“I treated you so cruelly,” I choked. “Yesterday, I—”
“You were scared,” she said gently. “You were sixteen. And yesterday… you were still scared.”
There was no bitterness in her voice.
Just understanding.
She had grown into a woman with strength I didn’t have at her age. A heart big enough to hold compassion for the mother who had abandoned her.
The transplant happened two weeks later.
She didn’t ask for anything in return. No apology. No recognition. No place in our family.
She just showed up. Again and again. Sitting by Lily’s bedside. Reading her stories. Holding her tiny hand.
Lily adores her.
Ethan follows her around like she’s a hero.
And Daniel…
Daniel has forgiven me. But he made something very clear.
“You don’t get to erase people because they remind you of your shame,” he said quietly one night. “You face it. Or it owns you forever.”
