My Husband Left Me After His Vasectomy, But the Ultrasound Revealed the Truth He Wasn’t Ready to Face - The Archivist P1...

He was in the kitchen drinking coffee, as if nothing in the world could break that false calm.

I had not slept. Diego did not know that. He did not know a lot of things about me anymore, because knowing requires paying attention, and Diego had stopped paying attention to me around the same time he started paying it elsewhere.

The appointment with Dr. Salinas was supposed to be quick. He had insisted on coming. I had not been able to stop him in time.

“Mr. Diego,” the doctor said, “before you say anything else, you need to see what is shown here.”

Diego let out a laugh. The kind men use when they are certain they are right.

“What age?”

Dr. Salinas turned the screen toward him without losing her composure.

“Your wife is not six weeks pregnant. She is not seven. Based on the embryo’s measurements and the date of her last period, we are talking about approximately twelve weeks.”

The office went quiet.

Twelve.

The word stuck in my chest like a splinter.

Diego blinked. Confused. The numbers were speaking to him in a language his certainty had not prepared him for.

“That can’t be,” he said.

The doctor pointed at the screen. “Here is the measurement. This was not invented to please anyone.”

Paola stopped stroking her hair. She had come with him. She had stood there like she had earned the right to be in the room where I was lying with cold gel on my belly.

“But he had surgery two months ago,” Paola said.

“Exactly,” replied the doctor. “And this pregnancy began before that date.”

I felt something inside me loosen. Not complete relief. It was as if a rope that had been tightening around my neck for weeks had eased by barely a centimeter.

Diego approached the screen. “No. The dates are wrong.”

Dr. Salinas looked at him with a seriousness that gave me strength.

“There can be variations of a few days. Not a whole month. Also, a vasectomy does not make a man sterile the next day. Follow-up tests are required to confirm the absence of sperm. Did you have your follow-up semen analysis?”

Diego remained silent.

There he was.....

The truth, small and brutal.

Paola looked at him. “Didn’t you get tested?”

He clenched his jaw. “It wasn’t necessary.”

“Yes,” said the doctor, “it was necessary.”

I was still lying there, the cold gel on my belly, my heart pounding against my ribs.

“So,” I murmured, “could the baby have been conceived before the vasectomy?”

Dr. Salinas softened her gaze when she looked at me. “Not only could it be. Based on current data, it is the most likely scenario.”

Diego looked at the floor.

Not at me. Never at me. At the floor.

As if he could not look at the woman he had just destroyed out of ignorance dressed up as pride.

But the doctor moved the transducer again. And her face changed.

Not with concern.

With surprise.

“Wait,” she said.

I felt like I could not breathe. “What is it?”

She enlarged the image. Paola crossed her arms. Diego raised his head.

Dr. Salinas pointed at the screen. “Here is another gestational sac.”

I was frozen. “Another?”

She moved the device a little more. A second dot appeared on the screen. Smaller, but there.....

And then, like a small answer from the universe, another heartbeat was heard.

Strong. Fast. Alive.

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