So, I never thought I’d have my little brother tagging along with me at work, but here we are. He’s only six, and lately, he’s been super curious about what I actually do all day in my uniform. He asked about a hundred questions at breakfast, and before I knew it, I told him, “Alright, you wanna see what it’s really like?”
I checked with my supervisor, and somehow, we made it work for a few hours.
I figured we’d just hang around the station, maybe let him meet a few folks and see the police car up close. Instead, as soon as we got outside for a break, we ended up in the middle of a situation—some neighborhood kids lost their puppy, and everyone was panicking. I was getting a dozen different stories at once, but my brother just stood there quietly, watching.
He tugged on my sleeve and said, “I think the puppy’s hiding under the old swing set. That’s where I’d go if I was scared.”
The parents looked at me, I shrugged, and we checked—and sure enough, the puppy was wedged right underneath, shaking like a leaf. My brother crawled in and coaxed him out with his granola bar, calm as anything.
Everyone clapped like he’d just pulled off a magic trick. One of the moms teared up, hugging her daughter with the now-happy puppy squirming between them.

“Your little brother’s got instincts,” one of the dads said, patting him on the head.
I ruffled his hair and laughed. “Guess I’ll have to bring you to work more often.”
But it didn’t stop there.
Back at the station, we stopped by the front desk just as a woman came in, flustered, saying she lost her car keys in the parking lot. While I started taking down a report, my brother wandered off toward the vending machines, then circled back with a question:
“Did the lady have a red scarf?”
I nodded, confused.
“She dropped something shiny by the snack machine. I didn’t touch it ’cause you told me not to touch stuff that isn’t mine.”
I walked over—and there they were. Her keys, wedged right between the soda machine and the wall.
By then, the desk sergeant was watching us, arms folded.
“Kid’s two for two,” he said. “You training him already?”
“More like he’s training me,” I muttered.
But the real kicker came when we were doing a routine neighborhood walk-through. A group of teens had been reported loitering around a construction site. Nothing serious, but we had to check it out.
I approached cautiously, asking questions, trying to get straight answers. Tension was rising a bit—just kids being defensive.
And then my little brother, from behind me, pipes up:
“You guys aren’t bad. You’re just bored. Wanna build a fort out of those boxes instead?”
They all blinked at him like he’d landed from Mars. But somehow, that broke the ice. They laughed, the mood shifted, and by the time we left, the teens were stacking empty crates and sharing snacks. No damage. No incident.
When we got back to the station, my supervisor clapped me on the back.
“Your brother’s got good instincts, heart, and a surprisingly effective way of diffusing tension.”
I grinned. “I know. He’s like a walking, talking tiny therapist in a Spider-Man hoodie.”
That night, after I tucked him into bed, he looked up at me and said,
“Did I do good today?”
I bent down and kissed his forehead.
“You didn’t just do good. You reminded me why I do this in the first place.”
And as I turned out the light, I realized something:
Sometimes the best backup doesn’t carry a badge—sometimes he just carries a granola bar and a heart bigger than his whole little body.