The day after I buried my parents, I became an adult. Not because I turned eighteen, but because someone tried to take the only family I had left. And I wasn’t about to let that happen.
I never thought I’d spend my eighteenth birthday at a funeral. I stood in the cemetery in my only black suit, clutching the small hand of my six-year-old brother, Max. He still thought Mommy was on a long trip. People said “Happy 18th” like it meant something. But all I wanted was for Max to stop asking when she was coming back.
Kneeling beside our parents’ grave, I whispered a promise: “I won’t let anyone take you. Ever.”
But not everyone agreed with that plan.
Aunt Diane and Uncle Gary invited us over a week later. Their house looked untouched by grief—gleaming countertops, matching coffee mugs. Max played with dinosaur stickers while they gave me that practiced look of sympathy.
“It’s for the best, Ryan,” Diane said, pressing a mug of cocoa into my hands like it made her kind. “You’re still in school. You don’t have a job. Max needs routine. A real home.”Uncle Gary nodded like a parrot on cue.
I bit my cheek so hard I tasted blood. These were the same people who forgot Max’s birthday three years in a row, the ones who went on cruises instead of showing up for holidays. And now, suddenly, they wanted to be parents?
The next morning, I found out they’d filed for custody.
That wasn’t concern. That was strategy.
And I knew, deep down, it wasn’t love they wanted. It was something else. I just didn’t know what—yet.