Daniel froze slightly, because that was exactly true.
Michelle looked between them, then said, “Okay, that’s slightly interesting.”
But her tone had softened.
After dinner, Michael brought his notebook to the table. Not to show off, not to perform—just to sit and draw.
Daniel sat across from him, watching quietly.
After a few minutes, he said, “Can I see?”
Michael hesitated, then turned the notebook around.
It was detailed.
Precise.
A crane again. Measurements, angles, structure.
Daniel studied it carefully, not rushing, not pretending.
“This is good,” he said.
Michael didn’t react immediately, then asked, “What would you change?”
Daniel leaned in slightly.
“The base,” he said. “It needs more support here or the whole thing could tilt under weight.”
Michael looked at the drawing, then back at Daniel. Then slowly he nodded and started adjusting it.
That moment was quiet but important.
Because it wasn’t just about drawing anymore.
It was about trust.
About listening.
About allowing someone else into your thinking.
Across the room, Margaret watched. She didn’t interrupt. Didn’t comment. But her eyes stayed on them.
Later that night, Michelle came into the kitchen while Daniel was washing dishes. She leaned against the counter, arms crossed.
“You’re doing better,” she said.
Daniel glanced at her. “At what?”
“Being here.”
He smiled slightly. “Thank you, I think.”
She shrugged. “You still have a lot to learn.”
“I figured.”
She paused, then asked, more quietly this time:
“You’re really not leaving again, right?”
Daniel turned off the water and looked at her directly.
“No,” he said. “I’m not leaving.”
She held his gaze for a few seconds, then nodded.
“Okay.”
And just like that, she accepted it.
Not fully.
Not permanently.
But enough.
When she left the room, Daniel stood there for a moment, hands resting on the edge of the sink, breathing slowly, because he understood something now.
This wasn’t about one big moment.
It wasn’t about saying the right words once.
It was about showing up again and again and again.
Every day.
In small ways.
In quiet ways.
In real ways.
And upstairs, behind two doors, were two children slowly deciding whether he was someone they could count on.
The following week brought something Daniel hadn’t expected so soon:
Resistance.
Not loud.
Not dramatic.
But quiet and sharp in a way that made it harder to face—because progress had begun.
Small trust had formed, and with it came the first real test.
It started on a Thursday afternoon. The sky had been heavy since morning, thick clouds hanging low, the kind that promised rain but waited just long enough to make everything feel tense.
Daniel had spent most of the day repairing a section of the back fence. It wasn’t urgent, but it mattered. The wood had weakened over time, and he knew now that in this house, nothing small could be ignored anymore.
Inside, Margaret was resting—something she did more often now, because she wasn’t carrying everything alone.
Around 3:15, the rain finally came.
Sudden.
Heavy.
Loud against the roof.
Daniel stood under the edge of the porch, watching it fall, already thinking about the children walking home.
He didn’t wait.
He grabbed his jacket and headed out.
By the time he reached the corner near the school road, the rain had soaked through everything. The street was nearly empty—a few parents with umbrellas, a few children running.
And then he saw them.
Michelle was walking fast, clearly annoyed, her bag held over her head in a useless attempt to block the rain.
Michael was behind her, slower, his shirt already soaked, his steps careful on the wet ground.
Daniel moved toward them.
“Hey.”
Michelle looked up first. “You didn’t have to come,” she said immediately, though she didn’t stop walking toward him.
“I wanted to,” Daniel replied.
Michael reached them a second later, hair wet, water running down his face, expression unchanged.
“Hi,” he said.
Daniel nodded. “Let’s get you home.”
He took off his jacket and held it over them as they walked. It didn’t cover much, but it helped.
The rain didn’t stop.
The road turned slippery.
And then, just a few steps from the house, it happened.
Michael slipped.
It wasn’t dramatic, but it was sudden. His foot hit a patch of mud near the side of the path, turned, and before he could catch himself, he fell forward, his hands hitting the ground hard.
Daniel reacted instantly.
“Michael.”
He reached him in seconds, helping him up.
“Are you okay?”
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Michael didn’t answer right away. He looked down at his hands.
Mud.
Scratches.
His breathing had changed slightly. Not panic, but something close.
Michelle stepped closer.
“That’s why I told you to walk faster,” she said. “You always stop—”
Daniel said firmly, not loud, but clear:
“Michelle.”
She went quiet immediately.
Daniel turned back to Michael.
“Let me see.”
Michael hesitated, then slowly showed his hands. The skin was scraped. Not serious, but painful.
Daniel looked at him carefully.
“It’s okay,” he said. “We’ll clean it when we get inside.”
Michael nodded, but still didn’t speak.
They walked the rest of the way in silence.
Inside, Daniel guided him to the sink, turned on the water, and gently washed the dirt away. Michael winced slightly, but didn’t pull back.
“I know,” Daniel said quietly. “It stings.”
Michelle hovered nearby, unusually quiet now, watching.
Daniel dried Michael’s hands carefully, then reached for the small first-aid kit Margaret kept on the shelf. He cleaned the cuts, applied ointment, wrapped them lightly—every movement steady, patient, not rushed.
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