My sister and I are fraternal twins. Just for fun, we took a DNA test last month.
Strangely, results came back: 0% match. Mom and Dad seemed just as baffled. I ran to the hospital to dig into our birth records.
A nurse located my name, my twin’s, and Mom’s in the system. But I froze when she looked up and said “…there’s a note in your file. It says ‘Twin switched—see Incident Report #4137.’”
I stared at her, waiting for a punchline. She blinked at me, her face pale. “I’ve never seen a note like this before,” she whispered, her fingers trembling as she tapped her keyboard.
“Switched?” I repeated. “Like… switched at birth?”
She nodded slowly. “It looks like something happened during delivery. The file’s restricted—only a supervisor can open it.”
Fifteen minutes later, the head nurse arrived, followed by an administrator. I signed a confidentiality waiver, then was led into a small, windowless office with a single file folder already waiting on the desk.
Inside was the report.
It was dated August 18th, 1999 — our birth date. It detailed a chaotic night shift, a power outage during a summer storm, and two mothers in simultaneous labor. Both gave birth to twin girls—one fraternal set, one identical. A nurse’s handwritten note said: “Patient Taylor (Rm 204) and Patient Meyers (Rm 206) had twin girls within minutes of each other. Baby A and Baby C taken for tests. Mix-up suspected after labels fell off.”
My heart pounded as I flipped through the rest.
I was born to the Taylors. My sister? One of the Meyers’ identical twins.
I stood up, the chair nearly tipping behind me. “So… my parents aren’t her parents. And hers aren’t mine.”
The administrator looked pained. “Genetically, yes. But the records show that your mother raised both of you from day one.”
My mind raced. What about the other twin? Did the Meyers realize? Were they missing me all this time?
The nurse swallowed hard and handed me one more paper. A current address — for the Meyers family.
And a photo.
Two girls. Both with my eyes.
And one of them?
Was me.