That line is clearly a fictional / clickbait storytelling hook, not a real event.
There is no scientific, medical, or documented basis for “pregnant mermaids” existing or for stories like this happening in real life. It’s the kind of content commonly used in:
- Fantasy short stories
- AI-generated viral fiction
- Social media engagement bait
🧠 What’s really going on with headlines like this
They usually follow a pattern:
- Strange or magical situation (“she saved a mermaid”)
- Emotional trigger (helping someone in need)
- Time jump (“7 days later…”)
- A mysterious payoff to keep people reading
📖 Reality check
- Mermaids are mythological creatures, not real biological beings
- “Pregnant mermaid” scenarios are purely fantasy storytelling
- No verified cases, reports, or evidence exist
❤️ Why people still click these
These stories are popular because they:
- Feel emotional and cinematic
- Mix kindness + mystery + surprise
- Are easy to turn into short videos or posts
🧠 Bottom line
This is fictional content designed to entertain or attract attention, not a real-world event or news story.
If you want, I can rewrite it as a proper short fantasy story or break down how to tell real news apart from viral fiction like this.