My mom gave up her parental rights and left when I was eight months old.
That’s the story I grew up with.
My dad told it simply, without venom but without softness either. She left. She never asked about you. She never tried to see you. It was just the two of us from then on.
There was one photo of her in our house. Just one. It lived in an old album tucked in a hallway drawer. In it, she was holding me in a hospital bed, her hair long and dark, her smile uncertain. I used to stare at that photo and try to see myself in her face.
I never could.
By the time I was old enough to ask real questions, the answers had fossilized. She had walked away. That was the beginning and end of it.
Then, a year ago, I saw her name on an appointment schedule at the law firm where I work.
Tirzah Mendel.
My stomach dropped so fast I thought I might faint.
She was scheduled for a consultation regarding a will dispute. Our firm was representing the opposing side. I wasn’t handling the case directly—I’m a legal assistant—but I was assigned to prepare files and escort clients to meeting rooms.
Which meant I had to walk her down the hallway.
When she stepped through the glass doors that afternoon, I felt my legs go numb.
Her hair was shorter than in the photo. Sharper. Streaked with gray. She wore a structured blazer and carried herself like someone who had learned how to take up just enough space.
Her voice, when she gave her name to reception, was smooth but edged—like honey poured over gravel.
She didn’t recognize me.
Not even a flicker.
No hesitation when she signed in. No double take. Nothing.
I stared at the appointment sheet like it might rewrite the last twenty-five years.
Tirzah Mendel.
The name looked unreal. Like it belonged to someone fictional. Not the woman who birthed me and walked away.
When it was time, I stood and said, “Ms. Mendel?”
She smiled politely.
“Right this way.”
We walked past my desk. The framed photo of my dad and me at my college graduation sat in its usual place. She didn’t glance at it.
“Is this your first year here?” she asked casually.
I almost tripped.
“No,” I said. “I’ve been here a while.”
My brain screamed at me to say something else.
To announce myself.
To ask why.
But I stayed silent.
After her meeting, she left with her attorney, chatting about lunch plans like it was any ordinary Tuesday.
I locked myself in the bathroom and threw up.
That night, I called my dad.
I hadn’t said her name in years. The moment I did, the line went quiet.
“I didn’t tell you before,” he said slowly, “but she tried to reach out when you turned eighteen.”
I sat up straight. “What?”
“She sent a letter. Just one. I didn’t give it to you.”
I felt like someone had knocked the air out of me.
“Why?”
“She caused you enough pain,” he said. “I didn’t want her hurting you again.”
Part of me understood. He had been both parents. He had protected me.
But another part—new and raw—ached with something I didn’t have a word for.
Curiosity.
Not because I thought she deserved forgiveness.
But because I deserved the truth.
For weeks, I looked her up.
Google. LinkedIn. Property records.
She lived forty minutes away. Had remarried. No other children listed. Worked as a therapist.
That last part made me laugh out loud.
Eventually, I sent her a letter.
It was short.
I told her who I was. That we had already met at the firm. That I knew about the letter she’d once sent. I said I wasn’t angry—just curious. And if she didn’t want contact, I would respect that.
I included my email.
She replied two days later.
Her message was formal. Almost clinical.
She said she hadn’t realized who I was at the firm. That seeing my name hadn’t registered.
She wrote that she was “relieved to hear” I wasn’t angry.
Then she added: “I would like to meet, if you’re open to it. I don’t expect anything from you. I just want to talk.”
We met at a café halfway between our homes.
I got there early.
She arrived ten minutes late, wearing all beige. No makeup. She looked composed—like someone who had practiced self-control for years.
“Hi, Ruhi,” she said gently. “You look like your dad.”
I nodded.
She started with her version.
She was twenty-two when she had me. The pregnancy wasn’t planned. My dad was twenty-seven, working long hours. She said she had postpartum depression, though no one called it that back then.
Her mother told her to “shake it off.”
“I didn’t bond with you,” she said. “I felt like I was holding someone else’s baby.”
Her voice cracked, but she didn’t look away.
“I left because I didn’t trust myself to stay.”
I asked the question that had lived in my chest for years.
“Why didn’t you try harder later? Why just one letter?”
She sighed.
“I was scared. And your dad made it clear he didn’t want me around. I thought you hated me.”
I wanted to.
But mostly I felt tired.
We met three more times.
Each meeting was easier.
She told me about her work. About her divorce. About how she never had more children.
I told her about my job, my roommate, my ridiculous cat.
Still, something felt unfinished.
Whenever I asked about specific details—the hospital, the day she left—she grew vague.
“It’s all a blur,” she’d say.
Or, “I don’t want to relive the worst parts.”
Then one afternoon at work, filing archived documents, I saw something that made my hands go cold.
Mendel v. Suresh.
I opened the custody file.
She hadn’t surrendered quietly.
She had fought for custody.
Twice.
The judge had denied her both times.
The file was sealed, but because I was the subject, I was allowed to view it.
The details were complicated.
She had been in therapy, yes. But there were also police reports. A neighbor testified she left me crying for hours. Another claimed she saw her slap me once on the porch.
There were photographs.
Nothing catastrophic.
But enough.
Dirty bottles in the sink. Me sitting alone on a kitchen floor. Timelines that painted a picture of neglect.
Not monstrous.
But unstable.
Enough for a judge to say no.
My dad hadn’t lied.
She had left.
But he hadn’t told the whole story.
And neither had she.
When I confronted her, she froze.
“You weren’t supposed to find that,” she whispered.
“I work at a law firm,” I said. “Did you think I wouldn’t look?”
She closed her eyes.
“I wanted to protect you from how bad I was,” she said. “I thought maybe we could start clean.”
“But it wasn’t clean,” I said. “You lied.”
She didn’t defend herself.
She just nodded, tears sliding down silently.
I didn’t speak to her for two months.
During that time, I started therapy for the first time in my life.
I had always thought I was fine.
But I realized I had built my personality around self-sufficiency. Around not needing anyone too much.
My therapist helped me untangle the knot.
Eventually, I talked to my dad.
I showed him the file.
He looked exhausted holding it.
“I didn’t lie,” he said. “I just didn’t want you to see her as dangerous. I thought maybe one day she’d come back. I didn’t want you hating her. Or hating yourself for wanting to know her.”
“She was sick,” he added quietly. “But she did try.”
I asked if he hated her.
He gave a dry laugh.
“I was just exhausted.”
That answer changed something.
I reached out to her again.
Not with questions this time.
With an invitation.
I asked her to come to my birthday dinner.
She came.
She brought cookies from a vegan bakery. I don’t even like vegan desserts, but I ate one.
My dad was there.
My friends were there.
It was awkward.
It was imperfect.
It was real.
She didn’t stay long. But when she left, she hugged me.
We’re not close.
We probably never will be in the way people imagine mothers and daughters should be.
But I know her now.
And knowing is different from fantasizing.
I used to think there was a hole in my life because she left.
Now I understand something else.
Some holes aren’t meant to be filled.
They’re meant to be mapped.
Understood.
Respected.
You don’t have to rebuild every broken thing.
Sometimes you just need to see it clearly enough to walk around it—without falling in.