The night Liam arrived, we thought we were taking in just one child. Then we saw Mia—his little sister—waiting in the car, terrified of being sent to another home miles away. We had no space, no extra bed, but we couldn’t let them be separated. That night, both kids slept on mattresses side by side on our floor, safe and together. At first, they barely spoke. Liam wouldn’t eat until Mia did, and she wouldn’t close her eyes unless she held his hand.
Slowly, they began to trust us—setting the table, leaving crayon drawings on the counter, laughing in the yard. When the agency said a placement opened for them elsewhere, we realized we couldn’t let them go. We fought to keep them, through tantrums, long nights, and tight budgets. Months later, their mother—struggling but selfless—told us she wanted them to stay where they were safe.
Years later, after the adoption was final, Liam whispered, “So we’re never leaving?” I told him, “Never. This is home now.” We thought we had space for one. Love showed us we had room for two—and in choosing them, they changed our lives as much as we changed theirs.