My husband had a vasectomy, and two months later I found out I was pregnant. He called me unfaithful, left me for another woman… but I still did not know the hardest blow was waiting for me at the ultrasound.

Part 2: The Ultrasound Revealed An Unexpected Truth

He simply set his cup on the table and stared at me like I had brought something filthy into our home.

“That’s impossible.”

My throat tightened.

“What do you mean, impossible?”

Diego gave a cold laugh.

“I had a vasectomy two months ago, Laura. I’m not stupid.”

That word hit me like a slap.

Stupid.

That was what the man I had loved for eight years called me.

The same man who had said the surgery was “for us,” because money was tight, because we could “decide later.”

I reminded him the doctor had said it was not immediate.

That follow-up testing was necessary.

That pregnancy could still happen.

But Diego had already stopped listening.

His verdict was already written across his face.

“Who is he?” he asked.

I froze.

“What?”

“The father. Tell me who he is.”

I felt sick.

Not because of the baby.

Because of him.

That night, he packed a suitcase.

Not many clothes.

Just enough to let me know another place was already waiting.

He was standing in the kitchen with his coffee, acting as if nothing in the world could disturb his perfect little calm.
I had not slept.

Diego didn’t know that. Then again, there were many things he no longer knew about me. Knowing someone required attention, and Diego had stopped giving me that long before I realized where his attention had gone.

The appointment with Dr. Salinas was supposed to be simple.

Quick.

Private.

But Diego had insisted on coming, and I had not managed to stop him in time.

“Mr. Diego,” Dr. Salinas said, her voice steady, “before you say anything else, you need to look at what is on this screen.”

Diego gave a short laugh.

The kind of laugh a man gives when he is completely sure he is right.

“How far along is she?”

Dr. Salinas turned the monitor toward him without changing her expression.

“Your wife is not six weeks pregnant. She is not seven. Based on the measurements and her dates, she is approximately twelve weeks pregnant.”

The room fell silent.

Twelve.

The number lodged itself in my chest.

Diego blinked.

For the first time in weeks, his certainty began to crack.

“That’s not possible,” he said.

The doctor pointed at the screen. “These are the measurements. They are not based on opinion.”

Paola, who had followed him into the room as if she had any right to be there, stopped touching her hair.

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

“Exactly,” Dr. Salinas replied. “And this pregnancy began before that.”

Something inside me loosened.

Not completely.

Not enough to feel free.

But enough to breathe.

Diego moved closer to the screen. “No. The dates must be wrong.”

Dr. Salinas looked at him with quiet firmness.

“A few days can vary. Not an entire month. And a vasectomy does not make a man sterile immediately. Follow-up tests are required. Did you complete your semen analysis?”

Diego said nothing.

There it was.

The truth.

Small, simple, and devastating.

Paola turned to him. “You didn’t get tested?”

His jaw tightened. “It wasn’t necessary.”

“Yes,” the doctor said. “It was.”

I was still lying there with cold gel on my stomach, my heart pounding hard.

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

Dr. Salinas looked at me more gently.

“Based on what we see today, that is the most likely explanation.”

Diego stared at the floor.

Not at me.

Never at me.

As if he could not bear to look at the woman he had condemned because of his pride and ignorance.

Then the doctor moved the probe again.

Her expression changed.

Not fear.

Surprise.

“Wait,” she said.

My breath caught. “What is it?”

She enlarged the image. Diego lifted his head. Paola folded her arms.

Dr. Salinas pointed at the monitor.

“There is another gestational sac.”
I froze.

“Another?”

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