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from DrFox
Il y a, dans le cœur humain, deux grands fleuves. L’un descend des montagnes du manque, l’autre jaillit des sources du trop plein. Et entre ces deux eaux, l’homme marche, souvent sans savoir de laquelle il boit.
Chaque parole, chaque silence, chaque amour, chaque fuite, chaque désir, naît quelque part. Rien ne vient de rien. Même le geste le plus spontané a ses racines dans une terre invisible. On croit dire simplement « je t’aime », mais parfois ce « je t’aime » est une main tendue vers le pain, parfois il est une coupe qui déborde de vin.
Dire « je t’aime » depuis le manque, c’est dire : « Sauve moi de ma solitude. Remplis l’espace que je n’ai jamais su habiter. Deviens la preuve que je mérite d’exister. » Alors l’amour devient une demande cachée. Il porte un parfum de tendresse, mais aussi une angoisse. Celui qui aime ainsi serre l’autre contre lui comme on serre une couverture dans une nuit froide. Il confond l’être aimé avec un abri.
Dire « je t’aime » depuis le trop plein, c’est autre chose. C’est dire : « Ce qui vit en moi est si vaste que je veux le partager avec toi. Je ne te demande pas de me compléter, je t’invite à goûter ce qui déborde. » Là, l’amour ne mendie pas. Il offre. Il n’enferme pas. Il éclaire. Il ressemble à une lampe qui n’exige pas que la chambre lui appartienne pour donner sa lumière.
Puis vient l’autre continuum, celui de la fusion et de la séparation. La fusion dit : « Je veux que nous soyons un, que ta peau devienne ma frontière, que tes pensées deviennent ma maison. » Elle peut être douce au commencement, comme deux rivières qui se rejoignent. Mais si elle oublie la liberté, elle devient marécage. On ne sait plus qui respire, qui choisit, qui désire. L’un dit « nous » pour ne plus entendre son propre « je ».
La séparation, elle, n’est pas toujours froide. Elle peut être une sagesse. Elle dit : « Je t’aime, mais je ne veux pas te posséder. Je marche près de toi, non à ta place. » Elle trace une distance juste, comme celle entre deux arbres. Leurs racines peuvent se parler dans la terre, mais leurs troncs ne se confondent pas. C’est pourquoi certains départs ne sont pas des trahisons. Ils sont des fidélités à la vie.
Vouloir réussir peut aussi venir du manque. On veut prouver à un père absent, à une mère inquiète, à une société bruyante, que l’on vaut quelque chose. On monte les marches non pour voir le ciel, mais pour être vu depuis la rue. Et plus on monte, plus le vide monte avec nous.
Mais vouloir réussir depuis le trop plein, c’est sentir une œuvre pousser en soi. On ne cherche pas seulement l’admiration. On cherche la forme juste de ce qui nous traverse. Le boulanger fait son pain, le médecin soigne, l’artiste écrit, non parce qu’ils veulent seulement être reconnus, mais parce qu’une force intérieure demande à devenir visible.
Vouloir aider peut venir de la fusion. On aide pour être indispensable. On se rend nécessaire afin de ne pas être quitté. On appelle cela bonté, mais parfois c’est une peur déguisée en vertu.
Vouloir aider depuis la séparation, c’est offrir sans voler à l’autre sa propre puissance. C’est tendre la main sans tirer le bras. C’est accompagner sans absorber.
Ainsi, avant chaque action, une question silencieuse mérite d’être posée : d’où vient ce geste en moi ? Du manque ou du plein ? Du désir de me fondre ou de la capacité d’aimer sans posséder ?
Car la même phrase peut être une chaîne ou une aile. La même caresse peut demander ou donner. Le même départ peut fuir ou libérer. Et l’homme devient libre le jour où il comprend que ses actes ne sont pas seulement ce qu’ils font dans le monde, mais ce qu’ils révèlent de la source qui les a enfantés.

from DrFox
Il arrive un âge où la vue baisse, et pourtant le regard commence. On rapproche le livre, on éloigne le monde, on ajoute un verre à ses lunettes, et l’on découvre que la clarté ne vient pas toujours des yeux. Elle vient de cette lampe intérieure que le temps allume lentement, comme un veilleur qui n’a jamais dormi.
Vieillir n’est pas seulement perdre. C’est apprendre à déposer. La jeunesse veut saisir le paysage entier, mesurer la montagne, compter les étoiles, posséder le matin avant qu’il ne s’enfuie. L’âge, lui, regarde une seule feuille tomber, et dans cette feuille il reconnaît l’arbre, la forêt, le vent, et la main invisible qui accompagne toute chute.
Nous croyions que voir plus signifiait accumuler des images. Nous remplissions nos journées de visages, de routes, de nouvelles, de promesses. Puis le temps, ce maître silencieux, vient réduire le bruit. Il enlève un peu de force aux jambes, un peu de netteté aux yeux, un peu de vitesse aux désirs. Mais ce qu’il retire à la surface, il l’offre en profondeur.
Celui qui a longtemps vécu sait que chaque ride est une phrase écrite par l’âme sur la peau. Certaines parlent de rires. D’autres gardent la trace des nuits traversées sans témoin. Aucune n’est une erreur. Elles sont les cartes d’un pays que nul ne peut visiter à notre place.
Voir plus avec moins, c’est entendre la vérité derrière les mots simples. C’est comprendre qu’un silence peut contenir plus d’amour qu’un discours. C’est reconnaître dans une tasse posée près d’une fenêtre tout le miracle d’être encore invité au jour. C’est sentir que l’absence aussi a une présence, et que les morts ne quittent pas toujours la maison. Ils deviennent parfois la douceur d’une habitude, le parfum d’un geste, la paix d’un soir.
Le jeune cherche des signes dans le ciel. Le vieil être les trouve dans le pain partagé, dans la main qui serre moins fort mais plus longtemps, dans le regard d’un enfant qui ignore encore qu’il est une réponse. Il découvre que la sagesse n’est pas une couronne, mais une écoute plus vaste, une patience accordée au rythme secret des choses.
L’art de vieillir consiste alors à ne pas maudire ce qui diminue. La fleur ne se plaint pas de devenir parfum. Le fruit ne regrette pas d’avoir quitté la branche quand il nourrit une bouche. Ainsi l’homme qui avance en âge peut devenir plus léger, non parce qu’il n’a rien porté, mais parce qu’il a compris que tout fardeau confié à l’amour se transforme en offrande.
Un jour, les yeux demanderont davantage de lumière pour lire. Mais le coeur, lui, demandera moins de preuves pour croire. Et dans cet échange mystérieux se trouve la grâce du grand âge. Voir moins loin, sans doute. Voir moins vite, sans doute aussi. Mais voir enfin. Car la lumière la plus fidèle n’est pas celle qui éclaire le monde entier, mais celle qui révèle, dans un seul visage aimé, l’éternité.

from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter One
Jesus knelt before sunrise on a narrow strip of dry ground where the grass had gone brittle beneath weeks of heat. The eastern sky had not yet opened into blue. It was gray first, then copper, then a dull red where smoke blurred the line between mountain and morning. Behind Him, far enough away that the flames could not be seen but close enough that their presence pressed on every breath, the foothills lay under a heavy, restless cloud.
He prayed without hurry.
The wind moved across the open field and carried the smell of pine, ash, hot dust, and something harder to name. It was the smell that comes when people know they may not return to the rooms where their children learned to walk, the porches where old men drank coffee, the kitchen tables where bills were paid late and prayers were whispered after everyone else had gone to bed. It was the smell of things being taken apart faster than human hearts could understand.
Jesus bowed His head. His hands rested open on His knees. His face was calm, but not distant. There was sorrow in Him, not the kind that panics, and not the kind that looks away. It was the sorrow of One who sees everything the fire cannot touch and everything the fire can reveal.
Down the road, trucks had been moving all night.
Engines groaned past with families packed into them like entire lives had been reduced to duffel bags, water bottles, dogs, medicine, framed photographs, and the stiff silence of people trying not to scare their children. On one windshield, somebody had written the word EVACUATED in white marker. On another, a little girl had drawn a crooked heart with her finger through the ash. The heart had already begun to smear.
Jesus rose from prayer when the first siren of the morning sounded.
At Valley Ridge High School, the gym lights had been on since midnight.
The school sat on the edge of a Colorado town that had never imagined itself as the kind of place strangers would recognize from emergency maps. It was not the famous Colorado of ski posters, wedding photos, and mountain vacation brochures. It was the other Colorado, the one of dry grass, small churches, volunteer fire departments, late-night gas stations, school fundraisers, old ranch roads, and people who knew which neighbor owned a trailer, which neighbor lived alone, and which neighbor would refuse to leave until someone pulled into the driveway and made them.
Inside the gym, cots lined the basketball court in uneven rows. The air smelled like sweat, coffee, damp towels, dog food, disinfectant, and smoke that had followed everyone in no matter how many doors were closed. A banner above the bleachers still said GO COYOTES, but below it a woman was crying into a borrowed blanket while her husband stared at his phone as if a new message could rebuild a house.
Mara Ellison stood near the sign-in table with a clipboard in one hand and a roll of masking tape hooked around her wrist. She had been awake for almost thirty hours. Her hair, usually pinned back cleanly for work at the county library, had come loose around her face. Soot had settled in the crease of her neck, and her eyes burned from smoke and exhaustion, but she kept moving because moving had always been safer than feeling.
“Name?” she asked gently.
The man in front of her looked down at the backpack hanging from his shoulder. He was somewhere in his seventies, with trembling hands and a small oxygen tank beside him. His wife stood close, holding a pillow against her chest like it was a child.
“Arthur Bell,” he said. “And June.”
Mara wrote their names carefully. “Do you have medication with you?”
June nodded, then shook her head, then began to cry.
Mara lowered her clipboard. “It’s all right. We’ll find out what you need.”
“I left the blue bag,” June whispered. “It was by the chair. I thought Arthur had it.”
Arthur’s mouth tightened. “I thought you had it.”
A sharper voice might have entered then. Fear does that. It dresses itself as blame because blame feels stronger than helplessness. But Mara had seen enough people break in enough different ways that night to recognize what was really happening.
She put a hand lightly on the edge of the table, not on either of them. She had learned not to touch people too quickly when their whole lives were shaking. “We’re going to write down the medication names. The nurses are in the classroom across the hall. We’ll help you sort it out.”
June nodded as if the word help had become too large to trust.
Mara tore off two strips of masking tape, wrote their names on them, and placed one on each cot number. “You’re in row three, near the wall. It’s a little quieter there.”
“Thank you,” Arthur said, but his voice sounded ashamed, as if needing a cot in a school gym had somehow become a personal failure.
Mara smiled, the small practiced smile people depended on from her. “You’re safe here.”
She said it because people needed to hear it.
She did not know if it was true.
Across the gym, her younger brother, Seth, was arguing with a firefighter near the side doors. Mara saw him before he saw her. He had arrived at dawn with his work boots unlaced, his shirt inside out, and anger sitting all over him like armor. He had been told to evacuate from the county road where he kept an old trailer and two sheds full of tools. Instead of going where he was supposed to go, he had come to the high school looking for Mara, which was exactly like him and exactly why she felt heat rise behind her eyes.
She handed the clipboard to a volunteer. “I’ll be right back.”
Seth saw her coming and pointed toward the doors. “Tell him I’m going back.”
