
Somewhere on the 12th floor of Northwestern Memorial, a 26-year-old woman wrapped in gauze and grace is about to celebrate the most improbable Thanksgiving of her life.
Ten days ago, Bethany MaGee was set on fire by a stranger on a CTA train. Today, she is surrounded by her entire family, a mountain of Portillo’s pumpkin pie, and $324,000 worth of love from strangers who refuse to let her fall.
Her brother Ethan posted the update at 6:03 a.m.:
“She’s awake. She’s smiling. She looked at all of us and whispered, ‘You guys are my superheroes.’ Then she asked if the pie had arrived yet. That’s our Bee.”
The GoFundMe, launched quietly on Monday with a modest $50,000 goal, shattered every expectation. By Wednesday night it stood at $324,187 and climbing, with donations pouring in from all 50 states and 27 countries. One donor, a 9-year-old boy from Naperville, emptied his piggy bank for $47.63 and wrote, “I want Bethany to buy the biggest pie in the world.” Another, an anonymous burn survivor from Texas, gave $25,000 with the message: “I walked out of the fire. So will you.”
Inside Room 1218, the transformation is nothing short of miraculous.
The walls are covered in handmade cards, many drawn by Chicago schoolkids who colored phoenixes rising from flames.
A string of orange fairy lights (cleared by the fire marshal) glows above her bed like a sunrise she’s determined to see again.
Her rescue dog Milo, wearing a tiny turkey hat, is curled at her feet (the nurses pretended not to notice when he was smuggled in).
A portable speaker plays her favorite playlist: Taylor Swift, Lizzo, and the Hamilton soundtrack she knows by heart.
Mom Lisa spoon-feeds her mashed potatoes while Dad Tom holds the phone so Bethany can “FaceTime-cheer” for the Bears game with her siblings. Every time the donations tick upward on the laptop screen, the room erupts in soft cheers so as not to disturb the grafts.
“She keeps saying thank you to the nurses, to us, to the city,” Lisa wrote on the fundraiser page. “We keep telling her: Chicago is thanking YOU for reminding us what strength looks like.”
The money, her family says, has already changed everything:
Private physical therapy sessions booked through 2026
A ground-floor apartment renovation so she can come home wheelchair-free
Trauma counseling for the whole family
A promise that Bethany will never see a single medical bill
But the part that breaks them—and all of us—is the note she asked Ethan to read aloud to the donors yesterday:
“I was on fire ten days ago. Today I am wrapped in more love than I have ever known. I don’t know how to say thank you big enough, so I’m going to live the biggest, loudest, kindest life I can. I’m going to hug strangers (when I can hug again) and I’m going to keep choosing joy even when it hurts. You didn’t just save my skin. You saved my story. This is only chapter one.”
As the Macy’s parade floats drift across the TV screen and the smell of warm pumpkin pie fills the room, Bethany MaGee—scarred, sedated, and somehow still sparkling—raises a tiny plastic cup of apple cider with her bandaged hand.
“To second chances,” she whispers.
Her family clinks water bottles, milk cartons, and one stolen hospital Jell-O cup against hers.
Outside, Chicago keeps giving. Inside, a girl who was literally set on fire is teaching the world how to burn bright instead.
Happy Thanksgiving, Bethany. The pie’s here. So are we.