My Daughter’s Classmates Held Prom in Her Hospital Room Because She Couldn’t Attend Due to Her Illness – Then One of Them Handed Me an Envelope and Said, ‘Here’s the Real Reason We’re Here’

My Daughter’s Classmates Held Prom in Her Hospital Room Because She Couldn’t Attend Due to Her Illness – Then One of Them Handed Me an Envelope and Said, ‘Here’s the Real Reason We’re Here’

Carol’s eyes drifted to the window. Prom was four days away.

“Mom?”

“Yeah, sweetheart?”

“Do you think I’ll get to go?”

I opened my mouth to say yes, of course. The doctors were optimistic, anything to fill the silence with hope. I’d decided that was my job. Hope was the one thing I could still hand her.

“Do you think I’ll get to go?”

“You’re going to that prom, my baby. One way or another,” I lied, giving her and myself false hope.

Carol looked at me for a long moment, and something passed behind her eyes that I couldn’t quite read. Then she nodded and reached for my hand.

My heart broke every time I watched her grow weaker after each round of chemotherapy.

That night, after she fell asleep, I noticed she’d tucked another folded letter into the back of her journal.

My heart broke every time I watched her.

***

Two days before prom, another round of chemotherapy made Carol feel even worse.

I drove her back to the hospital with shaking hands while she rested her cheek against the cool window. She didn’t say much; she didn’t have to.

My daughter was admitted for the night, then the next, then indefinitely.

“I won’t make it, will I, Mom?” Carol whispered from the bed.

I sat beside her and smoothed her thin hair back from her forehead.

“You’re going to make it to plenty of proms, baby. This is just a delay.”

She turned her face toward the wall.

I drove her back to the hospital.

***

The following evening, I was rinsing out Carol’s water cup at the little sink in her room when Nurse Jenny appeared in the doorway with a strange look on her face.

“Linda, honey,” she said. “Can you step into the hallway for a second? Just for a minute.”

I dried my hands and followed her out, assuming it was paperwork or worse.

I stepped through the door and froze.

“Can you step into the hallway for a second?”

The hallway was full of teenagers!

Boys in rented suits with crooked ties. Girls in long dresses with sneakers peeking out from underneath.

They were holding pizza boxes, foil pans, a stack of plastic cups, and Mylar balloons in soft pink and silver. One girl, Megan, clutched a pitcher of lemonade against her chest as if it were something holy.

A small Bluetooth speaker hung from Daryl’s wrist.

“Mrs. Linda,” Megan said, stepping forward. “We talked to Dr. Patel. She said it was okay. We wanted to bring prom to Carol.”

I covered my mouth. I couldn’t speak!

The hallway was full of teenagers!

“You did all this?” I finally managed.

“For weeks,” Daryl said quietly. “We’ve been planning it for weeks.”

I tried to thank them, but my voice cracked. Jenny squeezed my shoulder and motioned them toward Carol’s door.

“Go on, sweethearts. She has no idea.”

I followed them in.

When Carol looked up and saw her friends crowded into the doorway in their prom clothes, she let out a sound I’ll never forget! Half a sob, half a laugh, all disbelief!

“We’ve been planning it for weeks.”