Bryan Stern is outside a hospital in Kyiv at 9:15 a.m. When they hear the sound of shelling, they and their squad must hurry. When the capital is under assault, they must transport two preterm infants to safety in an ambulance.
There are two sets of identical twins whose safe removal is the purpose of this "Operation Gemini."
Their father, Alex Spektor, is eagerly awaiting their arrival from Poland, where they were delivered through surrogate. As he narrates the latest, his voice is heavy with passion and exhaustion.
Russia's invasion on Ukraine started 10 days earlier, when Moishe and Lenny were born prematurely in Kyiv.
After being born in the midst of conflict, they were too little to move. While Kyiv's strength dwindled, theirs increased. Their only hope is Stern and his expert evacuation squad of US Army veterans.
Russian shelling, complicated border crossings, and a snow storm are all part of the adventure.
As their surrogate Katya neared her due date, Spektor and his girlfriend Irma Nuez, who reside in Chicago, saw the tensions rise between Ukraine and Russia.
He was born in Kyiv, then a Soviet satellite city, and his family fled to the United States when the Soviet Union collapsed.
When his boys arrived in Kyiv and were in need of urgent medical attention, there was optimism that they may be relocated to a safer place. However, since moving such delicate cargo would need special medical attention, the infants remained in the nation's capital.
As the crisis worsened, so did Spektor's and Nuez's state of mind. Sending messages back home, Spektor headed to Poland. Anyone who may be able to assist them was contacted by them.
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