Four years of life.
Two years of absence.
Two years of repair.
One little girl surrounded by adults who had all, in different ways, learned to put down their pride.
“Make a wish,” Jackson said.
Emma squeezed her eyes shut.
Then she blew so hard that spit landed on the frosting.
The children cheered.
The adults pretended not to notice the frosting.
Later, as the party wound down, Rachel found me near the kitchen sink.
“I wanted to ask you something,” she said.
I turned off the faucet.
“All right.”
She twisted a dish towel in her hands.
“Emma asked if she could call me Mom someday.”
My chest tightened.
“Oh.”
“I told her she could call me Rachel as long as she wanted. Or Mom someday if it felt right. Or both. Or neither.”
I nodded slowly.
“That was a good answer.”
Rachel swallowed.
“She also asked what to call you.”
I smiled.
“She already calls me Nana.”
“I know. But she asked if Nana is family.”
My throat closed.
Rachel stepped closer.
“I told her yes.”
I looked at her.
She was crying again.
So was I.
“I told her family is who stays,” Rachel said. “And who comes back correctly when they were wrong. And who loves you without making you choose.”
I gripped the edge of the sink.
For a long moment, I could not speak.
Then I said, “That is also a good answer.”
Rachel laughed softly.
“I learned from very strict people.”
“Good,” I said. “We were expensive.”
She laughed harder.
Then her face grew serious.
“I can never give Jackson back those two years.”
“No,” I said.
“I can never give Emma back the mother she should have had as a baby.”
“No.”
“I can only be here now.”
I looked through the window.
Jackson was crouched in the yard, tying Emma’s shoe.
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