It was a stormy night at Fire Station #14โthe kind where wind rattled the windows and silence settled heavy between emergency calls. I was midway through my shift, sharing coffee and conversation with my partner Joe, when we heard something unusual: a faint cry just beyond the bay doors.
We stepped outside into the cold night and followed the sound until Joe spotted itโa small basket tucked close to the station wall. Inside was a newborn, no more than a few days old, wrapped in a thin blanket, cheeks red from the wind. As I picked him up, his tiny hand gripped my finger, and in that instant, something changed in me.
We immediately contacted Child Protective Services, and they took over from there. They named him โBaby Boy Doe.โ But I couldnโt forget his faceโor the way it felt when he held onto me. I called every week to check in, hoping for news.
Then one day, Joe asked what had been on my mind for weeks: โYou thinking about adopting him?โ
The road to adoption wasnโt easy. As a single firefighter working unpredictable hours, the process was full of challengesโpaperwork, interviews, home visits. But I couldnโt walk away. That baby had been left at our station for a reason. When no one came forward to claim him, I stepped up.

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