Priya was in her ninth month of pregnancy, her belly stretched and heavy. Her husband, Rajiv, was working on a construction site in Laos, far away and difficult to reach. He could only call once a month to ease their longing. The couple had saved every rupee they could to build a modest house at the edge of their village in Bihar, hoping their child would be born with a secure roof overhead.
For the past few days, the rain hadn’t stopped. Villagers murmured, “A big flood is coming again.” Still, Priya insisted on staying, wanting to deliver in familiar surroundings, with neighbors close by to help if needed.
That evening, the sky cracked open. Rain poured like a broken dam. Floodwaters surged down from the mountains, fast and wild. Before she could even react, the water had already reached her doorstep. Rats scattered frantically, dogs barked across the village. The tin-roofed house, already worn and leaking, turned cold and miserable.
In the middle of the storm, Priya suddenly felt intense pain. The contractions came fast and hard. Her belly stiffened with every wave. Her face turned pale, and sweat streamed down her body like rain. Trembling, she reached for her phone and dialed the emergency number the local village defense team had distributed a few days earlier:
— “Hello… I’m in labor… the floodwater’s rising fast… I can’t get out!”
Only the howling wind could be heard for a moment, then a sharp voice barked through the line:
— “Stay right where you are! We’re coming for you!”
Less than thirty minutes later, four army soldiers in raincoats waded through waist-deep muddy waters. They carried a stretcher, fighting against the strong current to reach Priya’s home. One soldier swept a flashlight around the room, another hurriedly threw a raincoat over her shivering body:
— “It’s okay, Didi. We’re taking you to the clinic. You’re almost there!”
On a small rescue boat, covered in mud and soaked to the bone, Priya panted and clutched the hand of a young soldier beside her. Tears welled up in her eyes:
— “If it weren’t for you all… I might not have made it through the night…”
An hour later, at the rural health center, a baby girl was born—healthy, crying loudly to the cheers of the nurses and villagers who had gathered.
The young soldier, still catching his breath, awkwardly asked:
— “Have you decided what to name the baby?”
Priya looked down at her daughter and whispered:
— “A girl born in the middle of a flood… carried through the mud by a soldier… I’ll name her Asha – hoping she’ll always have peace and hope in life.”
Four days later, as the floodwaters receded, Rajiv rushed across the border from Laos. The moment he arrived, he embraced his wife and newborn child, weeping with joy.
The story of “The Mother Who Gave Birth in the Flood” quickly spread across the region — a symbol of human kindness in disaster, of life amidst destruction, and of miracles found in the darkest of nights.
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