Father Michael Terretti was 52 when he finally admitted that the story had never stopped living inside him.
It had followed him through hospital corridors, funeral masses, quiet dawns, and the small chapel where candle flames trembled against old wood.
The story began on October 12th, 2006, when he was 34 years old and serving as a chaplain at San Gerardo Hospital in Monza, Italy.

By then, he had spent 8 years walking toward rooms other people dreaded entering.
He knew the hush of families pretending not to hear monitors.
He knew the sharp smell of antiseptic, the warm plastic scent of oxygen tubing, and the way holy oil clung to the lining of a purple stole long after Last Rites ended.
What he no longer knew, or feared he no longer knew, was wonder.
That frightened him more than death did.
Father Michael had entered the priesthood believing grace moved through the world like light through stained glass, visible to anyone humble enough to stand still.
Hospital work made him less poetic.
He still prayed with the dying.
He still anointed foreheads and hands.
He still spoke hope over frightened mothers, old men, tired fathers, and children who should have been complaining about school instead of chemotherapy.
But inside, a dangerous fatigue had settled.
A man can recite hope for years and still forget what hope feels like in his own hands.
Pediatric oncology was the hardest ward.
The children there made every argument sound small.
They lost hair in clumps, watched cartoons between bouts of nausea, and slept while their parents stood outside doors with hands pressed to their mouths.
Father Michael had learned not to flinch.
He had also learned that not flinching could become a kind of spiritual injury.
Around 4:00 p.m., Sister Maria called from pediatric oncology.
Her voice was calm, but it had the tightness nurses get when mercy has to pass through hospital language.
“Father Terretti,” she said, “we have a 15-year-old boy with leukemia who’s in his final hours. The family has requested a chaplain.”
He wrote the room number on a slip of paper.
Room 307.
He gathered the holy oil, his prayer book, his purple stole, and the small notebook he carried for final requests.
That notebook held names, addresses, unfinished apologies, and practical wishes from people who knew they were leaving.
He had no reason to think the next page would become the page he would look at for the rest of his life.
When Father Michael entered room 307, he expected heaviness.
Instead, the first thing he noticed was peace.
The IV line was there, the monitor was there, the pale sheet was there, and the cup of untouched water on the bedside table was sweating in the afternoon light.
Andrea and Antonia Acutis sat on either side of their son, Carlo.
Their eyes were red from crying, but they did not look frantic.
They looked devastated and strangely steady, as if their son had been consoling them instead of the other way around.
Then Father Michael saw Carlo.
He was thin, pale, bald from chemotherapy, and far too small beneath the hospital blanket.
But his eyes were alive.
Not glazed.
Not wandering.
Not sedated into confusion.
They were clear, direct, and unafraid.
“Good evening, Father,” Carlo said.
His voice was weak, but steady.
“Thank you for coming. I know it’s been a long day for you.”
Father Michael paused just inside the door.
In 8 years of chaplaincy, he had heard dying people speak of fear, regret, pain, and God.
He had almost never heard a dying child begin by worrying about the priest.
“Hello, Carlo,” he said. “I’m Father Terretti. How are you feeling?”
Carlo smiled.
“I’m ready to go home, Father. I’ve been ready for a while now.”
The phrase did not sound like a wish to leave the hospital.
It sounded like a boy waiting for someone he loved to arrive.
Father Michael asked if he wished to receive Last Rites.
Carlo nodded, then looked at his parents with such tenderness that Antonia lowered her head and Andrea closed his eyes.
“Yes, please,” Carlo said. “But first, Father, could I speak with you privately? There are some things I need to tell you.”
Andrea squeezed his hand once.
Antonia kissed his forehead.
Then they stepped into the corridor and closed the door.
The room narrowed around the bed.
The monitor continued its quiet rhythm.
The fluorescent light hummed overhead.
The cup of water glistened on the table.
Carlo’s expression changed.
The sweetness remained, but something focused came into him.
He looked older than 15 in that moment, not in body, but in authority.
“Father, I need you to listen very carefully,” he said. “And I need you to write it down.”
Father Michael pulled out his notebook.
He assumed Carlo wanted to leave a message for his parents, a friend, or someone who had been too afraid to come say goodbye.
The priest clicked his pen.
“I’m listening,” he said.
Carlo took a shallow breath.
“In about 1 hour and 45 minutes, I’m going to die,” he said.
Father Michael’s hand stilled.
Carlo spoke as plainly as if he were reading a schedule.
“But before I go, God has shown me three people who need your help. I’m going to give you their names, and I need you to find them.”
The priest felt the professional reflex rise.
Gently redirect.
Do not argue with the dying.
Do not turn medication visions into promises that could later wound a grieving family.
“Carlo,” he began, “let’s focus on preparing your soul for—”
“Father,” Carlo interrupted, “I know how this sounds. I know you think I’m hallucinating, but I need you to trust me. Write down these names.”
Father Michael looked at the IV line, the chart near the bed, and the boy’s calm face.
