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My new wife’s seven-year-old daughter burst into tears every time we were left alone together. Whenever I gently asked her what was wrong, she would only shake her head silently. My wife would just laugh it off and say, “She simply doesn’t like you.”

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The first time Harper cried when we were alone together, I told myself she was only overwhelmed by the sudden weight of a new life.

That was the easy explanation. The gentle one. The kind adults reach for when a child stands in front of them with shining eyes, stiff shoulders, and a face too controlled for someone so young….

I had married her mother only three weeks earlier. Harper was seven, old enough to understand that everything around her had changed, but too young to have any say in it.

A new man in the hallway.

A new name on school forms.

A new adult promising he would stay, when life may have already taught her that promises were fragile things.

I was an ER nurse in the trauma unit at University of Colorado Hospital. I had spent years learning to recognize pain before people found the words for it. I knew the wide-eyed panic of accident victims, the hollow silence of abuse survivors, the strange way fear could live inside a body long after danger had passed.

I thought I understood people.

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