What the City Chose to Remember

What the City Chose to Remember

Part I — The Edge of the Water

By the time anyone noticed the dog, it was already too late for an easy rescue.

The rain had come down hard for nearly an hour, turning the city’s canal into a furious gray chute that swallowed leaves, trash, and anything careless enough to slip near its edge. People on the walkway had stopped to watch the water hammer itself against the concrete walls. Most of them kept a cautious distance. The canal was steep, slick, and unforgiving even on dry days.

Then someone pointed.

A small dog, soaked through and shivering, was scrambling halfway down the slanted embankment. It had probably fallen from the upper path. Every time it tried to climb, its paws skidded, and the current snapped at its hind legs like it was waiting for one mistake.

Rowan saw it at the same moment the others did, but unlike the rest, he didn’t stop to calculate.

He was over the railing before anyone could tell him not to be.

“Rowan—”

The warning barely registered. His boots hit wet concrete. His body dropped low. His left hand clamped to a drainage seam in the wall, his right arm reaching down toward the dog. Rain streamed off the dark reflective stripe across his jacket and ran into his eyes. Below him, white water churned and frothed.

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