Daniel hesitated. That hesitation was a knife in my heart.
“I knew… I knew she had done things before,” he whispered. “To the pets. When we were kids. If a dog was sick, or a cat wasn’t acting right… she fixed it. She always said she was ‘saving them from suffering’.”
I covered my mouth to stifle a scream. He knew. He had grown up with a woman who viewed mercy killing as a household chore, and he had left me and our newborn son alone with her.
“I should have stopped her,” Daniel wailed. “I saw her looking at the cart. I saw her mood change. I knew that look. But I was… I was afraid of her.”
I listened through the glass, tears streaming down my face, hot and angry. And amidst the pain, I realized something terrifying and clarifying all at once.
My son didn’t die because of a tragic accident. He didn’t die because of SIDS or a medical anomaly.
He died because the people closest to him—his grandmother, his aunt, his father—decided, through action or inaction, that he shouldn’t live.
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