Josh refused to leave her side. He stood by the incubator, one hand pressed against the glass, tears streaming down his face.
“Please be okay,” he kept whispering.
At two in the morning, a cardiologist came to find us.
“We’ve found something. Lila has a congenital heart defect… a ventricular septal defect with pulmonary hypertension. It’s serious, and she needs surgery as soon as possible.”
Josh’s legs gave out. He sank into the nearest chair, his whole body shaking.
“How serious?” I managed to ask.
“Life-threatening if left untreated. The good news is that it’s operational. But the surgery is complex and expensive.”

A doctor | Source: Pexels
I thought about the modest savings account I’d been building for Josh’s college education. Five years of tips and extra shifts at the diner where I worked as a cashier.
“How much?” I asked.
When she told me the number, my heart sank. It would take almost everything.
Josh looked up at me, devastated. “Mom, I can’t ask you to… but…”
“You’re not asking,” I interrupted. “We’re doing this.”
The surgery was scheduled for the following week. In the meantime, we brought Lila home with strict instructions about medications and monitoring.
Josh barely slept. He’d set alarms every hour to check on her. I’d find him at dawn, sitting on the floor beside the crib, just watching her chest rise and fall.
“What if something goes wrong?” he asked me one morning.
“Then we deal with it,” I said. “Together.”

A sad boy | Source: Midjourney
On the day of the surgery, we arrived at the hospital before sunrise. Josh carried Lila, wrapped in a yellow blanket he’d bought specifically for her, while I cradled Mason.
The surgical team came to take her at 7:30 a.m. Josh kissed her forehead and whispered something I couldn’t hear before handing her over.
Then we waited.
Six hours. Six hours of pacing hospital corridors, of Josh sitting perfectly still with his head in his hands.
At one point, a nurse came by with coffee. She looked at Josh and said quietly, “That little girl is lucky to have a brother like you.”
When the surgeon finally emerged, my heart stopped.

A doctor wearing surgical gloves | Source: Unsplash
“The surgery went well,” she announced, and Josh let out a sob that seemed to come from somewhere deep in his soul. “She’s stable. The operation was successful. She’ll need time to heal, but the prognosis is good.”
Josh stood up, swaying slightly. “Can I see her?”
“Soon. She’s in recovery. Give us another hour.”
Lila spent five days in the pediatric ICU. Josh was there every single day, from visiting hours until security made him leave at night. He’d hold her tiny hand through the incubator openings.
See more on the next page
Advertisement
Leave a Comment