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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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“Mom thought she was burying us, didn’t she?”

I looked at the daughter I had chosen, the little girl who had saved my life with a flash drive hidden inside a stuffed fox.

“She did,” I said.

“But she forgot something?”

I smiled faintly.

“She forgot we were seeds. And when you bury a seed, it grows.”

A year later, I opened Scout House, a residential center for children who had survived coercive control, emotional abuse, and family manipulation. I used my savings, donations, and a grant from the Whitaker Foundation to build it.

It became a place where children learned that silence was not safety. That their voices mattered. That no shadow was stronger than the truth.

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