After Twenty-Two Years Raising Triplets, Their Graduation Broke Me-Teptep

I spent twenty-two years raising my three nieces after everyone else walked away, and I thought I already knew every version of what sacrifice could cost.

I was wrong.

The worst moment did not come during the sleepless nights.

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It did not come when I counted coins at the kitchen table, or when I warmed milk with one hand while trying to answer work calls with the other.

It came in a bright graduation hall, with hundreds of polite strangers watching, when the three girls I had raised walked back onto the stage and opened a piece of paper I thought had disappeared for ever.

The girls were six months old when their father left them outside my flat.

He was my younger brother, though for many years it was easier to think of him as a man who had become a stranger.

That morning was cold and grey, the kind of morning where the damp seems to creep under the door before anyone has opened it.

I lived in a tiny flat above the hardware shop where I worked.

The walls were thin, the stairs were steep, and the kitchen was barely wide enough for a kettle, a washing-up bowl, and the little table where I kept my bills in a pile I tried not to look at too closely.

I remember the crying first.

Not one cry.

Three.

Small, thin, frightened sounds coming from the landing outside my door.

At first I thought someone in the building had come upstairs with a baby and stopped to search for a key.

Then the crying kept going.

I opened the door in my socks.

Three infant carriers were lined up against the wall.

One pink blanket.

One yellow one.

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