The silence thickened.
I stopped thinking about my grocery list or the unfinished work waiting for me. Instead, I felt the pulse beating in my temples. He pulled back slightly, and I saw him frown behind his mask.
It wasn’t the neutral professional expression I was used to. It was discomfort. Or surprise. Or something worse.
“Who treated you before?” he asked again, his voice deeper now.
I swallowed.
“My husband,” I said. “Diego López. He’s a gynecologist too.”
Álvaro froze. He removed his gloves slowly, almost deliberately, and tossed them into the metal trash bin with a dry sound that made me jump slightly. Then he walked to his desk without looking directly at me.
“Lucía,” he finally said, using my first name for the first time, “we need to run tests right now. What I’m seeing… shouldn’t be there.”
The air suddenly felt heavy around me. I sat up slightly on the exam table, still covered by the paper gown.
“What do you mean?” I asked, my voice sharper than usual.
He avoided answering directly. He pressed the buzzer to call the nurse, opened the ultrasound screen, and began preparing the equipment. His hands moved quickly, but his eyes remained tense and alert.
“We’re going to do a transvaginal ultrasound right now,” he announced, trying to sound routine. “I just… need to confirm something.”
The door opened, the nurse entered, and cold gel touched my skin. On the screen, gray shapes appeared—patterns that would make sense to someone trained to read them.
Not to me.