The firefighter, a woman named Dana Ortega, looked as if she had been carved out of fatigue and willpower. Her yellow shirt was streaked black. Her face was red where her goggles had been. She did not raise her voice.
“Nobody goes back into that zone,” Dana said. “Not for tools. Not for pets. Not for paperwork. Not because you think you know a back road.”
“I’ve got generators up there,” Seth snapped. “I’ve got my father’s rifles. I’ve got everything I own.”
“You had a chance to leave with what you could carry.”
His eyes flashed. “Don’t talk to me like I’m stupid.”
Mara stepped between them before Dana could answer, though Dana had not looked like she intended to. “Seth, stop.”
He turned on her. “You don’t get to say that to me.”
“I get to say it when you’re about to make this worse.”
“This is rich coming from you.”
The words landed harder than Mara wanted them to. She kept her face still. That had been one of her gifts since childhood, or one of her injuries. Sometimes it was hard to tell the difference.
Dana glanced between them, then softened just enough to speak to Mara. “I’m sorry. I know everybody’s scared. But we’ve already had crews trapped once this morning. The wind shifted hard. We can’t keep pulling people out because they went back for things.”
Mara nodded. “I understand.”
Seth laughed once, bitter and sharp. “Of course you do. Mara understands everything.”
A teenage boy nearby looked up from a cot. His mother pulled him closer. Mara felt the room listening in the way rooms do when grief becomes public.
“Go sit down,” Mara said quietly.
“I’m not one of your evacuees.”
“No,” she said, and her voice almost broke. “You’re my brother.”
For a moment, his anger thinned, and beneath it she saw the scared boy he had once been, hiding in the hallway while their father shouted and their mother pretended the dishes needed washing. Then the old look returned. The one that said he would rather burn alone than owe anyone his rescue.
“I should’ve known you’d take their side,” he said.
“There isn’t a side. There’s a fire.”
He leaned closer. “There’s always a side with you. You just make yours sound holy.”
Mara looked at him for a long second. She wanted to remind him who had filled out his job applications when he was twenty-one and too proud to ask. She wanted to remind him who had paid the electric bill at his trailer two winters ago when he claimed the check was delayed. She wanted to remind him that when their mother got sick, he disappeared for three weeks and came back acting like grief had been equally distributed.
Instead, she swallowed it.
That was what she did. She swallowed things until they looked like strength.
“Seth,” she said, “please don’t make Dana spend energy on you that she needs for the fire.”
His face changed. She had meant it practically. He heard it personally.
“Right,” he said. “I’m the waste.”
“That’s not what I said.”
“It’s what you meant.”
He walked away before she could answer, cutting through the rows of cots, past families who looked down because nobody wanted to witness a stranger’s family pain when they were barely holding their own.
Mara stood still until she trusted her legs.
Dana exhaled slowly. “You okay?”
Mara turned back toward the sign-in table. “I’m fine.”
The firefighter studied her with tired, knowing eyes. “That word is doing a lot of work today.”
Mara almost smiled, but it did not reach her face. “So are you.”
Dana accepted that as a way of ending the subject. “We all are.”
By midmorning, the gym had filled beyond what anyone expected. More cots were pulled from storage. The cafeteria staff returned even though school was out, tying aprons over old T-shirts, making sandwiches in a kitchen built for hungry teenagers and now serving frightened adults who had forgotten how to eat. Volunteers arrived with cases of water, diapers, phone chargers, crates of apples, leashes, dog bowls, and more good intentions than organization.
Mara became the person everyone asked.
Where should the medical supplies go? Could pets stay inside? Was there a Spanish-speaking volunteer? Did anyone know whether the smoke would shift north? Had the county released a new map? Could someone call a woman’s daughter in Pueblo? Could someone find blankets? Could someone pray? Could someone not pray? Could someone make the man in the red hat stop playing videos of the flames because children were watching?
Mara answered, redirected, sorted, carried, taped, texted, apologized, cleaned, comforted, translated when she could, found someone else when she could not, and drank half a cup of coffee that had gone cold before she finished it.
Her own evacuation bag sat under the sign-in table. It contained two shirts, her mother’s Bible, an inhaler she had not used in years, a toothbrush, a photograph of her parents taken before everything became hard, and a small wooden box she had grabbed from the mantle without opening. Inside the box was her wedding ring.
She had not worn it in eight months.
People in town knew her husband had left. They did not know how quietly it happened. They did not know he had not slammed a door, had not found another woman, had not become cruel in a way that made leaving simple to explain. He had just grown tired of living beside a woman who could help everybody except herself.
“You don’t let me love you,” Daniel had said the night he packed.
Mara had laughed then, because it sounded unfair, and because laughing was easier than begging. “I don’t even know what that means.”
“It means you turn every hurt into a task.”
“I’m keeping us alive.”
“No,” he had said. “You’re keeping yourself unreachable.”
The next morning he was gone, and she told everyone they were taking time apart. She volunteered for more committees. She took extra shifts at the library. She checked on widows and drove neighbors to appointments and became the person who could always be counted on.
It was a beautiful way to avoid telling the truth.
Near noon, a new group arrived from a neighborhood closer to the foothills. They came in coated with ash and the stunned silence of people who had driven past flames too close to the road. A woman carried a cat in a laundry basket. A boy clutched a baseball glove. An older man had no shoes. He had left wearing slippers and lost one somewhere between his porch and the evacuation bus.
Behind them came a man in plain clothes carrying three folded blankets and a case of water on one shoulder.
Mara noticed Him because the room changed around Him, though no one stopped moving. It was not dramatic. No light broke through the ceiling. No music rose. The smoke did not vanish. The frightened did not suddenly become brave. But wherever He stepped, people seemed to remember how to breathe.
He set the water near the supply table and helped the shoeless man sit.
“Thank you,” the man said.
Jesus knelt before him and looked at his feet. “May I?”
The man blinked. “They’re dirty.”
“They have carried you through fear,” Jesus said. “That is not shameful.”
Mara heard the words from several feet away and felt something in her chest tighten.
Jesus cleaned the man’s feet with a damp towel someone had left beside a bucket. He did it without performance, without drawing attention, with the care of someone handling something precious. The man covered his face with one hand and wept so softly that only those nearby could hear.
Mara looked away.
She did not know why.
A volunteer came up beside her. “There’s a man asking about missing pets, and the nurses need more bottled water, and somebody said the generator behind the cafeteria is making a weird noise.”
“I’ll handle it,” Mara said.
The volunteer hesitated. “You haven’t eaten.”
“I’m fine.”
There it was again. The old faithful lie.
Mara turned toward the hallway, but the man who had cleaned the evacuee’s feet stepped into her path—not blocking her, exactly, but present enough that she had to stop.
His eyes met hers.
She had seen kind eyes before. She had seen tired eyes, gentle eyes, sympathetic eyes, even holy-looking eyes in paintings she passed without much thought. These were different. They did not merely look at her. They seemed to know what she had spent years arranging around herself so no one else could see.
“Mara,” He said.
She did not remember telling Him her name.
For a second, the gym sounds softened around the edges. Radios still crackled. Children still cried. Sneakers still squeaked against the floor. A dog barked near the bleachers. But all of it moved farther away, as if the center of the room had become the space between His voice and her answer.
“I’m sorry,” she said carefully. “Do we know each other?”
“Yes.”
Her mouth went dry.
The answer should have frightened her. Instead, it felt like being found in a place where she had been pretending not to be lost.
“I have a lot to do,” she said.
“I know.”
His voice held no accusation. That made it harder.
“The nurses need water,” she added, because tasks were solid and this moment was not. “And the generator—”
“Others can carry water.”
She looked past Him toward the supply table. “Others are exhausted.”
“So are you.”
Mara smiled politely, the way she did when someone came too close to something private. “Everyone is exhausted.”
He nodded. “But not everyone calls exhaustion love.”
The words entered her quietly, but they did not stay quiet inside her.
She glanced around to make sure no one had heard. “I don’t know what you mean.”
Jesus looked toward the rows of cots, toward the old couple who had forgotten medication, toward children coloring with donated crayons, toward Dana Ortega leaning against a wall with a radio pressed to her ear, toward Seth sitting alone on the bottom bleacher with his head in his hands.
Then He looked back at Mara.
“You have served many people today,” He said. “But you have not allowed yourself to be one of the people being carried.”
Her throat tightened so quickly she had to swallow before speaking. “That’s not what this is about.”
“What is it about?”
She almost said evacuation. She almost said logistics. She almost said keeping people calm. She almost said somebody has to. But His question did not leave room for the shallow answers she used with everyone else.
A woman called from behind the sign-in table. “Mara? We need more intake forms!”
Mara turned at once, grateful for escape. “Coming.”
Jesus did not stop her.
That unsettled her more than if He had.
She spent the next hour working faster than before. She found forms, moved water, spoke to the generator volunteer, arranged a quiet classroom for nursing mothers and elderly evacuees who needed less noise. She helped a mother locate a missing backpack that had been set under the wrong cot. She called the county hotline three times. She heard a rumor about burned homes and stopped it before it spread like a second fire through the gym.
But she felt His words following her.
You have not allowed yourself to be one of the people being carried.
She wanted to reject them. She wanted to argue that this was not the time for personal reflection, not with evacuation orders changing and firefighters running on fumes and families waiting to find out whether their homes still existed. She wanted to tell Him that love was not sitting down to discuss feelings while other people needed help. Love was work. Love was doing what had to be done. Love was being useful when the world came apart.
And yet beneath all of that, something older trembled.
At two in the afternoon, smoke darkened the windows so heavily that the gym lights seemed brighter than they should have. Someone taped plastic around the main entrance to keep more smoke out. Children began coughing. The county sent more masks. Dana left with a crew after a brief rest, and Mara watched her go with fear she did not know where to put.
Seth appeared beside her without warning.
“I’m leaving,” he said.
She turned. “Where?”
“Don’t start.”
“Seth.”
“I said don’t.”
His eyes were red. From smoke, maybe. From crying, maybe. With Seth it was hard to know, because he treated tears like contraband.
“You can’t go back,” Mara said.
“I’m not going back to the trailer.”
“Then where are you going?”
He looked toward the doors. “Away from here.”
The words were so childish and so honest that they nearly broke her.
“Please stay,” she said.
He stared at her, surprised by the softness in her voice.
Then his face hardened again. “Why? So you can manage me too?”
Mara felt the old anger rise, and with it the whole history of them. Two children learning how to survive a house where love depended on mood. A father who could be charming in public and frightening at home. A mother who stayed busy because busy women did not have to answer questions. Mara becoming responsible too young. Seth becoming reckless too young. Both of them still proving something to a man who had been dead for six years.
“I’m trying to keep you safe,” she said.
“No,” Seth replied. “You’re trying to keep from feeling guilty.”
That one found the place he meant it to find.
Mara’s hands curled at her sides. “You don’t get to say that to me.”
“Why not? Because you’re the good one?”
“I never said I was.”
“You never had to.”
A little boy on a nearby cot began to cry, startled by the sharpness between them. His father picked him up and walked away. Mara saw it happen and felt shame flood her face.
Seth saw it too. For a moment, he looked sorry. Then, as always, he looked trapped by his own pride.
“I shouldn’t have come here,” he muttered.
Mara wanted to say, Then leave. She wanted to hurt him because he had hurt her. She wanted to throw his failures down between them like evidence. She wanted to stop being the one who absorbed everything.
But across the gym, Jesus stood near the water table, watching them with sorrow and patience.
Not taking sides.
