The Councilman Marked Six Flood Victims Cleared Before Anyone Knocked on Their Doors-mochi

The pink backpack hit Councilman Briggs’s boot like it had been aimed by the creek itself.

For one second, nobody moved. Not the firefighters. Not the deputy. Not Ruth, who still had one hand wrapped around the tent pole. Not me, standing there with the freezer-bag binder open in my muddy hands.

Then Mrs. Delgado made a sound that did not belong to words.

She stepped toward the backpack, but the deputy blocked her gently with one arm. The bag was half-unzipped, packed with brown water, one plastic unicorn keychain swinging from the zipper.

Ruth whispered, “That’s Maya’s.”

Councilman Briggs stared down at it, his clean boots now ringed with mud. His tablet slipped against his palm. The screen flashed once, then went dark.

The deputy turned to him. “Don’t move.”

Briggs laughed once through his nose, but nobody joined him. “Deputy, this is a rescue scene. You don’t want to embarrass yourself in front of frightened people.”

The deputy reached for the radio clipped to his shoulder.

“Unit three to command,” he said, eyes still on Briggs. “I need a boat back at Hensley Creek. Now. And I need the councilman separated from the incident log.”

Briggs’s jaw tightened. “You have no authority to remove me from emergency coordination.”

The deputy looked at the binder in my hands. Then he looked at the backpack.

“I have six names, one falsified clearance, and a child’s bag floating out of an address you marked empty.”

The firefighters moved first.

Two of them jogged toward the flat-bottom rescue boat tied to a stop sign. The street sign still read KINGSLEY LANE, though the waterline had swallowed half the letters.

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