He Checked The Nursery Cam At Work And Saw His Mother Cross A Line-xurixuri

At exactly 2:00 P.M., I was supposed to be answering the most important question of my career.

The conference room smelled like burnt coffee and dry-erase markers, with that stale office air that makes every breath feel borrowed.

Sunlight cut across the long glass table and bounced off laptops, water bottles, and the silver nameplate in front of the senior partner.

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He had just asked me a question I had spent six months preparing to answer.

I remember the shape of his mouth forming my name.

I remember the scratch of someone’s pen.

I remember thinking that if I got this right, the promotion I had been chasing might finally stop feeling like something I had to beg for.

Then my phone buzzed under the table.

It was not a call.

It was not even an alert marked urgent.

It was the nursery camera app telling me motion had been detected in the kitchen.

Two weeks earlier, I would have ignored it.

Thirteen days earlier, I had become a father.

That changes what your body treats as noise.

I slid the phone under the lip of the table and opened the camera with my thumb, keeping my face still because ten people in suits were watching me.

At first, the screen looked ordinary.

Our kitchen.

The sink.

The pale afternoon light.

The little basket of baby bottles near the counter.

Then Claire came into frame.

My wife was wearing one of my old T-shirts, the soft gray one with the collar stretched from too many washes.

She looked smaller than she had ever looked in it.

Claire was thirteen days postpartum.

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