No hesitation. I waited for him to take it back. I waited for my mother to intervene.
All she did was appear in the hallway, eyes full of panic, before my father sent her silence with a single look. She turned away and vanished up the stairs. I picked up the small duffel I’d packed in fear—some clothes, a necklace from my grandmother, two photos—then stepped out into the cold November air.
Her parents were polite, but uncomfortable, whispering about not wanting to “get pulled into something complicated.” By the third night, it was clear I couldn’t stay. Jenna cried when she pressed forty dollars into my hand. I told her I would figure things out, even though I had no real plan.
The youth shelter downtown gave me a bed in a room with three other girls. The place smelled like disinfectant and exhaustion. I lay awake most nights listening to the city noise and wondering how my life had spun so violently off track.
The baby’s father—Tyler—disappeared the day I told him. He blocked my number and moved on like I’d never existed. When I saw him at school one last time, he wouldn’t even look at me.
By then, my belly had begun to show, and every stare and whisper from classmates felt like a shove. When the school counselor said I’d need a parent’s signature for any alternative program, that was the final blow. I dropped out because I had no parent left willing to sign anything for me, not even a form for help.
Survival became my full-time job. I cleaned offices at night, stocked shelves in a pharmacy, washed dishes in a diner. When the shelter time ran out, I found a room in a boarding house—basement level, damp, cold, the kind of place no one chooses unless there’s no other choice.
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