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They were in touch by email at first and shared details about their lives. Jacob, Davis learned, had indeed developed graft-versus-host disease. He had lost his sandy brown hair and his skin had turned blotchy and red and is still sometimes so raw it bleeds. He also wears special glasses to protect his light-sensitive eyes. Typically, Jacob is very strong, his parents say. Occasionally, the tears flow. "He bottles it up," says his dad, Michael Kowalik, a salesman in the semiconductor business. "So it's a release. He needs to get it out." Jacob also asks a lot of questions. "Why did I get sick?" he sometimes asks his parents. "When will I get better?" He is well aware that some of the other children he's met at the hospital haven't made it. But increasingly, his parents feel confident that he will. His doctors do, too. "It is very favorable for him now. The biggest concern is if he gets an infection," says Dr. Reggie Duerst, clinical director of the stem cell transplant unit at Children's Memorial. ___ Last month, Davis, his wife and his mother flew to Chicago for a national fencing championship and to meet Jacob and his family. Together, they visited the hospital where Jacob has been treated; a reporter and photographer were invited along. Jacob was shy. But his parents thought it important to share their story so that others might register to be donors. "By telling your story, you could save another kid's life," Jacob's mom told him, on the way from their home in Chicago's suburbs. He stopped what he was doing. "What?" he asked. "I think that's when he truly got it," his mom says. "The light bulb finally went off." Jacob goes to the hospital twice a week for photopheresis treatments; his blood is exposed to light and medicine to help the donor cells adapt to his body. He's also on steroids, though he's being weaned from them. During treatment, he played cards and joked around with Davis. Even after a single weekend together, there was a surprising comfort level there. The families were already planning their next visit together on the East Coast. "So the beach next summer?" Davis asked Jacob. "I'll go, if you go." "Maybe," Jacob said, grinning. "Maybe never." He giggled. Davis shook his head and smiled, too. Jacob now goes to school two days a week. He dreams of being back on the baseball diamond and soccer field next year. Over and over again, the Kowaliks thanked Davis and his family, until his mother, Carol, had had enough: "No more thank-yous," she said. "It felt good to know it was appreciated," her son added. "But this has been life-changing for us, too." ___ Online: Gift of Life: http://www.giftoflife.org/ Be The Match: http://www.marrow.org/
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