“I’m fine, Mom,” Allison purred, casting a smug glance at David.
Megan handed over a gift box wrapped in silver. “Premium organic supplements. Only the best for the Coleman heir. We’ve already reserved his spot at the international prep school.”
The family laughed, sharing a vision of a future built on the wreckage of my marriage. No one mentioned my name. I had been erased, a footnote in the ledger of their lives.
“Allison,” a nurse called. “The doctor is ready for the ultrasound.”
David jumped up, his face glowing with pride. “I’m coming in. This is my son we’re talking about.”
The ultrasound room was cool, lit by the clinical blue glow of monitors. Allison lay on the table, her hand clutched in David’s. The doctor, a man named Dr. Aris, began moving the transducer over her abdomen. The grainy image of a fetus appeared on the screen, flickering like a ghost.
But as the seconds ticked by, the doctor’s expression shifted. His brow furrowed. He moved the transducer again, his eyes darting between the screen and the intake forms.
“Doctor?” David asked, his voice tensed with a sudden, unformed fear. “Is my boy healthy? Look at those shoulders—he’s a fighter, isn’t he?”
Dr. Aris didn’t answer. He clicked a button on the console, zooming in on the crown-rump length. He looked at Allison, then at David, his face becoming a mask of professional neutrality.
“We have a discrepancy,” the doctor said quietly.
“A discrepancy? What does that mean?” David barked.
The doctor straightened his lab coat and pressed an intercom button. “Connect me to the legal department. And have security stand by in ultrasound room three.”
David froze. Allison’s face went from pale to translucent. The door, which hadn’t been fully latched, was pushed open by the eavesdropping Linda and Megan.
“Is something wrong with the baby?” Linda gasped.
The doctor turned to face the entire family, his voice ringing with a terrifying clarity. “Mr. Coleman, based on the fetal development, bone density, and gestational size, conception occurred exactly four weeks earlier than the dates provided on the intake forms.”
The air in the room seemed to solidify into ice. David looked at Allison. Allison looked at the floor.
“I don’t understand,” David stammered. “A month? That’s… that’s impossible. We weren’t even—”
“I mean,” the doctor interrupted, his voice dropping an octave, “that Miss Allison was already pregnant before your documented timeline of ‘exclusive intimacy’ began. By a full month.”
Chapter 3: The Ghost in the Machine
“Whose child is this?”
Leave a Comment