For the next two months, our house turned into a workshop.
The dining room table disappeared under fabric she bought to match the uniform, where she needed extra pieces. The sewing machine came down from the hall closet. Thread rolled under chairs. Pins ended up in impossible places.
The badge stayed in its velvet box on the mantle for almost the entire project. It wasn’t his real one. That had gone back to the department after the funeral. This one was far more special.
“Of course, I’m okay with you honoring your father.”
I remembered the night he gave it to her.
Wren had been three, sitting cross-legged on the living room floor, when Matt came home and crouched beside her.
“I’ve got something for you.” He pulled a small object from his pocket and held it out.
A badge.
Not an official one, but a carefully shaped piece of metal polished like the real thing.
His number was written neatly across the front in black marker.
“I’ve got something for you.”
“I made you your own so you can be my partner.”
Wren took it with both hands. “Am I a police officer too?”
Matt smiled. “You’re my brave girl.”
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