I tried to find out more information.
Papers fluttered across the floor — crumpled bills, an envelope of coins, and a shutoff notice with “FINAL WARNING” stamped in red. A battered notebook splayed open, pages scrawled with lists.
I knelt to help.
“EVICTION” glared at me in block letters. Beneath it, in neat handwriting: “What we take first if we get evicted.”
“Lizie…” I could barely get the words out. “What is this?”
She froze, lips pressed tight, her fingers twisting the hem of her hoodie.
“What we take first if we get evicted.”
Sam gasped behind me. “Lizie, you didn’t say it was this bad!”
Dan walked in, eyebrows furrowed. “What’s going on?” He glanced at the papers, then at me.
I held up the envelope. “Lizie, sweetheart, are you… Are you and your dad being put out of your home?”
She stared at the floor, hugging her backpack.
“My dad said not to tell anybody. He said it’s nobody’s business.”
“Sweetheart, that’s not true,” I said softly. “We care. But we can’t help you if you don’t tell us what’s going on.”
“Lizie, you didn’t say it was this bad!”
She shook her head, tears welling. “He says if people know, they’ll look at us different. Like we’re begging.”
Dan crouched beside us. “Is there anywhere else you can stay, hon? An aunt or a friend?”
Lizie shook her head harder. “We tried my aunt… but she has four kids in a tiny house. There just wasn’t any room.”
Sam squeezed her hand. “You don’t have to hide this. We’ll figure something out together.”
I nodded. “You’re not alone, Lizie. We’re in this now.”
She hesitated, glancing at her phone — a thin crack ran along the screen.
“He says if people know, they’ll look at us different.”
“Should I… should I call my dad?” she asked. “But he’ll be mad I told.”
“Let me talk to him,” I said gently. “We just want to help, that’s all.”
A tense silence followed as Lizie dialed.
We waited. I made coffee, and Dan put away the dishes.
My stomach continued to churn.
Half an hour, the doorbell rang.
“Should I… should I call my dad?”
Lizie’s dad stepped inside, exhaustion etched in every line of his face. There were oil stains on his jeans, dark circles under his eyes, yet still, he tried to smile.
“Thanks for feeding my daughter,” he said, reaching out to shake Dan’s hand. “I’m Paul. Sorry for the trouble.”
I shook my head. “I’m Helena, and this has been no trouble at all, Paul. But Lizie’s carrying too much. She’s a child.”
He glanced at the bills, jaw tightening. “She had no right to bring that here.” Then his face crumpled. “I just… I thought I could fix it. If I worked more…”
“Sorry for the trouble.”
“She brought it here because she’s scared,” Dan said. “And because no kid should be carrying this alone.”
Paul ran a hand through his hair, defeated. “After her mom died, I promised I’d keep her safe. I didn’t want her to see me fail.”
“She needs more than promises, Paul,” Dan said. “She needs food, sleep, and the chance to just be a kid.”
He nodded, finally breaking. “What now?”
***
That evening, I made calls: the school counselor, my neighbor who works at a food pantry, and the landlord of Lizie’s building.
“No kid should be carrying this alone.”
Dan drove to pick up groceries with the food coupons we’d saved, and Sam baked banana bread with Lizie. The kitchen filled with laughter again.
A social worker visited, asking questions.
The landlord came by and spoke to Paul about finding a way to stall the eviction another month.