Meanwhile, Emily had stopped speaking entirely after the prison visit. At the state children’s home where she had lived for six months under the guardianship of her uncle Michael, she communicated only through drawings.
One drawing stood out.
It showed a house. A woman on the floor. A man in a blue shirt standing over her. And another small figure hiding in the hallway.
Daniel had never owned a blue shirt.
Michael wore them constantly.
With less than 30 hours remaining on the execution clock, Margaret received a phone call from a man who had disappeared five years earlier: Ethan Reyes, the family’s former landscaper.
“I saw what happened that night,” he said. “And there’s something even bigger you don’t know.”
What he revealed would shake the entire state.
Laura Foster had not died that night.
Ethan had found her barely alive and helped her escape before Michael could finish what he started. A body from a nearby hospital—misidentified through falsified dental records—had been used to stage her death.
Laura had been in hiding for five years.
Waiting.
And she had recordings.
Audio recordings of Michael threatening her—and of Judge Alan Brooks discussing how to “handle” Daniel and the child.
By the time Margaret arrived at a safe house outside San Antonio, she came face to face with a woman the world believed was dead.
Laura Foster was alive.
And she was ready to testify.
Back in Huntsville, Daniel slept peacefully for the first time in years.
He now knew what his daughter had whispered:
“Mom is alive. I saw her.”
Within 24 hours, armed with audio recordings, financial records, psychological evaluations of Emily’s trauma drawings, and testimony from both Laura and Ethan, Margaret filed an emergency motion before the Texas Supreme Court.
The execution was halted indefinitely.
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