Leola Mae Harmon, a pregnant military nurse, is the victim of a drunk-driving accident. She loses her unborn child and is severely disfigured, her husband can't cope with the situation, and she sinks into depression. Her life slowly begins to get back on track when Dr. James Stallings takes an interest in reconstructing her face.—Jwelch5742
An Air Force nurse about to leave the service is badly disfigured in a car accident in which she also loses her baby. Her husband cannot deal with her disfigurement and she goes through a depression wondering why she was kept alive. The drunk driver who plowed into her car is let off with a very lenient punishment, too. A doctor at the hospital sees potential in reconstructing this nurse's face, and extends her enlistment so she'll be eligible for medical treatment covered by the armed forces over the full course of reconstructive surgeries. The doctor and nurse must overcome several obstacles during this time: the nurse wonders if the doctor is only doing this for his own fame; the bureaucracy has problems with the use of labial tissue from the vaginal area to reconstruct the nurse's lips. All through her treatment the nurse continues her duties at the hospital when she is well enough to work. She befriends a blinded patient while her jaws are wired shut and is afraid that he will not like her when he regains he sight. He does not and thanks his "Silent Angel" for the care she has given him. This boosts her morale greatly. In the end the nurse makes a full recovery. When her enlistment ends she joins the doctor in the private practice he has set up after leaving the Air Force, and they marry.—Gwynne M. Osaki <gmosaki@yahoo.com>