A doctor assists in the difficult delivery of his ex-girlfriend — but the moment he sees the newborn, he freezes in terror
That day, the maternity ward was overwhelmed. Doctors rushed from one room to another. He had just finished a complicated surgery and was finally about to catch his breath when a new call came in: a patient at the end of pregnancy, labor turning critical, an experienced physician needed immediately.
He slipped on a fresh gown, scrubbed his hands, and entered the delivery room with steady steps. But the instant he walked in, his heart stopped. On the bed before him — she was there.
The woman he had once loved more than anyone. The one who had held his hand for seven years, swearing she’d always be by his side, only to vanish without a word.
Now she was lying there, drenched in sweat, her face twisted in pain, clutching her phone tightly. Their eyes met.
“You?..” she whispered hoarsely. “You’re my doctor?”
He clenched his jaw, nodded, and without a word pushed the bed toward the operating room.
The delivery was grueling. Her blood pressure dropped, the baby’s heart rate slowed. He issued instructions, guided the team, and kept a calm façade — even though inside he was torn apart.
In his head, only one thought echoed: Why her? Why now?
Forty agonizing minutes passed. At last, the first cry of the newborn filled the room. Everyone exhaled in relief. The doctor carefully lifted the baby into his arms — and then froze.
“This is… my child?” the words escaped him.
“What are you talking about…” she turned away, but her voice trembled.
He pulled back the blanket and went pale. On the baby’s tiny shoulder was a birthmark — identical to his. In the exact same place.
“My God…” his voice cracked. “He has my birthmark. Is he my son?”
She covered her face with her hands, her shoulders shaking. Finally, she whispered almost inaudibly:
“Yes. He’s your child.”
“Why did you keep it from me? Why did you just leave?” he asked softly, each word weighted with pain.
She lifted her tear-filled eyes.
“I found out I was pregnant just before I left. I knew medicine would always come first for you — your career, your research, your surgeries. A child would have been an obstacle. I was scared. I thought it was better to disappear than to hold you back.”
He slowly moved closer to her bedside, took her hand, and held it tightly.
“I would have given it all up — the career, the titles — because nothing is more important than this moment. Nothing is more important than you.”
Meanwhile, the baby drifted peacefully to sleep, as if unaware that by simply being born, he had just rewritten both their past and their future.