His Son Swapped His Phone For A Toy Until One Call Exposed It All-tantan

Benjamin Clarke did not notice at first that the phone in his hand was fake.

He noticed the weight before anything else.

His real phone had a little heaviness to it, a scuffed black case, a scratch near the camera, and one corner that clicked loose if he pressed it too hard.

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This phone felt hollow.

It was bright blue, too smooth, with rounded yellow buttons and a little speaker grille shaped like a smile.

The kitchen smelled like burnt toast because one of the kids had left bread in too long, and the coffee in Benjamin’s mug had gone cold enough to show a pale ring around the inside.

He sat at the breakfast table in the striped light coming through the blinds, his appointment card beside his elbow, his glasses halfway down his nose, and pressed the button he thought would wake the screen.

The toy chirped.

Then it said, “Hello!”

Across the table, his two grandchildren started laughing.

Benjamin stared at the plastic thing in his hand.

He pressed another button.

“Hello!”

The youngest child laughed so hard he dropped his spoon into his cereal, splashing milk onto the placemat.

The older one pointed and said, “Grandpa’s phone talks like a baby toy.”

Benjamin did not smile.

He looked toward the counter where his real phone was supposed to be charging beside the fruit bowl.

The cord was there.

The phone was not.

“Daniel,” he said.

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