The door opened and a homeless teenager walked into my bookstore. Sixteen years old, dirty clothes, worn backpack. She asked if I was hiring. I should have said no, but when I looked at her face, I froze. She looked exactly like someone I knew, someone I hadn’t spoken to in two years. And when she told me her mother’s name, my heart stopped, because I knew that name. I knew it from seventeen years ago.
I hired her on the spot, gave her a place to sleep. But I didn’t tell her why. Because if what I suspected was true, if this girl walking into my store wasn’t just a coincidence, then everything was about to change for her, for me, and for the person who’d cut me out of their life two years ago. The person whose face I saw every time I looked at this girl.
What I discovered in the next weeks would force me to make an impossible choice.
My name is Linda, and this is my story.
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It was a Tuesday in November when everything changed. Cold outside, the kind that makes your hands ache. I had the heat turned up in the store, but it never quite reached the corners. Four customers all day, maybe five. I was behind the counter doing the accounts, numbers that didn’t look good no matter how many times I checked them. The bookstore felt too big with just me in it. Too quiet.
The door opened.
A girl walked in. Teenage, maybe sixteen or seventeen, thin in a way that said she hadn’t been eating enough. Her backpack hung off one shoulder, worn at the seams. The jacket was too big, sleeves covering her hands. Jeans with dirt at the knees. Something about her face caught my attention, familiar somehow. I couldn’t place it.
She stood just inside the door like she was deciding whether to stay. Her eyes moved across the shelves, not casual browsing. She was studying them.
I went back to my ledger, gave her space.
She moved to the fiction section, young adult first, then literary. Her fingers touched the spines gently. She pulled a book out, opened it, read the first page standing right there. I watched from the corner of my eye. She carried the book to another section, poetry, set it down on the small table, and kept looking. She was killing time, I could tell. Somewhere warm to be for a while.
Twenty minutes passed, maybe more.
She came back to the poetry table, picked up the book she’d left, held it against her chest, then walked toward the counter and stopped a few feet away.
“Excuse me.”
Her voice was quiet.
I looked up.
“Yeah?”
“Are you hiring?” She shifted her weight. “I need work. I’m really good with books.”
I set my pen down.
“How old are you?”
“Sixteen.” Quick, like she’d practiced. “I know I’m young, but I work hard. I can prove it.”
Sixteen.
“What’s your name?”
“Jennifer.” A pause. “Jennifer Carter.”
Carter.
I turned the name over in my mind. Nothing came.
“Where do you live, Jennifer?”
She looked down.
“There’s a shelter two blocks over. I’ve been staying there.”
A shelter. This kid was homeless.
“You’re not from around here?”
“No. Upstate. I ran away from an orphanage about a year ago.”
An orphanage. Sixteen years old, and already this much life behind her.
“What about your parents?”
She was quiet.
“My mom died when I was twelve.” Her voice got smaller. “My dad died before I was born. That’s what my mom told me.”
I watched her face, the way she said it, like she’d repeated those words so many times they didn’t hurt anymore.
“I’m sorry,” I said.
She nodded.
“Thank you.”
“What was your mother’s name?”
“Amanda.” She looked up at me. “Amanda Carter.”
The air went out of the room.
Amanda.
I saw her. Not this girl, but the girl from years ago. Dark hair pulled back. Soft voice. She used to come into the bookstore to meet Chris, my son. She’d sit in the corner with him reading poetry out loud while he pretended to pay attention.
That was sixteen, seventeen years ago. She came here all summer, then she stopped. I asked Chris about it once. He shrugged, said they broke up. Said she went back to her hometown. He didn’t seem bothered by it, just moved on. I never saw Amanda again after that. Never knew what happened to her until now.
This girl standing in front of me, Jennifer Carter, sixteen years old. The timeline fit.
I looked at her again. Really looked. The way she held herself, the set of her jaw, something familiar I’d noticed when she first walked in. She reminded me of Chris when he was younger.
My stomach dropped.