Seeing both.
That was almost unbearable.
Mara lowered her voice. “Seth, I am scared.”
He blinked.
The sentence surprised her too.
“I’m scared,” she said again, quieter. “I don’t know if my house is still there. I don’t know if your trailer is still there. I don’t know if Dana and the others are going to be all right. I don’t know what happens tonight if the wind shifts again. And I am so tired I keep forgetting what I’m holding.”
Seth stared at her as if she had spoken a language he understood but had never expected from her.
The gym carried on around them. A radio crackled. Someone asked for tape. A baby fussed. The air system hummed against smoke it could not fully defeat.
Mara’s voice shook. “I’m not trying to manage you. I don’t know how to love you without trying to fix everything first.”
Seth looked down.
His jaw moved, but no words came. For the first time all day, his anger did not know where to stand.
Then the side doors opened, and a gust of smoke rolled into the gym before two volunteers pushed them shut again. People turned. A firefighter entered with his helmet in his hand, face streaked black, shoulders low with the kind of exhaustion that makes men look older by years.
Mara recognized him as one of Dana’s crew.
He spoke to the emergency coordinator near the entrance. The coordinator’s face changed.
News moved through the gym before anyone announced it. Not words at first. Just the shift. The room knew before it knew. Bodies stiffened. Conversations thinned. Parents pulled children closer.
Mara stepped toward the coordinator. “What happened?”
The firefighter looked at her, then at Seth, then back toward the doors as if part of him was still out there.
“The wind jumped the line near County Road 18,” he said. “Several more structures are gone. We don’t have addresses confirmed yet.”
Seth stopped breathing in the visible way people do when a possible loss becomes personal.
Mara felt her own knees loosen.
The coordinator began asking for quiet, for patience, for people not to crowd the table. But grief does not wait in orderly lines. Within seconds, evacuees were standing, calling relatives, refreshing maps, asking questions no one could answer. A woman shouted that her mother’s house was on that road. A man cursed at the wall. Someone began praying aloud. Someone told him to stop. A child asked whether the fire could come into the gym.
Mara moved automatically toward the center of the room.
This was what she did. She entered the panic. She made herself useful. She became the voice that did not shake.
But halfway across the floor, she stopped.
Jesus was kneeling beside a little girl whose hands were pressed over her ears. He was not explaining the fire. He was not correcting the frightened. He was not commanding the room into order. He was simply there, close enough for the child to see His face.
Mara watched Him, and for one thin, terrifying moment, she understood that love was not only taking charge.
Sometimes love was telling the truth and staying near.
Her hands began to tremble.
Seth saw. He reached toward her, stopped himself, then tried again. His hand rested awkwardly on her shoulder, uncertain and rough and real.
Mara did not pull away.
Across the smoky gym, Jesus looked at her.
And for the first time that day, Mara let someone else hold part of the weight.
Earlier that morning, before anyone in the shelter knew what the day would ask of them, she had seen a flyer taped crookedly near the entrance for a modern Jesus in Colorado wildfires story and thought it was only another church handout someone had brought with the blankets. Beside it, on the same table as donated granola bars and phone chargers, someone had left a printed reflection about learning to love your neighbor when fear exposes what people carry, and Mara had almost thrown it away because there was no room for paper when real people needed help.
Now, as smoke pressed against the windows and the room filled with questions no one could answer yet, she wondered whether God had been speaking before she was willing to listen.
Chapter Two
The first thing Mara noticed was not that Seth’s hand was on her shoulder, but that she had not moved away from it. For most of their adult lives, they had touched each other only in emergencies, and even then with the awkwardness of people who had learned young that tenderness could become a weapon if it was seen too clearly. There had been a quick hug after their father’s funeral, a hand under Seth’s elbow when he came into the hospital room where their mother lay dying, and a shove once in the kitchen when Seth was drunk and yelling, when Mara had placed both palms against his chest because she could not bear one more man’s voice filling the house. Now his hand rested there, uncertain but steady, while the shelter around them strained under the new fear spreading through the rows of cots.
The name County Road 18 moved through the gym like smoke finding a crack under a door. That road bent through scrub oak and dry grass before climbing toward the lower ridges. Mara knew the mailboxes there. She knew the ranch gate painted turquoise by a woman who said color made grief less bossy. She knew the old modular home with wind chimes made from silverware. She knew Seth’s turnoff, the gravel pullout, the shed with the rusted roof, and the trailer that leaned slightly downhill because he had never leveled it properly no matter how many times she mentioned it. He did not ask if his place was gone, and she did not say it might be.
The emergency coordinator climbed onto the bottom row of bleachers and raised both hands, asking for everyone to give the firefighters space and wait for verified information. His voice cracked from smoke and overuse. People tried to listen. Some did, and some could not. A few pressed toward him with addresses on their phones. A woman in pajama pants kept repeating her street name as if the sound of it could force an answer out of the air.
Mara felt the old instinct rise in her so strongly it nearly took over. She could step forward, calm the nearest families, organize a line, assign volunteers, move the frightened people away from the doors, ask the children’s room to take anyone under ten, get water into hands, and get chairs under those who looked faint. She could become useful enough that her own fear would have nowhere to sit. Seth’s hand tightened slightly, not possessive, not demanding, just enough to remind her he was there.
“You’re shaking,” he said.
“I know.”
The admission sounded strange in her mouth. She expected shame to follow, but what came instead was a sudden, frightening looseness. Her body had been waiting for permission to stop pretending. She looked at the floor and saw a dark spot near her shoe where water had spilled from someone’s bottle. The school mascot was painted at center court, a coyote with its teeth bared. Children had crossed over it all morning carrying pillows and stuffed animals. Fear had no respect for gym floors, mascots, schedules, or the lives people thought they were living yesterday.
“I need to sit down,” Mara said.
Seth stared at her, then nodded too fast. “Okay. Yeah. Sit. Here.”
He guided her to the bottom bleacher, and she let him. That was almost harder than the fear. Sitting while others worked felt like disobedience to a law written somewhere deep in her bones. The law said she earned love by being steady. The law said she must never become the problem. The law said if she needed too much, people would leave. Jesus stood across the gym beside the frightened child, but His eyes lifted to Mara as she sat. He did not smile as though she had passed a test. He simply looked at her with a tenderness that made her feel more exposed than praise would have.
A volunteer named Kendra hurried over with a paper cup of water. She was a college student home for the summer, wearing a Broncos sweatshirt and the terrified competence of someone young enough to still believe adults usually knew what to do. “Mara, are you sick?”
“No,” Mara said, then caught herself. “Maybe. I don’t know. I think I forgot to breathe for a while.”
Kendra gave the cup to Seth, who passed it to Mara. “You need food. I’ll get you something.”
“There are people who—”
“Mara,” Seth said.
She looked at him, and his face was tight, but not angry now. “Let her get you food.”
Kendra ran off before Mara could object. The cup trembled in Mara’s hands. Seth sat beside her, leaving a careful inch of space between them. He looked toward the side doors, then down at his unlaced boots.
“I shouldn’t have said that,” he muttered.
She took a sip of water. It tasted like paper and plastic and mercy. “Which part?”
He gave a short, humorless laugh. “That’s a dangerous question.”
She held the cup with both hands and waited.
He rubbed his palms on his jeans. “The good one part. The side part. The guilt part. Maybe all of it.”
“Maybe not all of it.”
His head turned toward her. “Don’t do that.”
“Do what?”
“Make it easy for me to keep being cruel.”
That almost undid her. Mara looked out over the gym because looking at him was suddenly too much. A line had formed near the coordinator. Jesus was there now, not at the front, but beside a mother trying to keep three children close. He bent to pick up a dropped inhaler, handed it back, then remained with them without taking over. Every movement seemed to say that no frightened person was an interruption.
Seth followed her gaze. “Who is that man?”
Mara did not answer right away. She had no answer that would fit inside the ordinary shape of the question. A part of her wanted to say a volunteer, a stranger, or a good man. But the room around Him told the truth better than any label.
“I think,” she said slowly, “we know who He is.”
Seth frowned. “Mara.”
“I know.”
“No, I mean don’t say weird things right now. I can’t handle weird.”
“I’m not trying to be weird.”
He studied the man across the room, and something uneasy moved through his expression. Seth had always claimed faith was for people who needed comfort more than truth. He did not mock it loudly anymore, not since their mother died with a hymn shaking in her throat, but he kept God at a distance the same way he kept everyone else there. Safer to mistrust what might ask something from him.
Kendra returned with a peanut butter sandwich, an apple, and a small bag of chips. Mara started to protest out of habit, but Seth took the food from Kendra and placed it in Mara’s lap.
“Thank you,” Mara said.
Kendra looked relieved to have done something useful. “Dana’s crew called in. They’re okay so far. They’re moving to another line.”
Mara closed her eyes for one second. “Thank God.”
Kendra glanced toward the coordinator. “They still don’t know which structures burned.”
Seth’s jaw tightened. “They know. They just aren’t saying yet.”
“That’s not fair,” Mara said gently.
He looked ready to argue, then stopped. Kendra left to help a family with a stroller. Mara unwrapped the sandwich. The smell of peanut butter turned her stomach at first, but she took a bite anyway. Her body accepted it with a dull gratitude that felt almost embarrassing. Seth pretended not to watch her eat.
After a few minutes, he said, “I went back earlier.”
Mara stopped chewing.
“Not after they closed the road,” he said quickly. “Before. Around four this morning. I thought I had time.”
She swallowed carefully. “Seth.”
“I know.”
“What happened?”
He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, hands clasped so tightly the knuckles paled. “Smoke was already low. I could barely see past the headlights in places. I got to the trailer and started grabbing stuff. Tools first, because I’m an idiot. Then the lockbox. I couldn’t find the papers I needed. I kept opening drawers like that mattered. Like a warranty booklet from 2017 was going to be the difference between me being okay and not being okay.”
Mara listened, the sandwich untouched in her lap.
“There was this sound,” he said. “Not flames. Not at first. Wind in the trees, I guess, but wrong. Like the whole ridge was breathing through its teeth. Then ash started coming down so thick it looked like snow in the headlights. I knew I had to leave.”
“You left?”
He nodded. “I got out.”
Mara’s lungs loosened, but only for a moment because Seth lowered his gaze again.
“But there’s a dog up there,” he said.
She turned toward him. “What?”
“Not mine. At the Henderson place. The old yellow dog that always lies by the fence. I heard him barking when I was loading the truck. I thought they’d come get him. I thought someone would. Then when I got down the road, I saw their gate still chained.”
Mara closed her eyes.
“I was going to go back for him,” Seth said. “That’s what I was arguing about.”
“You told Dana it was tools.”
“I know.”
“Why?”
His face twisted. “Because saying it was a dog sounded stupid.”
“It doesn’t sound stupid.”
“It does when firefighters are risking their lives for people.”
Mara looked toward the side doors, then at her brother’s hands. “Seth, they still might not have been able to let you go.”
“I know that too.”
His voice had gone rough, not angry now, but stripped. “But I left him there, Mara.”
The sentence came out like a confession dragged through smoke. She wanted to comfort him quickly, but something in her hesitated. Quick comfort had often been her way of silencing pain she could not bear to sit beside. It was another form of control, softer than orders, but still control. She looked across the gym for Jesus, and this time He was already walking toward them.
Seth saw Him coming and stiffened. Jesus stopped a few feet away, leaving them room to breathe.
“May I sit?” He asked.
