Just weeks ago, Sundee Rutter was told she was beating breast cancer.

But suddenly she was dying of a different disease, and her six children were saying goodbye - from the other side of a window.

Rutter, 42, died on March 16 in Everett, Washington, after contracting coronavirus.

Shortly before she died, staff at Providence Hospital were keeping visitors out her room, hoping to prevent the virus’ spread.

Her children, aged 13 to 24, were losing another parent, eight years after their father died.

They gathered outside her hospital room, and staff came up with an arrangement to let them talk to her.

Walkie-talkie farewell

“They took a walkie-talkie, and they placed (it) right by her bedside, on the pillow,” her son Elijah Ross-Rutter, 20, said on Wednesday.

Looking at her through a window, “We got to say our final words and goodbyes to our mom,” he said.

“I was able to tell her I loved her,” he said.

Elijah Ross-Rutter, 20. Credit: CNN

“It’s kind of hard. In the moment, you really don’t know what you’re going to say, you know?”

Elijah said he told his mother that “everything’s going to be all right with the kids”.

“Us older siblings, we’re going to make sure everything’s OK with (the younger ones) and that they’re going to grow up to be some adults that my mom would want them to be,” he recalled.

‘Just starting to feel whole again’

Rutter had been battling breast cancer, but was told in January she was in remission, her family said.

“We were just starting to feel whole again,” her son told CNN.

She began to feel ill on March 2.

She was weak, had trouble breathing and had a migraine.

How you can tell the difference between the coronavirus, the flu, a cold or seasonal allergies. Credit: Sam Aitken, 7NEWS

Her son said he first took her to a hospital on March 3.

That first time, she was there four to five hours, but returned when her condition worsened.

“She fought valiantly until she could not fight any more,” a GoFundMe page set up on behalf of the family says.

Staying together

Elijah’s eldest brother, Tyree Ross-Rutter, intends to take custody of his younger siblings, aged 13, 14 and 15.

“We plan on staying together, and all getting a house together ... and fighting this all together,” Elijah said.

So far, the GoFundMe has raised more than its $350,00 goal from nearly 8,000 donors.

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The organiser of the fundraiser, Carrie Frederickson, said the money would help Tyree afford the attorneys needed to settle his mother’s estate and start the guardianship process for his three youngest siblings.

“In such a dark time for these six siblings, you are the ray of light that they needed,” Frederickson wrote.

Hero

Sundee Rutter’s older sister, Shawnna Olsen, called Sundee a “hero” who always put her children first.

Rutter had been a single mother since the death of her husband in 2012, Olsen said.

“My sister was amazing,” Olsen said.

“She was the first to lend a helping hand to anyone.”

The children “are well loved by family, community and complete strangers,” Olsen said.