A 66-Year-Old Mum’s Scan Left The Ultrasound Doctor Speechless-heuh

We were sure my 66-year-old mum had some kind of illness, but after the exam, the ultrasound doctor whispered, “Oh my God, I have never seen anything like this in my entire career…”

The hospital corridor smelt of hand gel, damp coats, and the bitter coffee that comes from a machine nobody trusts but everyone still uses.

My mother sat beside me on a hard plastic chair, her handbag pulled tight against her stomach as if it could hold the pain in place.

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She was trying to look irritated.

That was easier for her than looking frightened.

The fluorescent lights hummed above us, and every few seconds somebody’s shoes squeaked along the polished floor, passing our row of chairs without stopping.

Mum watched them go with the expression of a woman who believed other people deserved treatment more than she did.

She had been in pain for several days by then.

Not a little ache.

Not the kind of stomach upset she could blame on too much bread, a strong cup of tea, or age.

This was the sort of pain that had made her stop beside the kitchen sink with one hand pressed to her belly and the other gripping the counter so hard her knuckles went white.

The kettle had clicked off behind her that morning, sending steam up against the cold window, and she had still tried to wave me away.

“It’ll pass,” she had said.

She said it as if she had a right to decide that.

She said it as if stubbornness was a form of medicine.

My mum was sixty-six, widowed for nine years, and still living in the same small semi-detached house where my father had once painted the back fence badly and insisted it looked fine.

The hallway was narrow enough that two people had to turn sideways to pass.

There were coats on hooks, shoes tucked by the mat, an umbrella that never properly dried, and a little dish near the door where she kept keys, batteries, loose change, and things she claimed she would sort out later.

She had always been careful with money.

Careful was the word she used.

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