Every nurse who cared for a man in a coma for more than three years began getting pregnant—one after another—leaving the supervising physician completely baffled.
But when he secretly installed a hidden camera inside the patient’s room to uncover what was truly happening in his absence, what he saw made him call the police in sheer panic.
At first, Dr. Arjun Malhotra believed it was merely a coincidence.
Nurses became pregnant all the time. Hospitals were places filled with both life and loss, and people often sought comfort wherever they could find it.
But when the second nurse assigned to Rohan Mehta announced her pregnancy—and then the third—Arjun began to feel his rational, scientific worldview crumble.
Rohan had been in a coma for more than three years.
He was a twenty-nine-year-old firefighter who had fallen from a burning building while attempting to rescue a child during a massive fire in Mumbai.
Since that night, he had remained completely unresponsive, connected to machines, lying in Room 412-C of Shanti Memorial Hospital.
Every Diwali, his family sent flowers.
The nurses often remarked on how peaceful he looked, almost serene.
No one expected anything beyond silence—until the pattern began.
Every nurse who became pregnant had been assigned to Rohan for long night shifts.
All of them worked overnight.
All of them had spent countless hours inside Room 412-C.
And every single one swore the same thing.
They had not been involved with anyone outside the hospital who could explain the pregnancy.
Some were married.
Others were single.
All of them were equally confused, ashamed, and terrified.
Rumors spread rapidly through the hospital corridors.
Some spoke of hormonal reactions.
Others whispered about chemical contamination.
A few even suggested supernatural causes.
But Dr. Malhotra, the neurologist responsible for the case, found no scientific explanation whatsoever.
Every medical test showed the same results:
stable vital signs,
minimal brain activity,
no physical movement.
