As he rushed toward his flight, a man tripped over a little girl sitting by the gate. “Watch where you’re sitting!” he snapped. The girl looked up, smiling softly. “That ticket your wife bought you… don’t take that flight. Go home. Something’s waiting for you.”

“If it’s two days, I can handle it,” Alex said. “I’ll be back after lunch.

I have something important at home. I promised.”

“You promised. Do it,” his boss said unexpectedly.

“I haven’t seen you like this before. You’re a sharp guy. You were just always buried in other people’s tasks.”

Alex nodded, thinking that something in him had also been recognized.

Sometimes he returned to the thought of the little girl, to what she had said. In her “return it and go home,” there was no command. There was just a calm, steady suggestion: Do what you’ve long decided to do but haven’t dared.

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And he was glad he did. One day, as he and Elena were coming back from the market, Elena stopped at a shop window and looked at a pair of baby booties. “We used to buy ones like these,” she said.

“We didn’t buy them, you knitted them,” Alex corrected her. “They came out crooked, but with a lot of heart.”

“That’s because you chose the wrong kind of wool,” she retorted. They laughed as they walked, like two people who could afford to argue without anger.

That night, Alex got up and went out onto the balcony. The sky was clear. From deep within the building, he could hear voices.

Someone was discussing fish; someone was singing. He stood there and thought that people always have things that seem more important than their loved ones, and that the most important things are often quiet and unnoticed. And that it’s not shameful to return.

It’s shameful not to make it in time. Elena came up behind him and put her arms around him. “You’ll get cold,” she said.

“No,” he replied, holding her tighter. “Don’t stay out in the cold. Let’s go to bed.”

“Let’s go.”

In the morning, he went to work and called Elena from the doorway.

“I’m here.”

“Have a good day,” she wished him. “You too.”

Those two short sentences made his day better than all the hot coffee in the world combined. At lunch, he suddenly remembered: I need to buy pear jam.

Elena loves it. He bought it. That evening, he put it on the table.

She was surprised, shaking her head, smiling. “It’s a small thing,” he said. “But it’s pleasant and true,” she answered.

Chloe sent the first video of the baby kicking, where you couldn’t understand anything, but you could feel everything. Alex passed the phone to Elena. She cried and then immediately laughed.

“A gift of fate,” she said. “A gift of fate,” he repeated, and realized how perfectly that sounded. One quiet evening, he dreamt again of the airport corridor and his own hurried back, and he heard a voice say calmly, “Return the ticket, go home.” He woke up, looked at Elena, at the nightlight, at the neatly folded sweater on the chair, at their shared table, and thought, I’m back.

This thought required no confirmation. It was enough to go to the kitchen, put the kettle on, slice the bread, open the jam, and feel, in the silence, how the house breathed with him. And how in that breath, you could hear the most important thing: that you are near, that you were not too late.

Sometimes fate speaks loudly, sometimes it whispers. That day, it spoke with a strange child’s voice in an airport hallway: “Return it, go home.” And Alex did a simple thing: he listened and found himself where he was awaited. Where the gift of fate was not gold or random luck, but a warm hand on the table and quiet laughter in the kitchen.

And that turned out to be more important than any business trip, any bonus, any victory in endless arguments, because the new locks in their life were now placed not on doors, but on words they used to throw around without thinking. And the keys to those locks were held by both of them.

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