In many ways, this was going to be Virginia Giuffre’s emancipation.

Writing a book would free her, she thought, from the necessity of chronicling sex abuse at the hands of some of the richest and most powerful men again and again. To investigators and lawyers, reporters and counselors.

Giuffre would finally be able to focus on advocacy, pushing for stronger laws targeting sex traffickers and protecting children, and really, living her life.

But she is no longer here. Her words will have to be enough.

Her memoir “Nobody’s Girl” was released Oct. 21, six months after her death by suicide. The mother of three, one of the most outspoken victims of financier Jeffrey Epstein and his partner Ghislaine Maxwell, was 41.