Mara nodded. Seth said nothing, but he did not leave. Jesus sat on the bleacher below them, turned slightly so He could see both of their faces. There was nothing hurried in Him, though the building was full of urgency. That unsettled Mara more than haste would have. His peace was not ignorance. It was strength under command.
Seth looked at the floor. “If you’re going to tell me animals matter to God, I already know that.”
Jesus’s voice was quiet. “That is not what you are afraid of.”
Seth’s mouth hardened. “You don’t know what I’m afraid of.”
“I do.”
The words did not sound like a challenge. They sounded like the truth standing gently in the room. Seth looked up, and Mara saw something in him recoil, not from danger, but from being known.
Jesus said, “You are afraid that leaving the dog means you are the same kind of man who leaves whatever is weaker than him behind.”
Seth’s face went pale. Mara felt the sentence move through both of them. Their father was not named, but there he was, standing in memory with beer on his breath, promises in public, fury in private, and apologies that always required everyone else to pretend the damage had been smaller.
Seth stood abruptly. “I need air.”
“You shouldn’t go outside,” Mara said, rising too.
“I said I need air.”
Jesus remained seated. “Then breathe here.”
Seth turned on Him. “You think that fixes it?”
“No.”
“Then what are You doing?”
“Staying.”
The word entered the space between them with such plain authority that Seth had no immediate answer. Mara watched her brother’s chest rise and fall. He looked toward the doors, toward escape, toward smoke, toward the old habit of running before anyone could see what hurt. Then he sat back down, not gracefully, not peacefully, but he sat.
For a while, none of them spoke. Around them, the shelter continued in its strange mixture of disaster and ordinary care. Someone laughed too loudly near the coffee table, then apologized because laughter felt wrong and necessary at the same time. A toddler slept across two chairs with his shoes still on. A woman brushed ash from her husband’s eyebrows with the corner of her sleeve. The loudspeaker clicked once and went silent because no one knew what to announce yet.
Mara set the sandwich beside her and looked at Jesus. “What are we supposed to do with this? With all of it?”
He looked toward the windows, where daylight had dimmed into an unnatural afternoon. “Tell the truth you are able to tell. Receive the help that is given. Offer mercy where fear has made people hard. Do the next faithful thing, and do not call yourself the savior.”
The last sentence found her so directly she looked away.
Seth let out a breath. “That sounded aimed at you.”
Mara almost snapped back. Instead, to her own surprise, she gave a tired laugh. It was small, but real. “It probably was.”
Seth looked at her, startled again. Then something like sorrow moved over his face. “I hated you for it sometimes.”
“For what?”
“For being able to keep going. For making everybody think you were the strong one and I was the mess.”
Mara stared at the sandwich in her lap. “I didn’t make everybody think that.”
“Yes, you did.”
She wanted to argue. She knew there was more to it. Seth had made choices. She had carried things he refused to touch. But there was truth in what he said, enough truth that denying all of it would only protect the lie.
“I liked being needed,” she said quietly.
Seth blinked.
Mara’s voice steadied as she kept going, not because the words were easy, but because they had already lived too long inside her. “I told myself I was helping because that sounded better. And I was helping. I know I was. But part of me liked knowing people had to call me. I liked being the reliable one. I liked having a role nobody could criticize without sounding ungrateful.”
Jesus listened without interrupting.
Mara looked at Seth. “Maybe I made you feel smaller sometimes because I needed to feel useful.”
Seth’s eyes reddened again. He looked away fast. “I was still smaller.”
“No,” she said. “You were hurt. And I was hurt. We just chose different disguises.”
Seth’s mouth trembled once, but he pressed it still. Across the gym, the coordinator called for attention again. This time his voice carried enough weight that people quieted quickly. He read from a paper with county officials’ language on it, all careful phrases and verified zones. Several structures confirmed lost near County Road 18. Specific addresses still being matched. No confirmed civilian fatalities. Crews still active. Do not return. Wait for official contact. The whole room seemed to breathe at once, not with relief exactly, but with the fragile gratitude of people who understood that some losses were terrible and some were worse.
Seth bowed his head. Mara did not touch him right away. She waited. Then, when he did not pull inward as sharply, she rested her hand on his back.
“I’m sorry about the dog,” she said.
Seth covered his face with both hands. “I should’ve cut the chain.”
Jesus spoke with deep gentleness. “You cannot rescue yesterday by burning yourself today.”
Seth looked at Him through his fingers. “So I just let it go?”
“No. You grieve what you could not do. You repent for what fear revealed if repentance is needed. You make yourself available for the mercy that can still be given. And when the next living creature needs you, you do not let shame decide whether you show up.”
Mara felt the words settle into her too, though they had been spoken to Seth. When the next living creature needs you. The thought came to her so sharply that she reached into her pocket for her phone. The screen was smeared, the battery down to twelve percent. She had ignored three calls while working. Two from numbers she did not recognize. One from Daniel.
Her hand went cold.
Seth noticed. “What?”
“Daniel called.”
Seth’s expression changed in the way it always did when her husband’s name entered the room, protective and irritated, but also guilty for feeling relieved when Daniel left because it meant one less person witnessing their family from close range.
“Call him back,” Seth said.
Mara shook her head. “Not now.”
“Yes, now.”
“I can’t.”
“You just told me we chose different disguises. Yours is a clipboard.”
She almost smiled despite herself. “That was annoyingly clear.”
“Good.”
Jesus looked at her phone, then at her. He did not tell her what to do. Somehow His silence asked more than an instruction would have. Mara stood and walked toward the quieter hallway outside the gym, where trophy cases lined the wall and smoke had dimmed the glass. Old photographs of state wrestling champions, choir trips, and science fair winners looked out over evacuees moving past with blankets around their shoulders. The ordinary history of a school had become the backdrop for a town learning how fragile ordinary could be.
She called Daniel before courage had time to leave.
He answered on the second ring. “Mara?”
His voice nearly sat her down on the floor.
“I’m here,” she said.
“I’ve been trying to reach you. Are you at the high school?”
“Yes.”
“Are you okay?”
The automatic answer rose ready-made. I’m fine. She could hear it. She could feel the shape of it. She could almost admire how faithfully it came. Then she looked through the gym doors and saw Jesus helping Arthur Bell adjust the tubing on his oxygen tank while June watched Him with both hands pressed to her mouth.
“No,” Mara said.
There was silence on Daniel’s end. She leaned against the trophy case.
“No, I’m not okay. I’m scared. I’m exhausted. Seth might have lost his place. I don’t know about mine. I don’t know why you called, and I don’t know what to do with hearing your voice because I miss you and I’m angry at you and I’m ashamed that I miss you because I acted like I didn’t need anyone.”
Daniel exhaled, and in that sound she heard his own wall crack. “Mara.”
“I don’t know how to do this,” she said. “I know how to help strangers find blankets. I know how to fill out forms. I know how to keep my voice calm. I do not know how to be loved when I am not impressive.”
The words frightened her as soon as she said them. They were too true to take back. Daniel was quiet for several seconds. When he spoke, his voice was lower.
“I didn’t call to make this harder.”
“Then why did you call?”
“I’m at the animal staging area near the fairgrounds. I came down with supplies this morning. I heard evacuations moved toward your side of town, and I wanted to know where you were.”
Mara closed her eyes. Of course he had come. Daniel had always been kind in ways that complicated her anger.
“There’s a dog,” she said suddenly.
“What?”
“At the Henderson place off County Road 18. Old yellow dog. Seth heard him, but the gate was chained, and then the road closed. I know they may not let anyone in. I know it may be too late. But you’re with animal rescue people, and I thought maybe someone could at least know.”
“Give me the address if you have it.”
Mara pressed the phone harder to her ear. “You’ll ask?”
“I’ll ask the right people. I can’t promise.”
“I know.”
“Mara?”
“Yes?”
“I’m glad you told me the truth.”
She opened her eyes. Down the hall, ash drifted in where someone had opened the far door too long. It floated through a shaft of gray light, delicate and terrible.
“I don’t know if truth fixes anything,” she said.
“It might let someone stand closer.”
She could not answer. A coordinator called Daniel’s name in the background. He said he had to go, promised to text if he heard anything, and told her to keep her phone charged. The tenderness in that last instruction almost made her cry because it was so ordinary, so married, so familiar. Keep your phone charged. Drink water. Don’t drive tired. Small sentences love uses when larger ones are too heavy.
When Mara returned to the gym, Seth looked up from the bleacher. “Well?”
“He’s at animal staging. He’s going to ask about the Henderson dog.”
Seth’s face shifted so quickly it hurt to watch. Hope, fear, suspicion, gratitude, and shame crossed him before he could stop any of it.
“He didn’t have to,” Seth said.
“No.”
Jesus stood nearby, holding an empty water case He had just finished unloading.
Seth looked at Him. “You knew.”
Jesus did not answer the way Seth expected. “Your sister told the truth.”
Seth looked at Mara. The old rivalry had not vanished. Nothing so deep leaves all at once. But something had moved. The fire had not made them whole. It had only burned away enough brush for them to see where the path might begin.
A woman near the entrance suddenly stumbled, and Mara stepped toward her. This time she did not move alone. Seth rose with her. Kendra came from the supply table. Jesus crossed from the other side of the gym. Together they helped the woman into a chair. She was shaking hard, her breath catching. Her husband explained that they had just received word their house was gone. The woman kept saying she had left her mother’s quilt on the bed.
Mara knelt in front of her. She wanted to offer the clean, reasonable comfort people use when they cannot bear the size of someone else’s loss. At least you’re safe. Things can be replaced. You still have each other. All true in one way, and all too small for the moment.
Instead, Mara said, “I’m so sorry.”
The woman gripped Mara’s hand. “It was the last thing I had of hers.”
Mara felt the pressure of the woman’s fingers, the tremor in them, the heat of grief needing somewhere to go. She did not solve it. She did not rush it. She let herself be held there by another person’s pain without turning it into a project. Jesus stood just behind her, not speaking, but staying. For the first time in a long while, Mara understood that mercy did not always arrive as an answer. Sometimes it arrived as a presence that refused to leave when there was nothing useful left to say.
Chapter Three
By late afternoon, the shelter had learned the rhythm of waiting. It was not quiet. Nothing about the gym was quiet. Radios kept breaking into static. Children argued and cried and fell asleep in strange positions on folded blankets. Volunteers moved between rows with trash bags, water bottles, and the dull focus of people who had discovered that disaster creates more dishes than anyone expects. But beneath all of that was a waiting so thick it seemed to gather under the ceiling with the smoke that had seeped in through every opened door.
Mara felt it while she sat beside the woman who had lost her mother’s quilt. The woman’s name was Elise Morrow, and her husband, Patrick, stood behind her with one hand on her shoulder, stunned into silence by the loss of a house he had spent twenty-three years repairing. Elise did not want a speech. She did not want a story about things being replaceable. She wanted her mother’s hands back, her mother’s voice, her mother’s quilt folded across the bed in the back room where sunlight used to fall in the afternoon. Mara had no way to give any of that to her, so she stayed on the floor with her knees pressed against the gym’s polished wood and let Elise hold her hand until the first wave of crying passed.
When Elise apologized, Mara shook her head. “You don’t need to make grief polite for me.”