Could she be? No. I was jumping to conclusions. Amanda had been Chris’s girlfriend for one summer. That didn’t mean anything. Plenty of girls are named Jennifer. Plenty of last names are Carter. But sixteen years old. Amanda’s daughter. And that face…
I needed to think. Needed to figure this out before I did anything stupid.
“Can I ask you something?” Jennifer said.
“Of course.”
“Do you really have a job? Or were you just being nice?” The hope in her voice, the fear underneath it.
I made my decision.
“I have a job. You’re hired, if you want it.”
Her eyes went wide.
“Really?”
“Can you start tomorrow at nine?”
She stared at me.
“You don’t know anything about me.”
“I know you love books. That’s enough for now.”
She was shaking just a little.
“I don’t have references or anything.”
“That’s fine.”
“I can work mornings, afternoons, whatever you need.”
“We’ll figure it out tomorrow.” I came around the counter. “There’s a couch in the back office. It’s not much, but it’s warmer than a shelter. You can use it until you find something better. I can’t pay you. You’ll work. That’s payment enough.”
Jennifer just stood there like she couldn’t process what was happening. Her eyes filled up. She blinked fast, trying to hide it.
“Thank you,” she said. Her voice cracked. “I won’t let you down. I promise.”
“I believe you.”
She nodded, wiped at her eyes quick.
“Nine tomorrow?”
“Nine.”
She turned to go, made it to the door, then stopped.
“Why are you doing this?”
I looked at this girl, this stranger who might not be a stranger.
“Because you asked,” I said. “And I have a job that needs doing.”
She nodded, didn’t say anything else, just walked out into the cold.
I stood in the empty store, the accounts still spread out on the counter, the quiet pressing in. Amanda Carter had a daughter, and that daughter had just walked into my bookstore.
I sat down in the chair behind the counter, put my hands flat on the ledger. The math was simple. Chris dated Amanda seventeen years ago, maybe sixteen. Jennifer was sixteen now. It could be coincidence, or it could be something else. I didn’t have proof, just a gut feeling and a familiar face. That wasn’t enough to go making accusations. Wasn’t enough to call anyone or make a scene.
But tomorrow, Jennifer would come back. Tomorrow I could start asking the right questions, careful questions, see what I could learn.
Tonight, I just sat there in the bookstore that had been mine and Paul’s for forty years. The bookstore that was only mine now. And I wondered if maybe, just maybe, I wasn’t as alone as I thought.
She showed up at 8:45 the next morning.
I was unlocking the front door when I saw her coming down the sidewalk. Same worn backpack, different jacket, but just as oversized. Her hair was pulled back in a ponytail. She walked fast, like she was afraid I’d changed my mind.
“Good morning,” I said.
“Good morning.” She stopped on the sidewalk. “I’m not too early, am I?”
“Not at all. Come on in.”
She followed me inside. I turned on the lights, the overhead fixtures flickering before they caught. The store looked better in the morning, light coming through the front windows, dust motes floating in the air.
“Have you had breakfast?” I asked.
She hesitated.
“I’m fine.”
That meant no.
“There’s a coffee shop next door. Go get yourself something. Tell Marco I sent you. He’ll put it on my tab.”
“I don’t need—”
“You can’t work on an empty stomach. Go. I’ll be here when you get back.”
She went.
I used the time to clear off the desk in the back office. Moved boxes of inventory. The couch was old, the cushions sagging, but it was clean. I found a blanket in the storage closet, a pillow that smelled like mothballs but would do.
Jennifer came back fifteen minutes later with a coffee and a muffin wrapped in paper.
“Thank you,” she said. “I’ll pay you back when I get paid.”
“Don’t worry about it.”
I spent the morning training her: how to work the register, how the shelves were organized—fiction alphabetical by author, non-fiction by subject, the poetry section in the back corner where the light was best. She learned fast, asked good questions, wrote things down in a small notebook she pulled from her backpack.
“Do you get a lot of customers?” she asked.
“Not like we used to. People buy books online now.”
“That’s sad.”
“It is what it is.”
She ran her hand along a shelf of hardcovers.
“These are beautiful, though. You can’t get this from a screen.”
I liked her already.
