The next part changes everything.

But nothing happened.

No calls.

No texts.

Just silence.

I told myself that meant they had figured something else out. Maybe another donor had been found. Maybe the doctors were trying new treatments. Maybe my husband was too busy at the hospital to deal with me.

Two weeks passed before guilt finally pushed me to drive home.

I told myself I was just checking in.

Just seeing how things were going.

But the moment I stepped inside the house, my stomach dropped.

The living room walls were covered in drawings.

Dozens of them.

Maybe hundreds.

Messy, uneven sketches taped up with pieces of white medical tape. Crayon marks ran across the paper like storms of color.

Stick figures with giant heads.

A tall man.

A smaller boy.

And next to them, a woman with long hair.

Above every drawing, written in shaky letters, was the same word.

“Mom.”

My throat tightened.
I walked closer, noticing how the drawings changed slightly from one to the next. In some, the boy was holding the woman’s hand. In others, they stood in front of a house. One showed the three figures beneath a huge yellow sun.

All of them labeled the same way.

Mom.

I hadn’t even noticed my husband standing behind me.

“You came back,” he said quietly.

I turned to him. He looked exhausted—eyes hollow, shoulders slumped like he hadn’t slept in days.

“What… what is all this?” I whispered.
He didn’t answer immediately.

Instead, he walked me down the hallway to the small bedroom at the end.

My steps slowed when I saw the hospital bed set up inside.

Machines hummed softly. Tubes snaked across the blankets.

And there he was.

My stepson.

So pale.

So much thinner than before.

Next to the bed sat a plastic container filled with tiny folded paper stars.

My husband picked one up and placed it in my hand.

“He makes one every time the pain gets bad,” he said.

I looked down at the fragile star, carefully folded from bright blue paper.

“He thinks if he makes a thousand,” my husband continued softly, “you’ll say yes.”

The words hit me like a punch to the chest.

I felt my throat tighten as I looked back toward the bed.

His eyes fluttered open when he heard my voice.

When he saw me, a faint smile appeared on his thin face.

“I knew you’d come,” he said weakly.

My heart cracked.

“You always come back.”

That hurt.

Because I hadn’t.

Not when he first got sick.

Not when the doctors said the leukemia was aggressive.

Not when they told us we didn’t have time to waste.

For illustrative purposes only
I walked slowly to the bed and took his hand carefully, afraid of hurting him.

His fingers felt so small in mine.

“I’m here now,” I said quietly. “I’m not going anywhere.”

He nodded gently, like that was enough.

Like my presence alone fixed everything.

I looked up at my husband.

He stood by the door, watching us, too tired to even hope.

“It’s not too late to start the transplant, right?” I asked.

For a moment he didn’t answer.

Then he rubbed his face and said, “We still have time. But we need to act fast.”

I squeezed the boy’s hand.

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