But the request reached the desk of Warden Robert Mitchell, a 60-year-old veteran who had overseen more executions than he cared to remember. Something about Daniel’s case had always unsettled him. The evidence had seemed airtight—his fingerprints on the weapon, blood on his clothes, a neighbor claiming to see him leaving the house that night.
Yet Daniel’s eyes never looked like those of a killer.
After a long pause, Mitchell gave the order. “Bring the child.”
Three hours later, a white state vehicle pulled into the prison lot. A social worker stepped out, holding the hand of an eight-year-old girl with blonde hair and solemn blue eyes.
Emily Foster walked through the prison corridor without crying. Without trembling. Inmates fell silent as she passed.
When she entered the visitation room, Daniel was shackled to the table, thinner than she remembered, wearing a faded orange jumpsuit.
“My baby girl…” he whispered, tears filling his eyes.
Emily stepped forward slowly. She didn’t run. She didn’t cry.
She hugged him.
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