T1 2024 Now

Outside, the rain stopped. A single beam of low, watery sunlight broke through the clouds and hit her desk, illuminating the dust motes floating in the air like a million tiny, purposeless stars.

“The old trail washed out,” the text said. “The one behind the cabin. Creek rose six feet in two hours. Never seen that before.” t1 2024

She typed for five minutes. She did not use the words “circle back” or “low-hanging fruit” or “bandwidth.” She used words like “failed sensors” and “washed-out trails” and “we are building castles on mud.” She described the hundred-year storm that would come in March, or April, or maybe tomorrow. She described the elderly brick buildings. She described her father’s creek, rising six feet in two hours. Outside, the rain stopped

She reached up, tore the page off its ring binder, and crumpled it into a ball. Underneath was January: a blank grid of pale blue squares, unsullied by appointments or deadlines. February was hidden beneath that. Then March. Three months of unmarked days. “The one behind the cabin

Washed out.