My 4-year-old granddaughter was crying alone at my door at midnight. “What’s wrong? How did you get here?” I asked, picking her up. She answered through tears, “Mommy said we don’t need you anymore because there’s a baby coming.” In her trembling hands was a crumpled paper that read, “Parental rights relinquishment form.” When I called my son, an unimaginable truth was revealed…

My 4-year-old granddaughter was crying alone at my door at midnight. “What’s wrong? How did you get here?” I asked, picking her up. She answered through tears, “Mommy said we don’t need you anymore because there’s a baby coming.” In her trembling hands was a crumpled paper that read, “Parental rights relinquishment form.” When I called my son, an unimaginable truth was revealed…

My name is Margaret Whitman, and I had just turned off the kitchen light when a frantic knock rattled my front door. It was 12:03 a.m. The neighborhood was silent, the kind of quiet that makes midnight feel heavier than it is. I thought maybe a neighbor had an emergency—until I opened the door and saw my four-year-old granddaughter, Sophie, standing on my porch in socks, crying so hard she could barely breathe.

“Sophie?” I scooped her up instantly. Her cheeks were cold, and her little body shook against mine. “What’s wrong? How did you get here?”

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