Sneads, Florida—a place that's more farmland than town. Here, men still hunt with dogs, and young women know how to make chicken and dumplings from scratch.
This is a spot where kids still grow up barefoot on dirt roads. Where the biggest dangers facing local children are snagging feet on fishing hooks.
Georgie became a woman here. She started dating Trey at age fourteen. He was fifteen.
Their romance was the kind you don’t often see. The sort of teenage-love that adults warn won’t last six minutes. Trey and Georgie dated for six years.
Then, on one pretty October day, they visited the courthouse and said vows. They got straight to work, building a family. They started with Blakely Glen.
Parenthood agreed with them. The sleepless nights, the changing of diapers every nine seconds. Georgie got pregnant again.
Brenna Grace.
“She's always wanted a big family,” says Georgie's sister. “Lots of kids, spaced close together. She was so excited.”
But there was a problem. Georgie’s mother rushed her to the hospital. It was an emergency C-section.
Brenna Grace came into
this world two months early, tipping the scale at four pounds. It wasn't good. Bleeding on the brain. One collapsed lung. Jaundice.
They took Brenna Grace to UAB. The family has slept in waiting-room chairs, skipped meals, and survived on hospital coffee. To say it's been hard would be an understatement.
That was seven days ago.
But this story isn’t about Brenna Grace. It's not even about Georgie or Trey. This is about ordinary people.
In only seven days, ordinary prayers have reached across city lines, and into rural parts. Prayers have spread outward through the Panhandle and upward through Alabama—one steeple at a time. One ordinary person to another.
Communities pulled together. Some have donated money. Others are organizing suppers. There have been enough prayers to suffocate low-flying birds.
Then.
It happened overnight. One morning, doctors discovered Brenna Grace’s…