The words surprised both of them. They sounded like something she had learned only minutes ago and somehow already needed to give away. Elise gave a broken laugh, then cried harder, and Mara stayed. Her legs went numb. Her back tightened. A volunteer passed twice with a box of masks, glancing at Mara as if expecting her to rise and take charge again. She did not. She could feel the old pull in her chest, the need to become useful enough to escape being present, but Jesus stood several yards away speaking quietly with Arthur Bell, and whenever Mara looked up, she was reminded that mercy did not have to hurry to prove itself.
Seth sat nearby with his elbows on his knees, phone clasped in both hands. Daniel had not texted yet. Every few seconds Seth touched the screen, waking it, checking nothing, letting it go dark, then doing it again. He looked like a man waiting for a sentence he believed he deserved.
Mara wanted to tell him not to hope too much. She wanted to tell him the crews were overwhelmed, the roads were closed, the dog might have already run or died, and the kindest thing might be to prepare himself. But she recognized that impulse for what it was. She wanted to lower his hope so she would not have to stand beside his disappointment. That was not love either.
After Elise finally let go, Patrick helped his wife to a cot near the wall. Mara rose slowly, one hand on the bleacher to steady herself. Seth looked up.
“You okay?”
She almost answered automatically. This time she was too tired to lie quickly. “I don’t know. My legs are asleep.”
His mouth twitched. “That’s different.”
“It’s what I’ve got.”
He shifted over, making room on the bleacher, and she sat beside him. Their shoulders did not touch, but they were closer than before. Across the room, the emergency coordinator was taping a fresh map to the wall with evacuation zones marked in yellow and red. People gathered around it as if staring hard enough might move a boundary away from their streets.
Seth held up his phone. “Nothing.”
“He said he’d text if he heard anything.”
“I know.”
Mara watched him turn the phone over in his hands. There was ash under his fingernails. His left thumb had a cut across the knuckle, already dried dark. She wondered when that had happened and why she had not noticed before. For years she had noticed Seth mostly by what he failed to do, bills he did not pay, calls he did not return, jobs he lost, anger he carried into rooms that already had enough trouble in them. She had not noticed enough of the small wounds.
“Did you cut your hand at the trailer?” she asked.
He looked down as if seeing it for the first time. “Gate latch, I think.”
“Let me clean it.”
He pulled his hand back slightly. “It’s fine.”
She gave him a tired look.
He exhaled. “I heard it as soon as I said it.”
The corner of her mouth lifted. She went to the supply table and found antiseptic wipes and a bandage. Kendra was there sorting donations into piles that would have offended Mara’s usual system. Socks with granola bars. Diapers beside phone chargers. Pet food stacked on top of towels. For a moment Mara wanted to reorganize all of it. Her fingers actually reached toward the nearest pile.
Kendra noticed and froze. “I know, I know, it’s messy. I’m trying.”
Mara let her hand drop. “You’re doing fine.”
Kendra looked doubtful. “You always say that right before you fix it.”
Mara felt the sentence land. It was said with affection, but it carried the truth of a hundred small moments when she had stepped in so quickly no one else had room to grow. She looked at the young woman’s tired face and thought of all the times she had called control excellence because excellence sounded nobler.
“I’m sorry,” Mara said.
Kendra blinked. “For what?”
“For making help feel like it has to be done my way to count.”
The younger woman’s eyes softened. “I didn’t mean—”
“I know.” Mara picked up the wipes and bandage. “But I did.”
She returned to Seth, sat beside him, and opened the antiseptic wipe. He held out his hand after only a slight hesitation. The cut was shallow, but the skin around it was gritty with soot. Mara cleaned it gently. Seth watched her work with an expression too complicated to name.
“You used to do this when we were kids,” he said.
“You were always bleeding.”
“You were always prepared.”
“You make that sound bad.”
“It wasn’t bad.” He was quiet for a moment. “It just made me feel like you were already grown, and I was still trying to figure out how to tie my shoes without making Dad mad.”
Mara pressed the bandage over the cut. “I wasn’t grown. I was scared.”
Seth looked at her then, really looked, and something passed between them that was older than language. Not forgiveness yet. Not even understanding. More like the first honest recognition that they had both been children in the same burning house, long before Colorado caught fire around them.
A radio near the side doors cracked loudly. Several people turned. Dana Ortega’s voice came through, strained and clipped, reporting changing conditions near the ridge. The words were technical, but the tone was human enough for everyone to hear the pressure inside it. Crews were being reassigned. A new advisory was coming. The high school was still safe for now, but the smoke outside was worsening, and the county wanted medically fragile evacuees moved into interior classrooms where the air was easier to filter.
The coordinator began looking for volunteers before the announcement was even finished. Mara stood without thinking.
Then she stopped.
Her body had moved faster than her soul.
Seth watched her. Jesus, across the room, watched too. Not with disapproval. That would have been easier to resist. He watched like someone waiting for her to choose freely.
The coordinator called, “Mara, can you help organize the move?”
Every part of her knew the answer expected of her. Yes. Of course. Tell me what you need. Give me the list. I’ll handle it. The room had leaned on her all day, and not without reason. She knew where the masks were. She knew which evacuees had oxygen. She knew which classroom was quietest, which hallway had fewer drafts, which volunteers were strong enough to move cots and which were better with frightened children.
She opened her mouth.
Kendra stepped forward from the supply table, clutching a clipboard with both hands. “I can do it.”
The coordinator looked uncertain. “Do you know the medical list?”
Mara almost answered for her. She could feel the words rising.
Kendra swallowed. “Not all of it. But I can learn fast. Mara can tell me the first step.”
The room waited in its small way. No one else understood what this moment was. To them it was a practical question in a shelter under smoke. To Mara it felt like standing at the edge of an old identity and being asked whether she would call it obedience or fear.
She looked at Kendra. “The oxygen users are marked with blue tape on their cot cards. Start with them. Ask Nina and Paul to move chairs first, not cots. Keep families together if you can. Don’t argue with anyone who panics. Just slow down and repeat the next step.”
Kendra nodded quickly. “Okay.”
“And take Seth,” Mara said.
Seth’s head came up. “What?”
Mara looked at him. “You wanted to be useful. Be useful where you are allowed to be.”
He stared at her for a second, then stood. “Fine. But I’m not good with old people.”
Arthur Bell, who was close enough to hear, called over, “That’s all right. We’re not always good with you either.”
A laugh moved through the nearby cots, small but real. Seth looked offended for half a second, then laughed despite himself. It changed his face in a way Mara had not seen in years.
Kendra pointed toward row three. “Come on, then.”
Seth followed her, awkward and uncertain, but he followed. Mara remained by the bleacher, feeling the strange emptiness of not being at the center. It was not peaceful at first. It felt like standing outside in cold weather without a coat. Her hands wanted something to hold. Her mind wanted a task to conquer. Instead, Jesus approached and stood beside her.
“You gave room,” He said.
“I gave instructions.”
“Yes.” His eyes rested on Kendra directing Nina and Paul toward the first row. “And room.”
Mara crossed her arms, not from defiance this time, but because she felt suddenly small. “It shouldn’t be this hard.”
“Many prisons are built from good things used wrongly.”
She watched Seth help Arthur Bell rise slowly, one hand under the older man’s elbow, the other steadying the oxygen tank. Seth was too rough at first, then corrected himself when Arthur winced. June Bell touched Seth’s forearm and told him he was doing fine. Seth looked startled by the kindness.
“I thought love meant being the dependable one,” Mara said. “When everything fell apart at home, someone had to know what to do.”
Jesus nodded. “And you were a child.”
“My mother needed me.”
“She needed help no child should have had to become.”
Mara’s eyes burned. She looked away because the gym was too public for tears, but the tears came anyway, hot and embarrassing. She wiped them quickly.
Jesus did not soften the truth by pretending it was smaller. “You learned to survive by becoming necessary. But being necessary is not the same as being loved.”
The words struck deeper than she expected. She had believed in usefulness so completely that love without usefulness felt suspicious, almost irresponsible. A marriage could not survive on that. A family could not heal inside it. A shelter full of displaced people could not become a place of mercy if the helpers were secretly starving themselves to prove they deserved to help.
Mara looked toward the hallway. Daniel had said almost the same thing in a different way. You don’t let me love you. She had treated the sentence like an accusation because it was easier to defend herself than admit she did not know how to be loved without earning it first.
“What if I don’t know who I am if I’m not needed?” she asked.
Jesus turned toward her fully. “Then you begin where every beloved child begins.”
“Where is that?”
“Receiving what you did not earn.”
A child ran past with a stuffed rabbit dragging by one ear. His father caught him gently before he could enter the hallway being used for the medical move. Somewhere near the cafeteria, a pan clattered and someone apologized too loudly. The high school lights hummed overhead. The world did not pause for Mara’s revelation. That made it feel more true, not less. God was not taking her out of the pressure to teach her. He was meeting her inside it.
Her phone buzzed.
She grabbed it so quickly she nearly dropped it. A text from Daniel lit the screen.
Animal team got permission to check Henderson place with fire escort if conditions hold. No promise. Will update.
Mara showed Seth from across the room by lifting the phone. He left Arthur settled in a chair and hurried over with Kendra behind him.
“What does it say?” Seth asked.
Mara handed him the phone.
His face tightened as he read. “If conditions hold,” he repeated. “That means nothing.”
“It means they’re trying.”
“It means maybe. Maybe is worse.”
Kendra stood beside him, unsure whether to stay. Mara expected Seth to snap at her, but he looked at the phone and then at the rows of evacuees being moved.
“I should go with them,” he said.
Mara felt fear rise. “You can’t.”
“I know I can’t. I said should.”
Jesus spoke from beside Mara. “Why?”
Seth looked at Him with frustration. “Because I heard him barking.”
“And if you went?”
“I could help.”
“Could you?”
Seth’s jaw worked. He looked toward the doors, then back at the phone. “Maybe not.”
“What would you be seeking,” Jesus asked, “the dog’s rescue or relief from your own shame?”
Seth’s eyes filled, and this time he did not hide it quickly enough. Kendra looked down, giving him privacy as best she could while standing three feet away. Mara felt the urge to defend him from the question, but she knew it had been asked without cruelty. Jesus was not wounding Seth. He was cutting toward the infection.
Seth wiped his face with the heel of his hand. “I don’t know.”
“That is an honest beginning,” Jesus said.
Seth’s voice dropped. “I don’t want to be like him.”
The words were barely above a whisper, but Mara heard them. So did Kendra, though she did not know who he meant. Jesus knew.
“You are not made free by proving you are unlike him,” Jesus said. “You are made free by giving your whole self to the Father, including the parts still afraid of becoming what hurt you.”
Seth shook his head. “I don’t know how.”
“Tell the truth. Stay near. Do the mercy that is in front of you.”
Seth looked around the gym, at Arthur Bell trying to adjust to a classroom chair, at June holding a medication list, at Kendra waiting with the blue-taped cot cards, at Mara holding nothing for once.
Then he handed the phone back. “I’ll help move people.”
Kendra gave him a grateful nod, and they returned to the row. Mara watched him go with a feeling she could not name. Pride, maybe, but not the old kind that needed Seth to reflect well on her. This was quieter. A sorrowful gratitude. A brother had been offered a small way to become different, and he had taken it.
The work continued. Mara did not stand aside completely. She answered questions when asked. She found extra masks when Kendra could not locate them. She helped Nina calm a man who refused to leave his cot because he thought moving meant the fire was coming closer. But she did not take back the center. More than once she saw Kendra making a choice Mara would have made differently, and more than once she let it be because the choice was not harmful, only different. Each time felt like loosening a knot that had been pulled tight for decades.
