A 65-year-old woman discovered she was pregnant. But when the time came to give birth, the doctor examined her and was shocked by what he saw.-olweny - Chainityai

A 65-year-old woman discovered she was pregnant. But when the time came to give birth, the doctor examined her and was shocked by what he saw.-olweny

“Why is nobody smiling?” Alma Serrano asked from the stretcher, drenched in sweat, her hands clutching the sheet, her hope so great that it seemed to light up her face despite the pain.

Dr. Medina did not respond immediately, and that silence weighed more than any contraction, because in a hospital the lack of words almost always comes before the worst news.

The ultrasound screen remained lit in front of him, gray, bright, cruel, showing shapes that only specialists understood, while behind the curtain the whole family held their breath as if they were about to hear a verdict.

May be an image of hospital and text

Angela clutched the embroidered blue blanket to her chest.

Mariela put a hand to her mouth.

The nephew, who had arrived discreetly recording, put away his cell phone for the first time since they entered.

Dr. Medina called another doctor, then the radiologist, then the head of surgery, and Alma felt the room getting smaller, not because of the pain, but because of the way the adults avoided her eyes.

—Doctor—she insisted, trying to sit up—, tell me if he’s settled yet, tell me if there’s still a long way to go, but don’t keep me like this because I feel like the baby is going to get scared.

The young doctor looked at Medina with an expression that was not only medical concern, but also human compassion, the kind that appears when someone’s body is unknowingly holding a lie.

—Doña Alma—Medina finally said in a voice that was too soft—, I need you to listen to me very calmly.

Alma smiled, still trusting, still convinced that the worst that could happen was an emergency cesarean or a long night, never the possibility that her miracle did not exist.

—I’m listening, doctor, but first tell me if it’s a boy or a girl.

Nobody responded to that either.

The radiologist, a man with delicate hands and thick glasses, moved the chair closer to the machine, enlarged the image, and passed the transducer over Alma’s immense belly again with a slowness that seemed like a farewell.

Medina closed the cubicle curtain completely.

Then he asked the family members to wait outside.

Angela protested.

Mariela wanted to stay.

But the doctor’s voice hardened enough to make it clear that they were no longer in the realm of family emotion, but in that of a clinical truth that required silence.

When they were alone, Alma felt real fear for the first time.

Not that happy fear of women in labor who imagine the baby turning towards the exit.

No.

A dry, icy, barefoot fear.

“Where is my son?” she asked.

The question hung suspended between the buzzing of the device and the smell of antiseptic.

Medina took a breath as if he were the one who needed strength to continue.

—Doña Alma, there is no baby in your womb.

It took Alma a few seconds to understand the phrase, because the brain has the pious habit of rejecting anything that could split its life in two.

“Don’t talk nonsense,” she replied, first confused and then annoyed. “Of course there’s a baby, I felt it move, I’m nine months pregnant, I have milk, my feet swelled up, I vomited for weeks, I had positive tests.”

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