Neha’s fingers peeled from the branch one by one.
The flood did not pull like water.
It pulled like a crowd.
Her wrist flashed between muddy waves, thin and pale, and then her face disappeared behind a sheet of brown foam. Mr. Caldwell clung to the same branch with both arms locked around it, his mouth open, his voice swallowed by the roar.
I kicked hard toward her.
The tractor tube under my chest bucked sideways. Something sharp scraped my shin under the water. A hoe handle spun past my shoulder. The current tasted like rust and soil every time it slapped into my mouth.
My father yelled from behind me, but I could not turn.
Neha came up once, coughing.
Her eyes found mine.
Above her head, the clock flickered.
6:39 p.m.
Drowning.
Then the numbers broke apart like smoke and came back sharper.
6:40 p.m.
Drowning.
One minute.
I shoved the tractor tube forward with both hands.
“Grab it!”
She tried.
Her fingers touched black rubber, slipped, touched again.
Behind her, Mr. Caldwell’s face twisted into something small and animal. He reached past her, not to help her, but to catch the tube for himself.
“Mine,” he gasped.
His hand closed around the rubber.
The tube jerked away from Neha.
For half a second, everything inside me went quiet.
Not the flood.
Not the screaming.
Me.
I saw my mother clinging to another tube, her scarf dragging in the current. I saw my father’s hands shaking around wet rubber. I saw the workers grabbing branches, fence posts, sacks, anything that floated.
Then I saw Caldwell’s clock.
6:39 p.m.
Crushed by debris.
The branch above him cracked.
A broken wooden cart, lifted by the current, came spinning toward his back.
I had one tube.
His daughter had no grip.
He had taken her only chance.
I pulled the tube back so hard the rubber burned across my palms. Caldwell’s fingers scraped over it, missed, and clawed at the water.
His eyes snapped to mine.
“You little—”
The cart hit the branch.
Wood exploded. Muddy spray burst into the air. Caldwell vanished behind it, his cane spinning up once before the water folded over him.
Neha screamed his name.
I caught her wrist.
Her skin was ice cold.
The current tried to take both of us.
My shoulder wrenched until light flashed white behind my eyes. I hooked my elbow through the tube, wrapped my other hand around her sleeve, and kicked toward the half-submerged neem tree where the others were climbing.
“Don’t let go,” I said.
She was coughing too hard to answer.
At the tree, my father reached down first.
His hands closed around Neha’s arm and dragged her upward. My mother grabbed the back of my shirt with both fists and pulled until the collar cut into my throat. We collapsed against the trunk, soaked, shaking, packed shoulder to shoulder with people who had called me mad less than twenty minutes earlier.
Below us, the field was gone.
The wheat stack I had burned was only a black smear under rushing water. The tractor sat tilted against a wall of mud, its flat tires buried. Payroll envelopes floated open like dead birds.
Neha crawled to the edge of the branch.
“Dad?”
No one answered.
The dam supervisor was clinging to a roof beam a few yards away. His clean white shirt had turned brown. His lips kept moving without sound.
I looked above his head.
7:12 p.m.
Cardiac arrest.
Fear can make a man honest for a moment.
He stared at me like he knew I could read the sentence written over him.
“You knew,” I shouted.
The workers turned.
The supervisor’s eyes darted toward the broken dam, then to the crowd in the tree.
“I told what I was told to say,” he cried.
My mother’s grip tightened on my sleeve.
“What does that mean?” my father called.
The supervisor swallowed muddy water and coughed.
“Caldwell ordered the inspection report buried. The west wall cracked three weeks ago. He said repairs would shut down harvest. He said laborers were cheaper than concrete.”
Neha went completely still.
The rain started then, sudden and hard, peppering the flood with silver rings. The wet leaves slapped against our faces. Somewhere downstream, a cow bellowed. Somewhere closer, a woman prayed with her forehead pressed to bark.
I looked at the workers one by one.
Most of their clocks had changed.
Some still showed drowning.
Some showed fever.
Some showed infection.
Some showed the next hour.
The blessing had not ended with the dam break.
It was still counting.
“There’s a second surge coming,” I said.
Nobody laughed this time.
My father followed my eyes toward the spillway.
Beyond the broken dam, the reservoir was emptying in pulses. Each time a piece of concrete gave way, another wall of water rolled over the fields. The tree shook beneath us.
“Higher,” I said. “We have to climb higher.”
Old Mrs. Baker shook her head. She was wedged between two branches, one arm twisted badly, her gray hair pasted to her cheeks.
“I can’t.”
Her clock showed 6:58 p.m.
Fall.
I tore the wet payroll envelope from the branch beside me and emptied it. Bills scattered into the flood. The rubber band around the money was thick and tight.
Mr. Caldwell had kept the wages dry against his own chest while telling people to stay and die.
I wrapped the rubber band around Mrs. Baker’s wrist and tied it to my belt strap, then shoved my shoulder under her arm.
“Step when I say step.”
She sobbed once, then nodded.
We climbed.