He searched for delirium.
He found none.
The words were organized.
The gaze was steady.
The voice was not dreamy.
It was almost administrative, and that made it more frightening.
Father Michael wrote the date at the top of the page.
October 12th, 2006.
Then he waited.

“The first name is Elena Rossi,” Carlo said.
Father Michael wrote it down.
“She’s 34, a cardiac nurse here. In exactly 23 days, she’ll lose her husband, Jeppe, in a car accident. She doesn’t know it yet, but she’s 3 weeks pregnant. When she gets the news about Jeppe, she’ll want to end her life.”
The pen moved, but Father Michael felt as if his hand belonged to someone else.
Elena Rossi.
34.
Cardiac nurse.
Jeppe.
23 days.
3 weeks pregnant.
“You need to find her,” Carlo continued, “and tell her that Jeppe wants her to live and that her unborn child has a special purpose.”
Father Michael looked up.
A 15-year-old leukemia patient should not have known the private life of a nurse in another department.
He might have heard a name.
He might have seen someone in a corridor.
But this was not corridor gossip.
This was a map of a wound before it happened.
“The second name is Antonio Martelli,” Carlo said.
Father Michael lowered his eyes back to the page.
“He is 67 years old. For 12 years, he came to mass every morning at San Carlo Church after his wife died. But 3 months ago, he stopped coming because he’s angry at God.”
Carlo’s breathing caught, then steadied.
“His grandson, Marco, is 8 years old. He will be diagnosed with the same leukemia I have. This will happen in exactly 4 months. When it does, Antonio will blame God and lose faith completely.”
Father Michael wrote faster.
“You need to find him and tell him that Marco will be completely healed, but only if Antonio returns to faith and prays for him.”
The room felt too bright.
The page felt too white.
Outside the door, the hospital continued moving as if impossible sentences were not landing one after another inside room 307.
“The third name is Father Allesandro Conti,” Carlo said.
Father Michael’s pen stopped.
He knew of the diocesan office downtown.
Carlo continued.
“He is 41 years old. He has been struggling with his vocation for two years and is planning to leave the priesthood next month. But God has special work for him. In 6 months, he’ll receive a letter from the Vatican that will change his mind completely. When he does, you need to support him, because what he’ll be called to do will seem impossible.”
Father Michael finished writing with a trembling hand.
“How do you know these things?” he asked. “How could you possibly know about people you’ve never met?”
Carlo smiled gently.
“For the last 3 weeks, during my worst pain, I’ve been having visions,” he said. “Not scary ones. Beautiful ones. Jesus has been showing me people who will need help after I’m gone. He told me you would be the one to help them.”
After that, Andrea and Antonia returned.
Father Michael administered Last Rites, anointing Carlo’s forehead and hands while the scent of holy oil rose softly in the clean hospital air.
Carlo answered each prayer with astonishing clarity.
When the sacrament ended, he turned to his parents.
“Mom, Dad, don’t be sad for me,” he said. “I’m going somewhere beautiful, and I’ll be watching over you always.”
Antonia bent over his hand and cried soundlessly.
Andrea kept one palm on Carlo’s shoulder.
Then Carlo looked again at Father Michael.
“Father, don’t forget what I told you,” he said. “Those three people need you. Promise me you’ll find them.”
Father Michael promised.
He did not fully understand what he was promising.
He was not even sure he believed the page in his notebook.
But he promised because a dying boy with clear eyes asked him to.
Carlo closed his eyes.
His breathing grew shallow.
At exactly 6:37 p.m., almost precisely when he had predicted, Carlo Acutis passed away peacefully.
Afterward, Father Michael stood in the corridor with the notebook in his hand.
He could have dismissed it.
He could have told himself Carlo had overheard fragments, that grief creates patterns, that dying children sometimes speak with strange certainty.
Instead, he copied the three entries into a sealed page in his chaplaincy file.
Twenty-three days later, on November 4th, 2006, the cardiac unit erupted.
Father Michael was finishing evening rounds when someone shouted for space and a nurse cried out in a voice that was not professional at all.
Jeppe Rosi, a 28-year-old construction worker, had been killed in a devastating car accident caused by a drunk driver.
His wife, Elena Rossi, a cardiac nurse at the hospital, had just received the news.
Father Michael felt the corridor tilt.
He found Elena in a supply closet, folded over herself between shelves of sterile packets and spare gowns.
She was sobbing so hard she could barely breathe.
There is no graceful way to tell a woman that her dead husband’s name was spoken by a dying stranger 3 weeks earlier.
There is only obedience.
“Elena,” he said, “I know this sounds strange. But 3 weeks ago, a dying patient asked me to find you if something happened to Jeppe.”
She looked up through tears.
“He said to tell you that Jeppe wants you to live,” Father Michael said. “And that your unborn child has a special purpose.”
Elena stared at him.
The grief on her face changed into shock.
“How could anyone know I’m pregnant?” she whispered.
Father Michael felt the hair rise along his arms.
