A Secret Vasectomy, a Miracle Baby, and the DNA Test That Broke Him-eirian

Liam did not remember the exact second he became afraid of the baby.

He remembered the hospital room, though.

He remembered the smell of antiseptic and warmed cotton, the sting of sleeplessness behind his eyes, and the fragile little sound his son made when Sarah Rachel shifted him against her chest.

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The boy was wrapped in a striped hospital blanket so tightly that only his face showed.

Sarah held him with trembling hands, her hair loose around her shoulders, her face pale from labor and wet with tears.

The lights above the bed were harsh, but somehow they softened when they touched her.

For a few minutes, she looked almost golden.

She looked like a woman standing at the edge of a miracle, too exhausted to celebrate loudly and too grateful to do anything but cry.

Liam stood beside the bed with one hand on the rail and the other pressed flat against his thigh.

He was trying to steady his breathing.

He was also trying not to look like a man who had just realized his entire life might be collapsing in the middle of the happiest moment anyone would ever expect him to have.

“Liam,” Sarah whispered.

Her voice broke on his name.

“We finally did it… our miracle is finally here.”

He smiled because she needed a smile.

He smiled because nurses had been coming in and out, because the doctor had congratulated them, because people expected a father to glow when he looked at his newborn son.

He smiled because not smiling would have raised a question he could not answer.

But inside, something split open.

His fingers curled around the metal bedrail until the cold edge pressed into his palm.

A line of sweat slid down the center of his back despite the cool air in the room.

The baby made a tiny noise, and Sarah laughed softly through tears.

Liam almost stepped back.

He stopped himself.

That was the first restraint, the first little act of violence he did not commit against the truth.

He did not pull away.

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