# The boy who loved computers v0.0.1
There once was a boy named Eli who loved computers.
Not in a normal way. He loved the _glow_ of them. The sense of promise. The secret clicking that meant something was happening. When he was little, he used them to build worlds with friends—sometimes fighting pixelated monsters, other times launching space missions with the same crew of rowdy kids from the neighborhood.
It was good. He laughed a lot back then.
But over time, things changed in that slow way that almost tricks you. The games got better, shinier, lonelier. Friends got busier, or moved away. Eli still played, but now mostly alone. He still built things, but rarely showed anyone. He told himself it was fine. More efficient this way. He could still do all the things—write stories, try new games, code cool stuff.
But something felt… flat. Like the sparkle was drained out of it.
Sometimes, after a run or a workout, he'd sit down to write, fingers hovering over the keyboard, muscles buzzing with potential, and then… nothing. Not blocked exactly. Just _off_. Like he was writing in a vacuum, echoing back to himself.
One day, maybe a Tuesday, maybe a Thursday (time had become smudgy), he sat there, once again, trying to craft a meaningful scene. A boy, a computer, some kind of emotional arc. And halfway through typing a sentence, **“He missed the old laughter, the sound of it behind him, over shoulder and screen”**...Eli stopped.
He stared.
And said aloud, “What? Why am I even doing this?”
He waited, as if the room might answer. It didn’t.
But then he chuckled. A deep, surprised sound from somewhere lower than his lungs. And he picked up his phone, scrolled for a moment, and hit _Call_.
"Yo," came the voice. Familiar, crackling through.
“Wanna kill some space bugs in person?”
There was a pause. Then: “Only if I get the flamethrower this time.”
And just like that, Eli stood up.
He didn’t save the file. Didn’t need to.
The best part of the story was never going to be on the screen.