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I Adopted My Best Friend’s Daughter After Her Sudden Death – When the Girl Turned 18, She Told Me, ‘You Need to Pack Your Things!’

articleUseronMay 11, 2026

My name’s Anna, and I grew up in an orphanage. I slept in a room with seven other girls. Some got adopted. Some aged out. But we stayed… my best friend, Lila, and I.

We weren’t friends because we chose each other; we were friends because we survived each other. We promised ourselves that someday we’d have the kind of family we’d only seen in movies.

We both aged out at 18. Lila got a job at a call center. I started waitressing at an all-night diner. We shared a studio apartment with mismatched furniture from yard sales and a bathroom so small you had to sit sideways on the toilet. But it was our only place where nobody could tell us to leave.

Three years later, Lila came home from a party looking like she’d seen a ghost.

“I’m pregnant,” she announced, standing in our doorway at 2 a.m. “And Jake’s not answering my calls.”

Jake, the guy she’d been seeing for four months, blocked her number the next day. No family to call. No parents to lean on. Just me.

I held her hand through every doctor’s appointment, every ultrasound, and every 3 a.m. panic attack. I was there in the delivery room when baby Miranda was born, watching Lila transform from a terrified girl to an exhausted mother in eight hours.

“She’s perfect,” Lila whispered, holding the tiny screaming thing against her chest. “Look at her, Anna. She’s beautiful.”

Miranda had dark hair and Lila’s exact nose. She was beautiful in a wrinkled, angry newborn way.

“We did well,” Lila said through tears.

For five years, we made it work. Lila got a better job doing medical billing. I picked up extra shifts whenever Miranda needed new shoes or had a birthday coming up.

We figured out how to be a family… the three of us against a world that never promised us anything.

Miranda called me “Aunt Anna” and climbed into my lap during movie nights. She’d fall asleep on my shoulder, drooling on my shirt, and I’d carry her to bed thinking this was probably what happiness felt like.

Then, that fateful day came.

Lila was driving to work when a delivery truck ran a red light. The impact killed her instantly. The officer who told me said, “She didn’t suffer,” like that was supposed to help.

Miranda was five years old. She kept asking when her mommy was coming back.

“She’s not, sweetheart,” I’d say, and she’d ask again 20 minutes later.

Social services came three days after we buried Lila. A woman with a clipboard sat across from me at our kitchen table.

“There’s no one willing or able to take custody of Miranda.”

“What happens to her?”

“She’ll enter the foster system…”

“No.” The word came out harder than I meant it to. “She’s not going into the system.”

“Are you related to the child?”

“I’m her godmother.”

“That’s not a legal designation.”

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