My Mom Said She’d Been Raising My Baby for a Month—But My Daughter Was Asleep Beside Me.-iwachan - Chainityai

My Mom Said She’d Been Raising My Baby for a Month—But My Daughter Was Asleep Beside Me.-iwachan

The name on the hospital bracelet was mine.

Not Lily’s.

Mine.

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My mother read it twice, like saying it slower might change what it meant.

“Megan Harper,” she whispered. “Mother.”

I sat down because my knees stopped working.

Across the room, Lily slept like nothing in the world had shifted. Her tiny chest rose and fell under a pale pink blanket.

I kept staring at her.

My daughter was there.

My daughter had always been there.

So why was another baby wearing a bracelet that said I was her mother?

“Mom,” I said, my voice barely there, “lock your doors.”

“What?”

“Lock them. Front and back. Do it now.”

For once, she didn’t argue.

I heard her move through the house, her slippers dragging across the old hardwood. A deadbolt clicked. Then another.

The baby at her house began to cry.

It was a small, hungry cry.

Not strange. Not frightening.

Just a baby.

That made it worse.

“I’m calling 911,” I said.

My mother’s breath caught. “Megan, what if they take her?”

“Mom, we don’t know who she is.”

“She’s a baby.”

“I know.”

That was the awful part.

She was innocent. Whoever had brought her there was not.

I called the police with Lily’s bassinet beside my foot and my mother still on speaker. I gave them both addresses, my daughter’s name, my mother’s address in Skokie, and the words that sounded insane even as I said them.

“My mother has a baby in her house. She thought it was mine. It isn’t.”

The dispatcher stayed calm.

I did not.

By the time two officers knocked on my townhouse door, I had Lily strapped into her car seat and the gray coat laid across the kitchen table like evidence.

One officer was a woman named Ramirez. She looked at Lily first.

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