“My husband insisted that the girl was just pretending, until I secretly took her to have some tests done.

“My husband insisted that the girl was just pretending, until I secretly took her to have some tests done. When the doctor looked at the screen, he whispered trembling, ‘There is something alive inside the girl…,’ and my scream tore through the silence of the hospital.”

“My husband insisted the girl was only pretending, until I secretly took her for medical tests. When the doctor stared at the screen, he whispered in a trembling voice, ‘There is something alive inside the child…,’ and my scream tore through the silence of the hospital.”

I knew something was wrong long before anyone else cared to notice.

For weeks, my fifteen-year-old daughter, Anaya, had been complaining of nausea, sharp stomach pains, dizziness, and a constant exhaustion that was unlike the energetic girl who once loved football, photography, and late-night phone calls with her friends.

But lately, she barely spoke at all.

She kept her hoodie pulled over her head even inside the house and flinched whenever someone asked how she was feeling.

My husband, Rajesh, dismissed everything.
“She’s just acting,” he insisted. “Teenagers exaggerate everything. Don’t waste time or money on doctors.”
He said it with a cold certainty that shut down any argument.

But I couldn’t ignore it.

I watched Anaya eat less and sleep more.
I saw her wince in pain when she bent down to tie her shoes.
I saw her lose weight, lose color, lose the light in her eyes.

Something inside her was breaking, and I felt helpless—as if I were watching my daughter fade away behind fogged glass.

One night, after Rajesh had fallen asleep, I found Anaya curled up on her bed, clutching her stomach.

Her face was pale, almost gray, and tears soaked her pillow.

“Ma,” she whispered, “it hurts. Please make it stop.”

That moment shattered whatever doubt I had left.

The next afternoon, while Rajesh was still at work, I took her to St. Helena Medical Centre. She barely spoke during the drive, staring out the window with a distant expression I no longer recognized.

The nurse took her vitals. The doctor ordered blood tests and an ultrasound.
I waited, wringing my hands until they trembled.

When the door finally opened, Dr. Mehra walked in with a grave expression. He clutched the file tightly, as if the information inside weighed more than paper should.

“Mrs. Sharma,” he said quietly, “we need to talk.”

Anaya sat beside me on the examination bed, shaking.

Dr. Mehra lowered his voice.
“The imaging shows that there is something inside her.”

For a moment, I couldn’t breathe.

“Inside her?” I repeated. “What do you mean?”

He hesitated—just for a second—but that hesitation said everything.

My stomach dropped. My heart pounded against my ribs. The room tilted, as if gravity had shifted.

My hands went numb.

“What… what is it?” I whispered.

Dr. Mehra exhaled slowly.
“We need to discuss the results privately. But I need you to prepare yourself.”

The air in the room grew thick.

Anaya’s face crumpled.

And in that moment—before the truth was spoken, before the world split open beneath my feet—

I barely remember how I stayed upright when Dr. Mehra closed the door and said the words no mother should ever hear.

“Your daughter is pregnant,” he said.
“Approximately twelve weeks.”

Silence fell. The kind that presses against your skull.

I stared at him, unable to comprehend.
“No,” I whispered. “That’s impossible. She’s fifteen. She hardly goes anywhere except school.”

Anaya broke down, burying her face in her hands, her shoulders shaking violently.

I reached for her, but she pulled away—not from me, I realized, but from the unbearable weight of it all.

Dr. Mehra’s voice softened.
“Because of her age, we are required to involve a social worker. She will need medical and emotional support.”

I nodded mechanically, as if submerged underwater.

A social worker named Neha arrived shortly after. She asked to speak with Anaya alone. I waited in the corridor, pacing, digging my nails into my palms until they left crescent-shaped marks.

Every minute felt like an hour.

When Neha came out, her expression was grave.

“Mrs. Sharma… we need to talk.”

My knees nearly gave way.
“Please. Just tell me.”

She asked me to sit. I didn’t.

“Anaya has disclosed that the pregnancy is not the result of a consensual relationship,” she said gently.
“Someone hurt her. This was not her choice.”

My head spun.
“Who?” I managed to choke out. “Who did this to my child?”

Neha hesitated.
“She wasn’t ready to say his name. But she indicated it was someone she sees regularly. Someone she feared no one would believe her about.”

Fear pooled inside me—cold and heavy.

“Does she feel safe at home?” Neha asked quietly.

The question struck me like a slap.

“Of course,” I said, but my voice sounded thin. “I… I would never let anything happen to her.”

Neha looked at me with compassion—and with a painful honesty reserved for those about to watch their world fall apart.

“Sometimes,” she said softly, “children stay silent because they’re trying to protect the very people they love.”

Something flickered in my mind:
Anaya shrinking when Rajesh entered a room.
Her growing silence.
Her sudden fear of weekends when he stayed home.

No.

My throat tightened painfully.

I collapsed into a chair, shaking.

“For now,” Neha continued, “I recommend that you and Anaya stay somewhere else tonight—perhaps with a relative—just as a precaution.”

My breathing became shallow.

Rajesh had always been strict, sometimes harsh—but not this.
Not this.

Except… I was already thinking it.

And every memory I had pushed aside came flooding back.

“I’ll take her to my sister’s place,” I whispered.

Neha placed a hand on my shoulder.
“Good. The police will speak with you both tomorrow. Tonight, focus on keeping Anaya safe.”

When I returned to the examination room, Anaya sat curled into herself, staring at the wall. When she saw me, she broke down again.

I held her tightly.

“I’m here,” I whispered. “You’re safe with me. We’ll get through this. I promise.”

But inside, I was falling apart.

Because I already feared the truth I wasn’t ready to face.

And the next day, that truth shattered our lives.