My wife was seven months pregnant, but her belly was still flat.
When I took her to the doctor, he whispered in my ear: “Divorce her. Now.”
I remember that morning too clearly.
Emily stood in the kitchen, holding a cup of tea, gently resting against the counter. She smiled—tired, but smiling. One hand on her stomach… the same stomach that, at seven months, barely showed.
Seven months.
Seven months of believing we were finally having a child.
After years of loss, I didn’t question it.
At the appointment, something felt off.
Not excited.
Tense.
In the waiting room, her hand was ice cold.
— It’ll be okay, I said.
She looked at me.
And for a second… I saw horror.
Not fear.
Horror.
Dr. Miller called us in.
Everything seemed normal—until the ultrasound.
Then silence.
His expression changed. He moved the probe again and again… like something should be there—but wasn’t.
He turned off the machine.
— Mr. Carter, come with me.
Emily didn’t move.
In the hallway, the door shut behind us.
He leaned in, voice low:
— Divorce her. Immediately.
I froze.
— Why?
He hesitated.
— There is no pregnancy.
My breath stopped.
— That’s impossible…
He looked me in the eyes.
— The problem isn’t that she’s not pregnant.
A pause.
— It’s that her body thinks she is.
My stomach dropped.
— What does that mean?
He glanced back inside… then whispered:
— If you want to live… don’t let her give birth.
I felt the ground vanish.
— Give birth to what?
He didn’t answer.
— Take her and leave. Now.
I opened the door.
Emily was sitting up.
Watching me.
Smiling.
A smile I had never seen before.
— What did he say? she asked softly.
I couldn’t move.
Because in that moment… her stomach moved.
Not like a baby.
Something else.
And then I understood.
She hadn’t lied.
I just never understood… what she was really carrying.
My throat went dry.
— We’re leaving, I said.
Emily tilted her head, still smiling.
— Already?
Her voice sounded… wrong.
I stepped closer, forcing calm.
— Yes. Now.
For a second, she didn’t move.
Then she slowly slid off the bed.
That’s when it happened again.
Her stomach shifted.
Not a kick.
Not life.
Something… pressing outward.
I grabbed her hand.
Cold. Too cold.
We walked out without another word. I didn’t look back at the doctor.
Outside, the air hit me hard.
— We need to go to the hospital, I said.
She stopped.
— We already did.
Her grip tightened.
Pain shot through my fingers.
— Emily… you’re hurting me.
Her smile widened.
Then her body jerked.
Violently.
She doubled over, a sound escaping her throat—low, distorted.
And her stomach—
moved again.
This time, there was no doubt.
Something inside pushed against her skin, stretching it from within, sharp and unnatural.
I stepped back.
— Emily…
She looked up at me.
Her eyes were not hers anymore.
— It’s time, she whispered.
That was the moment everything became simple.
No confusion.
No denial.
I turned and ran.
I didn’t stop.
Behind me, I heard a sound—wet, tearing, impossible—and then silence.
I never went back.
I filed for divorce that same day.
I never asked questions.
Never answered calls.
Never tried to understand.
Because I already knew enough.
There was never a child.
And whatever she carried—
it was never meant to be born into this world.
I chose to live.
And I never looked back.