He’s building it.
For me.
The writing nook.
My nook.
He won’t call it an office. “Too cold,” he said.
“This is your place, little one. Where you dream.”
I can already see it.
The windows he framed with such care.
The shelves he’s measuring to fit my height, so I can reach without straining.
The little alcove in the corner—he left it on purpose.
“For your chair,” he told me.
“I want you comfortable. I want it to feel like you.”
My laptop sits behind me on the bed.
Blank screen.
Cursor blinking.
Like it’s waiting for me to be ready.
I haven’t written in a long time.
Not really.
Not without fear whispering at the edges.
Not without bracing for failure.
But something’s different now.
There’s a nudge.
A flicker.
A feeling like soft roots pressing down into warm soil. Not fast. Not loud.
But real.
Alive.
I watch him work.
Watch the way he wipes sweat from his brow with the back of his arm, leaving a streak of sawdust across his temple. He doesn’t even notice.
And then—
He does.