Her small body was stiff with cold, and mine wasn’t much better. We stood in line outside St. Andrew’s Outreach Shelter, waiting for a bowl of free soup. Snow dusted the sidewalk, and the wind cut straight through our coats. We had nowhere to go.
Our landlord had evicted us from the tiny room we rented after I lost my job at a grocery store. I begged for time. I promised I’d find something else. He didn’t care. By morning, our belongings were stuffed into garbage bags, and the door was locked.
To the outside world, my parents had rejected me because I was “difficult” and got pregnant too young. That was the story they told friends and relatives.
The truth was simpler and crueler. They didn’t want to help. They didn’t want a child around. They said they “couldn’t afford it,” even as they renovated their kitchen and planned vacations. They chose comfort over their daughter—and over their granddaughter.
As Sophie and I waited for soup, a sleek black Rolls-Royce pulled up in front of the shelter. It looked absurd against the cracked pavement and flickering streetlight. An elderly woman stepped out, wrapped in a fur coat, pearls resting perfectly against her neck. Assistants hurried around her with umbrellas. She was clearly there to make a donation.I nodded through tears.
“Yes, sweetheart. We do.”
Behind us, my parents stood surrounded by luxury that no longer belonged to them.
And for the first time in years… justice finally found us.