His Vasectomy Was 14 Years Old. Then the DNA Test Broke Him.-xurixuri

Alexandre Gomes had built his adult life around wires, switches, and things that either worked or did not. A circuit had a fault. A breaker tripped. A cable carried current or it failed. That certainty comforted him.

He was 39, an electrical technician in Curitiba, and most of his workdays began before sunrise. He carried tools into half-finished buildings, climbed ladders, breathed dust, and came home with sore shoulders and gray powder in his clothes.

Lúcia knew that version of him better than anyone. She had seen him exhausted, proud, frightened, stubborn, and silent. They had been married long enough to know how the other person breathed when worry entered the room.

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Fourteen years earlier, when they lived in a small rented apartment in Sítio Cercado, money had made every decision feel dangerous. The fridge was never full for long. Bills sat on the table like threats.

Lúcia’s father had left behind debt from a failed business, and Alexandre had helped pay what he could. He never forgot the humiliation of calculating groceries against someone else’s mistake.

So when they talked about children, the conversation was not tender. It was practical. Black coffee, stale bread, a notebook page, and a terrible little column of numbers that told them 1 child could ruin them.

Lúcia agreed because the math was real. Alexandre agreed because fear had already taken the shape of responsibility inside him. He scheduled a vasectomy at a private clinic in São José dos Pinhais.

The doctor made it sound simple, quick, and safe. Alexandre left with letterhead paper, a signature, a stamp, and a date. He placed the document inside a plastic folder and believed the future had been sealed.

Years passed. Their life did not become easy, but it became steadier. Lúcia opened a small beauty salon in the neighborhood. Alexandre worked across Curitiba and the metropolitan region, taking every job he could.

They paid bills. They replaced old furniture. They learned which months were heavy and which months gave them room to breathe. From the outside, their marriage looked like two tired people who had survived.

But survival is not the same thing as peace. Sometimes Alexandre saw Lúcia standing at the salon door, watching children run along the sidewalk, and mistook her silence for acceptance.

It was not acceptance. It was mourning without a funeral.

The night she placed the pregnancy test on the kitchen table, the kitchen felt too bright. Two red lines sat on white plastic under the cold Curitiba light, and the smell of burned coffee drifted from the sink.

The refrigerator hummed. Water ticked somewhere in the faucet. Lúcia stood across from him with one hand trembling, and Alexandre felt the tile beneath his feet turn strange and unstable.

“I’m pregnant, Alexandre,” she said.

He did not answer at first. His mind went straight to the folder. The clinic. The signature. The stamp. The old promise that biology had been handled.

He opened the kitchen drawer and pulled out the yellowed plastic folder. Inside was the document from 14 years ago, still creased, still official-looking, still carrying the authority he had trusted.

He wanted to ask whose child it was. He wanted to shout. He wanted to smash something just to make the room match what was happening in his chest.

Instead, his anger went cold. That was worse. It became clean, quiet, almost disciplined. He pressed the folder so tightly that the plastic edge cut into his finger.

“I understand,” he said.

He did not understand.

From that night on, Alexandre became two men. One drove Lúcia to medical appointments. The other sat beside her believing she had betrayed him.

At 7:40 a.m. on a Tuesday, he held her bag during an ultrasound. At 6:12 p.m. on a Friday, he bought vitamins, papaya, and water crackers for her nausea.

He saved receipts, protocols, appointment slips, and exam photos in the same plastic folder as the vasectomy document. Proof became his private religion. Paper seemed safer than conversation.

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