But no one has come up with a realistic scenario...if you remember you suggested a ruptured aorta...the sort of injury arising in a car accident
Chloe Goddard's death remains unexplained.
She was glimpsed stumbling forward but was not seen to strike her head nor did she complain or show any sign of distress either then or later when she went to bed.
The post mortem found "she died from a severe head injury following a blow to the back of the head". Did she perhaps fall out of bed, strike the back of her head and manage to climb back into bed before being discovered by her mum?
We will never know, and more importantly neither will her parents.
It is possible for a child to suffer a blow to the back of the head resulting in injury and live to tell the tale.
**Snip
My granddaughter slipped and fell on a marble floor running through the kitchen in her socks when she was three years old – the blow to the back of her head sent blood flying in all directions.
Rushing her to the hospital, we realized she was going to have a concussion.
She will never remember that incident, yet in that moment the Neuro Net of her brain went into shock and her brain slowed down to start the healing process.
http://marmaladeoc.com/your-childs-vulnerable-brain-2/I do not believe there is a scintilla of evidence that Madeleine McCann either suffered a head injury from which she later died or that she fell onto her head from a sofa or over a balcony into a garden and died immediately.
So until someone can come up with a workable scenario for such an event which even touches on the possible and doesn't rely on fantastic speculation on how her little body was made to vanish as in a magic trick ... why speculate?