My daughter was gone in a crash caused by a teenage boy. In court, he cried and took the blame, and I chose to adopt him instead of destroying his life. For years, we became a family. But on my birthday, he revealed a truth I was never meant to hear.
My daughter, Sarah, was 11 when a car came through an intersection and took her from me. She had her whole life mapped out in that funny, confident way kids do.
She wanted to be a veterinarian. She kept a list of dog names in a notebook she carried everywhere.
A car came through an intersection and took her from me.
The boy who was driving was 17. An orphan named Michael, coming back from a sports competition with a few friends.
In court, he just cried and said it had been a terrible mistake, and that he’d never forgive himself for it.
I believed him. Looking at his face across that courtroom, I felt something I hadn’t expected: I didn’t want to ruin him.
Not because I didn’t love Sarah. God, I loved her more than I have words for.
But breaking that boy wasn’t going to bring her back.
So I did the thing that made everyone in my life think I’d lost my mind. I dropped the charges and adopted Michael, and in doing so, I lost almost everything else.
But breaking that boy wasn’t going to bring her back.
My wife left immediately. She said she couldn’t live under the same roof as the boy connected to Sarah’s passing.
I understood that. My brother stopped returning my calls. My mother cried every time she saw Michael and then apologized for crying.
