Our Adopted Daughter Passed Away – A Week Later, My 5-Year-Old Son Said, ‘My Sister Waves Goodnight from That House’

I held my girl tightly, promising her over and over that I loved her and had never stopped loving her.

Tears streamed down my face as I looked at Matt, my rage bubbling over.

“You did this!” I hissed. “You betrayed her. You betrayed me!”

I didn’t hesitate.

I grabbed Emily’s hand and ran home with her, getting Ben up and bundling them into the car. I needed to get my children out of this neighborhood. I needed them safe.

The legal battle that followed was brutal.

The lies Matt and Robin had spun unraveled quickly, especially with Emily’s testimony and the evidence I presented.

In the end, I won full custody of both Emily and Ben. Matt signed the divorce papers, and the biological mother left without pursuing custody further.

“My husband said that this isn’t worth it,” she said outside the courthouse. “He said we should live our lives, not fight to keep our old lives.

Keep her.”

My daughter still has nightmares about that time, but we are healing together. Every night, I tuck my kids into bed, grateful they are safe and are mine.

Life is fragile and often cruel, but love is stronger, isn’t it? Especially as a mother, nothing can come between my children and me.

Not even Matt, the disgusting man who was ready to sell my daughter for the sake of our son.

Some betrayals can never be forgiven.

What would you have done?

If you’ve enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

After losing his wife, Jim finally finds a woman who makes him believe that happiness can be found once again. As Jim navigates the fine line between his daughter and welcoming Emily into his life, he realizes that blending a family isn’t as easy as he thought it would be.

I met Emily three years after my wife’s death. Losing Karen had shattered me.

She was the person that I thought I would grow old with, and more importantly, Karen was the mother of our precious daughter, Amy.

There were days when I thought that I’d never heal from the loss of my wife, but as time went on, I knew that hope would come.

“It’s okay to feel your feelings, Jim,” my mother would say. “But it’s also okay to dream of a new start. Nobody will ever replace Karen.

Not for you, nor for Amy. But it’s okay to want joy.”

And meeting Emily made me feel like it was a fresh start. After a few months of dating, I decided to introduce her to my daughter, who was nine at the time.

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