For four months, I trusted the gentle woman who cleaned my home and folded my children into warm hugs. I had hired her during a season of quiet desperation. At 38, with three young children and a full-time job, I felt like I was constantly falling short. I left work early with apologies on my lips and came home late with promises to make it up to little hearts too young to understand sacrifice. At night, guilt would sit heavy on my chest as I watched my youngest sleep, wondering if she would remember me as present or perpetually tired. I had grown up with questions of my own — adopted young, holding only a blurred memory of the woman who gave me life and a single sharp image of a small blue bird she once showed me, a symbol of “love that lasts forever.”
When Helen arrived through the agency, she felt like an answer to a prayer I hadn’t dared to speak aloud. She was 58, soft-spoken, with kind gray curls and a gift for calming chaos. Within days, she knew how my son liked his sandwiches cut and how to hum my daughter into a nap. She brought homemade cookies and stories of small-town dinners around crowded tables. She felt safe — almost grandmotherly. The only curious detail was the small flesh-colored bandage she wore on her wrist every single day. When I asked, she brushed it off as an old wound that hadn’t healed properly. I respected her privacy. Everyone carries something tender.
