Stories: She was three years old and suspicious of me

When I met Jenna, she was three years old and suspicious of me.

Her mom and I had just started dating, and Jenna would peek at me from behind her mom’s legs like I was some strange new animal in the house. I didn’t push. I just showed up. I colored with her. I let her win at Candy Land. I learned how to braid badly.

A year later, out of nowhere, she tugged on my sleeve and said, “Daddy, can you open this?”

I froze.

Her mom did too.

We never forced it. She just decided. And from that day on, I was “Daddy.”

Now she’s thirteen—taller, louder, smarter. And her biological dad drifts in and out of her life like a seasonal storm. Big promises. Long silences. Repeat.

Last night, she was at his place for a visit. Around 9:30, my phone buzzed.

Can you pick me up?

No explanation. Just that.

I grabbed my keys.

When I pulled up, she was already standing outside on the curb, arms crossed against the cold. I stepped out of the car.

“You okay?” I asked.

She nodded, but her eyes were shiny.

She slid into the passenger seat and shut the door. We sat there a second in silence. The porch light behind us flicked off.

Then she looked at me and said quietly, “He forgot my birthday again.”

My chest tightened. Her birthday had been two weeks ago. We threw her a party. He hadn’t shown.

“I thought maybe this time he’d remember,” she continued. “But he didn’t. And when I said something, he told me I was being dramatic.”

I gripped the steering wheel harder than I meant to.

“I’m sorry,” I said, because I didn’t know what else to say.

She stared out the window for a moment. Then she turned back to me.

“But you didn’t forget,” she said.

I blinked.

“You never forget,” she added. “Or my games. Or my science fair. Or when I need a ride.” Her voice cracked. “So… can I ask you something?”

“Anything.”

She took a breath. “Would you… would you adopt me? For real?”

Everything inside me just stopped.

“For real?” I repeated, my voice barely working.

She nodded. “I don’t want someone who comes and goes. I already have a dad.”

I didn’t even try to hold it together. I leaned across the console and pulled her into the tightest hug I’ve ever given.

“You’ve been mine since you were four,” I said into her hair. “The paperwork’s just a formality.”

When we got home, her mom was waiting on the porch, worried.

Jenna ran ahead and shouted, “Mom! He said yes!”

And for the first time, I understood something simple and true:

Being a father isn’t about biology.

It’s about showing up.

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