Story: IS HIS FATHER HERE?

MY 10-YEAR-OLD SON SAID HIS STOMACH HURT… THEN THE DOCTOR LOOKED AT THE SCREEN AND ASKED, “IS HIS FATHER HERE?”

For weeks, my son Leo wasn’t himself.

He used to be everywhere at once—running through the house, asking endless questions, turning cardboard boxes into entire worlds. Our home in a quiet neighborhood outside Portland used to feel alive because of him.

Then… it got quiet.

At first, it seemed small.

“Mom, my stomach feels weird,” he said one afternoon after school.

I smiled, made him tea, told him to rest. Kids get stomachaches all the time.

The next day, he was outside again, kicking his soccer ball like nothing happened.

I told myself it was over.

It wasn’t.

A few days later, I found him sitting on his bed, pale, both hands pressed against his stomach.

“I don’t feel good,” he whispered.

Something about his eyes made my chest tighten.

Still, I told myself it was just a bug.

But days passed… and instead of getting better, Leo changed.

He stopped running.

Stopped playing.

Stopped being him.

The house that once echoed with his voice fell into a silence that felt… wrong.

By the second week, he spent hours just sitting by the window, staring outside like he didn’t have the energy to explain what was happening inside him.

That’s when the fear started.

The kind every parent feels… but never wants to say out loud.

So I took him to the doctor.

They ran tests. Blood work. Then an ultrasound.

I watched the screen, not understanding anything I saw.

But the doctor did.

His expression shifted.

He leaned closer… studying it again.

Then he slowly turned to me.

His voice dropped.

“Ma’am…”

He hesitated.

Then asked the one question that made my stomach drop—

“Is his father here?”

He asked it so quietly it barely sounded real.

“Is his father here?”

My heart started pounding. “No… why?”

The doctor glanced at the screen again, then back at Leo… then at me.

“What I’m seeing,” he said carefully, “doesn’t look like a typical stomach issue.”

My throat tightened. “Then what is it?”

He turned the monitor slightly toward me, pointing to a shadow I didn’t understand.

“There’s a mass,” he said. “But that’s not the part that concerns me most.”

Everything inside me went cold.

“It’s positioned in a way that suggests something congenital… something he may have been born with.”

I blinked. “Born with? But he’s ten. Wouldn’t we have known?”

“Not always,” he replied. “Some conditions remain silent for years.”

Leo shifted beside me, small and quiet.

“Am I in trouble?” he asked.

I grabbed his hand. “No, baby. We’re just figuring things out.”

The doctor took a breath.

“I need to ask again—his father… has he ever had any rare medical conditions? Genetic abnormalities? Surgeries when he was younger?”

And that’s when it hit me.

Not something medical.

Something I had buried.

Leo’s father… hadn’t been in our lives for years. He disappeared before Leo turned one. No records. No family history. Nothing I could give them.

“I don’t know,” I admitted quietly.

The doctor nodded, already thinking ahead.

“Okay. Then we move fast.”

Within days, everything changed—specialists, scans, long hospital hallways that felt colder every time we walked through them.

And then we got the answer.

It wasn’t cancer.

It wasn’t anything life-threatening.

It was a rare congenital growth—dangerous if ignored, but completely removable.

The surgery took three hours.

I didn’t breathe the entire time.

But when the doctor came out… he smiled.

“He’s going to be okay.”

And just like that, the silence that had taken over our home began to lift.

Weeks later, Leo was back outside, running, laughing, filling every corner with life again.

But sometimes, late at night, I still think about that question.

“Is his father here?”

Because even though Leo is safe…

There’s still a part of his story I can’t answer.

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