Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Echoes in the Adoption File - Part 1

 

The File That Wasn’t Empty

The adoption file was supposed to be thin.

That’s what Anika Rao had always been told—routine case, no complications, closed chapter. She believed it for twenty-six years. Until the day the file slid across the dusty wooden table in the basement of St. Mary’s Adoption Trust and landed in front of her with a soft, accusing thud.

It was thick.

Anika’s fingers hovered over the folder, her pulse suddenly loud in her ears. The old ceiling fan groaned above her, pushing warm air that smelled of paper, ink, and secrets long buried. The caretaker, an elderly man with tired eyes, avoided her gaze.

“Are you sure this is mine?” she asked.

He nodded once. “That’s what the register says.”

Anika opened the file.

The first few pages were expected—date of birth, place of discovery, a temporary name scribbled in blue ink: Female infant, approx. three days old. But then she saw it.

A page torn roughly from a notebook.
A fingerprint in dried brown ink.
And one line, underlined twice:

“Father deceased. Mother missing.”

Her breath caught.

That was not what she had grown up hearing.

Her adoptive parents had always said the same thing: Your parents loved you, but they were poor. They wanted a better life for you. No deaths. No disappearances. No violence.

Anika turned the page, her hands trembling now.

There was a police stamp—faded, almost erased with time. A case number. And one word circled in red:

HOMICIDE

The room seemed to tilt.

“Why would this be here?” she whispered, more to herself than to the caretaker.

He finally spoke, his voice low. “Some adoptions… begin in tragedy.”

Anika closed the file slowly. Her reflection stared back at her from the plastic cover—dark eyes filled with questions she had never allowed herself to ask.

If her father was murdered…
If her mother vanished…

Then her adoption wasn’t just an act of mercy.

It was an escape.

As she stood to leave, something slipped from the back of the folder and fluttered to the floor. Anika bent down and picked it up.

A photograph.

A young couple stood outside a small house. The man’s arm was protectively around the woman, who was visibly pregnant. Both of them were smiling—but someone had scratched over the man’s face with a sharp object, gouging deep, angry lines.

On the back of the photo, written in hurried handwriting, were four words:

“She must never know.”

Anika felt a chill crawl up her spine.

For the first time in her life, she understood something with terrifying clarity:

Her past wasn’t lost.

It was hidden.

And someone had killed to keep it that way.

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