chapter one

226 Words
The Fresno Civic Center smelled like old carpet and bad coffee. Adrian Delgado stood at the podium, tie loose, sleeves rolled up. He wasn’t here for the cameras. He was here because 400 people had no homes after the levee broke. “If we wait for state funding, it’s December before anyone gets a roof,” he said. “ Delgado Initiative can have temporary housing up in 12 days. No cost to the county. We just need a 30-day waiver on permits.” From the back row, Claire Velez crossed her arms. She was the county’s disaster coordinator. Twenty-four, tired, and done with rich guys playing hero. “Waivers mean skipping inspections,” she said. “Skipping inspections means people could get hurt. Or worse.” Murmurs rippled through the room. Adrian met her eyes. “Then inspect it. Every day. But don’t let paperwork kill people before winter hits.” She wanted to hate him. He looked calm, too calm, like he’d already won. Three weeks later, when the storm knocked out her county’s backup generator, Adrian's trucks showed up at 2 a.m. No press. No speeches. Just generators, food, and a note: _For the kids at Oak Ridge shelter. – D.I._ Claire stared at the note. She still didn’t trust him. But she couldn’t ignore that he’d shown up when no one else did.
Free reading for new users
Scan code to download app
Facebookexpand_more
  • author-avatar
    Writer
  • chap_listContents
  • likeADD