My sister’s sudden death left her seven-year-old daughter with no one but me. I begged my husband to adopt her, but he refused, insisting we could not take responsibility for another child. Heartbroken and powerless, I watched my niece leave with a social worker, carrying a small backpack and looking back at me one last time. That moment stayed with me for years.
Soon afterward, we moved away, but I never stopped thinking about her. Every birthday, every holiday, I wondered where she was, whether she was safe, and if she blamed me for not fighting harder. Fourteen years passed, yet the guilt and heartbreak never truly disappeared.
Then one evening, there was a knock at our door. Standing on the porch was a young woman who looked so much like my sister that I could barely breathe. It was my niece. Instead of anger or accusations, she greeted me with a smile and handed me a wedding invitation.
As tears filled my eyes, she told me that my children and I were the only family she had left and that she wanted us beside her on her special day. Then she asked my husband to walk her down the aisle. Overcome with emotion, he immediately said yes. In that moment, I learned that forgiveness can heal wounds time could never erase, and that love can survive even the longest separation