Then the heavy oak doors at the back of the sanctuary swung open, and every head turned. Twenty-seven children walked in two by two, still in hospital gowns and cardigans, holding paper hearts with my name on them. Behind them came their parents, and behind the parents came Dr. Adaeze Whitfield, the chief of pediatric oncology, in a navy dress and pearls. She walked straight down the aisle Marcus had just humiliated me in, stopped one pew short of him, and turned to face the guests. She did not raise her voice. She told them that the small-town nurse standing at the altar had sat through three hundred and eleven nights of chemotherapy with children who were not her own. That I had paid for two funerals out of my own savings when families could not. That the hospital board had voted that morning to name the new pediatric wing after me, and that she had come to invite me, personally, to cut the ribbon in the fall. One of the children, a boy named Theo who had lost his hair twice, walked up the marble steps and slid his small hand into mine. He looked up at Marcus without fear and said he thought I was already somebody’s family. Marcus tried to speak. His mother tried to stand. The videographer kept rolling. I let go of Marcus’s hand, stepped out of the borrowed shoes, and walked back down the aisle barefoot with twenty-seven children trailing behind me like a second, truer procession. My father caught up at the doors, crying, and whispered that he had been wrong to stay quiet. Outside, the hospital shuttle was waiting. We drove straight to the ward. I cut a ribbon that afternoon in my wedding dress, and for the first time all day, the room clapped for the right reason.
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