The doctors stopped using hopeful words after the third round of testing.
“We’re running out of options,” Dr. Bennett said quietly, folding his hands across the desk. “Your son needs a kidney soon.”
I remember staring at the floor tiles because I couldn’t bear to look at my son, Ethan, sitting beside me in that oversized hospital chair. He was only sixteen, but months of dialysis had hollowed his cheeks and stolen the energy from his voice.
I had already been tested.
Not a match.
My wife wasn’t a match either. Neither were Ethan’s grandparents, cousins, uncles, or anyone else in our family. Friends volunteered. Coworkers volunteered. People from church volunteered.
Nothing.
Every failed phone call from the transplant coordinator felt like another door slamming shut.
At night, I would hear Ethan vomiting in the bathroom after treatment, and I’d sit outside the door pretending not to cry because fathers are supposed to fix things. Fathers are supposed to save their children.
But I couldn’t save mine.
One evening my wife posted our story online.
It was simple. A photo of Ethan smiling weakly from his hospital bed, wearing a baseball cap because he hated how pale he looked.
She wrote:
“My son needs a kidney. We’re praying for a miracle.”
The post spread farther than we expected. Friends shared it. Then strangers shared it. Thousands of comments appeared from people promising prayers and support.
But prayers didn’t change blood types.
Months passed.
No donor.
For illustrative purposes only
Then, one rainy Tuesday morning, my phone rang while I was buying coffee in the hospital cafeteria.
“Mr. Carter?” the transplant coordinator asked.
“Yes?”