By lunch, I let her handle the register while I did inventory in the back. I watched through the doorway. She was careful with the customers, polite. She recommended books to a woman looking for something for her daughter.
During a slow stretch in the afternoon, I found her sitting on the floor in the poetry section, her notebook open. She was writing something, then crossing it out.
“What are you working on?” I asked.
She looked up, startled.
“Nothing. Just…” She closed the notebook. “Stories, I guess.”
“You write?”
“Sort of. It’s stupid.”
“It’s not stupid.”
She shrugged.
“Books were kind of my friends when I was younger. When things got bad at home.”
I sat down on the step stool near her.
“What happened at home, Jennifer?”
She was quiet for a long time, picked at the edge of her notebook.
“My mom had problems,” she finally said. “Drugs, mostly. It started after I was born. I don’t really remember a time before it.”
“I’m sorry.”
“I took care of her. When I was old enough, ten maybe. I’d find her passed out on the couch or in the bathroom. I got good at hiding things from the neighbors, making excuses.”
She said it flat, like she was reading from a list.
“That’s a lot for a kid to handle.”
“I didn’t have a choice.” She looked up at me. “I found her when she died. I was twelve. Came home from school and she was in the bathroom. I called 911, but she was already gone.”
My chest tightened.
“Jennifer…”
“It’s okay. It was four years ago.” She closed her notebook. “After that, it was foster care. Then the orphanage. That place was awful. Cold. They didn’t care about us. We were just numbers.”
“So, you left?”
“Yeah. Last year I turned fifteen and I just walked out. Been on my own since.”
She said it like it was simple. Like being homeless at fifteen was just another thing that happened.
I understood loss. I understood loneliness.
It hit me then, sitting on that step stool in the poetry section, Jennifer’s story settling into my bones. I’d been alone, too.
Two years ago, my world fell apart.
Paul died on a Thursday morning. Heart attack. Sudden, no warning. I woke up and he was already gone in the bed next to me. Just gone. We’d been married forty years. Built this bookstore together from nothing. It was ours. Every shelf, every book, every creak in the floorboards.
The funeral was small. Paul didn’t have much family left. Chris came, my son, but he stayed in the back, spent half the service on his phone, left right after without saying much.
I spent three months in a fog, running the store because I didn’t know what else to do. The apartment upstairs felt too big without Paul. The silence pressed down on everything.
Then Chris showed up one afternoon. He had a business plan—subscription boxes, curated products for young professionals. He needed $350,000 to get started. He wanted me to sell Williams Bookstore.
“Think about it, Mom,” he said. “This place barely breaks even. You’re working yourself to death for what? Dad’s gone. You don’t need to keep doing this.”
I stared at him.
“This store is all I have left of your father.”
“It’s a building. It’s inventory. Dad wouldn’t want you struggling.”
“I’m not selling.”
His face changed, got hard.
“You’re choosing this over helping your own son.”
“I’m not choosing anything. I’m keeping what your father and I built.”
“Dusty books over your son’s future. Got it, Mom. Forget it.”
He stood up, grabbed his coat.
“Don’t expect me to be around to watch you struggle. I’m done.”
He left. Didn’t call. Didn’t visit. Two years of silence. I lost Paul. Then I lost Chris, by his own choice.
I ended up completely alone, just like Jennifer. We both lost the people we loved. Both ended up with nobody.
I looked at her sitting there on the floor, this kid who’d survived things she shouldn’t have had to survive, and I saw the timeline, clear as day. Chris and Amanda dated seventeen years ago, maybe sixteen. Jennifer was sixteen now, born after Amanda left. It could be nothing, or it could be everything.
I needed proof, real proof, before I did anything that couldn’t be undone.
That night, after Jennifer went to sleep on the couch in the back office, I sat at the computer upstairs, searched for DNA tests, found a company that did ancestry matching, ordered two kits.
They arrived three days later. Jennifer was restocking the young adult section when I brought them downstairs.
“Hey,” I said. “I got something kind of random.”
She turned around.
“What’s that?”
I held up the boxes.
