A Phenomenon Is Born

It was not just babies being born with the help of Dr Paul. A phenomenon had been born. By the 3rd stage, and more especially the the 4th and 5th stages, the sight of bulging female bellies seemed to become more and more common at the roadside along the Tour de France route. The births that sometimes followed under the supervision of the, by then, yellow jerseyed Dr Paul, would dominate the news more than the cyclists. Not that the other cyclists seemed to mind. They were as much caught up in the excitement as anyone else, and seemed to take it in turns having baby boys named after them. While not every stage of the race produced a new Dr Paul delivery, the evidence was becoming increasingly clear that near term pregnant women were making a special trip to be on the route of the Tour de France. In some cases busloads of pregnant young women arrived from other parts of the country just for the occasion. By the end of the penultimate stage of the race, Dr Paul had, amidst a crescendo of worldwide excitement, reached his 4997th delivery.

The Final Stage With 3 Babies To Go