“You don’t need to think about the orphanage anymore,” my adoptive mother would say. “Now we’re your family.”
So I learned to stop mentioning Mia out loud.
But in my mind, she never disappeared.
When I turned eighteen, I went back to the orphanage. New staff. New children. Same peeling walls.
I gave them my old name, my new name, my sister’s name. A woman returned with a thin folder.
“She was adopted shortly after you,” she said. “Her name was changed. Her file is sealed.”
I tried again years later. Same answer.
Sealed file. No details.
Life went on. I studied, worked, married too young, divorced, moved, got promoted. From the outside, I looked like a normal adult woman with a stable, slightly boring life.
Inside, my sister never left me.
Then, last year, everything changed.
I was on a short business trip to another city—nothing special. One evening, I stopped by a supermarket. I was tired, distracted, heading toward the cookie aisle.
That’s when I saw her.
A little girl stood there, carefully comparing two boxes of cookies. As she lifted her arm, her jacket sleeve slipped back.
On her wrist was a thin, crooked bracelet—red and blue.
I froze.
When I was eight, I had stolen red and blue yarn from the craft box and made two matching bracelets. One for me. One for Mia.
“So you won’t forget me,” I’d told her.
She wore it the day I was taken away.
I approached the girl.
“That’s a beautiful bracelet,” I said.
“My mom gave it to me,” she replied proudly. “She said someone special made it.”
A woman walked toward us with a box of cereal.
I knew her the moment I saw her.
Her eyes. Her walk. The way her brows tilted as she read labels.
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