The Second Note Inside The Lego Manual Made The Officer Stop Writing Mid-Sentence-yumihong

The officer’s pen hovered above his notepad.

The little green light on the tracker blinked again beneath the plastic, patient and steady, like it had all afternoon. Heat shimmered above the dry grass. Somewhere behind me, the screen door trembled under Caleb’s small hands, and the smell of melted frosting mixed with the sharp rubber scent of the patrol car tires at the curb.

Officer Bradley looked from the Lego box to my phone.

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“Do not delete that message,” he said.

My thumb locked around the phone so tightly the edge pressed a red line into my palm.

“I won’t.”

He crouched beside the box but didn’t touch it. His radio hissed softly at his shoulder. A few parents had backed toward the fence, their party cups hanging low, their eyes moving between me and the open gift like the backyard had changed shape around them.

“Your parents sent this?” he asked.

“Yes.”

“Do they have any custody rights to your son?”

“No.”

That answer came out flat. Clean. Practiced, almost. Because for three years, I had been saying versions of it to teachers, pediatricians, front-office secretaries, and birthday-party parents who smiled politely when my mother introduced herself as Caleb’s “real safe place.”

Officer Bradley glanced toward the screen door. Caleb’s fingers curled into the mesh.

“Mrs. Parker,” I called without turning my back on the box, “please take him farther inside.”

My neighbor moved quickly. The kitchen door clicked shut. Caleb’s hands disappeared.

Only then did my knees start shaking.

Officer Bradley asked for the packaging, the card, the shipping label, and the note. I pointed instead of touching anything else. The butter knife lay in the grass beside the bow, frosting stuck to its handle. A red Lego brick sat near my shoe like a small piece of something broken loose.

My phone buzzed again.

This time it was my father.

“You’re embarrassing yourself.”

I held the screen toward the officer.

His face didn’t change, but his pen started moving.

The second patrol car arrived at 2:49 p.m. Its blue lights flickered across the fence, the folding chairs, the half-empty pizza boxes, the paper banner that said CONGRATS CALEB in bright block letters. One of Caleb’s friends began crying. His mother scooped him up and whispered into his hair.

The party ended without anyone saying it had ended.

Parents gathered backpacks and gift bags. Shoes scraped the patio. A chair folded with a metallic snap that made me flinch. Someone carried the cake into my kitchen and set it on the counter untouched, the plastic graduation topper leaning sideways in the frosting.

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