Thirteen years ago, I became a father to a little girl who had lost everything in one terrible night. I built my life around her and loved her as fiercely as if she were my own blood. But recently, one woman—someone I thought I might marry—showed me something that nearly shattered everything. In the end, I had to choose between the woman I loved and the daughter who made me a father.
It began the night Avery came into my life. I was a 26-year-old ER doctor, still figuring out how to survive the chaos of medicine. Just after midnight, two stretchers arrived from a car crash. Sheets had already been pulled over two bodies. And then came the third stretcher—carrying a three-year-old girl with enormous, terrified eyes.
Her parents had died before the ambulance even arrived.
She clung to me—literally. When the nurses tried to take her to a quieter room, Avery grabbed my arm with both hands and whispered, “Please don’t leave me.” I stayed with her. Brought juice. Read a book. Let her tap my ID badge while she processed the worst moment of her life. She didn’t know any relatives. When social services arrived, she still wouldn’t let go of me.
I heard myself say, “I can take her. Just for the night.”
One night became a week. A week became months. And within six months, I adopted her.
From then on, my life revolved around Avery—school pickups, midnight chicken nuggets, soccer games, bad dreams, bubble-tea runs, all of it. She grew into the sharpest, funniest, most stubborn girl I’d ever known. At sixteen, she rolled her eyes at me daily but still checked the bleachers to make sure I was there.
She was my whole heart.
Eventually, I started dating again and met Marisa—a nurse practitioner. She was polished, intelligent, kind to Avery… or so I thought. After eight months together, I was keeping a ring in my nightstand.
Then one evening, Marisa arrived looking frantic, holding out her phone.
“Your daughter is hiding something terrible from you. Look.”
The security footage showed a hooded figure entering my room, opening my safe, and taking cash. The hoodie looked a lot like Avery’s. My stomach dropped. Marisa insisted Avery had been “acting strange.” She wanted me to confront her.