My Parents Voted To Take My Daughter Until My Brother Came Back-olive

I came home at 4:36 on a Thursday afternoon with cold coffee in one hand and the notes from my job interview under my arm.

Mia’s sneakers were not by the door.

Her pink blanket was not on the couch.

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I called her name once from the living room, then again from the hall.

No little voice answered.

My mother stood in the doorway of Mia’s bedroom wearing her cream church blouse and pearl earrings.

My father stood behind her with his arms folded, blocking half the frame like he had been waiting for me to arrive late to my own punishment.

I pushed past him and saw the mattress.

The sheets were gone.

The dresser drawers were empty.

The books, night-light, stuffed animals, and rain boots were gone.

Only the bare bed remained, with one small dent where Mia’s pillow used to be.

My knees hit the carpet.

“Where is she?” I asked.

My mother looked down at me with the calm face she used when she wanted everyone else to believe I was the problem.

“Stop making a scene,” she whispered.

“Where is Mia?”

My father closed the bedroom door behind him.

“We held a vote,” he said.

For a moment I thought I had misheard him.

People voted on budgets, bake sales, parking rules, and what restaurant to try after church.

My mother laid a tan folder on the bare mattress.

“The entire family agreed she is better off without you.”

I grabbed the folder so hard the corner bent.

The top page said Temporary Guardianship Affidavit.

Below that was a paragraph claiming I had abandoned my daughter and voluntarily surrendered custody to my parents until Mia turned eighteen.

At the bottom was my name in blue ink.

It was close enough to scare me, but the A was wrong.

I always looped the first letter because my third grade teacher once told me it looked fancy.

Whoever signed that paper had copied my name, but they had not copied my hand.

“I didn’t sign this,” I said.

My father tapped the page.

“The papers are signed.”

“I did not sign this.”

“She is already on a plane to your Aunt Paula,” he said.

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