When the baby was finally born, the air in the room seemed to relax, as if everyone had been holding their breath for too long. The midwife’s nod, the doctor’s calm, the sudden rush of the first cry: together they broke a tension that superstition had only heightened. No one asked which star dominated the sky or whether that date was blessed or cursed. Instead, they drew closer: they counted his fingers, felt the breath on his chest, caressed the softness of his hair. The fear, once so strong, receded, concealed by the quiet, overwhelming reality of his existence.
As the news spread, people came not to interpret omens, but to bear a burden. They arrived bearing meals, offering to watch their older children, small, carefully folded envelopes. Some who once repeated old warnings now stood in the doorway, uncertain, only to come forward anyway with timid smiles and outstretched hands. The family sensed something more solid than “good fortune” descending upon them: a network of ordinary people who had chosen to be present. In the days that followed, no one spoke of broken curses or rewritten destinies. Yet, in the constant rhythm of visits, messages, and shared weariness, a new conviction quietly took root: that what truly protects a child is not the promise of luck, but the daily, conscious work of love.