Two years earlier, Grace had been admitted with a severe infection. I remembered sitting beside her bed until Neil told me she had been declared brain-dead. I trusted him.
When I confronted Dr. Peterson, he revealed the truth: Grace had never been legally declared brain-dead. There had been signs of neurological response—small but real. Recovery wasn’t guaranteed, but it wasn’t hopeless either. Neil had requested to be the primary decision-maker and later arranged to transfer her to a private facility, claiming he would inform me once she stabilized.
He never did.
Instead, he told me she had di:ed.
When I confronted him at home, he finally admitted it. After her illness, Grace had cognitive delays and needed therapy and special schooling. It would have been expensive. He claimed I was too fragile to handle it. So he made a decision.
He secretly arranged for another family to take her.
He had our living daughter adopted out while telling me she was d3ad.
He said he was protecting me. That she “wasn’t the same.” That we could move forward.
What he really did was abandon her because she wasn’t convenient anymore.
Grace later told me that the people she lived with dismissed her memories of me. They kept her mostly indoors, made her do chores, and insisted she was confused whenever she talked about her old life. Eventually, fragments of memory returned clearly enough that she remembered her school. She stole money, took a taxi, and found her way back to the only place that still had her photo on record.
She found me.