I found a scribbled grocery list in my son’s backpack—milk, cereal, diapers, wipes. He’s seventeen. When I asked about it, he turned pale and muttered something about helping a friend.
Later that night, I followed him across town and watched him knock on a door.
A toddler ran out screaming, “Daddy!” and I nearly fell off the curb. I don’t move.
Just stand there behind a half-dead bush in front of the neighbor’s house across the street, heart punching through my chest. The porch light hits my son’s face, and I see it: guilt.
His arms scoop the little girl up like it’s muscle memory.
He kisses her forehead, bouncing her gently while the woman at the door leans against the frame, arms crossed, looking exhausted. I don’t recognize her. Maybe early twenties, long black braids pulled into a bun, wearing an oversized t-shirt and leggings.
She’s not angry.
Just…tired. Like a single mother who hasn’t slept properly in weeks.
I back away before anyone sees me, slide into my car, and just sit there for a while with the engine off. My fingers tremble on the steering wheel.
I don’t even know where to begin.
When he gets home two hours later, I’m pretending to watch some cooking show. He tries to sneak past, hoodie still on, shoes in hand. “Sit,” I say without turning.
He freezes, then drops into the armchair like a sack of bricks.
His head hangs. “Who is she?” I ask.
“And the little girl?”
He swallows hard. “Her name’s Yessenia.
The baby’s Amina.”
I nod slowly.
“And you’re the father?”
“I think so,” he says, almost in a whisper. “I didn’t know until a couple months ago.”
I mute the TV. “You’re seventeen, Nasir.”
“I know.”
I want to scream, or cry, or maybe both.
But I don’t.
I just look at him, and he looks like a kid again. Not a father.
Not yet. He tells me everything.
That he and Yessenia hooked up a few times the summer before junior year, then lost touch.
She moved schools. Then a few months ago, she reached out on social media. Said she had something important to tell him.
“She didn’t ask for anything,” he says.
“No money, no help. She just thought I should know.”
But Nasir didn’t walk away.
He started visiting. Helping out.
Picking up groceries with the little money from his part-time job at the car wash.
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