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Doctor hears STRANGE NOISE coming from a pregnant woman’s belly; when the baby is born, he runs out!

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Dr. Carmen called Marie’s name, and the woman entered the office accompanied by her husband, Balthazar. As soon as the doctor saw Marie’s prominent belly, she couldn’t hide her surprise.

“Marie… how many months along are you? Seven? Eight, maybe?”

Marie immediately shook her head and crossed her arms. “Doctor, I already said this outside. I’m not showing because of a baby.”

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Balthazar, scratching his neck, confirmed, “That’s right, doctor. The nurse who checked us thought my wife was expecting and sent us here. But we’re telling you—it’s not a pregnancy.”

Dr. Carmen furrowed her brow, clearly intrigued. “How could it not be a pregnancy?” Marie’s rounded belly said otherwise. “If it’s not a baby, then what is it? Some kind of health issue? Acid? A growth?”

Marie huffed, placing her hands on her hips. “It can be whatever, doctor. Just not a baby.”

Balthazar, somewhat embarrassed, cleared his throat and added, “And another thing, doctor… it’s been months since Marie and I, you know… been intimate.”

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Carmen raised an eyebrow, eyeing the woman with suspicion. The belly was undeniable. If it wasn’t her husband’s, then whose?

She didn’t want to jump to conclusions. So, following protocol, she calmly opened a drawer and pulled out a pregnancy test.

“Marie, let’s do this quick test just to be sure. After that, we’ll investigate further.”

“But I’m not pregnant,” Marie insisted, indignant.

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“I understand. But it’s just protocol. This way we can rule it out before moving on to other exams.”

Marie sighed heavily but took the test from the doctor’s hand. She left the office grumbling, with Balthazar by her side.

“This is such a waste of time,” she muttered. “I don’t know what’s happening to me, but it ain’t a baby.”

“I hear you, hun. But just get it done so we can figure out what’s really going on,” her husband replied.

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A few minutes later, a scream echoed down the hospital corridor. Balthazar jumped in fright and ran toward the bathroom. Dr. Carmen, equally alarmed, rushed out of her office.

Marie emerged from the bathroom pale, eyes wide, and her trembling hand held the test.

Balthazar rushed to her side. “What happened, hun?”

Marie swallowed hard and showed the test. “I’m pregnant.”

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Balthazar blinked a few times, trying to process the information. “That… that can’t be.”

Dr. Carmen took the test from Marie’s hand and confirmed it. “This test doesn’t fail. But to be sure, we’ll do a blood test.”

Still in shock, Marie shook her head. “But I don’t know how this happened, doctor.”

Back in the office, Carmen decided to be direct. “Are you absolutely sure you two haven’t been intimate in the past few months?” she asked, crossing her arms.

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“Absolutely, doctor!” Marie exclaimed. “We’re under a vow. One year without it—only two months left to finish.”

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Balthazar nodded. “It’s true, doctor. And we live out in the country, far from everything, growing our own food. Marie hasn’t left the farm in months. Ain’t no way she could have found another man, if that’s what you’re thinking.”

Carmen sighed, trying to stay calm. “All right, let’s proceed with the tests. We’ll get to the bottom of this.”

The blood test confirmed it: positive. Marie was indeed pregnant.

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“Now we just need to hear the baby’s heartbeat,” said the doctor, preparing her stethoscope and placing it on Marie’s belly.

What followed made Carmen’s blood run cold.

The sound echoing through the device wasn’t normal. It wasn’t a heartbeat. It was a strange, distorted noise—something she had never heard before.

“I already told you,” Marie said. “This ain’t no baby. That weird noise’s been there a while. Every time Balthazar puts his head on my belly, he hears it too.”

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“That’s why we came here,” Balthazar added. “This ain’t normal.”

The only way to clarify things was with an ultrasound.

“Let’s do an ultrasound then,” Carmen said. “That should clear up any mystery.”

Marie lay down on the examination table as cold gel was applied to her belly. Carmen positioned the transducer and began scanning. The strange noise echoed again—but louder, more unsettling.

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And then the monitor displayed an image.

Dr. Carmen froze.

Balthazar squeezed his wife’s hand tightly as they stared at the screen. It wasn’t a baby. It was… something else. The shape was unusual. There was something that looked like a tail.

Suddenly, the creature moved swiftly, like it was swimming inside Marie’s belly.

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Before anyone could react, a loud pop echoed through the room. The monitor flickered, then went dark.

The machine had short-circuited.

Balthazar jumped back. “What the heck was that?!”

Dr. Carmen took a deep breath. “I don’t know… but we need to understand what’s going on.”

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She turned to Marie. “Tell me everything. When did your belly start growing? When did the symptoms begin?”

Marie and Balthazar exchanged worried glances. Finally, Marie sighed.

“Doctor… I don’t want to believe it. But I think I got pregnant by… an alien.”

Carmen blinked. “Did you just say… alien?”

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To understand what happened, they had to go back—ten months earlier.

Ten months earlier, Marie and Balthazar were living a peaceful life on a rural farm they had inherited from Balthazar’s father. It was a quiet place, surrounded by cornfields, isolated from the outside world. The couple had been together since they were teenagers—deeply in love—but they had one unfulfilled dream: a child.