“Ancestry DNA kits. I read this book about genetics a few weeks ago. Got me curious about my family tree. I ordered two by accident. Want to try it with me?”
She looked at the box.
“Really?”
“Could be fun. See where our families came from.”
“I don’t know much about my family. Just my mom.”
“That’s okay. It might show you something interesting.”
She shrugged.
“Sure. Why not?”
We opened the kits at the counter, read the instructions together. The process was simple: swab your cheek, seal the tube, mail it back. Jennifer did hers first. I watched her spit into the tube, cap it, shake it.
“That’s it?” she asked.
“That’s it.”
I did mine. We packaged them up, walked to the post office together, and dropped them in the mail slot.
“How long does it take?” Jennifer asked.
“Three weeks, maybe four.”
“That’s a long time.”
“Good things take time.”
She smiled, the first real smile I’d seen from her.
We walked back to the bookstore in the November cold. The sun was setting early. The streetlights were already on. Three weeks until I’d know for sure. Three weeks until I’d have proof. And then I’d figure out what to do about Chris.
The waiting started the next morning.
Jennifer showed up at 8:30 with two coffees from Marco’s. Set one on the counter in front of me.
“Thought I’d return the favor,” she said.
It became our routine. Morning coffee. Her behind the register while I unpacked new inventory. Lunch shared in the back office. Her asking questions about books I’d loved. Me learning bits and pieces about who she was.
The first week passed slow. Each day I watched her, looking for more signs, more proof beyond a familiar face and a timeline that fit. She worked hard, never complained, never showed up late.
On Thursday, I found her reading in the poetry section during her break, the same spot she’d been that first day.
“Find something good?” I asked.
She held up the book.
“Mary Oliver. My mom used to read poetry,” she said. “When I was little, before things got bad.”
I sat down on the step stool.
“What was she like before?”
Jennifer’s face softened.
“She was good. Really good. She’d make up voices for different characters when she read to me. She loved books almost as much as I do.”
“Almost,” I said.
A small smile.
“I might love them more.”
“What happened to her? I mean, what changed?”
Jennifer closed the book, ran her finger along the spine.
“I think she was sad. My whole life, probably. Her parents kicked her out when she got pregnant. She was twenty. She tried to make it work, but I don’t think she ever stopped being heartbroken about it.”
Twenty. Same age Amanda was when Chris dated her.
“The drugs started when you were young?”
“Yeah. I remember being maybe five or six, finding needles in the bathroom, not knowing what they were.” She paused. “By the time I was ten, I was the one taking care of her.”
“That’s too much for a kid.”
“I didn’t have a choice.”
She opened the book again, stared at the pages without reading.
“But there were good days. Days when she’d be clean for a week, sometimes two. She’d take me to the library. We’d check out stacks of books. She’d read poetry to me at night.”
“What kind?”
“All kinds. Neruda, Dickinson, Frost. She had this old collection, torn cover, pages falling out. She gave it to me right before…” Jennifer stopped. “Right before things got really bad. Told me to keep it safe.”
“Do you still have it?”
She nodded, reached into her backpack, and pulled out a small book. The cover was held together with tape. Pages yellowed and bent.
“I carried it with me everywhere. On the streets, in the shelters. It’s the only thing I have from her.”
She handed it to me. I opened it carefully. Inside the front cover, written in faded ink:
For my Jennifer, love finds a way.
Mom.
My throat tightened.
“This is beautiful.”
“She wrote that when I was eleven, a few months before she died.”
Jennifer took the book back, held it close.
“Sometimes I read it and try to remember her voice. The way she’d emphasize certain words, make them sound like music.”
“Is that why you write? To remember her?”
“Kind of.” She put the book away. “I write the version of her I wish I’d had. The mom who stayed clean, who took care of me instead of the other way around. It’s stupid.”
“It’s not stupid. It’s survival.”
She looked at me.
“That’s exactly what it is.”
The second week, Jennifer suggested we reorganize the young adult section.
“It’s popular right now,” she said. “If we move it to the front window, more people might come in.”
