Even though they knew I was infertile, the groom’s family still asked for my hand in marriage. On our wedding night, as soon as I lifted the blanket, I was stunned to discover the reason…

Even though they knew I was infertile, the groom’s family still asked for my hand in marriage. On our wedding night, as soon as I lifted the blanket, I was stunned to discover the reason… My name is Ananya Sharma, I’m 30 years old. I always thought I would be alone for the rest of my life.

Three years ago, after surgery at AIIMS in New Delhi, doctors told me I would never be able to become a mother. That news completely devastated me.

At that moment, my boyfriend of five years, Rohan, remained silent all afternoon, and the next day he sent me a single message: “I’m sorry. Let’s end it here.”

From then on, I stopped thinking about wedding dresses… until I met Kabir. Kabir Malhotra was seven years older than me. He was the new branch manager who had just taken over at my office in Gurugram. He was polite, calm, with a kind smile in his eyes.

I admired him, but I kept my distance. How could such a perfect man choose a woman like me, incapable of having children? Yet, he was the one who made the first move. On nights when we worked overtime, he would bring me a box of hot food or some steaming khichdi.

On cold days, he would discreetly leave a ginger tea bag on my desk. When he proposed, I burst into tears. I had already accepted my condition. But he just smiled and stroked my head.

“I know. Don’t worry.”

His family didn’t object either.
His mother, Savita Malhotra, came to my house in South Delhi to formally ask for my hand in marriage. Everything was arranged without a hitch. I felt like I was in a dream, convinced that God had loved me so much that He decided to bless me late. On my wedding day, dressed in a red lehenga, I sat next to Kabir in the soft, yellow light of the small hall in Hauz Khas, listening to the sound of the shehnai.

Seeing the tenderness in her eyes, I couldn’t hold back my tears. That night, back in our room, I sat in front of the mirror and began to remove the hairpins from my hair.

Kabir came in from outside, took off his sherwani and placed it on a chair. He
approached, hugged me from behind and rested his chin on my shoulder.

“Tired?” he asked softly. I nodded, my heart pounding. He took my hand and led me to the bed.

Then he lifted the blanket…

And I was completely paralyzed when I saw what was underneath…

 

Instead of plain sheets or a romantic gesture, there was a small wooden box, covered with an embroidered fabric.

Kabir took it carefully and looked at me with a mixture of sadness and determination.
“Ananya,” he whispered, “before you say anything… I need you to know the truth.”

My breathing became ragged. He opened the box, and inside were dozens of old photographs, hospital clippings, and a medical report with the AIIMS logo.
It was  my  report. The same one that said I was sterile.

“How did you get that?” I asked, trembling.

“Because I was there that day,” he said.
He looked up, and for the first time I saw something in his eyes I had never seen before: guilt.

—I was the resident who signed your diagnosis. I was the one who recommended the surgery that… changed your life.

I felt the ground disappear beneath my feet.

—What… what are you saying?

“I made a mistake, Ananya. A mistake in the lab. Your results got mixed up with another patient’s. You…  you were never sterile.”

The silence became unbearable.

“I searched for years for a way to find you,” he continued, his voice breaking. “When I saw your name in the office, I knew it was fate giving me a second chance to make amends for what I did to you.”

Tears blurred my vision. The box fell to the floor.

And then, as he tried to approach, I took a step back.

—And all this? Was our wedding… just your way of redeeming yourself?

Kabir remained silent. Only then did I understand that his love, so perfect, so patient, had been born of guilt rather than desire.

That night, as the shehnai still faintly sounded from the street, I understood that not all miracles come from divine love.
Some arrive wrapped in human error… and in truths that should never have been revealed.