Whose children are they then?
Dr. Subramaniam, the director of the Genetics & Fertility Institute, was polite and professional when he broke the bitter news to me. "We are very sorry, Mr. Halsbeth. But I am afraid that your sperm is simply not suitable for our donor program."
Not suitable? Based on their brochures, I would have thought that I was the perfect candidate: 6' tall, blond hair, blue eyes, 140 IQ.
"We will test the second sample you just gave us, to be absolutely certain," he continued, "but the lab results for the first sample are quite conclusive: you are, unfortunately, completely sterile."
"Sterile? That's impossible. I mean, I have..."
I stopped myself and completed the sentence silently in my head: ...
three children!
Or at least, till now, I thought I did. My wonderful wife had given birth to them and naturally I had assumed they were mine.
I tried a different tack: "What could be the cause of that? Could I have an infection or something?" I hadn't felt ill when I came into the clinic, but I certainly did now.
"No," he said, with a sympathetic shake of his head. "It appears to be a congenital condition. Again, we are very sorry."
Not as sorry as I was.
Somehow I managed to drive home without running over a pedestrian or cutting off a cop. My wife must have been in the process of changing clothes because she was buttoning her blouse as I entered the living room. A slight breeze blew in from the open back door. "You're home early," she said breathlessly.
"We need to talk," I said as I sought the comfort of my favorite overstuffed chair.
"Okay," she replied, sitting down on the matching sofa across from me. I tried not to stare as she demurely crossed her sexy legs. Even when she was home alone, she liked to wear short skirts, and she wore them well.
I explained to her that a fellow Mensa member had suggested that I donate some sperm like he did, that I had had mine tested, and that the results came back negative.
"What does that mean?" she asked with genuine concern. "Are you sick?"
"What it means," I replied grimly, "is that Billy, Karen, and Jason are not my children. Whose are they, Jill?"
She stared at me for a moment, seemingly as perplexed by this development as I was. "I always assumed they were yours," she said at last. "I mean, you always had the best shot at being their father. Wouldn't it be best for all of us to simply go on as if you were?"