So I tried.
The first weekend, I made $47.
The following month, $300.
I sold homemade tea blends at farmers’ markets until my hands shook from exhaustion. Eventually, my little hobby turned into a real business.
Within two years, I had a small online store.
People loved the blends.
By the time the twins were in middle school, the business had grown into something I never expected. We had a warehouse, employees, and contracts with coffeehouses across the state.
But the boys never cared about any of that.
To them, I was just Grandma.
Jeffrey grew into a quiet thinker, always reading thick books, while George was the opposite. He was loud, warm, and always laughing.
At night, they would sit at the kitchen table while I packed tea orders.
“Grandma,” George would ask, “did Dad like baseball?”
“He loved it,” I’d say.
“Couldn’t throw straight to save his life, though.”
Jeffrey would smile softly.
That question came less often, but when it did, I answered carefully.
“She liked different things.”
Neither boy remembered much about her, and honestly, I hoped it would stay that way.
For 10 years, Vanessa never called. She never sent birthday cards, child support, or visited.
By then, my company was worth more money than I had ever dreamt.
But the best thing in my life is still those boys.
I thought we were finally safe and settled.
Until three weeks ago.
When the security gate buzzer rang, yes, we could now afford that, I thought it was another delivery truck.
But instead, Vanessa stood outside with a lawyer.
I opened the gate slowly.
My DIL looked different, older, but still up to no good.
She asked to speak to me inside. Her lawyer held a folder.
Vanessa didn’t ask how the boys were or about their health.
Instead, she handed me legal papers in the living room.
She was asking for full custody!
I stared at the document.
“You abandoned them.”
Her smile was thin. “Legally, you had temporary guardianship. That can change.”
I asked to consult my lawyer and went into the kitchen for some privacy while they waited.
“Margaret,” my lawyer said carefully, “courts sometimes favor biological parents if they claim they’ve reformed.”
“She disappeared for a decade!”
“I know,” he replied.
“But we still have to prepare.”
After the call, I stood there contemplating how to handle Vanessa.
I didn’t have much time alone because she cornered me in my own kitchen.
Jeffrey and George were luckily still at school.
