I asked my boss for five urgent days off.
My hands were shaking as I stood in his doorway, phone still pressed to my ear from the call I’d gotten that morning. “My son is in the ICU,” I said, voice cracking. “There was an accident. I need to be with him.”
Mr. Kline didn’t even look up from his laptop. He sighed like I’d asked for a paid vacation.
“Claire,” he said, tapping his pen against the desk, “you need to separate work from your private life. We’re already behind this week. I can’t approve that.”
For a second, I couldn’t breathe. I stared at him, waiting for him to realize what he’d just said.
He didn’t.
So I nodded slowly. “Okay,” I whispered.
I walked out with a smile stretched so tight it hurt. I went back to my desk, finished the report he’d demanded, and clocked out exactly on time. Then I drove straight to the hospital and sat beside my son’s bed until the monitors became the only sound I could hear.
That night, staring at the ceiling of the waiting room, I made a decision.
The next morning, I showed up at work anyway.
I walked through the glass doors holding a framed photo of my son—Mason grinning with chocolate smeared on his cheeks from his last birthday cake. In my other hand was a thick folder. People looked up from their computers, confused at first… then concerned.
“Claire?” someone whispered.
Mr. Kline emerged from his office, already irritated. “Why are you here?” he snapped. “I told you—”
“I know,” I said, loud enough for everyone to hear. “You told me to separate work from my private life.”
The office went silent. Even the copier seemed to pause.
I held up the folder. “This is my FMLA paperwork. And this”—I lifted an envelope—“is my resignation letter, effective immediately.”
His eyes narrowed. “You’re quitting? Over this?”
“Over you,” I corrected, calm as ice. “My son is fighting for his life, and you treated it like an inconvenience.”
A few people shifted in their seats. I saw my coworker Jenna swallow hard. Another coworker, Luis, looked down at his hands like he was ashamed for ever staying quiet.
Mr. Kline scoffed. “You’re making a mistake.”
I slid the envelope onto his desk. “Maybe,” I said. “But at least it’ll be mine.”
I turned toward the open office. “If anyone needs the client passwords, they’re in my top drawer. And if anyone here ever has an emergency…” I let my gaze sweep across the room. “Don’t ask permission to be human.”
I walked out before my legs could start shaking again.
Two weeks later, Mason opened his eyes.
When he squeezed my fingers, faint but real, relief hit me so hard I cried into his hospital blanket. The bills were scary, the future uncertain—but I was there. I hadn’t missed the moment I’d been praying for.
A month after that, Jenna called me.
“Hey,” she said softly. “We all filed a complaint. HR investigated. Kline’s gone.”
I looked at Mason, safe on the couch beside me, coloring with fierce concentration.
For the first time in weeks, I smiled without forcing it.
“Good,” I said. “Now maybe someone else won’t have to choose.”