A Promise Made in a Hospital Room
1979 — The Silence After Love
In 1979, Richard Miller’s life had fallen into silence.
At just thirty-four years old, he was already a widower. His wife, Anne, had passed away two years earlier after a long illness that drained not only her strength, but the warmth from their home. The house that once carried dreams of children now echoed with emptiness.
Evenings were the hardest.
Richard would sit alone at the kitchen table beneath the dim yellow glow of a single light bulb, staring at the peeling wallpaper while the ticking clock mocked the slow passage of time. Friends encouraged him to remarry, to “start over,” to move on with his life.
But Richard had no desire to replace what he had lost.
He still carried the final words Anne whispered from her hospital bed:
“Don’t let love die with me. Give it somewhere to go.”
At the time, he had no idea where that love would lead him.
The Rainy Night That Changed Everything
St. Mary’s Orphanage
One cold, rain-soaked evening, Richard’s old pickup truck broke down near St. Mary’s Orphanage on the edge of town.
He stepped inside simply to use the phone.
But before he could ask for help, he heard something else.
Crying.
Not one cry.
Many.
For illustrative purposes only
He followed the sound down a dim hallway and into a cramped nursery lined with rows of tiny cribs.
Inside them were nine baby girls.