June DWC 2026 Day 4 - Inadequate
The apartment buildingâs front door had been sticking. Again. Not exactly broken, just old and stubborn from being neglected for a little too long. The latch caught unevenly, forcing people to shoulder their way inside. Every few days someone complained about it in passing before shrugging and living with the inconvenience. The landlord had done nothing, no surprise there. It needed to be replaced, but that wouldnât happen anytime soon.
So Keyalin fixed it. Again.
He sat crouched near the entrance in the late afternoon light, tools spread neatly beside him while he adjusted the warped hinge for what was probably the third time in as many months. The building itself was old and charming in a way, but also terribly inconvenient in other ways. The sort of place constantly threatening to fall into minor disrepair if no one paid attention. Most people tolerated the problems because the rent was cheap. Well, cheaper, by Silvermoon City standards.
Keyalin had never been especially good at tolerating broken things, so he was happy to fix it himself. The door gave one final reluctant creak before settling smoothly into place. He tested the handle twice, then once more for certainty, watching the latch settle properly with satisfaction.Â
âYou know, the landlord is supposed to do that,â a voice chimed in behind him.
He looked up to find his pretty neighbor standing in the hallway, groceries balanced against one hip. She smiled easily, familiar enough now that the interaction no longer startled him, even though he still never entirely knew what to do with her casual conversation. Especially from someone so obviously out of his league. âI had some free time, and itâs not like the landlord was gonna fix itâŠâ he mumbled after a pause.
Her mouth twitched like she was trying not to laugh. âSee, that is exactly why everyone likes you.â
Keyalin frowned faintly, but also turned a slight shade of pink. â...I just fixed the door.â
âNo, you help people. Without ever asking for anything in return.â She smiled.
Before he could figure out what response was expected there, she disappeared upstairs with a small wave, leaving him standing awkwardly in the hallway holding a wrench and the vague suspicion he had somehow missed part of the conversation. That happened more often than he liked.
Later that evening, after retreating to the apartment with every intention of quietly reading and avoiding additional social interaction, someone knocked at the door. Another knock followed almost immediately, lighter this time, but obviously impatient and suggesting familiarity. When he opened it, one of the younger tenants stood there holding a gaming device.
âWell, youâre good at everything, right?â The teen held out the device with a pleading look.âMy mum is gonna kill me if she knew I broke it.â
Keyalin wasnât seeking more company, but he couldnât say no. The wiring had come loose, nothing particularly difficult, and at least the repair itself took less than fifteen minutes. The kid lingered nearby while he worked, talking easily like some people did when silence made them uncomfortable. Keyalin contributed occasional responses when appropriate, but mostly focused on the repair.
âYou make this look easy,â the teen said eventually, peeking over his shoulder.
âItâs not difficult.â
âFor you. Seriously, though. Everyone says if somethingâs broken, you just ask Keyalin. Youâre a lifesaver!â
The words settled strangely, because fixing things was easy. Or easier, at least. Machines and broken hinges made sense. Wires and structural problems and mechanical failures all followed certain rules. If something stopped working, there was usually a reason, and if there was a reason, there was something you could do about it.
People were different.
Conversations rarely made sense to him until several hours after they happened, and sometimes they never made sense to him. Friendships seemed to form through invisible rules he had somehow never learned, and half the time he still found himself wondering if people genuinely liked him or simply found him useful. Even now, after years of military life, roommates, neighbors, and routines that should have made things easier, there remained a disconnect he never entirely figured out how to fix.
The teenager left a few minutes later with a repaired device and an enthusiastic thank you, leaving the apartment quiet again. Keyalin stood in the kitchen afterward longer than necessary, absently drying his hands while staring at nothing in particular. The compliment should not have bothered him.
âYouâre good at everything.â
He wasnât. Not really.
There was a part of him that still felt inadequate in ways he rarely talked about, because the problem sounded unreasonable once spoken aloud. He had a great military career. People trusted him. He was dependable and useful in ways that made sense for his position. Yet outside of fixing problems with his hands, life often felt like something everyone else had received instructions for that he somehow missed.
He thought about conversations that ended awkwardly, and about the unsettling way he often realized he cared about people only after his routine shifted around their absence. He also thought about the doubts he still felt around simple things like joining a group conversation or knowing when someone genuinely wanted his company. He could repair a communication device down to its smallest internal components, but somehow he still struggled to understand why talking to people felt harder than rebuilding machinery.
Maybe people were more difficult to understand because they could not be repaired, at least not in a way that made sense to him. It had been a struggle as far back as he could remember, yet it came so naturally to the rest of his family. Clearly, that gene had skipped right over him.
Standing alone in his apartment as the building and city noises seeped faintly through the walls, he realized he wasn't sure if understanding would have made anything better.
@daily-writing-challenge


















