The Doctor Set One Old Photograph On My Hospital Blanket — And I Saw The Lie Emilio Had Built-thuyhien

The plastic edge of the photograph clicked softly against the white hospital blanket when Dr. Richard Salazar laid it beside my son. I could smell old leather from his wallet under the sharper scent of alcohol wipes and bleach. The overhead lights caught the glossy corner of the picture. A teenage boy in a faded Cubs jersey was grinning into the camera, one arm around a younger Richard in weekend clothes instead of a white coat. The boy’s head was turned just enough for me to see it clearly—beneath his left ear, the same cinnamon-shaped birthmark.

My fingers closed around the blanket until my knuckles ached.

The nurse took one slow breath through her nose. Somewhere in the hallway, a newborn started crying. The sound slid under the door and thinned out.

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“Your son is healthy,” Dr. Salazar said, and his voice dragged slightly on the first word, as if he had to pull it through his throat. “His lungs are strong. His heart sounds perfect. The problem is not the baby.”

He looked at the photograph again before lifting his eyes to me.

“The problem,” he said, “is my son.”

I had imagined anger many times during those seven months. Anger at Emilio. Anger at myself. Anger at the empty side of the bed, the unanswered texts, the way my body kept carrying proof of somebody else’s cowardice. But sitting there with my hospital gown twisted over my knees and my newborn son still warm from my body, I felt something colder than anger. It slid under my ribs and stayed there.

“You told me his father was dead,” I said.

Dr. Salazar shut the wallet and held it in both hands.

“That is what Emilio says when he does not want people finding me.”

The words landed one at a time.

The nurse—her badge said Marisol—looked from him to me and back again. She was still standing by the bassinet, one palm pressed over her mouth.

“Can someone tell me what is happening?” I asked.

Dr. Salazar pulled the chair closer to the bed and sat, the wheels giving a soft rubber squeak against the floor.

“I haven’t spoken to Emilio in eighteen months,” he said. “Not after I learned he’d been using my name to open doors he had not earned. He worked medical supply sales for a while. Charm, polished shoes, perfect smile. He could walk into a room and make people feel chosen. Then bills would appear. Missing inventory. Signatures that didn’t hold up when someone looked twice. I paid some of it early on because I thought I was buying him time to become a better man. All I really bought him was cover.”

He rubbed the heel of his hand over his mouth.

“When I saw that birthmark, I knew. All the Salazar men have it. My father had it. Emilio has it. Now your son has it too.”

I turned my head and looked at the tiny curve below my baby’s ear. He made a sleep-heavy sound and tucked his chin deeper into the blanket.

For a second, all I could do was listen to the beeping monitor and the air vent blowing cold over my shoulder.

Emilio had not started out looking like a man who would disappear.

I met him on a wet Thursday night at the diner where I worked in River North. It was 10:40 p.m. and I was wiping syrup off a counter with my wrist already throbbing from carrying plates all evening. He came in wearing a navy quarter-zip and rain on his shoulders. He ordered grilled cheese and black coffee, then apologized when he saw how full the place was, as if he had walked into my life already trained to look considerate. He left a $100 bill on a $14 check and smiled when I tried to hand it back.

“Keep it,” he said. “You look like you’ve earned more than minimum wage tonight.”

The tip paid my electric bill.

He came back three nights later. Then again the following week. He remembered what shift I worked. He remembered I hated pickles. He noticed when I wrapped my wrist with an elastic bandage and showed up with a cheap brace from a drugstore, still in the plastic. He kissed the spot beneath my thumb where the tendon ached and said, half laughing, “You work like three people.”

When he talked about family, his face always changed just a little. His mouth would stay easy, but his eyes went flat.

“My mother died when I was young,” he told me once.

That part, I later learned, was true.

“And my father? He might as well have.”

That part was not.

He told me they had money but it meant nothing. He told me he didn’t care about any of it. He said he wanted quiet, normal, honest. He said my tiny apartment smelled like coffee and laundry soap and peace. He used to stand behind me while I cooked eggs in a pan too small for the stove and rest his chin on my shoulder. He bought one tiny pair of gray baby socks the week the test turned positive and left them on my pillow like an offering.

On the day of the first sonogram, he pressed both hands to the printout like it might warm up under his palms.

“That looks like a fighter,” he said.

For weeks after he left, that sentence kept coming back to me at stupid times. On the bus. At the laundromat. Bent over in the diner storage room trying not to vomit into a box of paper napkins.

The worst part of being abandoned while pregnant was not even the silence itself. It was how loud everything else became. Other women in waiting rooms with men holding water bottles. Grocery stores full of couples arguing over diaper brands. A baby aisle under bright lights where I stood with a calculator open on my phone and a package of wipes in my hand while two teenagers in hoodies laughed near the formula shelves like life was still something light.

My body kept changing whether I felt ready or not. By month six, my ankles swelled over my sneakers by the end of every shift. My lower back burned so hard I had to brace one hand against the pie case when the diner got busy. At night I would lie down on the thin mattress in that rental room and feel my son roll under my skin while the radiator hissed and a couple in the next apartment argued about cable bills through the wall.

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