Near five o’clock, the air outside turned darker. The gym windows, high along the walls, changed from gray to brownish orange. Someone said the sun looked like a wound, and someone else told them not to talk that way around the children. The coordinator announced that the high school still remained outside the evacuation boundary, but buses were being prepared in case relocation became necessary. A low groan passed through the shelter. People who had already fled once now imagined fleeing again.
Mara’s own fear returned with a fresh edge. Her house sat on the west side of town, not in the red zone yet, but close enough to make every announcement personal. The wooden box under the sign-in table seemed to call to her through the noise. She had not opened it since placing her wedding ring inside. The box was small, cedar, built by her father in one of his gentle seasons. That was part of the trouble. He had not been cruel all the time. If he had been, memory would have been easier to sort. He could make pancakes shaped like bears, fix a broken chair, cry at old country songs, and then, without warning, become a storm everyone else had to survive. Mara had learned early that love could be real and unsafe in the same house, and she had never known what to do with that.
She walked to the sign-in table and pulled the box from her evacuation bag.
Jesus followed, but did not crowd her.
Mara ran her thumb over the lid. “My father made this.”
“Yes.”
“I keep my ring in it.”
Jesus waited.
She laughed softly, but there was no humor in it. “That feels like a bad symbol.”
“It is an honest one.”
“I don’t know if Daniel and I can fix anything.”
“Truth is not a bargain with the future,” Jesus said. “It is obedience in the present.”
She opened the box.
The ring lay on a square of faded blue cloth. Simple gold, scratched from years of dishes, gardening, work, and ordinary living. She did not pick it up. She only looked. The gym noise seemed to recede again, but not as sharply as before. This time the world remained present. Families, smoke, sirens, maps, and the ring all belonged to the same moment. There was no separate sacred place. There was only the place where Jesus stood.
“I loved him,” she said.
Jesus answered softly. “You do.”
Mara closed her eyes. “I was angry that he left.”
“Yes.”
“I was more angry that he was right.”
The confession came with a force that made her grip the edge of the table. She had spent eight months telling herself Daniel had abandoned her. Part of that was true. He had left instead of staying to fight through the closed doors between them. But another part, the part she had refused to touch, was that he had named something she did not want named. He had reached for a wound she had built a life around protecting.
Her phone buzzed again.
She looked at the screen, afraid to hope, afraid not to.
Daniel: They found him alive. Burned paws, smoke inhalation, scared bad. Transporting to animal triage now. Tell Seth.
Mara covered her mouth. For one second she could not move. Then she turned toward the row where Seth was helping move the last of the blue-taped evacuees into the hallway.
“Seth,” she called.
Her voice cracked hard enough that he came running.
“What happened?”
She held out the phone.
He took it, read the message, and folded in on himself so suddenly Mara reached for him. Seth sat on the bottom bleacher, phone still in his hand, shoulders shaking. It was not the clean grief of a man mourning a lost dog. It was relief and shame and childhood and repentance and hope all arriving at once with nowhere orderly to go.
Kendra stood nearby, crying openly. Arthur Bell removed his cap. June whispered, “Thank You, Lord,” as if the rescue of one old yellow dog mattered in a gym full of human loss, because somehow it did.
Seth pressed the phone to his forehead. “He’s alive.”
Mara sat beside him. “He’s alive.”
“I left him.”
“And someone still went.”
He shook his head, crying harder. “I don’t deserve that.”
Jesus knelt in front of him. “Mercy is not given because you deserve it.”
Seth looked at Him through tears. “Then why?”
“Because the Father is good.”
The words did not float above the room. They entered it. Mara felt them in the concrete of the shelter, in the taped windows, in the old people being moved to cleaner air, in the firefighters still working beyond the smoke, in Daniel asking the right people for help, in Kendra learning to lead, in Seth letting himself be seen, in a dog carried out of danger though no one was owed that grace.
Seth lowered his head and wept with the helplessness of a man who had run out of defenses. Mara put her arm around him. This time it was not to manage him. It was not to hold him together so no one else would have to witness his pain. It was to stay near while he came apart.
Across the gym, the coordinator called for another volunteer. Someone else answered before Mara could.
She let them.
Then she looked down at the ring in the open box and understood, with a clarity that frightened and freed her, that the next faithful thing would not be another task.
It would be a conversation she could not control.
Chapter Four
The rescue of the old yellow dog did not make the shelter peaceful. It did not return a single burned house, clear the smoke from the windows, or give anyone back the photographs, quilts, tools, toys, letters, and ordinary rooms that had already been taken. The gym remained crowded and strained. The air still scratched at throats. The maps on the wall still looked too much like warnings written over the shape of people’s lives. Yet something changed near the bottom bleacher where Seth sat with Mara’s phone in both hands, reading Daniel’s message again and again as if grace might disappear if he stopped looking at it.
Mara stayed beside him until his breathing steadied. She did not tell him to stop crying. She did not turn his relief into a lesson. She let the moment be what it was. That restraint took more strength than all the work she had done that morning. A part of her still wanted to organize even his repentance into something cleaner, to help him stand, hand him water, give him a next step, and rescue herself from the discomfort of watching a grown man weep in public. But Jesus remained kneeling in front of them, and His patience made room for Seth to be unfinished.
Finally Seth wiped his face with both hands and gave the phone back. “I don’t know what to do with that.”
“With what?” Mara asked.
He looked embarrassed by the obviousness of it. “Somebody going back when I couldn’t. Somebody helping after I lied about why I wanted to go. Somebody doing mercy for me when I was acting like a jerk.”
Mara looked at Daniel’s text one more time before the screen went dark. “Maybe you start by not arguing with it.”
Seth gave a weak laugh. “That sounds like something you’d be terrible at.”
“I am.”
Jesus rose slowly. “Gratitude is often the first honest prayer of a heart that does not yet know how to speak to God.”
Seth looked up at Him. “I don’t know if I’m praying.”
“You said he is alive as though you were speaking to more than the room.”
Seth did not answer. He looked toward the high windows, where smoke had turned the late afternoon into a strange burnt dusk, and for the first time Mara could remember, he did not look away quickly when something holy came near his pain.
The coordinator’s voice cut through the gym again, asking for volunteers near the main entrance. A new group of evacuees had arrived, not as many as before but more shaken. They had come from the outer edge of the advisory zone, people who had waited because the order had not yet reached them and then left because their lungs, children, or fear could no longer stand it. Among them was Dana Ortega, walking slowly with her helmet tucked under one arm and another firefighter holding her elbow.
Mara stood at once.
Dana’s face was gray beneath the soot. Not tired-gray, not the ordinary color of a hard shift, but something thinner. Her lips were dry. Her eyes kept trying to focus and missing. The firefighter beside her guided her toward a chair near the wall.
“She needs the nurses,” he said.
Dana tried to pull away. “I’m fine. I just need five minutes.”
Mara moved toward her, then stopped after only three steps. The whole room in her wanted to take over. She could already hear the commands forming. Get the nurse. Bring water. Move those people back. Open a pathway. Somebody find a mask that seals. She would have been good at it. She would also have made herself the center again before anyone else could breathe.
She turned toward Kendra instead. “Can you get Nina and one of the nurses?”
Kendra nodded and ran.
Mara looked at Seth. “Help clear space, please.”
He was already moving. “On it.”
Then she approached Dana without rushing. “Sit before you fall.”
Dana tried to smile. “That your official medical opinion?”
“No. That’s my scared friend opinion.”
The word friend surprised Mara as much as it seemed to surprise Dana. They knew each other in the way small-town adults knew each other, through meetings, fundraisers, emergency trainings, library events, passing conversations in grocery aisles. Friend had never been a word Mara used easily. It required more openness than usefulness did.
Dana lowered herself into the chair. “Scared friend is bossier than clipboard Mara.”
“Clipboard Mara is taking a break.”
“Good. She was wearing me out.”
Mara knelt beside her. “What happened?”
Dana glanced at the firefighter who had walked her in. He gave a small shake of his head, not wanting details to spread. Dana understood. “Too much smoke. Too little rest. I got stupid and stood up too fast.”
The nurse arrived with Kendra and began checking Dana’s pulse and breathing. Dana protested, but weakly. Mara backed up to give room, though her feet wanted to stay planted by the chair. She had asked for help. Now she had to let help help.
A text buzzed on her phone.
Daniel: I’m bringing supplies to Valley Ridge. Also, animal team says the dog is stable enough to transport later if owners are found. They’re calling him Buddy for now.
Mara almost laughed at the name. Buddy. The old yellow dog had become Buddy because mercy often needed a name before paperwork caught up. Seth was near the entrance moving chairs with Paul. She lifted the phone, and his face changed when he read her expression.
“Good news?” he called.
“Stable,” she said. “They’re calling him Buddy.”
Seth pressed one hand over his mouth, nodded once, and turned back to the chairs before anyone saw him cry again. Mara let him have that privacy.
Dana watched from the chair while the nurse fitted an oxygen tube beneath her nose. “County Road 18?”
Mara nodded.
Dana closed her eyes briefly. “We heard barking when we passed earlier. Couldn’t stop then. I hated that.”
“You had people to save.”
“I know.” Dana opened her eyes. “Still hated it.”
Jesus stood near the wall, quiet among them. His gaze rested on Dana with the same tenderness He had shown the shoeless evacuee and the frightened child. Mara had never noticed before how much people who seemed strong needed someone to look at them without demanding more strength.
Dana followed Mara’s gaze and looked at Him. “You’re the one who’s been everywhere today.”
Jesus stepped closer. “Not everywhere.”
“Feels like it.”
“I have only been where I was welcomed.”
Dana breathed shallowly, studying Him. “That can’t be true. Half these people are too scared to welcome anybody.”
“Fear can open a door when pride cannot.”
Dana’s eyes filled suddenly, and she looked away with irritation at herself. “Great. Now I’m crying in front of evacuees.”
Mara sat on the chair beside her. “You’re allowed.”
“I’m really not.”
“You are.”
Dana swallowed hard. “There was a house up on the ridge. We couldn’t get to it. Too hot. Too fast. We had to pull back.”
Mara said nothing. She knew enough not to ask whose house. Names would come later. Pain had already arrived.
Dana’s voice went rough. “I keep telling people not to go back, but part of me knows why they want to. You spend your life building rooms around love. Then someone tells you to leave in five minutes and trust strangers with the rest.”
Mara looked down at the ring box still tucked beneath her arm. She had forgotten she was holding it. “Trust is hard when leaving once cost you too much.”
Dana looked at her, and in that glance Mara knew the sentence had revealed more than she meant to reveal. She almost retreated. She almost laughed it off. Instead, she held still.
“My husband is bringing supplies,” Mara said.
Dana raised an eyebrow. “I didn’t know Daniel was back.”
“He isn’t back. Not like that.”
“But he’s coming.”
“Yes.”
Dana took that in. “You scared?”
Mara nodded. “Very.”
Dana leaned back, oxygen tube in place, firefighter soot on her cheeks, eyes red from smoke and tears. “Good. Means you’re not dead inside.”
Mara actually laughed then. A real laugh, tired and uneven. Dana smiled faintly.
Jesus looked at Mara. “Fear told the truth more kindly than pride did.”
Before Mara could answer, the main doors opened and a small group entered carrying boxes. The volunteers rushed to close the doors quickly against the smoke. Daniel came in last, wearing jeans, a faded work jacket, and a mask pulled down under his chin. His hair was dusted with ash. He carried two cases of bottled water, but when he saw Mara, he stopped so suddenly a man behind him nearly walked into him.
