The nanny had stepped out “just for a moment,” leaving him in his play seat on the floor beside the island. He was dressed in a white onesie, his cheeks soft and pink, his eyes bright and observant.
He wasn’t crying. He wasn’t fussing.
He was simply watching—silent as the house itself.
Clara knelt down beside him, lowering herself carefully onto the tiled floor.
“Well hello there,” she whispered, as if the kitchen might scold her for being too loud. “You’re Elliot, aren’t you?”
The baby stared at her with solemn intensity, blinking once like a tiny judge.
Clara tried a smile. “I’m Clara. I clean things. I make floors sparkle. I rescue socks from under couches.”
Elliot’s mouth twitched—almost, almost.
Clara’s heart lifted. “Oh, you almost laughed,” she said, delighted. “Don’t deny it. I saw it.”
His face returned to calm, like he’d remembered himself.
Clara glanced around. No nanny. No cook. No manager. Just sunlight and silence and one baby who looked too serious for his own good.
Then her eyes fell on the huge stainless-steel stockpot on the stove—empty, clean, polished. It was nearly as tall as Elliot sitting up.
A ridiculous idea popped into her mind, the kind of silly thought adults usually smother before it can grow.
Clara should’ve smothered it too.
But Elliot’s gaze followed hers to the pot, curious.

Clara leaned closer and lowered her voice conspiratorially. “Do you know what this is?”
Elliot blinked.
“This,” Clara said, tapping the side of the pot, “is a royal spaceship. Also known as… the Soup Castle.”
Elliot’s eyebrows lifted the tiniest bit.
Clara looked around again, then whispered, “Don’t tell anyone we’re doing this.”
Very carefully, she lifted Elliot—he was heavier than he looked—and settled him inside the pot, cushioning him with a folded kitchen towel. He sat there like a tiny king, his hands gripping the rim, his legs tucked inside.
Clara put on the yellow dish gloves she’d been using and made a show of it, snapping them like a performer.
Then she lifted the pot lid like a magician revealing a trick. “Ladies and gentlemen,” she announced in a grand stage voice, “welcome to Chef Elliot’s Cooking Show! Today, we are making…”
She paused dramatically, peering into the imaginary camera.
“…Invisible Soup!”
Elliot’s lips parted.
Clara stirred the air with a wooden spoon, leaning into the absurdity. “First ingredient: one spoonful of sunshine!” She scooped toward the window and dropped the “sunshine” into the pot with a plop sound effect.
Elliot’s eyes widened.
“Second ingredient,” Clara continued, “three giggles from a very serious baby.”
She leaned down and looked directly into Elliot’s face. “Sir. I’m going to need those giggles.”
Elliot’s mouth twitched again. A silent smile threatened.
Clara gasped loudly. “He’s refusing! The chef refuses to provide giggles! This is a crisis!”
She threw her head back dramatically. “What will we do? How will the Invisible Soup be delicious without giggles?”
Elliot’s shoulders bounced in a tiny, restrained shake—as if something inside him was trying to climb out.
Clara began to sing in a soft, playful rhythm, making up words as she went.
“Stir stir stir, the soup so bright,
Invisible flavors in the light—
Add a toe, add a nose—
Wait, where did the carrots go?”
She exaggerated every motion, noting his fingers tightening on the pot rim, his eyes shining brighter.
Then Clara leaned in and said with absolute seriousness, “Chef Elliot, I must inspect your quality control.”
She gently poked his belly.
Elliot’s face froze.
Clara poked again, lighter this time, then made a tiny “boop” sound at his nose.

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