For over a decade, they had tried. But Marie had never once gotten pregnant. No miscarriages, no close calls—just silence. Friends urged them to seek fertility treatment, but they believed if it was God’s will, it would happen naturally. As a last hope, they made a vow: no intimacy for a full year. They believed that if they abstained, maybe God would bless them when the vow was over.

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They were four months into the vow when the night that changed everything happened.

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It started like any other evening. Balthazar was in the shower. Marie was relaxing in the living room when a bright light appeared in the backyard, pouring through the windows and lighting up the cornfield like daylight.

“Balthazar?” she called, walking toward the back door.

No answer.

The light shimmered, flickering between the corn stalks. Curious, Marie stepped outside. The air felt heavy. The light pulsed as if it were breathing. She moved into the cornfield, as if drawn by something she couldn’t explain.

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Inside, Balthazar turned off the water, drying his face. That’s when he noticed the strange glow outside.

“What the hell…?” he muttered, wrapping a towel around his waist and rushing into the living room. Marie was gone.

He heard a distant scream.

His heart jumped. “Marie!”

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He bolted outside with a flashlight, sprinting through the cornfield, pushing through rows of stalks. The deeper he went, the brighter the light became—until he found it.

A massive circle, perfectly flattened, lay in the middle of the field. The ground was scorched.

Above him, a round, glowing object hovered silently, then zipped into the sky and vanished in seconds.

Balthazar was frozen, gasping, trying to process what he had seen. Then panic returned.

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“Marie!” he yelled again.

He searched for what felt like forever—but no trace of her. Exhausted and shaken, he returned to the house, only to find muddy barefoot prints on the floor, leading to the bedroom.

There she was. Lying in bed. Asleep.

He rushed to her, gently shaking her. “Marie? Marie, wake up!”

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She opened her eyes slowly, confused. “What… What’s wrong?”

“You were gone!” he said. “I looked everywhere for you. How did you get back here?!”

“I… I don’t know,” she said, furrowing her brow. “I was outside… I saw a light… and now… I’m here.”

She couldn’t remember anything in between.

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In the doctor’s office, Carmen’s hands trembled as she finished writing the notes. “So… you believe you were abducted?”

Marie nodded. “I didn’t at first. But I’ve been having these dreams. The same dream. Over and over.”

“What happens in the dream?” the doctor asked.

“I’m back in the cornfield. The light lifts me up. Then I’m in a cold room, lying on a table. Creatures with long arms and big black eyes surround me. I feel them touching my stomach. And then… I see it. My belly. It’s swollen. Pregnant.”

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“And then?”

“I scream. And I wake up.”

For weeks, the dreams haunted her. And then her belly started growing. Her body changed. She had nausea, dizziness. Her appetite disappeared. Balthazar took over the cooking. Then came the strange sounds inside her belly. A weird, almost mechanical humming.

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They dismissed it. They tried to forget. But her belly kept growing. Until finally, today, they came to the hospital.

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After hearing the full story, Carmen felt like her world had been turned upside down. But as bizarre as the story was, it wasn’t over yet.

A strange noise suddenly echoed again from Marie’s belly. Then, warm fluid spilled onto the floor.

“Oh my God,” Balthazar gasped. “Doctor—her water broke!”

Carmen acted fast. “We need a delivery room now!”

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But there was no time.

Marie was already in labor.

The contractions came hard and fast.

“Push, Marie!” Carmen shouted.

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Balthazar held her hand. “Whatever it is, we’re going through it together.”

The room was tense. And then—screams. But not of horror.

A baby was born. A perfectly human, crying baby boy.

Everyone sighed in shock and relief.

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But then Marie screamed again. “There’s another one!”

“Twins?!” Carmen gasped.

Minutes later, a second baby was born—a girl.

Healthy. Beautiful.

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Carmen’s eyes filled with tears. She held the newborns and turned to the parents. “They’re twins… and they’re perfect.”

Balthazar broke down in tears. “Our dream came true. We’re parents!”

Later, in the ICU, the babies were placed in incubators for observation. Carmen confirmed it: both children had a unique birthmark on their necks—just like Balthazar.

“Doctor,” Marie asked softly, “was I really pregnant this whole time? With his babies?”

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“Yes,” Carmen said. “There’s no doubt.”

“But what about the strange sound? The image on the ultrasound?”

Just then, Mr. Larry and Josephine—neighbors—arrived at the hospital for a checkup. The moment Marie saw them, everything clicked.

A memory returned.

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That night, she had caught them stealing corn. They had used a drone with lights to create a diversion. When Marie screamed, Josephine struck her on the head to silence her. That’s when she lost consciousness.

Everything else—the dream, the fear, the pregnancy—it all aligned.

Marie had conceived that night—after returning home—when she and Balthazar had unknowingly broken their vow in their shared sleep, shaken and comfort-seeking.

The strange sound was due to intestinal gas. The odd ultrasound was a result of overlapping scans from faulty hospital equipment.

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And the aliens?

Just clever neighbors faking crop circles to hide their farm theft.

In the end, Larry and Josephine were exposed and forced to work in every field they had stolen from.

Marie and Balthazar, now proud parents of twins, finally had the family they dreamed of.

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And Dr. Carmen?

She returned to her practice, knowing she’d never forget the strangest, most miraculous case of her career—a pregnancy that everyone believed came from outer space, but turned out to be a perfect, earthly blessing.

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