Ivy looked at the ground for a moment before speaking.
“Can we talk somewhere private?”
Ms. Moreno, the principal, nodded and led us to her office, closing the door behind us. We sat, the air thick with things unsaid. Ivy stared at her hands.
“I need to ask you something,” I said first. “And I need the truth, Ivy. Is Theo… Is he my grandson?”
Ivy looked up, eyes bright with tears she tried not to shed. “Yes.”
“Is he my grandson?”
For a moment, everything inside me loosened, then tightened again, sharp and electric.
“He has Owen’s face,” I whispered.
Ivy wiped her cheek with her thumb. “You want the honest version? I should’ve told you. I chose my fear over your right to know. I was scared. I’d just lost Owen.”
“I lost him too, Ivy.”
“That’s why I couldn’t walk into your grief with more pain, Rose. You were drowning already. But I was there, alone with this news.”
“You want the honest version?”
I leaned forward. “I wish you’d told me, Ivy. I would have wanted to know. I needed him to live on, somehow.”
She shook her head, voice trembling. “I was 20. And terrified you’d take him away, or that I’d just be another burden to you.”
“This is my son’s child.”
Ivy stiffened. “He’s my child too, Rose. I carried him, I raised him, through everything. I’m not about to hand him over like a coat you left behind at a party.”
“I wish you’d told me.”
“I’m not here to take him from you, sweetie. I just want to know him. I want to love what’s left of Owen.” The words tumbled out of me before I could stop them. “I could take him this weekend. Just for pancakes or the park —”
Ivy’s head snapped up. “No.”
Heat rushing to my face. “You’re right. I’m sorry. That was too much, too fast.”
The door opened behind us.
A tall man stepped in, shoulders tense, eyes moving quickly between Ivy and me.
“What’s going on?” he asked.
Ivy’s fingers twisted together. “We were just talking. This is Theo’s dad, Mark.”
“About?” His gaze landed on me.
She swallowed. “About Theo.”
“This is Theo’s dad, Mark.”
He frowned slightly. “Okay…”
I stepped forward before she could spiral. “I’m Rose,” I said. “Owen’s mother, and Theo’s teacher.”
He studied my face. “Owen?”
“My son,” I said. “He died five years ago.”
Recognition flickered across his expression. He did the math.
Ivy’s voice broke. “Theo is his.”
He looked at Ivy. Not angry. Not yet. Just stunned.
“Theo is his.”
Leave a Comment