Chapter 78 The Call That Changed Everything
The Kane family had always believed that the ice held their secrets and their dreams in equal measure.
It was a quiet February evening in Evergreen Hollow, the kind where snow muffled the world and the backyard rink lights glowed soft through the falling flakes. The house was unusually still—most of the family scattered for the weekend: Lily and Nathan in Boston for a charity event, Everett and Elise visiting Mia’s college tournament, Clara and Alex at a goalie camp with Mateo.
Only Rowan and Holly remained, enjoying the rare peace of an empty nest that hadn’t been empty in decades.
Rowan sat in his favorite chair by the fire, reading glasses perched on his nose, flipping through an old photo album—pictures of Lily’s first skate, Everett’s championship medal, Clara’s twins as newborns, Rowie’s draft day.
Holly was in the kitchen, humming softly as she made cocoa—the same recipe she’d perfected when the kids were small.
The phone rang.
Holly wiped her hands and answered, expecting one of the children checking in.
Instead, it was the hospital in St. Paul.
“Mrs. Kane? This is Dr. Larson from St. Paul General. We have your granddaughter, Rowie Harper, here. She was brought in by ambulance after collapsing at practice.”
Holly’s hand froze on the receiver.
Rowan looked up, seeing her face drain of color.
“What happened?” Holly’s voice was barely a whisper.
“Preliminary tests suggest a cardiac event. She’s stable now, conscious, asking for family. We’re running more tests, but… you should come.”
Holly’s legs gave out. She sank to the floor, phone still to her ear.
Rowan was beside her in an instant, taking the phone, voice calm but tight. “We’re on our way. Tell her we’re coming.”
He hung up, pulled Holly into his arms as she began to shake.
“Rowie,” she whispered, tears starting. “Our Rowie.”
Rowan’s own tears fell, but his voice stayed steady—the captain in crisis mode.
“We’ll call the others. She’s strong. She’s a Kane. She’ll fight.”
They moved fast—coats, keys, phones.
Rowan called Lily first.
Lily answered laughing—background noise of the charity gala.
“Dad? Everything okay?”
Rowan’s voice broke. “It’s Rowie. Hospital in St. Paul. Cardiac event. Get on a plane. Now.”
Silence, then Lily’s sharp intake. “We’re coming. Tell her we love her.”
Nathan’s voice in the background, already booking flights.
Everett next—on the road with Elise.
Everett’s “Hey Dad” turned to stunned silence, then “We’re turning around. Be there as soon as we can.”
Clara last—tears immediate. “My baby… we’re leaving now.”
The drive to St. Paul was three hours of white-knuckle silence and quiet prayers.
Holly clutched Rowan’s hand. “She’s only thirty-one.”
Rowan’s voice was rough. “She’s a fighter.”
They arrived at the hospital near midnight.
Jordan met them in the waiting room—face pale, eyes red, still in practice clothes.
He hugged them tight.
“She’s stable,” he whispered. “Conscious. Asking for you.”
They went in together.
Rowie lay in the bed, monitors beeping softly, IV in her arm, but her eyes—those determined Kane eyes—were open.
“Grandma… Grandpa…”
Holly rushed to her side, taking her hand, tears falling.
Rowie managed a weak smile. “I’m okay. Just… scared.”
Rowan leaned down, kissed her forehead. “You’re the strongest person I know.”
Jordan stood beside her, hand in hers.
“Doctors think it’s something called hypertrophic cardiomyopathy,” he said quietly. “Genetic. Manageable, but… she can’t play anymore.”
The words hung heavy.
Rowie’s tears fell. “My career…”
Holly’s voice broke. “Your life, baby. That’s what matters.”
The family arrived in waves through the night—Lily and Nathan on a red-eye, faces drawn; Everett and Elise bursting in at dawn; Clara and Alex with the twins close behind.
Hugs, tears, quiet talks in the hallway.
Doctors confirmed: sudden cardiac arrest during practice, revived quickly by the trainer’s AED. Diagnosis: HCM, likely inherited. With medication and an ICD, she could live a full life—but competitive hockey was over.
Rowie cried quietly in Jordan’s arms.
But in the midst of fear came fierce love.
The family circled her—telling stories, holding hands, promising they’d face whatever came next together.
As dawn broke over St. Paul, snow still falling soft outside the window, Rowie looked at her family—tears in every eye, love in every touch—and whispered, “I’m not done yet.”
Jordan kissed her forehead. “We’re just getting started.”
Outside, the world waited—new challenges, new paths, new dreams.
The ice had carried her this far.
Now love would carry her further.
But what would the future hold for a champion forced to hang up her skates?
Only time—and the unbreakable Kane heart—would tell.
And the story, far from over, turned toward its most unexpected chapter yet…