3-year-old cancer survivor is flower girl at her bone marrow donor's wedding: 'She saved our daughter's life'
Skye Savren-McCormick was diagnosed with leukemia in 2016.
Guests were in tears earlier this month as a toddler walked down the aisle at the wedding of the woman who saved her life.
Skye Savren-McCormick, 3, served as the flower girl for bride Hayden Hatfield Ryals, 26, who was Skye's bone marrow donor.
"I always tell people they're smitten for one another," Talia Savren-McCormick told "Good Morning America" of Ryals and her young daughter. "Skye calls her 'Hay Hay.'
Savren-McCormick said that during the wedding, her daughter "stepped out and took a giant, handful of flowers and threw them on the ground. One of the bridesmaids said everyone was ugly crying."
Skye was diagnosed with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia in March 2016, just before her first birthday. That same year, she had her first bone marrow transplant, from Ryals, and later, a vital infusion of cells. Skye's final transplant was April 2017.
Savren-McCormick said that Skye wouldn't have made it to her final transplant if it had not been for Ryals.
"She was that sick," Savren-McCormick said. "I feel like Hayden is such a huge success in why Skye was able to beat leukemia."
Months after her transplant, Savren-McCormick and her husband Todd received a letter from Ryals who reached out through Be the Match, the organization to which Ryals donated her bone marrow.
Ryals and the Savren-McCormicks exchanged texts and Facebook messages until Ryals sent Skye a gift for her third birthday. Inside the card was an invitation asking the toddler to be the flower girl at her June 9 wedding.
After Skye's doctors gave her a clear bill of health, she and her parents made the trip to Alabama. At the wedding rehearsal, Skye and Ryals embraced for the very first time.
"I walked up and I just dropped to my knees and all I could do was smile," Ryals told ABC's World News Tonight.
Savren-McCormick said that her and Ryals' families hope to see each other again soon.
"They are going to be part of our lives forever," Savren-McCormick added. "She saved our daughter's life."