His mother, Diane Brooks, stood near the window taking photos like she was capturing a victory she had waited years to claim. Everyone looked relieved and complete, like the story had ended perfectly.

I tried to feel what they felt. I couldn’t.

Because the plastic band rested against the blanket, and every nerve in my body locked onto it like a warning signal. The surname was correct, Harper, my name, the one I insisted our daughter carry after months of arguments with Diane who believed children should always carry the father’s name.

But beneath that name, printed in black letters, was the birth date. It was wrong.

Not a simple typo, but two full days off. I had given birth just after midnight on March 18, yet the band read March 16.

I stared until the numbers blurred, then sharpened again as my throat tightened. “Why does her band say the sixteenth?”

The nurse froze instantly, and her smile disappeared like someone flipped a switch. Diane lowered her phone slowly while Caleb’s hand on my shoulder turned stiff and cold.

The room stopped breathing. “What is that?” I asked again, louder this time.

No one answered.