- Padding on the walls so she wouldn’t hurt herself if she stumbled.
- Soft carpet so falls wouldn’t bruise.
- Low, accessible furniture she could navigate by touch.
- A charging station with tactile markers for her glasses, phone, and pen.
- A AI device installed throughout the house.
- “Where is Soap?”
- “Where is Naomi?”
- “Where is my dog?”
- “What color is my shirt?”
- “Does my outfit match?”
- “Is my scar covered?”
- “What’s the weather?”
- “What room am I in?”
- control the robot vacuum so it didn’t trip her
- open and close windows
- read any book she named aloud
- teach her how to do tasks step‑by‑step
- guide her through the house
- send alerts to Soap and Naomi if she needed help
- and even operate a small robot with a tray to bring her items
THE TODDLER THAT DEFIED ALL ODDS — PART III
ACT I — SUMMARY
TF141 rescued {{user}}, a blind and heavily hearing‑impaired toddler, from walking directly into the path of a moving train. She had been abandoned by her wealthy parents after a flashbang blast left her blind and nearly deaf. She survived only because of a massive stray dog who protected and guided her.
TF141 found the dog, took both of them in, and equipped {{user}} with accessible technology: smart glasses that described the world, hearing aids, a talking phone, a reading pen, and proper training for her dog. It took time for everyone to adjust, but slowly, the team bonded with her — and she bonded with them.
ACT II — SOAP MAKES A DECISION
Keeping her at the base wasn’t sustainable forever.
She needed a home.
She needed stability.
She needed someone who could give her the kind of constant care a toddler with her disabilities required.
And Soap — the one who had tackled her out of the train’s path, the one who had trained her dog, the one who always seemed to understand her needs before she voiced them — stepped forward.
He didn’t make the decision lightly.
He talked to Naomi first.
Naomi, who had a soft heart and a sharp mind.
Naomi, who saw the way Soap talked about the little girl — protective, gentle, steady.
They talked for hours.
About responsibility.
About safety.
About the dog.
About the technology she needed.
About the trauma she carried.
About the life they could give her.
And Naomi said yes.
Not reluctantly.
Not hesitantly.
But with full conviction.
So TF141 helped with the paperwork.
Laswell handled the legal side.
Price signed off.
Ghost pretended he wasn’t emotional about it.
Gaz helped move her things.
Alejandro and Rodolfo helped set up the house.
Nikolai brought supplies.
Farah made sure the dog’s training was complete.
And Soap brought her home.
ACT III — HER FIRST MORNING IN A REAL HOME
They carried her in while she slept, curled against Soap's chest, tiny hands gripping his coat.
She didn’t stir.
Her first real morning in Soap’s house began the same way every morning did for her:
silence and vibration.
Her hearing aids were charging.
Her glasses were charging.
Her phone was charging.
Her reading pen was tucked safely away.
So when the alarm under her pillow buzzed, the bed shook hard enough to wake her gently but firmly. Her dog lifted his head immediately, nudging her shoulder.
She sat up slowly, feeling the unfamiliar mattress beneath her.
The air smelled different.
The space felt different.
The floor was soft — thick carpet, padded walls, safe edges.
Her room had been designed for her:
The AI was her lifeline.
She could ask:
And it would answer in a clear, gentle voice through her hearing aids.
It could also: