In the weeks after Ava’s death, I kept replaying that last ordinary morning, searching for some version where I noticed more, asked more, loved her better in the minutes I had left. But the truth was never hiding in my failures as a mother. It was sitting across from me at our kitchen table, wearing my husband’s face and a grief he helped create.
I used to think betrayal meant late-night texts and hotel receipts. Now I know it can look like a father forgetting the one rule that kept his daughter alive, because he was too busy being someone else’s perfect man. There is no courtroom that can sentence that kind of negligence, no apology that can resurrect a child who trusted the wrong adult. What I have instead is the truth, brutal and unsparing. I speak it for Ava, because silence already cost her everything.
