I Found My Parents Motionless — Then The Doorbell Camera Spoke-heuh

The last time I saw my parents awake, Mum was fussing over a tub of homemade chicken soup in the kitchen, clicking the lid down as though that single plastic container could keep me safe from the world.

The kettle had just boiled, and the windows were misted from the warmth inside and the grey weather pressing against the glass.

She wrapped the container in a tea towel and pushed it into my hands before I could protest.

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“Don’t argue,” she said, giving me the look she had used since I was five.

Dad was already at the front door, wearing his faded cap and pretending he had only come out to check whether the rain had stopped.

It had not.

He stood on the step with his hands in his pockets, smiling as if I were leaving for months instead of a few days.

I kissed Mum on the cheek, waved at Dad, and promised I would be back at the weekend.

That promise should have been simple.

It should have been nothing.

But life has a way of making small neglects look reasonable until they are too heavy to carry.

Work ran late two nights in a row.

Michael picked up extra shifts and came home so tired he ate standing by the sink.

Then I caught a bug and spent the weekend under a blanket, telling myself I would visit Mum and Dad as soon as I felt human again.

I rang once, missed them, and forgot to ring again until it was too late in the evening.

By Monday, I had begun bargaining with my own conscience.

I would go tomorrow.

I would take something nice.

I would stay long enough for Mum to stop pretending she had not missed me.

On Tuesday afternoon, Kara’s message came through while I was at work.

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