The quiet that morning wasn’t gentle or peaceful; it was the kind that made the back of your neck prickle, the kind that warns you—before anything logical forms—that something is off. With a three-month-old baby in the house, silence didn’t belong to us. Our world was supposed to exist in cycles of crying and cooing, feeding and rocking, exhaustion and love.
Yet as the early light slipped through the blinds, the stillness felt wrong enough to jolt me upright. Reaching instinctively toward the other side of the bed, my fingers brushed nothing but cool sheets. Erin’s pillow sat indented, her blanket twisted near the edge like she’d gotten up in a hurry. I told myself she must be with the baby. That was the only explanation that made sense to a mind still foggy with sleep and new-parent fatigue. So I walked down the hall, half awake, half unsettled, and pushed open the nursery door
. There was Maisie, our tiny miracle, bundled and sleeping peacefully … clutching the frayed sleeve of Erin’s favorite gray hoodie against her cheek. The missing drawstring on one side caught my attention for the briefest moment—a small detail that would later take on weight I couldn’t have imagined—but right then, all I felt was relief that the baby was safe.