The pregnant sow went into labor with a high fever, and they feared she might not survive.

When Emma the pig arrived at Apricot Lane Farm in California, she was dangerously sick, exhausted, and heavily pregnant. Her new owner, Chester, could see she was struggling just to stand. Veterinarians warned him that her condition was so fragile she might only manage to deliver a small litter of six piglets, if she survived the birth at all.

But the night Emma went into labor, she defied every expectation. One piglet arrived, then another, and the count kept rising. By the end of the long, painful delivery, Emma had given birth to 17 piglets. Thirteen of them survived—far more than anyone believed possible given her weakened state.

The exhausting labor left Emma barely able to lift her head. Her fever spiked dangerously, and she grew too weak to nurse her newborns. Chester and the farm team stepped in, gently removing the piglets so they could attempt bottle-feeding. But the tiny pigs refused the formula, crying and searching for their mother.

Meanwhile, Emma’s condition worsened. She hardly moved, and her breathing turned shallow. Everyone feared they would lose her. Chester faced an impossible decision: continue trying to save the piglets on their own, or take a chance on bringing them back to their mother.

In desperation, he reunited the piglets with Emma. What happened next stunned everyone. At the sound and touch of her babies, Emma stirred. She lifted her head, then her body, as if responding to a powerful instinct stronger than her illness.

Slowly, she began to nurse. Her fever eased, her strength returned, and her eyes brightened for the first time since arriving at the farm. The presence of her piglets seemed to awaken something deep within her.

Over the next days, Emma continued to improve, gaining energy as she cared for her litter. Chester later said it best: it was her calling as a mother that ultimately saved her.