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I flew to Alaska unannounced and found my daughter slowly slipping away in a silent hospice room, while the man who had once vowed to stand by her side was celebrating his honeymoon beneath the bright Bahamian sun. By the time morning broke, the comfortable future he thought was guaranteed had already started collapsing.

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else.

Not hospice.

Not end-of-life.

Not come quickly.

Three weeks.

My daughter had been dying in Alaska for twenty-one days, and I was only learning about it from a stranger.

“Where is her husband?” I demanded. “Where is Colin?”

Another pause.

This one was worse.

“Mr. Mercer filled out her admission paperwork,” Nora said quietly. “He listed himself as unavailable continue reading …

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