Thirteen years ago, I became a father to a three-year-old girl who lost everything in a single night. I raised her, loved her, and built my life around her. I never imagined I’d one day be forced to choose between the woman I planned to marry and the daughter who had already chosen me as her safe place. I met Avery during a graveyard shift in the ER. Her parents were brought in under sheets. She arrived behind them—wide-eyed, shaking, alone. When staff tried to wheel her away, she clung to my arm and whispered, “Please don’t leave me.”
So I stayed. I read her a children’s book with a happy ending, because she needed to believe those still existed. Social services said she’d go into foster care. I asked to take her home “just for tonight.” One night became months of background checks, classes, and home visits. Six months later, I adopted her. I rearranged my life—steady shifts, school pickups, midnight chicken nuggets, nightmares soothed with a stuffed rabbit named Mr. Hopps. Avery grew into a sharp, funny teenager who pretended not to care when I cheered too loudly but always looked for me in the stands. She was my whole heart.