For eight months, Mara had imagined seeing him again in cleaner circumstances. She had imagined herself composed, maybe a little distant, maybe kind enough to prove she was healed, maybe strong enough to make him regret leaving without seeming like she wanted him to regret it. She had not imagined smoke, gym lights, cots, her brother crying over a rescued dog, a cedar box under her arm, and Jesus standing a few feet away like the truth had arranged the meeting Himself.
Daniel set the water down.
“Mara,” he said.
The sound of her name in his voice undid the speech she had not realized she was preparing.
“Thank you for the dog,” she said.
He glanced toward Seth, who stood frozen near the chairs. “The crew did it. I just bothered people until the right person listened.”
“That counts,” Seth said.
Daniel looked surprised to be addressed by him. Seth crossed the space awkwardly, like a man walking into a room where he had broken something years ago and never cleaned it up.
“I was out of line with you before,” Seth said.
Daniel’s expression softened, but carefully. “You had a lot going on.”
“That’s not an apology. That’s you being generous.” Seth swallowed. “I’m sorry. For how I treated you when you were with Mara. For acting like you were the problem because it was easier than looking at us.”
Mara stood very still. Daniel looked from Seth to her, then back again.
“Thank you,” Daniel said. “That means something.”
Seth nodded as if he had reached the edge of what he could say without falling apart. He stepped back. Kendra caught his eye and pointed toward another stack of chairs, giving him a merciful excuse to move.
Daniel turned to Mara. The room around them remained busy, but the space between them felt quiet enough to hear every unspoken thing. He noticed the cedar box, then looked away from it quickly, not wanting to claim meaning she had not offered.
“Are you safe?” he asked.
“For now.”
“Your house?”
“Still unknown. Yours?”
He gave a faint, tired smile. “My apartment is east. I’m okay.”
Of course. His new place. The place she had never visited. The place that proved the separation was not just a dramatic pause. She looked down at the box, then back at him.
“I opened it,” she said.
His eyes flicked to it again. “Okay.”
“I don’t know why I brought it.”
“I think you do.”
That could have sounded harsh from someone else. From Daniel it sounded sad.
Mara’s throat tightened. “I didn’t call you because I thought if I needed you, it meant I had lost.”
He nodded slowly. “That sounds like you.”
The honesty stung, but not cruelly.
She took a breath. “I made our marriage a place where you could help only if I approved the kind of help and the timing and the method. I made you feel unnecessary unless you were cooperating with my version of strength.”
Daniel’s eyes filled, though he did not let the tears fall. “I left instead of fighting harder to stay close. I need to say that too.”
Mara shook her head. “You tried.”
“Not always. Sometimes I got tired and quiet. Sometimes I let you disappear into work because it was easier than being rejected again.”
The sentence opened a sorrow she had not made room for. She had imagined herself as the abandoned one because that story hurt less than seeing him standing for years outside doors she kept locked from the inside.
Jesus was near enough to hear, but He did not step into the conversation. His presence steadied it without taking it over. Mara looked at Him once, and His eyes invited no performance, only truth.
“I don’t know if I can fix us,” Mara said.
Daniel’s face trembled. “I don’t know either.”
“I want to try without making trying another project.”
He breathed out slowly. “That might be the only way I can try.”
The words should have frightened her more than they did. They did not promise reunion. They did not erase the eight months apart. They did not solve the ways they had hurt each other. But they were clean. For once, neither of them was pretending that honesty required certainty before it could be spoken.
Mara opened the cedar box and held it out, not giving him the ring, not putting it on, not making a vow she was not ready to make in a crowded shelter under evacuation smoke. She simply let him see it.
“I kept it in something my father made,” she said. “I think I kept trying to make love out of unsafe materials.”
Daniel’s face tightened with compassion. He knew enough of her childhood to understand. Maybe not all of it. Maybe no one ever knew all of another person’s first wounds. But he knew the outline.
“What do you want to do with it?” he asked.
Mara looked at the ring. “Not hide it.”
That was all she had. Not a plan. Not a deadline. Not a solution. A small obedience. The next faithful thing.
Daniel nodded. “That’s a beginning.”
A loud cough pulled their attention back to Dana. The nurse had decided she needed to rest in one of the interior classrooms. Dana protested with the weak indignation of someone used to giving orders, not receiving them. Mara turned instinctively to intervene, but Daniel touched her elbow lightly.
“Do they need you,” he asked, “or do you need to be needed?”
It was exactly the wrong thing to say and exactly the right thing. Mara turned on him, ready to bristle, then saw that he was not accusing her. He was standing closer to the truth because she had invited him there.
She looked at Dana, then at Kendra, who was already helping the nurse clear a path. Seth joined them. Paul took Dana’s helmet. June Bell offered a blanket. The work was being done.
Mara exhaled. “They have it.”
Daniel did not smile in victory. He simply let his hand fall away.
Jesus stepped beside them. “Love does not become smaller when shared by many hands.”
Mara watched Dana allow herself to be helped toward the hallway. The firefighter moved slowly, irritated, humbled, alive. Seth carried her helmet like it weighed more than it did. Kendra walked ahead clearing the path with growing confidence. Arthur Bell called out that Dana had better not give the nurses trouble. Dana managed a smoky laugh.
The shelter had not become less frightening. The fire was still out there. Homes were still burning. The wind had not repented. But the room had changed because people were no longer trying to suffer as separately as before.
The coordinator approached Mara with a clipboard. “I hate to ask, but we may need to prepare a list for possible relocation. You know the room better than anyone.”
Mara took the clipboard, feeling its familiar weight. For a moment, fear returned disguised as purpose. She could vanish into this. She could become efficient and unreachable within seconds.
Then she turned to Kendra, who was returning from the hallway. “Will you build the first draft with me?”
Kendra looked startled. “With you?”
“With me. Not under me.”
The young woman smiled, tired and bright. “Yes.”
Mara looked at Seth. “After you get Dana settled, help Daniel unload the rest of the supplies.”
Seth glanced at Daniel. “You good with that?”
Daniel nodded. “I’d like that.”
Mara turned to Jesus. “And what should I do?”
His answer was quiet enough that only she heard it. “Do the work, but do not use the work to disappear.”
She looked down at the clipboard, then at the people around her: her brother, still wounded but softening; her husband, separated but standing near; the firefighter finally receiving care; the young volunteer learning that leadership could be shared; the evacuees waiting beneath a smoke-stained sky; and Jesus, holy and present in the middle of all that could not yet be fixed.
Mara held the clipboard with one hand.
With the other, she closed the cedar box and placed it in Daniel’s care.
“Will you hold this for me?” she asked.
He looked at the box as if she had handed him something living. “Yes.”
It was not reconciliation yet. It was not the return of everything lost. It was not proof that the future would obey their hope. But it was trust, small enough to fit in two hands and costly enough to tell the truth.
Mara picked up a pen and stood beside Kendra at the table. For the first time all day, she worked without hiding.
Chapter Five
By early evening, the gym no longer felt like a school. The polished floor was hidden beneath cots, bags, shoes, pet carriers, half-empty water bottles, and the invisible weight of everything people had not been able to bring with them. The air system worked hard and still could not keep the smoke completely away. Outside, the sky had turned the color of old copper, and the sun, when it could be seen at all, looked weak and far off, as if even daylight had grown tired.
Mara stood beside Kendra at the sign-in table, building the relocation list one careful name at a time. They marked the medically fragile first, then families with small children, then elderly evacuees who would need help if the buses had to move quickly. The work was still work. It required focus, accuracy, patience, and the ability to listen when frightened people gave half-answers because fear had scattered their thoughts. But it did not swallow her the way it usually would have. She kept looking up. She kept breathing. She kept letting other people do pieces of it.
Daniel worked near the entrance with Seth, unloading supplies from a pickup and stacking them by the wall. They moved awkwardly at first, two men tied together by Mara but not yet by trust. Seth kept glancing toward the cedar box tucked under Daniel’s arm where he had placed it for safekeeping. Daniel noticed and finally held it out.
“You can set this behind the table if it makes you nervous,” he said.
Seth looked embarrassed. “It’s not mine.”
“No,” Daniel said. “But you’re her brother.”
That sentence struck Seth in a way Mara saw from across the room. He took the box carefully, carried it to the sign-in table, and placed it beneath Mara’s bag without making a speech about it. When he straightened, their eyes met. She nodded once. He nodded back. It was not everything, but it was something clean.
A new announcement came through just after six.
The high school would remain open, but the county wanted a partial relocation before nightfall. Smoke levels had become dangerous for some evacuees, and another facility farther east had cleaner air and more medical support. No one was being forced to leave yet, but the most vulnerable would be moved first. The word vulnerable changed the room. People did not like being placed in that category, even when it might save them. It sounded too close to helpless, and helpless was a word many had spent their lives avoiding.
Arthur Bell refused first.
“I’m not getting on another bus,” he said, gripping the arms of his chair as June stood beside him with their medication list folded in her hand. “I just got settled here.”
June tried to soothe him, but fear sharpened his voice.
“I said no. I’m not being hauled around like old furniture.”
Kendra looked toward Mara, panic rising in her face. Mara stepped forward, then paused. She could handle this. She could use calm authority, gentle insistence, the tone that made people obey because they trusted her or were too tired to resist. But something in Arthur’s face stopped her. His refusal was not stubbornness alone. It was humiliation. He had already lost the dignity of leaving on his own terms. Another move felt like proof that his life now belonged to clipboards and strangers.
Jesus crossed the gym and sat in the chair beside Arthur, not above him, not in front of him, but beside him.
“You do not want to be carried,” Jesus said.
Arthur’s mouth tightened. “Would you?”
Jesus looked at him with deep kindness. “I have been carried by others.”
Arthur turned, startled by the answer.
Jesus continued, “As a child, I was carried away from danger by Joseph and My mother. As a man, I was helped by women who provided from what they had. When I fell beneath the cross, another man was made to carry it with Me.”
The gym noise seemed to soften around them. Mara stood still, the relocation clipboard resting against her side.
Arthur’s eyes filled. “I hate needing this.”
“I know.”
“I used to be the one who helped.”
“You are still a man worthy of honor.”
Arthur looked down at his hands. They trembled even when he tried to hide them.
Jesus said, “Receiving help does not erase the years you gave it.”
June began to cry quietly. Arthur did not look at her, but his hand moved toward hers. She took it.
After a long moment, Arthur nodded. “All right.”
Kendra exhaled as if she had been holding her breath for a minute. Seth stepped forward to help, but this time he did not rush Arthur. He waited for the older man to decide how he wanted to stand. When Arthur rose, Seth offered an arm, and Arthur took it without surrendering his pride completely. Maybe that was enough. Maybe some kinds of surrender came one inch at a time.
The movement toward the buses began slowly, then gathered force. Families collected blankets and bags. Volunteers taped new names onto carriers. Children were told to hold hands, then told again because children forgot when afraid. Dana, still pale but steadier after oxygen and rest, insisted on walking to the hallway under her own power. The nurse argued. Dana argued back. Jesus looked at Dana once, and she sighed.
“Fine,” she muttered. “Halfway with help.”
Mara watched Seth take one side and Kendra the other. Dana submitted to being helped with all the grace of a woman swallowing sand, but she submitted. When she passed Mara, she said, “Scared friend, don’t disappear.”
“I won’t,” Mara said.
