The Day the City Stopped

The Day the City Stopped

Part I — The Sound Below the Rain

The dog was already slipping when the first shout cut through the rain.

It came from halfway down the canal wall, from a man in a red rescue jacket whose boots kept searching for grip on slick concrete. Below him, water churned through the channel in a gray, angry rush. Above him, under umbrellas and beneath the pale outline of high-rise towers, people gathered along the railing and watched the scene unfold with the helpless stillness of strangers who knew that looking was not the same thing as helping.

The dog was small enough to be carried, but terror had made it rigid. Its paws scratched against the wet embankment and slid again. Every time it tried to climb, the angle threw it back toward the water.

“Hold on!”

The man’s voice cracked through the weather, not because the dog could understand him, but because some part of him needed the sound to bridge the distance. Beside and slightly above him, another rescuer in a blue jacket planted his boots harder and leaned backward, anchoring the man in red with both strength and calm.

“I’ve got you,” he said.

From the bridge above, an older man beneath a wide red umbrella watched without moving. Rain ran off the umbrella’s rim in steady silver lines. His dark coat hung straight and heavy against his frame, and his face, full and composed in the way public men often train themselves to be, had begun to lose that composure one small muscle at a time.

Please save him.

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