“I just found out yesterday morning,” she said. “I was going to surprise Jeppe when he came home from work today.”
Then her voice broke.
“He’ll never know about the baby.”
Father Michael repeated Carlo’s message exactly.
No improvements.
No interpretation.
No priestly embroidery.
Elena admitted that she had been thinking about ending her life.
The pregnancy, which should have been joy, felt impossible to face alone.
But the fact that a dying 15-year-old boy had known about the child before her husband did pierced through the darkness closing around her.
She did not feel healed that night.
Grief does not obey one sentence.
But she lived through that night.
Then the next one.
Nine months later, Elena gave birth to a healthy boy and named him Carlo Jeppe.
The second name waited.

In February 2007, four months after Carlo’s death, Father Michael asked at San Carlo Church about Antonio Martelli.
The parish priest confirmed it all.
Antonio was 67.
He had come to morning mass every day for 12 years after his wife died.
Then, 3 months before Carlo’s death, he had stopped.
Father Michael found Antonio in a small apartment that smelled of coffee, old paper, and closed windows.
Antonio opened the door like a man prepared to dislike whoever stood there.
When Father Michael mentioned faith, Antonio’s jaw hardened.
When he mentioned Marco, the 8-year-old grandson, Antonio’s suspicion turned sharp.
“You priests always come when people are weak,” Antonio said.
Father Michael repeated Carlo’s message anyway.
Antonio dismissed him.
Three days later, Marco collapsed during a soccer game.
The hospital tests revealed acute lymphoblastic leukemia, the same aggressive form that had taken Carlo’s life.
Antonio called Father Michael with a broken voice.
“Father, how did that dying boy know? How could he have known about Marco months before it happened?”
Father Michael repeated the rest.
Marco would be completely healed, but Antonio had to return to faith and pray with complete trust.
Antonio returned to daily mass that week.
He prayed with a desperation Father Michael had rarely seen.
He organized prayer groups, attended healing services, and did not miss mass even when Marco was too sick for visitors.
After 6 months of treatment, Marco’s cancer went into complete remission faster than doctors expected for such an aggressive case.
Antonio never called it luck.
He called it mercy.
The third name unfolded in April 2007.
Father Allesandro Conti really had been planning to leave the priesthood.
For two years, he had carried private exhaustion behind proper sentences, official letters, and diocesan office work.
When Father Michael first told him what Carlo had said, Father Conti listened with tired courtesy.
“I think you want this to be true because you need it to be true,” he said.
The words hurt because they were partly accurate.
Father Michael did need it.
Not for pride.
For survival.
He needed to know that the sacraments he carried into hospital rooms were not just beautiful gestures offered against an indifferent dark.
In April 2007, Father Conti received the unexpected letter from the Vatican.
It selected him for special work establishing programs for ministering to terminally ill children.
The calling was exactly what Carlo had described: difficult, unlikely, and tied to the suffering Father Conti thought he could no longer face.
Father Conti stayed in the priesthood.
He began training chaplains in pediatric spiritual care and eventually reached families Father Michael would never meet.
That was the pattern Father Michael came to understand.
Carlo’s final words never pointed back toward Carlo.
They moved outward.
A grieving widow.
An angry grandfather.
A collapsing priest.
A child not yet born.
A child not yet diagnosed.
A vocation not yet saved.
Every vision had been aimed at someone else’s rescue.
That was what finally broke Father Michael’s spiritual exhaustion.
Not spectacle.
Not proof for proof’s sake.
Love with addresses.
Grace with names.
Years passed.
Elena raised Carlo Jeppe with stories of the boy whose message kept her alive in a supply closet.
Antonio continued attending daily mass, and Marco grew into a healthy young man.
Father Conti’s mission continued through chaplains trained to stand beside terminally ill children with more tenderness and less fear.
As for Father Michael, the notebook remained.
The page aged.
The ink settled into the paper.
The date at the top still read October 12th, 2006.
The names remained in the order Carlo spoke them.
Elena Rossi.
Antonio Martelli.
Father Allesandro Conti.
Beside them were the numbers a dying child should not have known.
23 days.
4 months.
6 months.
Father Michael avoided calling the page proof for a long time.
Proof felt too small.
It sounded like something used in an argument.
The page was not an argument to him.
It was a wound that had become a window.
When people asked what Carlo’s final hours taught him, Father Michael did not begin with prophecy.
He began with humility.
He said he entered room 307 as a priest who thought he was there to bring grace to a dying boy.
He left having received grace from him.
He said the youngest souls are not always the least prepared.
He said God sometimes speaks through the person everyone else assumes is too weak to carry a message.
And he said the most miraculous thing was not that Carlo knew three names.
It was that Carlo, in the last two hours of his life, used what he had been shown to save people he had never met.
That was the mercy Father Michael still carried.
A notebook.
A hospital room.
A boy’s clear eyes.
Three names.
And a promise made by a tired priest who had almost forgotten what hope felt like, until a dying 15-year-old placed it back into his hands.