She was right. We spent two days rearranging. She made little handwritten signs, recommendations for different age groups. Within three days, we’d sold more young adult books than we had all month.
“You’re good at this,” I told her.
She shrugged.
“I just know what I would have wanted when I was younger. A place that felt like it was for me.”
On Wednesday of that week, an older couple came in looking for a book club recommendation. Jennifer suggested a few titles, explained why each one would work. They bought three books and asked if we hosted book clubs.
“Not currently,” I said.
After they left, Jennifer turned to me.
“Could we host a book club?”
“You want to run it?”
“I could try. Once a month, maybe. We could use the space in the back.”
“Let’s do it.”
Her whole face lit up.
“Really?”
“Really.”
She threw herself into planning, made flyers, posted them around the neighborhood. By Friday, six people had signed up.
I watched her with customers that week. She had a way with people, made them feel seen. An older man came in looking for something to read to his grandson. Jennifer spent twenty minutes with him, pulling books, explaining why each one mattered.
“You remind me of my daughter,” he said when he left. “She used to love books like this.”
Jennifer smiled, but after he left, she got quiet.
“You okay?” I asked.
“Yeah.” She restocked a shelf. “It’s just weird. People being nice.”
“You’re not used to it.”
“On the streets, you learn pretty fast who to trust. Most people look through you like you’re not there.” She paused. “In the shelters, it’s worse. Everyone’s so angry, so tired. You keep your head down and stay out of the way.”
“What was the worst part?”
She thought about it.
“The fear, I guess. Never knowing if someone was going to hurt you, take your stuff. I slept in doorways sometimes, library bathrooms, anywhere that felt safe for a few hours.”
“How did you survive?”
“I was careful. Stayed in public places during the day. Avoided certain streets at night.” She looked at me. “I got lucky, mostly. Could have been a lot worse.”
The third week, Jennifer asked me something I wasn’t expecting.
“Why are you doing this?”
We were closing up, counting the register.
“Doing what?”
“Helping me. Letting me stay here. You don’t know me.”
“I’m getting to know you.”
“But why? Most people would have said no. Sent me back to the shelter.”
I stopped counting, looked at her.
“Do you want the truth?”
“Always.”
“I was alone for a long time before you walked in here. This store felt empty. I felt empty.” I folded a twenty-dollar bill, added it to the stack. “You reminded me what this place was supposed to be. A place where people who love books can find each other.”
She was quiet for a moment.
“I keep waiting for you to change your mind. Tell me to leave.”
“I’m not going to do that.”
“People always leave. Or I leave. That’s how it works.”
“Not this time.”
She nodded, didn’t look convinced.
That weekend, I started checking the DNA website multiple times a day, refreshing my email every fifteen minutes.
The results posted on a Monday morning, three weeks and two days after we’d mailed the samples. I saw the notification on my phone while Jennifer was restocking the mystery section. My hands shook when I opened my laptop.
There it was, clear as day.
Granddaughter match: Jennifer Carter.
I stared at the screen, read it again. Again. She was Chris’s daughter. I printed the results. My printer jammed twice before it worked.
“Jennifer.”
My voice sounded strange.
She came around the corner.
“Yeah?”
“Can you come here for a second?”
She walked over, looked at my face.
“What’s wrong?”
“The DNA results are in.”
“Oh.” She brightened. “What did we get?”
I pulled up the website on the laptop, turned it toward her.
“Look at this.”
She leaned in, read the screen. Her face changed—confused first, then shocked.
“Grandmother match…” She looked at me. “I don’t understand. How is this possible?”
I took a breath.
“I have a son. His name is Chris. He’s thirty-eight.”
She stared.
“Seventeen years ago, he dated your mother, Amanda Carter. That summer, she used to come here to meet him. Then she left. Went back to her hometown. I never saw her again.”
Jennifer’s mouth opened, closed.
“You’re saying he’s… your son is my father. But my mom said he was dead.”
“She lied. Probably to protect you.”
Jennifer sat down hard in the desk chair.
“I have a father.”
“Yes. He’s alive.”
“Do you think he knows about me?”
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