That was all it took.
The next day, she pulled out her yarn box and asked me to drive her to the craft store. She chose soft, colorful yarn—pastels, bright blues, sunflower yellow, gentle creams. That same week, she started crocheting hats. At first, she made one or two a week. Then five. Then ten. Every spare moment she had, she was crocheting: after homework, on weekends, even in the car.
“It’s for the kids in the hospital,” she said simply when people asked.
Over the next four months, Lily crocheted eighty hats.
Eighty.
Each one different. Some had little ears on top. Some had flowers stitched on the side. Some were superhero-themed for boys who didn’t want to wear “baby colors.” She kept a small notebook with tally marks and color descriptions. She named some of them after the kids she imagined would wear them.
When she finished the final hat, she placed it gently into a large box in her room, nestled beside the others. She looked up at me and smiled.
“They’re ready.”
Our plan was to donate them to the children’s oncology ward at the hospital downtown. I had already spoken to the volunteer coordinator, who was deeply touched and eager to accept them.
