There were many nights when I wondered if I was doing enough or if I was getting any of it right. But looking back now, I can follow everything that happened back to one choice I made on a normal October night.
The porch light was flickering that October, throwing a narrow yellow circle across the wooden boards. I came home after a double shift, smelling like sawdust and motor oil, my keys already in my hand, and I nearly stumbled over them.
Three car seats, one diaper bag, and a note scribbled on a gas receipt.
I picked up the receipt first because my mind refused to accept what was sitting inside those car seats. My brother Daniel’s handwriting leaned sharply to the right, just like it always had.
“I’m sorry, Noah. I can’t do this.”
That was all. No phone number. No address to follow.
Daniel’s wife, Patricia, had been laid to rest 11 days earlier. My brother had made it less than two weeks.
I was 27, single, and living in the apartment above the hardware store where I swept floors and made spare keys. I had exactly $312 in my checking account and a futon that never opened properly.
One of the triplets let out a tiny sound, a damp little hiccup, almost like she was trying not to bother anyone.
I crouched down on the porch. Two small faces were sleeping, but the tiniest one was awake, watching me with eyes the same gray as my mother’s.
“Hey,” I whispered. “Hey, you.”
Just then, Mrs. Hunter stepped out of the next unit wearing her bathrobe, her slippers smacking against the concrete. She had lived beside me for six years and had never once stayed out of anyone’s business, which, that night, turned out to be a blessing.
Patricia had brought the triplets over twice that summer, and Mrs. Hunter had sat outside fussing over them while their mother proudly listed their names and birth weights like a commander giving a report.
—
“Noah? What in the world?!”
“Where is he?!”
“Gone.”
She read the note, looked back at me, then pressed one hand flat to her chest.
“Honey, you can’t raise three babies alone!”
“I know!”
“You don’t even know how to warm a bottle.”
I let out a breath.
My neighbor lowered herself beside me. I was thinking she was probably right when the smallest baby lifted one hand, reaching blindly, and wrapped her tiny fist around my index finger. It was warm, small, and impossibly strong for a six-month-old.
I froze. I couldn’t move.
“That’s June,” Mrs. Hunter said quietly. “Patricia made sure we’d know how to tell them apart. Said the smallest one would always be June.”
“June,” I repeated, saying her name like I was checking whether I could still speak.
Baby June kept gripping my finger. She didn’t know I had no money, that I had never changed a diaper, or that her father had left them behind. She only knew someone was there.
“I’ll call social services in the morning,” my neighbor said gently. “There are good families, Noah. Ready people.”
I opened my mouth to say yes. I truly did.
“Okay,” I whispered instead, still looking at June. “Okay. Okay, I’ve got you.”
Mrs. Hunter fell silent. The porch light flickered once more.
I carried them inside one by one, and somewhere between the second trip and the third, I stopped being Uncle Noah and became something I didn’t yet have a name for.