Late at night, my mom called and asked, “When are you coming to get the baby?” I froze and said, “Mom… she’s asleep right next to me.”-lbsuong

My phone rang at 1:17 a.m.—a thin, sharp sound that didn’t belong in the fragile quiet of my one-bedroom walk-up.

The nightlight by the couch spilled a soft amber puddle across the floor. Lily—my daughter—was asleep beside me, warm and heavy in a way that made the world feel briefly safe. Her tiny hand was tangled in the edge of my shirt like she’d tied herself to me in her sleep.

Across the room, a little Stars and Stripes magnet on the fridge held up an index card in my mom’s careful handwriting:

BANANA BREAD.

A faint radio somewhere down the hall played old crooners low enough to be a rumor—Sinatra sliding through the walls like a memory you couldn’t quite catch.

I reached for my phone.

Mom.

My thumb hovered. Mom never called this late. The few times she’d called after midnight were always the kind of nights that changed you.

I answered.

Her voice was hoarse and hushed, like she was standing in a dark room trying not to wake someone. “When are you coming to get the baby?”

I went still.

For a few seconds my brain tried to make it make sense. Which baby? Lily?

I looked down.

Lily was right there, eyelashes resting on her cheeks, mouth slightly open, breathing steady.

My throat tightened. “Mom… what are you talking about?”

Mom inhaled, and the tremble in it made my skin prickle. “You brought her here. You said you were exhausted. You said you just needed to sleep. You asked me to watch her. I… I watched her.”

The room felt like it tilted.

“That’s not possible,” I whispered, gripping the phone so hard my palm ached. “Lily is asleep right next to me.”

Silence.

No fan. No traffic. Just the emptiness of a line that suddenly felt too long.

Then my mom spoke again, like she was turning a rusty key inside her own chest.

“Then whose baby is in my house?”

I don’t remember hanging up. I only remember sitting rigid in the dark, staring at that little flag magnet like it could pin reality in place.

Because if Lily was here with me, then something else had just walked into my mother’s life wearing my name.

I moved on autopilot, the way you do in a real emergency—quiet, fast, hands shaking but functional. I pulled on jeans, a sweater, and shoes without looking at what I grabbed. I stuffed Lily’s diaper bag with wipes, a bottle, extra diapers, and an extra onesie, throwing in things we didn’t need like I could pack my fear away with them.

Lily barely stirred when I lifted her. Her head sank into my shoulder, warm and drowsy. I kissed her hair, breathing her in like proof. “We’re going to see Grandma for a little bit,” I murmured.

The hallway outside my apartment smelled like detergent and old carpet. When I pushed through the front door, cold air slapped my cheeks and made my eyes water.

The parking lot was quiet. A few cars sat beaded with dew under streetlights that cast pale halos on wet asphalt.

I buckled Lily into her car seat with more care than usual, tightening the straps as if, if I didn’t, the whole world might slip an inch and never click back into place.

When the engine turned over, I realized I was breathing too fast.

The streets at night in our suburb had an unreal quality. Streetlights smeared gold streaks across damp pavement. Dark houses held their breath behind closed blinds. A late-night drive-thru sign blinked in the distance like an invitation I didn’t have time to accept.

I drove on muscle memory, but my mind ran in tight circles around the same question with no exit.

How could there be another baby at my mother’s house?

Mom didn’t joke. And if she was terrified, she would call a neighbor, call 911, call anyone—she wouldn’t call me with something this strange unless she needed me.

At a red light I glanced in the rearview mirror.

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