Chapter One: The Diagnosis That Shattered Everything
Harry Campbell had never feared hospitals. As a manager at a local logistics company and a father to two spirited twelve-year-old boys, he’d spent more than his fair share of time patching up scrapes, waiting through fevers, and sitting beside ER beds for the occasional broken bone. But nothing could have prepared him for the quiet dread that had been building over the past few weeks.
It started with Josh—one of the twins—looking paler than usual.
He was always the more active of the two, but now he was napping more, skipping meals, and complaining about headaches. At first, Harry and his wife, Nancy, assumed it was just a growth spurt or maybe too many late nights playing video games. But when Josh fainted during P.E. class at school, panic finally kicked in.
That’s how Harry found himself sitting across from Dr. Dennison in a stark white room at the children’s hospital, clutching his son’s medical chart with one hand and rubbing his forehead with the other. Josh and Andrew, his twins, were outside the door, playing a mobile game and laughing like everything was fine.
Dr. Dennison shuffled in, his expression unreadable.
“Mr. Campbell,” he said, nodding politely. “Thank you for coming in.”
Harry stood and shook his hand. “Of course, Doctor. We’re just hoping to get Josh back to his normal self.”
The doctor gave a tight smile, then motioned for the boys to step outside. “Just for a few minutes, boys. This is a grown-up talk.”
Once they were gone, Harry sat again, trying to keep the anxiety from his face.
“Hit me,” he said. “Whatever it is, we can deal with it.”
Dr. Dennison sat across from him, folding his hands. “The good news is Josh is going to be okay. He has iron-deficiency anemia, which is treatable. We’ll start him on supplements and keep monitoring him.”
Harry let out a breath of relief. “That’s fantastic. I was so worried.”
“But there’s something else,” the doctor added, tone darkening.
Harry’s brow furrowed. “Something else?”
Dr. Dennison hesitated. “We routinely do blood typing and matching with immediate family in case a transfusion is needed. I asked you to get tested, remember?”
“Yeah,” Harry said slowly.
“I reviewed the results this morning. Mr. Campbell, your blood type is B. Nancy’s medical record shows her as also having type B. But both of your sons… are type A.”
Harry blinked. “That… doesn’t mean much, right? I mean, that happens, doesn’t it?”
Dr. Dennison shook his head. “It’s genetically impossible for two type B parents to produce type A children. It’s a simple Mendelian inheritance pattern.”
The words began to sink in like cold water down his spine.
The doctor continued. “I double-checked. Then I had the lab run a DNA analysis using the samples we already had from your boys’ tests.”
Harry’s fingers curled into fists in his lap. “And?”
The doctor slid a folder across the desk. “You are not their biological father, Mr. Campbell.”
Harry stared at him, eyes wide, mouth open, unable to form words.
“But,” Dr. Dennison added, “that’s not all. The analysis shows something even more surprising. Based on the DNA markers… you are their half-brother.”
Silence.
The kind of silence that rang in his ears like a bomb had just gone off.
Harry finally spoke, but his voice sounded foreign. “You’re saying… they’re not my sons. But they’re still related to me?”
Dr. Dennison nodded solemnly. “Yes. Genetically, they share approximately 25% of your DNA. That would make them your half-siblings. Meaning… their biological father is likely your biological father.”