Someone mentioning that she liked humming.
Someone warning that she would kick one foot free whenever she became too warm.
I remembered a woman standing near the doorway after the adoption papers were signed.
I had never studied her face.
“That was you,” I breathed.
Rose nodded.
“I couldn’t stay.”
She looked directly at me.
“Because you were becoming her mother, and I had already taken up enough space in that room.”
Richard tapped the old note.
“She gave me this outside the hospital. She asked me never to let Claire grow up feeling discarded.
A muscle moved in his cheek.
“I told myself Claire was too young to understand.”
Rose turned toward him.
“You should have told your wife.”
Richard lowered his eyes.
He offered no defense.
That silence was the first honest part of his lie.
I looked at the woman in the photograph.
“Why is Rose’s face on your chest?”
Richard placed his palm over his heart.
“When I was 19, I volunteered at the hospital after classes. Every afternoon I’d pass the neonatal unit. Rose was always there. She spoke to babies whose parents couldn’t be there. She celebrated every ounce they gained.”
He looked toward Rose.
“One evening another volunteer sketched her sitting beside an incubator. I carried that sketch in my wallet for months.”
His gaze remained on her.
“Eventually I had it tattooed. Years later… when we walked into the hospital to bring Claire home, the nurse waiting for us was Rose. I couldn’t believe it. She recognized me too.”
I pressed my fingertips against the table’s edge.
“And you lied to me?”
His hand stayed over the portrait hidden beneath his shirt.
“Yes… and I was wrong. But I never wanted to forget that our family was built on kindness that began before we ever arrived.”
“But you let me believe she was imaginary.”
The truth hurt more because Richard did not try to soften it.
Rose reached into a canvas bag beside her and removed a cream blanket.
Claire’s coming-home blanket.
I recognized the faded satin border, the small stain near one corner, and the loose thread Claire used to rub between her fingers whenever she was tired.
“Why do you have that?” I asked.
“When Richard recognized me the day you brought Claire home, we stayed in touch with an occasional Christmas card every few years. Last week he brought me the blanket because he remembered I was the one who stitched it.”
I lifted the blanket.
A tiny rose had been embroidered near the hem.
I had washed it hundreds of times. I had wrapped Claire in it during fevers, packed it for family vacations, and laid it across her knees the night she left for college.
I had never wondered who had sewn the flower.
“One corner kept fraying at the hospital,” Rose said. “I fixed it during a break.”
Her finger hovered over the embroidery.