A Baby Was Left In The Storm. Eleven Years Later, A Folder Waited-lequyen994 - Chainityai

A Baby Was Left In The Storm. Eleven Years Later, A Folder Waited-lequyen994

The night Austin left his newborn son on my doorstep, I was barefoot, broke, and tired in the ordinary way a twenty-one-year-old learns to be tired.

My apartment was cold around the edges because the windows leaked air, and November rain kept slapping against the glass like someone throwing handfuls of gravel.

I had been studying with one knee tucked under me on the couch, trying to make sense of a chapter I could barely afford to own, when someone pounded on my door hard enough to make the deadbolt rattle.

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For one second, I thought it was a neighbor.

For one second after that, I thought it was trouble.

When I opened the door, nobody was standing there.

Only the storm came in.

Cold rain blew across my feet and soaked the cuffs of my sweatpants before I saw the blue laundry basket sitting on the concrete.

It was cheap plastic, the kind people buy when they are trying to organize a life that keeps falling apart anyway.

A gray blanket sagged over the top, heavy with water.

Then the blanket moved.

The sound that came out from under it was not loud at first.

It was thin and sharp and broken, a newborn cry being swallowed by wind.

I dropped down so fast my knees scraped the porch.

When I pulled back the blanket, there was a baby inside the basket.

He was red-faced, shaking, and wrapped in a hospital blanket too thin for the weather.

His fists were clenched beside his cheeks, and his mouth opened on a scream that looked too big for his body.

There was a diaper bag shoved against one side.

There was also a folded piece of notebook paper tucked into the blanket, the ink already softening from the rain.

I knew the handwriting before I read it.

Austin had always written like responsibility was chasing him.

I can’t handle this. He’s yours now.

That was the whole explanation my brother gave his son.

I carried the basket inside because I was terrified that if I lifted the baby too quickly, something terrible would happen.

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