The morning Ava, my four-year-old daughter, got sick started like any other weekday.
She sat at the kitchen counter in pink pajamas, swinging her legs while making her stuffed rabbit “talk” to me in a tiny squeaky voice.
“Mommy,” she said seriously through the rabbit, “Mr. Bun-Bun says, ‘You work too much.’”
I laughed despite being stressed. “Mr. Bun-Bun should get a job so he can help me.”
Ava giggled so hard she almost dropped her fork!
I laughed despite being stressed.
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***
I was supposed to take Ava to daycare that morning, as I always did, but my office had moved up an important meeting at the last minute.
My husband, Mark, grabbed his car keys from the counter. “I can take her. It’s on my way.”
“You sure?” I asked.
“Emily, it’s daycare drop-off, not brain surgery.”
Ava raised her rabbit proudly. “Daddy can do it!”
I kissed the top of my daughter’s head. “I’ll pick you up later, okay?”
“Can we get nuggets after?”
“You already know the answer.”
“Yesss!” she said happily.
That was the last normal conversation I ever had with my daughter.
“I can take her. It’s on my way.”
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***
A few hours later, my phone rang while I was at work.
It was Miss Greenwood, Ava’s daycare teacher, and the second I heard the panic in her voice, I knew something was wrong.
“Mrs. Carter,” she said quickly without greeting, “Ava suddenly became very sick during class! The ambulance has already taken her to the hospital!” Then Miss Greenwood gave me the name of the hospital.
I was out the door before she finished speaking!
I knew something was wrong.
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***
Mark met me at the hospital entrance, looking pale and shaken.
“She’s gonna be okay,” he kept saying.
I believed him because I had to.
After 40 horrific minutes in the waiting room, the doctor walked toward us with that expression people only wear when they’re about to change your life forever.
“I’m very sorry,” he said gently. “She had a severe allergic reaction. We did everything we could. But she didn’t make it.”
I just stared at him.
Because none of it made sense.
Ava had been perfectly fine that morning.
“She’s gonna be okay.”
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***
The days that followed barely felt real.
I had no strength left and didn’t know how to keep living because my heart was shattered.
People filled our house with flowers and casseroles. My sister Jenna stayed with me because she was worried I wouldn’t sleep. She was right.
Meanwhile, Mark handled everything.
The funeral home, the church, and the paperwork.
Every time someone asked me a question, my husband answered on my behalf.
At the time, I thought he was protecting me.
I didn’t know the truth yet.
Mark handled everything.
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***
Those first few days after we lost Ava, I kept replaying that morning in my head, trying to understand how my healthy little girl could suddenly become so sick.
One night after the funeral home meeting, I finally mustered the strength to ask Mark directly.
“Did Ava eat anything unusual at school?”
My husband shook his head immediately. “Not anything I know of. Just her normal breakfast, like I told the school and paramedics.”
Then he sat beside me on the couch and took my hand.
“Emily, please don’t do this to yourself. The doctors said these reactions can happen fast.”
I kept replaying that morning in my head.
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At that time, I thought he was on my side.
Looking back now, I realize he answered too quickly, as if he’d already rehearsed the lie.
***
Five days after the funeral, I sat alone in the living room, barely moving, wearing the same oversized sweatshirt I’d slept in for two straight days. I hadn’t eaten in days because Jenna had to return to work.
The house felt painfully quiet without Ava.
No cartoons, toys on the floor, or a tiny voice asking for apple juice.
Then my phone rang.
It was Miss Greenwood again.
I thought he was on my side.
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