I’d been waiting nine long months for this moment, and finally, the day arrived.
The entire time my wife was in the hospital, I barely left her side — only quick runs to the pharmacy or cafeteria when she needed something.
The nurses teased us gently. “Aren’t you tired of him yet?” one would laugh to my wife. Over those days, one nurse in particular — Rebecca — felt almost like an older sister to me. She was kind, attentive, always stepping in to help.
But then came that night.
I must’ve passed out from exhaustion. I don’t even remember closing my eyes. When I woke up seven hours later, voices outside my room were frantic:
“They’re starting labor!”
I bolted upright and sprinted to the delivery room. My wife was already prepped, under anesthesia. But the moment I stepped through the door, a voice snapped across the room:
“GET OUT. NOW!”
It was Rebecca. The same nurse who had been nothing but kind to me for days.
“What? Why? I’m her husband!” I stammered, heart pounding.
She locked eyes with me, her expression like stone.
“Only the *real* father is allowed in the room.”
My blood ran cold.
“…WHAT?!” My voice cracked, echoing down the sterile hallway. “WHAT DOES THAT MEAN?!”
Rebecca’s words echoed in my skull. *Only the real father…*
I staggered forward. “What are you talking about? I AM the father!”
Her lips pressed into a thin line. “You need to leave.”
“No!” I shouted. “Not until someone tells me what the hell is going on!”
At that moment, the doctor stepped in, glancing between me and Rebecca with clear unease. Then his gaze softened, almost pitying.
“Mr. Hayes… please. This isn’t the time. You’ll only upset your wife.”
The floor tilted beneath me. My chest burned. “Upset her? She’s my wife. That’s my child. Why are you saying this?”
Rebecca finally looked away, her voice low. “Because she put another man down on the forms. And he’s already on his way here.”
It felt like someone had driven a knife into my ribs. My knees buckled, my breath came ragged.
“No…” I whispered. “That’s not possible.”
But through the glass window in the corridor, I saw him. A man I recognized — *my wife’s coworker*. Striding down the hall, panic on his face, flashing an ID at the nurse’s station.
The world around me blurred. Rebecca’s hand was on my arm, guiding me away, but I barely felt it. My ears rang, my heart thrashed.
Behind me, the doors to the delivery room closed.
And I realized in a single, brutal instant:
The day I had dreamed of for nine months… was never really mine.