Benton stepped into the hall with a gun. My father stood behind him. My mother looked unhinged.
“You ruined everything,” she hissed.
I finally understood. None of this had ever been about family. It was greed wearing my mother’s face.
Benton raised the gun toward Noah.
Then sirens wailed outside.
Noah tackled Benton. The gun skidded across the floor. Officers stormed in. My father dropped to his knees. My mother tried to run and was cuffed in the kitchen.
An hour later, wrapped in a blanket at the back of an ambulance, I held my son against my chest as agents led my parents and Benton away.
Noah sat across from me, bruised and quiet. “I don’t deserve forgiveness,” he said. “But I’m done running.”
“What’s his name?” Lena asked.
For the first time, no one answered for me.
I kissed his forehead and said, “Gabriel. Because he came back to me.”
And this time, no one took him away.