Her Adopted Daughter Offered a Birthday Poem. Grandpa Went Too Far-eirian

Two nights before my father’s sixtieth birthday, Olivia turned our kitchen table into a paper storm.

Notebook sheets spread in uneven stacks around her elbows.

A purple glitter pen rolled across the wood, its chewed white cap clicking every time it hit a crumb.

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The dishwasher hummed behind me, and the kitchen still smelled like tomato soup and buttered toast.

Olivia was eight years old, and she worked over that birthday card like a child preparing evidence.

She had been with us six months.

That was long enough to know where we kept the cereal bowls and which blanket on the couch was hers.

It was not long enough for her to stop thanking me for clean towels.

It was not long enough for her to trust that love could stay.

Her adoption folder was in the file drawer beside the stove-side desk, the certified decree from Franklin County Probate Court tucked behind school forms and insurance cards.

The paper said she was ours.

The law had done its part.

The heart was still catching up.

“Read this one?” she asked.

I sat across from her.

She lifted the page with both hands, elbows pressed close as though someone might take it.

“Dear Grandpa,” she read, soft but steady, “you tell stories and fix things and make pancakes too. I didn’t have a grandpa before. Now maybe I do.”

Then she stopped.

She scratched out maybe so hard the paper tore.

“No,” she whispered. “That sounds scared.”

I watched her swallow.

Children who have been left behind learn to edit themselves before anyone else can reject them.

“Does Grandpa hate fake stuff?” she asked.

The question was so clean it hurt.

My father did not hate fake things.

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