I became pregnant in tenth grade, and the moment I saw the two lines, my hands shook so badly I could barely stand. Before I could even decide what to do, my world collapsed—my parents looked at me with cold disgust, my father calling me a disgrace and disowning me on the spot. That same night, in pouring rain, my mother threw my torn backpack outside and pushed me into the street. With no money, no shelter, and nowhere to go, I walked away holding my stomach, swallowing my fear and heartbreak. I gave birth to my daughter in a cramped eight-square-meter rented room, surrounded by poverty and judgment. I raised her alone, working as a waitress by day and studying a vocational course by night after moving to Saigon when she was two. Slowly, life shifted—I found an opportunity in online business, built a company step by step, bought a house six years later, opened a chain of stores after ten, and twenty years on, my assets exceeded 200 billion VND. By every measure, I had succeeded—but the pain of being abandoned by my parents never truly faded.
One day, I returned to my hometown—not to forgive, but to show them what they had lost. I arrived in my Mercedes to find the house unchanged, only more decayed: rusted gate, peeling paint, weeds choking the yard. I knocked three times, and an eighteen-year-old girl opened the door. I froze—she looked exactly like me at that age. Before I could answer her gentle question, my parents stepped out, stunned at the sight of me. I smiled coldly and asked if they regretted it now. Then the girl grabbed my mother’s hand and called her “Grandma.” The word hit me like a blow. When I demanded to know who the child was, my mother collapsed into tears and my father, aged and weary, explained they had adopted a baby left at their gate eighteen years earlier.
Numb, I listened as my mother retrieved an old diaper from a cabinet—the very one I had wrapped my newborn in. My heart felt pierced. Through sobs, she told me that after I left, my daughter’s father had come searching but I was already gone; he drank, caused trouble, and disappeared. Then, one morning eighteen years ago, they found a newborn at their gate wrapped only in that diaper. They believed something terrible had happened to me and, unable to abandon the child, raised him as their own—never striking him, never mistreating him. There was only one explanation: my daughter’s biological father had another child and abandoned him at the very place he knew I had been cast out. I looked at the girl—this child I hadn’t borne, yet who mirrored me so closely—and felt my world tilt again.
When she shyly asked why Grandpa was crying, I pulled her into my arms and broke down. My parents fell to their knees, begging forgiveness and asking me not to blame the child. In that moment, twenty years of resentment began to dissolve—not because they deserved absolution, but because I understood something deeper. This child needed a family, and I needed to release the past. I wiped my tears and told them I hadn’t come back for revenge; I had come to reclaim what was mine. Taking the girl’s hand, I smiled and told her that from now on, she was my sister. Behind us, my parents wept like children as something long broken finally began to mend.