I Had a Vasectomy 14 Years Ago, but When My Wife Got Pregnant, I Stayed Quiet Until the DNA Test Came Back-tete

The second name on the report made no sense.

I sat in my truck outside St. Mark’s Church with the paper shaking in my hands, reading the line again and again.

Paternity probability: 99.999%.

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Biological father: Alex Gomez.

That should have been the end of it.

That should have made me cry, laugh, drive home, hold my wife, and apologize until my voice gave out.

But below that, under an additional note from the private lab, was another name.

Dr. Raymond Keller.

The same doctor who had performed my vasectomy fourteen years earlier.

For a full minute, I couldn’t move.

The church bell rang somewhere behind me, soft and distant, but inside my truck, the air felt locked shut.

I looked at the envelope on my lap.

Then at the baby car seat base still strapped into the back seat.

Then back at the name.

Dr. Raymond Keller.

I had not heard that name in over a decade.

Not since the clinic near San Antonio.

Not since the day I walked out with a small ice pack, a prescription, and a paper saying the procedure had been completed.

I drove home slowly.

Every red light felt longer than it should have.

Every couple walking with a stroller looked like they knew something I didn’t.

When I pulled into our driveway, Lucy was sitting on the porch with the baby against her chest.

The porch light had just come on.

She looked exhausted.

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