My daughter, Sarah, was 11 when a car came through an intersection and took her from me. She had her whole life mapped out in that funny, confident way kids do.
She wanted to be a veterinarian. She kept a list of dog names in a notebook she carried everywhere.
A car came through an intersection and took her from me.
The boy who was driving was 17. An orphan named Michael, coming back from a sports competition with a few friends.
In court, he just cried and said it had been a terrible mistake, and that he’d never forgive himself for it.
I believed him. Looking at his face across that courtroom, I felt something I hadn’t expected: I didn’t want to ruin him.
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