The Vetter family was happy when their baby was born. Unfortunately, the happiness didn’t last long.
Soon the heir died, and doctors explained that the boy had no resistance at all. Doctors warned the couple that the situation could happen again next time.
However, the Veterans dreamed of an heir and consciously took the risk. The couple had a son, David, who was immediately placed in a sterile box.

Vetter’s daughter had to become a donor for the child. Doctors were confident that the girl’s bone marrow transplant would save David’s life.
Unfortunately it turned out that Veter’s daughter could not become a donor for her brother. The doctors decided to leave the boy in a bubble.

David did not come out, the child could only be touched with gloves. Sometimes the parents took the child home. In the house bubble.
But the boy’s survival was hardly a carefree childhood. On one occasion, David found a syringe in his bubble that the nurse had forgotten and began to puncture the walls of the bubble.

The doctors had to tell the boy the whole truth. This conversation affected the mental state of the child.
Soon, NASA created a special suit that David could use to go outside. At first, the boy resisted, but soon curiosity awoke in him.

David managed to make his little ‘trips’ in the big world only 7 times.
David soon outgrew the spacesuit. However, the doctors decided to take the decisive step by persuading the boy’s parents to undergo a bone marrow transplant.
The doctors hoped for a miracle. After the boy was taken out of the bubble, his condition worsened.

12 days later David died. A virus was found in the bone marrow of his donor, which doctors had not noticed at the time. David died at age 12.
