“My mommy has been sleeping for three days”: A 7-year-old girl pushed a wheelbarrow for miles to save her newborn twins — and what happened next left everyone speechless…

The girl arrived at Northbridge General Hospital just before noon. The sun was harsh, the pavement shimmering, and the heat clung to everything like a thick sheet. Her name was Alina Cresswell, though she did not offer it at first.

She pushed a battered wheelbarrow whose single wheel squeaked in protest at every turn. Inside the metal basin lay two infants wrapped in pieces of cloth that once might have been bright. Now they were dull and stiff with dried residue.

The babies were frighteningly still. Their breathing was shallow. Their lips were pale as frost.

Alina herself looked as if she had walked through a storm. Her hair was tangled. Her bare feet were torn.

Her small hands were streaked with grit. She did not cry. She did not ask for help.

She simply went to the first adult in a uniform and tugged at the sleeve until the woman turned. Nurse Gertrude Malik had witnessed more emergencies than she cared to remember. Yet nothing prepared her for the sight of this tiny child and the wheelbarrow containing two unmoving infants.

For a moment she felt her breath seize, but training snapped into place. She called for assistance. She lifted the babies gently.

She ushered Alina toward the emergency entrance. Through it all, Alina clung to her hand, her grip surprisingly strong. She did not release it until the twins were taken behind the swinging doors.

Gertrude crouched to the girl’s height. She spoke softly, trying to soothe the fear that quivered behind Alina’s eyes. The girl stared fixedly at the closed door as if willing life into her siblings with sheer determination.

Her silence felt louder than any scream. Dr. Harlan Kapoor, the pediatrician on duty, worked rapidly.

The infants were severely dehydrated. Their temperatures were dangerously low. Their bodies showed clear signs of malnutrition.

The team moved with precision. Warming units were prepared. Fluids were administered.

Vital signs were checked repeatedly. After long minutes that felt stretched into an hour, Dr. Kapoor finally emerged.

“They are alive,” he informed Gertrude quietly. He glanced at Alina. “Both of them.

They arrived just in time.”

Alina exhaled a sound that was barely audible. Her shoulders sagged. Relief washed across her face like a tide retreating from shore.

Then her knees buckled and she fainted softly against Gertrude’s arms. . .

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