When Her Brother’s Kids Destroyed Her Office, The Envelope Changed Everything-heuh

By the time Nate’s kids reached my office door, Daryl had already backed himself against the hallway wall.

He was barefoot in his Minecraft pajama pants, hair sticking up on one side, both hands wrapped around the little USB drive he wore on a lanyard.

He called it his vault.

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It held his school projects, his drawings, the game level he had been building for three weeks, and more pixel dragons than any reasonable child needed.

To him, it was not a flash drive.

It was proof he had made things.

It was proof he had a world nobody could barge into and ruin.

“Wait,” he said, too quietly. “My mom said not to go in there.”

Mason, Nate’s older boy, did not even slow down.

“Look at all the screens,” he yelled.

He said it like he had found a secret arcade instead of the room that paid our rent.

Liam followed him in, sticky fingers already reaching for the edge of my desk.

I was in the kitchen with my mother, holding a mug of coffee I had not taken one sip from.

The house smelled like grocery-store muffins, coffee, and the faint lemon cleaner I had used that morning because my parents were coming over and I still cared, stupidly, about looking like I had everything under control.

Then my office chair slammed into the wall.

Then Mason laughed.

That laugh pulled something cold through my stomach.

I put the mug down so hard coffee splashed over my knuckles.

By the time I reached the hallway, the blue “Work Call — Please Knock” sign Daryl had made for me was hanging crooked from one piece of tape.

Inside the office, everything was moving.

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