Stardust to Ashes
My mother fell critically ill and was rushed to the hospital. Desperate, I knelt before my fiancé—the department's chief surgeon—and begged him to take charge of her operation.
But outside the ICU, he was carefully tending to a scraped knee. Lucy Wendell's scraped knee, to be exact.
Just as I was drowning in hopelessness, Cameron Mitchell—the hospital director and my childhood friend—pushed open the operating room doors and handed me a marriage proposal.
"Marry me, and I'll personally perform your mother's surgery."
With trembling hands, I signed my name, clinging to the last shred of hope that she could be saved.
But she never made it through that stormy night.
Cameron handled all the funeral arrangements himself, and our wedding proceeded as scheduled.
Seven years later, in the hushed silence of the hospital archives, I overheard Cameron speaking with the deputy director.
"Cameron, why did you transfer your mother-in-law's organ to Lucy's mother during that surgery? Weren't you afraid of getting caught?"
"I owed Lucy," he replied. "If I hadn't hesitated back then, Lucy never would've chosen medical aid work in Africa… and her mother wouldn't have fallen ill from the grief."