Patricia and JoAnn rent a beach house in Florida while JoAnn recovers from her liver transplant. They discover the house is haunted by a young woman with a mysterious message. When the riddle is solved, the story explores the journey of an organ donor, the donor family, and six organ recipients. Everyone’s experience is different and brings strength, courage, hope, growth, faith, and gratitude. Terry is a young boy in immediate need of a new kidney. Sarah suffers from Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension and goes from being a healthy person to being on oxygen and in a wheelchair. After receiving a double lung transplant, Sarah agonizes with Survivor’s Guilt . Lori is a young woman with dreams of being a dancer. When she requires a heart transplant, she’s overcome with anger, fear, and resentment, but finds hope through therapy. Steve is a successful married man who falls into financial hardship, fighting pancreatic cancer while waiting for a transplant. His wife, Janet, struggles with ‘caretaker burnout’, but a family support person helps them realize the true value in life. Maria is in the hospital waiting for a liver transplant and is on her deathbed with NASH (Fatty Liver Disease). Her faith in God brings her salvation and peace. Jim is a man with a huge family and community support who has been on kidney dialysis for three years, when finally, a matching organ is provided to save his life. Conditions Mentioned: Autoimmune Hepatitis (AIH), Non-alcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH aka: Fatty Liver Disease), Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH), Pancreatic Cancer, Rheumatic Heart Disease, Kidney dialysis, Kidney Disease, Post Transplant Delirium, Brain Fog, Postpartum Preeclampsia, Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS), Esophageal Varices, MELD (Model for End-stage Liver Disease), ESRD (End-Stage Renal Disease), Organ Rejection, Hepatic Encephalopathy, Survivors’ Guilt, Caretaker Burn-out. This is not a memoir about the author’s transplant, but stories of how one single act of kindness changes the lives of so many. If this book helps one person, then it is enough.