A single teacher adopted two abandoned twins and raised them to become students at a prestigious university. Unexpectedly, 22 years later, she received a painful ending.
Ms. Hanh, a middle school literature teacher in a small town, has lived alone since her parents passed away. Unmarried, she always thought her single life was enough with students, books, and afternoons standing in the sunlight looking at the school yard covered with royal poinciana trees.
One winter morning that year, while returning from the market past the old pagoda, she heard a faint cry. Hidden behind a thick bamboo bush were two newborn boys, roughly wrapped in a ragged cloth. Beside them was only a small cloth bag, inside were a few old clothes and a piece of paper with the words scrawled: “Please, if anyone is kind enough, please take care of them. We cannot keep them. Sorry.”
Without informing the police or asking anyone, Mrs. Hanh brought the two children home as an instinctive reflex. She named them Minh and Phuc — two words she longed for: a bright and peaceful life.
Life became more difficult than ever. A teacher’s meager salary was not enough to support two growing children. She worked extra hours tutoring, selling cakes in the evenings, and typing documents for the education department.
But she never complained. On nights when Minh had a high fever and on mornings when Phuc cried for his mother, she held them both in her arms and whispered:
“It’s me, it’s me, Hanh. No one will leave you again…”
Time passed. Minh was good at math, Phuc loved painting. The two boys grew up obedient, loved their mother, and knew she had a hard life, so they always tried to study hard. Even though they had no household registration or clear papers, Mrs. Hanh still persevered, asking for help step by step so that the two boys could go to school like other children.
When they were in 12th grade, they both passed the university entrance exam — Minh went to the University of Science and Technology, Phuc to the University of Architecture. Mrs. Hanh was both proud and worried: “When you go to Hanoi, remember to take care of yourself. I won’t be there for you.”
Then they left her. At first, they called once a week. Then it gradually decreased, and then it was just text messages wishing her a happy holiday and a New Year. She thought, “They are grown up now, they are just busy with school.”
She didn’t know that a tall, well-dressed man had been sitting quietly on a park bench near her house one rainy afternoon. He looked up at the second-floor window – where Minh and Phuc’s desk lamps had shone through the old curtains – and then quietly pulled out his phone.
“I found them. The boys are still alive. She raised them…”
One September morning, as Ms. Hanh was leaving the school gate, she saw two strangers waiting for her. They presented her with papers and an old photo.
“We are Minh and Phuc’s biological parents. We have come to reclaim custody and claim our children.”
She seemed not to hear clearly. Her heart felt as if someone was squeezing it. She stammered:
“You… abandoned them. I raised them since birth. Now you say… you want them back?”
The woman was silent. The man looked at her frankly:
“We were too poor back then to afford to raise them. But now we have a stable life. They are our own children. The law will be on our side.”
Then they left, leaving behind a request for DNA confirmation.
A week later, Minh and Phuc returned. Seeing them again after almost a year, Mrs. Hanh burst into tears and hugged them. But the two children seemed distant, their eyes avoiding each other.
“Mom… they are our biological parents. They want us back. They… are suffering too.”
She was speechless. All those years of going alone to apply for scholarships, old uniforms, and waiting at the university gate to see her son, were now just her past.
Two months later, the court approved the biological parents’ request. The two brothers were officially allowed to change their household registration, get their old names back, and move in with their new family.
No goodbyes.
Not a hug.
Not even a glance back.
One late winter afternoon, Mrs. Hanh reopened a wooden box filled with old photos. A photo of her third birthday with a homemade cake. A photo of the two of them studying at the old desk. A photo of the Mid-Autumn Festival lantern procession…
The last photo is of her standing silently watching from a distance at their graduation, taken by a hastily hired photographer.
“Perhaps, being a mother… is not just about blood. It is a lifetime of sacrifice without expecting anything in return.”
Mrs. Hanh sighed softly, then folded the photo and put it away in the box. Outside, the first snow of the season began to fall. But in her heart, winter had come a long time ago…
If you would like me to adapt this story into a short film script or a short story for publication, I can assist. You can also request a voiceover if needed.
News
VIDEO: Megan Rapinoe’s Girlfriend, Sue Bird, Caught In Coldplay Scandal/hi
Sue Bird is hilarious. Megan Rapinoe and Sue decided to get in on the fun by reenacting the Coldplay kiss…
The Teacher Who Never Married Adopted a Student Who Had One Leg Amputated — 20 Years Later, It Brought the Entire Nation to Tears…/hi
The Teacher Who Never Married Took in an Abandoned One-Legged Student — 20 Years Later, That Boy Moved Millions to…
Angel Reese SNAPS Over Sophie Cunningham’s Sold-Out Merch: ‘Y’all Love the Blonde Barbie Image, Huh?!’ — WNBA Tension ERUPTS On and Off the Court!/hi
Angel Reese, the outspoken and fiercely competitive forward for the Chicago Sky, has never been one to hold back—and this…
Nancy Lieberman DESTROYS Jeff Teague On Live TV: ‘You Clearly Don’t Know Greatness!’ — Explosive Clash Over Caitlin Clark Leaves Studio in Silence!/hi
In a fiery moment that instantly broke the internet and sent shockwaves through the world of basketball punditry, Hall of…
Sophie Cunningham has revealed the shocking truth after being hit by a $3x toy at Fever Game/hi
A sex toy thrown during a WNBA game landed on a body part of Sophie Cunningham, who had previously criticized such behavior….
He Married Me Without Touching Me—Then I Found a Hidden Room With Another Woman…./hi
From the outside, our marriage looked perfect. People envied us. Our wedding was small but elegant—hosted at a private estate…
End of content
No more pages to load