Part3: After My Wife D/i/e/d, I Threw Her Daughter Out Because She Wasn’t My Blood — Ten Years Later, the Truth That Emerged Shattered My Heart

“I’m Dr. Sophie Bennett, from Northwest Genetic Services,” she said. “We’ve been working on a DNA case involving you and Ava.”

I felt the ground shift beneath me.

“She’s alive?” I asked.

Sophie nodded.

“Yes. But she’s very ill. She has advanced kidney failure. She needs a transplant.”

My throat went dry.

“And you’re a match,” she added softly.

I shook my head, confused.

“That doesn’t make sense,” I said. “She’s not my biological daughter.”

Sophie held my gaze.

“Yes,” she said quietly. “She is.”

Everything went silent.

Ten years of certainty—gone in an instant.

The letters… the assumption… the anger…

All wrong.

I hadn’t cast out someone else’s child.

I had abandoned my own.

I don’t remember the drive to the hospital.

I only remember standing outside her room, staring through the glass.

A pale young woman lay on the bed, machines humming softly around her.

But I knew her.

Even after all those years…

I knew her.

Ava.

A nurse spoke beside me.

“She was found at a bus station years ago,” she said gently. “A couple took her in. Raised her. She became a teacher.”

My chest ached.

“She didn’t want to contact anyone,” the nurse added. “She just said… if something happened, try to find her father.”

When I walked into the room, she opened her eyes.

For a long moment, we just looked at each other.

Then she smiled.

“Dad,” she whispered.

“I knew you’d come.”

I fell to my knees beside her.

“I’m so sorry,” I choked. “I was wrong. I was cruel. I didn’t understand. Please… forgive me.”

She shook her head gently.

“Don’t cry,” she said softly. “I just wanted to see you again.”

I agreed to the transplant immediately.

“Take whatever you need,” I told the doctors. “Just save her.”

The surgery lasted hours.

When I woke up, the doctor smiled.

“It was successful. You’re both stable.”

For the first time in years, I cried—not from pain, but from hope.

But hope didn’t last.

Days later, complications set in.

My body struggled.

Her body fought infection.

Then… she slipped into a coma.

I sat by her side, hour after hour, whispering apologies she might never hear.

Until one morning—

“Dad…”

Her voice was faint.

But it was real.

I rushed to her side.

“I’m here,” I whispered. “I’m not going anywhere.”

She smiled, weak but peaceful.

“Just live well,” she said. “That’s enough for me.”

We spent weeks recovering together.

Talking. Laughing quietly. Relearning each other.

I brushed her hair. Brought her food. Sat beside her like I should have all along.

It felt like we had been given a second chance.

But some things don’t heal in time.

One morning, I reached for her hand…

and it was still.

Too still.

She was gone.

I buried her beside Emily.

On her grave, I wrote:

“My daughter—who taught me what love truly means.”

Now, I live quietly.

The house is still the same.

But I am not.

I planted roses by the porch—the kind she loved.

Every morning, when they bloom in the sunlight, I think of her smile.

I spend my days helping children who have nowhere to go.

Not to erase what I did.

That can’t be erased.

But to honor who she was.

Sometimes, when the wind moves through the garden, I imagine I hear her voice:

“It’s okay, Dad.”

And for the first time in years…

I believe it.

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