“I’ll take them,” he said.
A Decision the World Didn’t Understand
The paperwork became a battlefield.
Social workers called it reckless.
Relatives called it foolish.
Neighbors whispered behind curtains.
“What’s a white man doing with nine black babies?”
Some said worse.
Richard refused to waver.
He sold his truck.
Anne’s jewelry.
Even his own tools.
He worked extra shifts at the factory.
Patched roofs on weekends.
Took night shifts at a diner.
Every dollar went to formula, diapers, and supplies.
He built their cribs by hand.
Boiled bottles on the stove.
Hung endless laundry across the yard like battle flags.
At night, he lay awake counting nine sets of breathing in the dark, terrified of losing even one.
Learning Fatherhood from Scratch
He learned which lullaby calmed which baby.
He taught himself to braid hair with clumsy fingers.
He memorized the rhythm of their cries.
The outside world judged him harshly.
Mothers at school whispered suspicions.
Strangers in grocery stores stared.
Once, a man spat at his feet and sneered, “You’ll regret this.”
But regret never came.
Instead came the first time all nine laughed at once — filling the house with music.
Stormy nights when the power failed and he held them close until they fell asleep in his arms.
Birthdays with crooked cakes.
Christmas mornings with gifts wrapped in old newspaper.
To outsiders, they were the “Miller Nine.”
To Richard, they were simply his daughters.
Nine Girls, Nine Stories
Each grew into her own light.
Sarah with the loudest laugh.
Ruth clinging shyly to his shirt.
Naomi and Esther staging mischievous cookie raids.
Leah with tender kindness.
Mary with quiet strength.
Hannah, Rachel, and Deborah inseparable and endlessly chatty.
Money was always tight.
His body wore down from endless shifts.
But he never let despair show.
To his daughters, he was strong.
And their belief made him stronger.