I was 18 years old when my mother died. At the same time, my brothers—newborn triplets—were still tiny, still figuring out how to exist in the world. Three babies, fresh from the hospital, surrounded by that sterile smell and those clear plastic bassinets… and then, all at once, they were mine to protect.
My name is Cade. I’m 29 now, and when I look back, it feels like my life split into two parts: before I became their guardian, and everything that came after.

Our father was “around” in the loosest sense. He appeared just often enough to leave emotional bruises and then vanish again. When I was a teenager, he made a sport out of mocking me—especially in front of other people. I wore black, listened to music he didn’t understand, and sometimes painted my nails.
“What are you, some kind of goth?” he’d laugh. “Not a son—just a shadow.”
My mom always stepped in. She’d shut it down, change the subject, and later remind me that I wasn’t the labels he tried to stick on me.
Then she got pregnant. The triplets weren’t planned, and even the doctors seemed startled—speaking softly, staring at the ultrasound like it had to be a mistake. Mom was nervous, but there was light in her eyes too. She was scared, yes, but she was also genuinely happy.
- Three babies on the way
- A mother trying to be brave
- A household already held together by her patience
Our father started fading out before they were even born. He became a ghost who left behind only unanswered questions.
When my mother’s health began to fail, everything tightened around us. At first it was described as “fatigue.” Then it turned into “complications.” And then the doctors began choosing their words carefully—the kind of careful that fills a room with a heavy, telling quiet.
That was when he left for real.
No big fight. No final conversation. No promise to call. One day he was technically part of our lives, and the next day he simply wasn’t.
One night my mom looked at me with a tired certainty and said, “Cade… he isn’t coming back.”