My brotherโs voice didnโt tremble that night, even though I know now he mustโve been terrified.
“Mom and Dad had a dream,” he said, sitting on that squeaky foster home mattress, โand just because theyโre goneโฆ doesnโt mean their dream has to die too.โ
He was only nine. Nine. But in that moment, he sounded older than most grown men Iโve met.
โThey wanted that cafรฉ to become something real. A place where people could feel at home.โ
My sister, Alenna, nodded slowly, still cradling my hand. โWeโll bring it back one day. All three of us.โ
We sealed that promise with our pinkies.
The years after that werenโt easy. We bounced around different foster homes for a while before ending up with a woman named Marla who ran a small bookstore and believed in second chances. She wasnโt warm exactly, but she was consistentโand after what weโd been through, that was enough.
My brother, Sayer, started working part-time as soon as he was legally allowed. Heโd bike to the grocery store at 5 a.m., bag groceries before school, then come home to help with dinner. Alenna tutored younger kids in math for pocket change. And I… I just tried to keep up.
We didnโt talk about the cafรฉ every day. But it was always there. A silent compass.
In high school, Sayer took a culinary arts class. At first, it seemed random, but I figured it out laterโhe was chasing pieces of Dad. His handwriting on the old recipes, the smell of his late-night experiments with cardamom or mint. Sayer wanted to remember through creation.
Alenna got into community college, studying business. She printed spreadsheets for fun. Yeah, she was that kind of person. We teased her, but deep down, we knew she was our best shot at making the dream real one day.
As for meโI drew. Mostly on napkins, old paper bags, the margins of notebooks. Logos, menus, chairs, floor plans. I didnโt even realize it, but I was designing our future without knowing it.
By the time I turned 19, everything changed.
Sayer had finished culinary school. He was working under a head chef in a downtown bistro, and they loved him. Alenna got offered a small startup loan through a youth business program. And me? I was offered a free internship at a local branding agency.
We took a deep breath and did something crazyโwe rented a crumbling old shop space at the edge of town. It had mold in the walls and paint peeling like sunburnt skin. But the rent was cheap, and the windows were massive.
That space became ours.
We scrubbed, painted, hammered. Sayer slept in the back room some nights, waking up early to test recipes. Alenna handled the business licenses, permits, inspections. I worked on the brandโlogo, menu design, the sign out front. I called it “Kindred Grounds.”
We opened three months later.
The first few days? Dead. Maybe three customers total. But Sayer had this chocolate chili scone that made people pause. Then they came back. And brought friends.
A food blogger stumbled in by accident and wrote a piece that went viral locally. Suddenly, we had a line on Saturday mornings.
Kindred Grounds became a little refuge. Elderly couples sipping tea at the window. Students cramming for finals. A man proposed to his girlfriend during open mic night. It was everything we imaginedโand more.
About two years after we opened, Marla came by. She never asked for credit or recognition, but I saw her eyes mist over when she stepped in and saw what weโd built.
โThis place,โ she whispered, โfeels like itโs been here forever.โ
I squeezed her hand. โThatโs kind of the point.โ
Iโll never forget the night we hung up our parentsโ old photo in the cafรฉ. It was taken when the original shop opened. They’re both grinningโaprons stained, eyes full of wild hope.
I stood there for a while after the customers left, just staring at them.
We had done it.
Weโd taken nothingโand built the dream they never got to finish.
If thereโs one thing Iโve learned through all of this, itโs this:
You donโt have to come from money, or safety, or even certainty. You just need people who believe in something bigger than themselves.
We were just three scared kids once. But we had love. And a promise.
That was enough.
If this story touched you, please like and share itโsomeone out there might just need to believe that their dream isnโt over yet.




