Heartbreaking news from influencer Melissa Mae Carlton: she and husband Tom have lost their young daughter Molly on Christmas Day, just over a year after their 9-year-old Abigail passed from sepsis. The family, who also share kids Harry and Lily, shared the devastation on social media, finding small comfort in the sisters' reunion. Doctors suspect a genetic heart condition played a role in both tragedies.
Oh, darlings, grab the tissues because this one hits hard. Melissa Mae Carlton, the faith-and-grief influencer who calls herself a 'mother, believer, writer, griever' on her site, dropped a bombshell on Instagram this week. She revealed that their little Molly Moo passed away on December 25, 2025—Christmas morning, no less—reuniting her with big sister Abi in the most gut-wrenching way imaginable. 💔
'On Christmas morning, our sweet Molly girl, and her big sister Abi were reunited,' Melissa wrote. 'This is the only thing giving me even a small sense of comfort. Molly missed her sister so deeply. She would often ask me, “Mummy, when is Jesus coming back so Abi can come down?”' The family is reeling: 'We are devastated. In disbelief. Confused and in shock. We are exhausted and shaken after a day filled with trauma and heartbreak.'
Abigail's death last year from sepsis left them shattered, but Molly's sudden passing—amid a family trip to Arizona—has them pleading for prayers. Son Harry, through tears, shared how Molly whispered on the plane Monday that she wanted to be with Abi. 'She got what she wanted,' he sobbed. 😢
Hours later, amid speculation, Melissa updated with some clarity: no official diagnosis yet, but docs believe Molly had a genetic heart condition, and they suspect Abi did too. Unlike Abi's sudden exit without hospital monitoring, Molly fought in the peds trauma center—just 15 minutes away, with paramedics arriving in three. 'Even a minor illness could potentially trigger a sudden cardiac event,' she explained. 'Her little body fought so hard. But we've been told that this type of cardiac event is, in most cases, not survivable.' Now, genetic tests are next for the fam.
'I'm scared of what life looks like now for us. I am heartbroken for our children,' Melissa confessed, begging followers: keep the prayers coming. Our hearts ache for them—what strength they'll need ahead.