Her breathing stabilized. Her tiny body responded to treatment.
But Mia…
Mia was slipping away.
“No matter what we try, she’s not improving,” one doctor admitted quietly.
Her parents were breaking.
“Why isn’t she getting better?” Sarah cried.
No one had a clear answer.
Then one afternoon, everything changed.
Emily had stopped by during her break.
The room was eerily quiet.
No doctors. No nurses.
Just the parents… and the machines.
Suddenly, alarms began to flicker.
Mia’s skin turned bluish.
Her breathing weakened.
Her heartbeat—
Fading.
Panic exploded in the room.
“My baby—please!” her mother screamed.
Emily froze for only a second.
Then something—instinct, memory, something deeper—took over.
She remembered something she had once read.
Studies suggesting that twins, when kept together, sometimes stabilized faster.
It wasn’t standard practice.
It wasn’t even widely accepted.
And it was risky.
But Mia was dying.
Emily turned to the parents.
“I want to try something,” she said.
They didn’t hesitate.
“Please—anything.”
With careful, trembling hands, Emily opened the incubator.
She gently lifted Mia, her tiny body fragile beneath the wires and tubes.
“Stay with me, sweetheart…” she whispered.
Then, slowly…
She placed Mia beside her sister.
For a moment, nothing happened.
The room held its breath.
Then—
Lily moved.
Her tiny arm shifted…
And rested across Mia.
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