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MY HUSBAND AND I ADOPTED A 10-YEAR-OLD GIRL — WHEN MY FATHER SAW HER FOR THE FIRST TIME, HE TURNED PALE AND WHISPERED, “YOU?… THIS CAN’T BE REAL.”

articleUseronMay 8, 2026

Our attorney tracked Diane to a small apartment over a laundromat.

Same birth year.

Same scar under the chin.

Same intake photo.

When Lily was finally allowed inside to see the page, she stared at it and whispered, “That’s me.”

Our attorney tracked Diane to a small apartment over a laundromat.

I still don’t know if bringing Lily there was the right choice. I only know that after so many adults had decided things over her head, I could not stand the idea of excluding her again.

“She should have been told the truth years ago.”

When Diane opened the door and saw Lily, her face fell apart.

She said, “You shouldn’t be here.”

Ben answered, “She should have been told the truth years ago.”

Inside, Diane tried to dodge for maybe a minute. Then she sat down and started crying.

Years earlier, Mara had been living in a badly run children’s home during a winter outbreak. Another girl around the same age died. Her records were a mess. In the confusion, Mara’s file was wrongly closed as though she had died too.

“You let a living child stay dead on paper?”

I said, “So you corrected it.”

Diane shook her head. “No.”

My father looked furious. “You let a living child stay dead on paper?”

“The home was already under investigation,” Diane said. “If the mistake came out, Mara would have been trapped in hearings and emergency transfers. I told myself I was protecting her.”

“You erased her,” I said.

Then Lily spoke.

She nodded, sobbing. “I used the abandoned file of another child named Lily. I attached Mara’s photo and medical notes to it and transferred her out before the old home shut down.”

The room went silent.

I asked, “And the girl who died?”

Diane covered her mouth. “She was buried under Mara’s name. I never found out her real name. That is the part I will never forgive myself for.”

That changed everything.

Then Lily spoke.

“What was my real name?”

Diane looked at her. “Mara. Your mother called you Mara.”

Lily blinked. “I had a mother?”

“Yes.”

That changed everything.

Ben and I turned our dining table into a command center. Files. Notes. Timelines. Dates. Lily helped too. She offered small scraps of memory.

One memory led to an old neighbor from Mara’s first neighborhood.

“A yellow kitchen.”

“Cinnamon toast.”

“A song about sunshine.”

“A woman with red work shoes.”

One memory led to an old neighbor from Mara’s first neighborhood. The neighbor remembered the red shoes because Mara’s mother wore them to wait tables at a diner.

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