“THE MAN ON TV USED TO PICK ME UP FROM SCHOOL”

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When my son was 5 or 6, he used to call a news anchor on TV “Daddy!”

My wife would smile and say that kids live in their own world.

Years later, the same guy was on TV.

I joked, “Come see your TV dad!” My son turned pale. He turned to me and said, “Dad, this man is… the one who used to pick me up from school.”

I laughed. “What are you talking about? I picked you up from school. Or your mom. No one else.”

He didn’t laugh with me. He looked serious. Scared even.

“I thought it was you… when I was little. But I remember now. He used to say he was helping you. That you were busy at work.”

I felt a lump in my throat. “What do you mean he picked you up?”

He nodded slowly. “A few times. Not every day. He had a black car. He gave me candy.”

My wife, Meira, was in the kitchen. I called her in. Told her everything. Her eyes widened.

“Are you saying someone else picked him up?” she asked, barely above a whisper.

I turned back to my son—Kien. He was seventeen now. Confident, level-headed. Not the kind of kid who made up stories. He wasn’t grinning. He wasn’t playing. His hands were shaking.

“Why are you only remembering this now?” I asked, not accusing him—just… trying to make sense of it.

“I don’t know. I saw his face, and something clicked. I remembered the smell of his car. Mint and… cigarettes.”

We sat in silence for a moment.

I picked up my laptop, searched the guy’s name. Lars Deylan, a local anchor. I never thought much of him before—generic smile, overly perfect hair, always wearing suits a little too tight.

His bio popped up. “Award-winning journalist. Former foster youth advocate. Father of two.” Blah blah blah.

Then something caught my eye. In 2010—around the time Kien would’ve been in kindergarten—Lars did a segment on school safety and “unauthorized child pickup cases.”

What the hell?

I emailed the school to check if anyone else had ever been listed on Kien’s authorized pickup list. Just us. No Lars. No one resembling him.

But how would a stranger get access to our kid? Why would he?

We went to the police. They asked Kien to give a full account. He didn’t remember exact dates, but he recalled two specific afternoons.

One detail hit me like a punch: “He told me you were stuck in a meeting and asked me not to tell Mom because it’d make her worried.”

They pulled some old surveillance footage from the school—yes, they still had archives from that year, miraculously. No clear face, but there was a black Volvo seen pulling up near the side exit, where some kids snuck out for pick-up shortcuts.

Still, the police said without a direct accusation or clear evidence, there was little they could do. Lars had a clean record. No complaints. No charges.

That’s when something unexpected happened.

Meira sat me down that night. “I think I need to tell you something. About when I was pregnant with Kien.”

I stared at her.

She continued, “You remember I volunteered at that community journalism workshop, right? The one downtown? Lars was a guest speaker. We got close. Not that close—but… there was one night. We were both drinking. I don’t think it meant anything. I honestly didn’t even think about it again. Until now.”

My stomach dropped. “Are you saying Lars could be…?”

She shook her head. “I don’t know. I never told you because I thought it was just a dumb mistake. But if he thought—if he suspected—I don’t know. Maybe he was trying to see if Kien looked like him.”

Everything started swirling together in my head. What if Lars did think Kien was his? What if he was trying to… what? Secretly be involved?

I reached out to Lars directly. Sent a message through a burner email. Told him someone came forward claiming he picked up a child under false pretenses, years ago, and we were gathering information.

He never responded.

But a week later, he announced his resignation from the network. “To spend more time with family,” he said during his last segment. His face never wavered. That same polished expression.

The police didn’t pursue it. There just wasn’t enough.

But we knew.

Meira and I sat Kien down again and told him the truth—at least what we could piece together. He took it better than I expected. He even joked, “Guess I really did have a TV dad.”

We offered to get a DNA test. He said he didn’t need it.

“You raised me,” he said. “That’s all I need to know.”

And honestly, that broke me a little.

Because yeah, I wasn’t sure if I’d been lied to for 17 years… but the way he said that, it reminded me what really mattered.

It didn’t matter how things began. It mattered who showed up every day. Who stayed when it was hard. Who sat with him through fevers, heartbreaks, and science projects.

It mattered who loved him.

Family isn’t always about blood. Sometimes it’s about who chooses to be there—even when it’s hard, even when you don’t have all the answers.

If this story hit home, share it with someone who’s been there. And remember to like the post—it helps others find it too.

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