I was a pediatric surgeon when I met a six-year-old boy with a failing heart. After I saved his life, his parents abandoned him, so my wife and I raised him as our own. Twenty-five years later, he froze in an ER, staring at the stranger who’d saved my wife, recognizing a face he’d tried to forget.
I’ve spent my entire career fixing broken hearts, but nothing prepared me for the day I met Owen.He was six years old, impossibly small in that oversized hospital bed, with eyes too large for his pale face and a chart that read like a death sentence. Congenital heart defect. Critical. The kind of diagnosis that steals childhood and replaces it with fear.