Chapter 316
The boy sported a neat short haircut and was dressed in a white long-sleeved tee and coffee-colored trousers. His face was
clean as a whistle, with tender, thick eyebrows. Although he was young, he already exuded a cool and handsome air that set him
apart from others.
This was Atticus who had Thalassa all tied up in knots.
“Atticus!” Thalassa hurried over with the other three kids in tow, let go of their hands, then she scooped Atticus up from his swivel
chair and held him tight. With a mix of relief and lingering fear, she said, “Baby, you scared the living daylights out of me. I
thought you got lost.”
Finally, her worries about Atticus eased up.
Thalassa fought back tears, stroking Atticus’ tender face non-stop.
Atticus could feel his mother’s concern and love. Although he wasn’t the type to act cute, he wrapped his arms around Thalassa
and rested his face against hers to reassure her, “Mom, I’m fine. Don’t worry about me. I won’t get lost.”
The staff member who was about to reward Atticus chuckled, “That’s right, ma’am. Your kid’s super bright. With smarts like his,
he definitely won’t get lost. He’s only four, but he’s already fixed a computer that our staff couldn’t handle. He’s a real computer
whiz.”
Thalassa calmed down, looking puzzledly at the staff member, then back at Atticus, surprised. “Did you really fix someone’s
computer?”
Atticus nodded earnestly. His words, though childish, were clear and coherent. “After I left the restroom and couldn’t find you, I
was going to look for you in the lounge. But then I heard a man on the phone, saying the computer for managing surveillance
was broken and the repairman couldn’t fix it. He was desperately looking for other repairmen. I heard this and offered to give it a
shot. So, he brought me here.”
After saying all this, Atticus gave Dorian a meaningful glance and winked at him.
Picking up on his brother’s hint, Dorian immediately straightened up and explained to Thalassa, “Mom, I’m ratting out my brother.
He often reads books with computer graphics at night. Maybe that’s why he can fix computers.”
Thalassa finally understood how Atticus learned to fix computers.
The boy had followed a stranger to fix a computer out of his instinctive inclination to help others.
Thalassa lovingly ruffled Atticus’ hair, then put him down and told the staff member, “My son is a quick learner. He probably saw
similar repair cases in books, which is why he could fix the computer.”
The staff member laughed in response, “A photographic memory. That’s genius too.” He shoved the reward into Thalassa’s
hand, “Just a token of appreciation, please take it.”
“No, we can’t accept this,” Thalassa politely declined.
It took the staff member quite a while to stuff the money into her pocket. “We’d have to pay for a professional to come fix it
anyway. Compared to that, this is nothing. Consider it candy money for the kids, please take it.”
“Mom, you said you’d buy us candies just now,” Dorian said, tilting his head, looking forward to the candies.
“Right, go get some candies for the kids. Look at them, each one’s lively and adorable. They deserve a candy reward,” the staff
member said, glancing around at the four children. They really liked these kids.
Thalassa no longer refused and smiled graciously, “Then, thank you.”
“Don’t mention it. It’s the least we could do.”
Thalassa left the broadcasting room with the children.
Each of the four kids held a candy shaped like an animal.
Atticus had a kitty-shaped one, Dorian’s was puppy-shaped, Elowen’s was a panda, and Sophia’s was a raccoon.
ཌ ཡ བ འཅ ཆ
Atticus and Dorian were up front, happily licking their candies, while Thalassa, hand in hand with Elowen and Sophia, followed
behind. Sophia was also contentedly licking her candy.
But Elowen was just staring at her candy.
Curious, Thalassa asked, “Elowen, why aren’t you eating your candy?”