A Cop Called: “Sir, Your Pregnant Wife Is in the Hospital with Another Man.” I Rushed Over…
The Impossible Truth
A man in a white coat emerged from the double doors. He was in his mid-40s, Asian, with tired eyes and an ID badge reading Richard Chen, MD, Emergency Medicine, 17 years experience.
“Mr. Walsh?”
“That’s me. Where’s my wife? Is she okay? Is the baby?”
“Come with me.” He gestured to a small consultation room off the waiting area. “We need to talk privately.”
“I don’t want to talk! I want to see Emma!”
“And you will. But first, we need to discuss what happened. Please, Mr. Walsh, this is important.”
Something in his tone made me stop. It made me follow him into that tiny room with its bland walls, fluorescent lights, and a box of tissues on the table.
Tissues that were there for a reason. Dr. Chen closed the door and gestured to a chair.
I sat. He sat across from me.
“Your wife was brought in by ambulance at 1:34 p.m. Single car accident on the GW Parkway. Her vehicle hit a guardrail. Minor collision. She sustained a mild concussion and some bruising, but structurally she’s fine. The baby’s heartbeat is strong. No signs of placental abruption or distress.”
Relief flooded through me. “Thank God. Can I see her now?”,
“Mr. Walsh, there was another person in the vehicle with her.”
I froze. “What?”
“A male passenger. He also sustained minor injuries—a dislocated shoulder. He’s being treated in the same examination area.”
Who was she giving someone a ride? Is he okay?
Dr. Chen’s expression was carefully neutral and professional. “The man identified himself as Ryan Walsh. He said he’s your brother.”
The room tilted. Ryan? My brother Ryan was in the car with Emma?
“Yes.”
But why? What was he—my brain was moving too slow, processing too slow. “Is he okay?”
“He’s stable. Dislocated shoulder that we’ve relocated. He’ll need to wear a sling for a few weeks, but he’ll recover fully.”
I don’t understand. Why was Ryan with Emma? Where were they going?
Dr. Chen folded his hands. “Mr. Walsh, when pregnant women come into emergency care, especially after accidents, we run standard tests. Blood work, ultrasound monitoring. It’s protocol to ensure both mother and baby are healthy.”
“Okay.”
“And during the examination, your wife became very distressed. She asked to speak to me privately.”,
He paused, choosing words carefully. “She said there was something you needed to know. Something about the baby.”
My heart started hammering. “What about the baby? Is Lily okay?”
“Lily is fine. But Mrs. Walsh requested we run a paternity test.”
The words didn’t make sense. Paternity test? Why would Emma want a paternity test?
We were married. We’d been trying for a baby for 2 years. Lily was ours—our daughter.
Unless… no. Why would she?
My voice came out strangled. “Why would Emma want a paternity test?”
Dr. Chen reached into his pocket and pulled out a folded paper. “She wanted you to have these results before you saw her. She felt you deserve to know the truth.”
He handed me the paper. I unfolded it with shaking hands.
It was an official lab letterhead from Georgetown University Hospital Genetics Laboratory. There was technical language about genetic markers, probability calculations, and DNA analysis.
And at the bottom, in plain English, were the paternity test results. “Tested individual: Emma Walsh, Mother. Tested individual: Baby Walsh, Fetus, 33 weeks gestation. Alleged father: Ryan Walsh. Probability of paternity: 99.7%.”,
The paper fell from my hands. It floated to the floor like a leaf, like it weighed nothing, like it hadn’t just destroyed my entire world.
“Mr. Walsh?” Dr. Chen’s voice seemed to come from very far away.
99.7%. Ryan. My brother. My best man at my wedding 5 years ago.
The guy who’d helped me pick out Emma’s engagement ring. The guy who came over every Sunday for dinner.
The guy who’d been so excited when we told him Emma was pregnant. Who’d offered to build the crib. Who’d helped me paint the nursery yellow 2 months ago.
That Ryan. How long?
My voice didn’t sound like mine. “How long have they been…?”
“I can’t answer that. But Mr. Walsh, you should know both your wife and your brother are in the examination area. They know you’ve been called. They know what’s happening. If you want to see them, I can take you back, but I wanted to prepare you first.”
I stood up. My legs felt like concrete, like they might not hold me. “Take me to them.”,
Dr. Chen stood. “Are you sure? You might want some time to process.”
“Take me to them now.”