The bark tore my palms. Mud made every branch slick. Neha climbed beside my mother, silent, her face drained of everything except shock. Twice she looked back toward the water. Twice she stopped herself from calling for her father again.
At 6:56 p.m., the second surge hit.
The tree bent.
Men cursed. A child cried out. My father hooked one arm around the trunk and used the other to pin my mother against him. I pressed Mrs. Baker into a fork of branches as water slapped over our feet.
The flood rose past the lower limbs and carried the last pieces of the field away.
Then headlights appeared on the ridge.
Three trucks.
Then five.
Then the red flash of county rescue vehicles.
Someone had called them before the phones went dead.
Neha lifted her head.
“I did,” she whispered.
Her hands shook as she held up her phone. The screen was cracked, but still glowing. A video was open.
Caldwell’s voice came from it, thin under the rain.
“Anyone who leaves loses the day’s pay. That’s $96 each, and I won’t hand a cent to cowards.”
Then the supervisor’s voice.
“The dam is perfectly safe.”
Then my voice, hoarse and shaking.
“The dam is failing. You have to move everyone uphill.”
Neha had recorded everything.
The first rescue rope landed across the branches at 7:08 p.m.
The deputy who threw it was a broad woman with wet hair plastered under her hat and a cut across her chin. She clipped herself to the line, waded into the current up to her chest, and looked directly at me.
“You Ravi?”
I nodded.
“Your call got through too. Dispatch heard enough before the line dropped.”
“I didn’t call.”
She glanced at Neha.
“She did. Then your mother did. Then half the town did after the wall broke.”
The first person they took was the youngest child.
Then Mrs. Baker.
Then my mother.
My mother refused to let go of my shirt until the deputy put both hands on her shoulders and said, “Ma’am, he’s next.”
But I was not next.
I kept pointing.
The man on the roof beam.
The two boys caught on the fence.
The woman on the grain shed.
The supervisor whose clock had reached 7:11.
By the time they hauled him onto the rescue boat, he was gray in the face and clutching his chest.
“Tell them,” I said as they laid him flat.
The deputy turned.
“What?”
I leaned close enough for him to hear me over the water.
“Tell them where the report is.”
The supervisor’s eyes rolled toward the deputy.
“Caldwell’s safe,” he rasped. “Office wall. Behind the hunting photo. Inspection copies. Payments. All of it.”
Neha heard him.
Her face did not change.
That frightened me more than crying would have.
At 7:43 p.m., they pulled us onto the ridge.
The whole town stood there wrapped in blankets, dripping mud onto the gravel road. Ambulance doors slammed. Radios crackled. Diesel fumes mixed with rain and river stink. My mother sat on a tailgate with both hands wrapped around a paper cup she never drank from.
My father stood beside her, staring at me like he was trying to memorize my face while I was still alive.
Then Neha walked past me.
She went straight to the deputy.
“My father’s office is on the hill,” she said. “I know the code.”
The deputy looked at her carefully.
“You understand what you’re offering?”
Neha’s eyes moved to the flood where the fields had been.
“Yes.”
Nobody stopped her.
Not even the workers who had spent years bending their backs under Caldwell’s name.
At 9:26 p.m., under the weak yellow lights of the emergency tent, the deputy came back with a plastic evidence box.
Inside were folded inspection reports, cash ledgers, signed repair denials, and one handwritten note in Caldwell’s square, careful script.
Delay repair until after harvest. Labor unrest manageable. Public panic unacceptable.
Neha read it once.
Her mouth tightened.
She did not cry.
She took the wet payroll envelope from my hand, the one I had used to tie Mrs. Baker to my belt, and placed it on top of the evidence box.
“He kept this dry,” she said. “While everyone drowned.”
The deputy sealed the box.
A rescue worker found Caldwell’s body before midnight, caught under the remains of the broken cart near the old fence line.
Neha did not go to see him.
She sat beside my mother instead, wrapped in a gray blanket, holding a cup of soup with both hands. Every time someone thanked me, she looked down at the mud on her shoes.
Around 1:18 a.m., when the rain finally thinned into mist, my father touched my shoulder.
“Do you still see them?”
The clocks.
I looked across the tent.
Some numbers floated faintly. Some were far away. Some had changed into dates so distant they looked almost gentle.
Above Neha’s head, the time was gone.
No number.
No cause.
Only empty air.
She noticed me staring.
“What do you see?” she asked.
I could have lied.
Instead, I shook my head.
“Nothing.”
For the first time all night, she breathed like the air had reached the bottom of her lungs.
Outside the tent, dawn began without color.
The valley below was no longer a field, no longer a road, no longer the place where men argued over wages and boys were told to be quiet. It was a wide brown sheet of moving water carrying pieces of people’s lives past the rescue lights.
A cane turned slowly in an eddy near the broken spillway.
A payroll envelope, empty now, rested against a branch above the floodline.
And on the highest limb of the neem tree, where Neha’s fingers had slipped and my hand had caught her, a strip of black tractor rubber hung in the morning mist, swinging softly like a clock that had finally stopped.