She meant it.
Near the doors, a little boy began sobbing because he could not find the stuffed rabbit he had carried all day. His father turned in circles, overloaded with bags, a sleeping toddler, and the panic of possibly missing the bus. Mara spotted the rabbit under a chair near the cots and grabbed it. She could have handed it to the boy and moved on. Instead, she crouched.
“He stayed behind for a minute,” she said gently, placing the rabbit in his arms, “but he was found.”
The boy hugged it hard. “Like Buddy?”
Mara smiled. The story had traveled farther than she knew. “Yes. Like Buddy.”
His father looked at her with wet eyes. “Thank you.”
Mara almost said, It’s nothing. She stopped herself. It was something. Small, but something. “You’re welcome.”
By the time the first bus loaded, the smoke outside had deepened. The parking lot lights glowed in a haze. Fire engines moved on the road beyond the school, red lights flashing through the brown air. Evacuees climbed aboard slowly. Some looked back at the high school as if leaving one shelter for another was a second loss. Others simply leaned their heads against the bus windows and closed their eyes.
Mara stood near the curb with Daniel beside her. The cedar box was back in her hands. Seth had gone with Kendra to help settle Arthur and June onto the bus. Dana sat near the front, irritated but safe. For a few moments, Mara and Daniel watched without speaking.
“My house might be gone,” she said.
Daniel nodded. “I know.”
“I keep trying to feel ready for that, but I’m not.”
“I don’t think ready is the word for losing a home.”
She looked at him. His face was tired, smoke-marked, kind, and no longer hers in the way it once had been. That hurt. It also told the truth.
“I don’t want to use this fire to force us back together,” she said.
He turned toward her fully.
“I don’t want fear to make promises that truth can’t keep,” Mara continued. “But I also don’t want pride to keep me alone and call it strength.”
Daniel’s eyes softened. “Then maybe we don’t promise the whole road tonight.”
“What do we promise?”
He thought for a moment. “We answer the phone. We tell the truth. We let help count even when it isn’t perfect.”
She looked down at the cedar box. “And we forgive slowly?”
“If slow is honest.”
Mara opened the box, took the ring out, and held it in her palm. For a moment she imagined putting it on. She imagined the clean drama of it, the way people in stories made one gesture and everyone understood the ending. But this was not that kind of night. Too much was still burning. Too much still needed healing. She closed her fingers around the ring, then placed it back in the box.
“Not hidden,” she said.
Daniel nodded. “Not forced.”
She handed the box to him again, then changed her mind and held it between them. “Maybe we both hold it.”
He placed his hand under hers. They stood that way for a few seconds, sharing the small weight, not as a symbol of everything repaired, but as a refusal to keep pretending the wound did not exist.
Behind them, Seth came down from the bus steps. His eyes found the box in their hands, and he looked away quickly, giving them privacy. Then he walked toward Jesus, who stood beneath the awning near the entrance, watching the buses fill.
“I don’t know what to do after tonight,” Seth said.
Jesus looked toward the smoke-covered foothills. “You know the next thing.”
Seth followed His gaze. “Stay near?”
“Yes.”
“To her?”
“To her. To the truth. To those who need mercy. To the Father who has not left you.”
Seth swallowed. “And if I mess it up?”
“You will need mercy again.”
Seth let out a breath that was almost a laugh. “That’s not very flattering.”
“It is better than flattery,” Jesus said. “It is the truth that keeps the door open.”
The first bus pulled away slowly, carrying Arthur, June, Dana, frightened children, tired parents, and people whose lives would never again be divided as simply as before and after evacuation. The second bus waited with its doors open. The wind shifted, and for one brief moment the smoke thinned enough for Mara to see the dark outline of the mountains beyond the school.
They were still there.
Scarred, threatened, partly hidden, but still there.
When the last of the medically fragile evacuees had been moved, the shelter grew quieter. Not peaceful, exactly. Just emptier. Volunteers swept around the cots. The remaining families settled in for a long night of bad sleep and uncertain news. The coordinator finally sat down with his head in his hands. Kendra brought him water without being asked. Seth helped a little girl plug in a tablet, then apologized to her mother for stepping over their bag. Daniel carried empty boxes to the recycling bin. Mara watched all of it and realized she was not holding the whole room together.
The room was being held.
Not perfectly. Not without pain. But held by many hands, and beneath those hands, by God.
Near midnight, Daniel received a text from the animal triage team. Buddy’s owners had been found at another shelter. They had thought the dog was dead. The message was short, but it passed through the remaining volunteers like a candle being shared in the dark. Seth went outside under the awning and cried where fewer people could see him. Mara followed only as far as the door. She let him have the moment with God without turning it into hers.
Later, word came that Mara’s house still stood. Smoke damaged, yard burned along the fence, but standing. Seth’s trailer was gone. The news arrived in the same breath, mercy and loss tangled together so tightly no one knew how to respond cleanly. Seth nodded when he heard it, stared at the floor, and said, “Okay,” though it was not okay and everyone knew it. Mara put her arms around him. This time he held on.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered.
He nodded against her shoulder. “Me too.”
Daniel stood near them, not intruding, not leaving. Jesus watched with the sorrow and hope of One who knew that healing often begins long before life feels healed.
Near dawn, Mara found Him outside the school, beyond the reach of the parking lot lights. The wind had calmed. Smoke still hung over the land, but the sky in the east had begun to pale. Firefighters were still working somewhere beyond sight. Families were still waking on cots and buses and classroom floors. Houses were still gone. Insurance calls, cleanup crews, funerals for old lives, arguments, paperwork, fear, gratitude, and exhaustion all waited for the day to begin.
Jesus stood alone on the dry ground.
Then He knelt.
Mara stopped at the doorway and did not interrupt. Daniel stood behind her. Seth came beside them a moment later. None of them spoke. They watched as Jesus bowed His head in quiet prayer over the burned and breathing land, over the families who had lost much and the families who had been spared, over the firefighters whose courage had cost them more than anyone would know, over the shelters and roads and animals and homes, over old wounds brought into the light by smoke and fear, over every person who thought love meant never needing help.
The morning came slowly.
Jesus remained in prayer.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from Mitchell Report

Celebrating 250 years of freedom and unity with fireworks lighting up the night sky above the U.S. Capitol, as the American flag proudly waves in honor of the nation’s milestone birthday.
Happy 250th birthday, United States of America!
What a strange moment to mark a birthday, given everything going on in the world. Even so, I believe the U.S. has done enormous good and has served as a beacon for the world since at least World War I, if not sooner.
I remember being about 7 years old in 1976, during the last major milestone, America’s 200th birthday. My aunt, uncle, and cousins lived in Lakeland. I was staying with them, and we went to the train yard in Lakeland to see the Freedom Train. It did not stop in Lakeland until December 1976, but I still remember it.
Now it is the 250th anniversary, and this year just feels different. It should be a big celebration, and I hope it is. For all our problems, this is still one of the best countries in the world, and possibly the best.
We will probably stumble at times. When we do, I hope we correct course and keep moving forward, becoming stronger and truer to the ideals that brought us into being. No kings, no queens, no nobility. Our representative government endures. I believe it can be even stronger over the next 250 years.
So happy birthday, America. Let’s keep driving forward. And to my fellow citizens, enjoy the day and celebrate responsibly.
Related Post from last year and still stands true too: Happy 249th Birthday to the United States of America 🇺🇸
#currentevents #history #USA
from
SmarterArticles

Somewhere in the American desert, a building the size of a small town hums in the dark. It has no windows and almost no people. Inside, tens of thousands of processors run hot, churning through the requests of strangers half a world away: a marketing executive in London asking for a punchier subject line, a student in Toronto summarising a textbook, a hobbyist in Sydney conjuring a cartoon dragon for no particular reason. Pipes carry water through the building to keep the silicon from cooking itself. Transformers the size of lorries pull electricity off the grid in quantities that would once have powered a city. The dragon appears on the hobbyist's screen in about four seconds. The cost of producing it does not appear anywhere at all.
That invisibility is the point, and it is also the problem. For most of the people typing into a chatbot, generative artificial intelligence feels like the most weightless technology ever invented. There is no exhaust pipe, no smokestack, no spinning meter on the wall. You ask, it answers, and the bill, if there is one, seems to be a few pennies on a subscription. But the bill is real, and it is enormous, and it is being paid in a currency most users never see: water drawn from stressed aquifers, land scraped flat for server halls, electricity wrenched off ageing grids, and a rising tide of toxic electronic waste. The question the technology industry has been remarkably good at avoiding is a simple one. Who, exactly, is footing it?
On 3 June 2026, the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health published a report that tries to answer that question with the kind of hard numbers the debate has mostly lacked. Its title, “Environmental Cost of AI's Energy Use: Carbon, Water and Land Footprints”, is dry. Its findings are not. The report argues that the environmental costs of the AI boom are not only larger than commonly understood, but are being distributed in a way that is profoundly, structurally unjust. The wealthy generate the prompts. Someone else, very often, pays the bill.
The timing was pointed. The report landed in the same week as World Environment Day, an annual fixture in the United Nations calendar, and its authors clearly intended the juxtaposition. While the world's environment ministers issued their usual statements, a team of UN scientists was quietly publishing evidence that one of the fastest-growing pressures on the planet's water, land and atmosphere is a technology that most of those ministers were probably using to draft their speeches. The report is not a polemic. It is an attempt at accounting, an effort to put a defensible number on a cost that the industry has been content to leave uncounted, and then to ask what follows once the number is on the table.
There is a stubborn assumption baked into how we talk about software, and it goes roughly like this: bits are cheap, the cloud is somewhere else, and digital things do not have a physical body. Kaveh Madani, director of UNU-INWEH and one of the report's authors, puts the counterargument bluntly. “Though often described as weightless and virtual,” he says, “the reality of AI is profoundly physical.”
That physicality starts with electricity. The International Energy Agency, in its landmark “Energy and AI” analysis published in April 2025, estimated that the world's data centres consumed roughly 415 terawatt-hours of electricity in 2024, about 1.5 per cent of global demand. That figure is already growing at around 12 per cent a year, far faster than overall electricity use. The IEA's central projection is that data centre consumption will roughly double by 2030, reaching around 945 terawatt-hours. That is more than the entire current electricity consumption of Japan. The UNU report adopts the same headline number and spells out what it means: were the world's AI-driven data centres a country, they would rank around eleventh in the world for electricity use, sitting behind France and ahead of Saudi Arabia.
The IEA's analysis is careful to note that AI is the single most important driver of this surge, and that the United States accounts for by far the largest share of the projected increase, with China following. In the United States, the agency found, data centres are on track to account for nearly half of all electricity demand growth between now and 2030. This is the part that ought to alarm anyone who follows the energy transition. The grid was already straining to decarbonise. Now it is being asked to absorb a vast new load on top of everything else, and that load does not wait politely for clean power to come online. It plugs into whatever is available, which in most of the world still means gas and coal.
None of this is hypothetical. The build-out is happening now, in concrete and copper, across Virginia and Texas, across Inner Mongolia and Ningxia, in Ireland and in the Gulf. And here the UNU report makes its first genuinely clarifying move. The public conversation about AI's energy appetite has fixated on training, the months-long, headline-grabbing process of building a large model from scratch. Training is expensive and dramatic, and it makes for good copy. But it is not where most of the energy goes.
The report's central technical insight is that the day-to-day running of AI models, the part engineers call inference, accounts for somewhere between 80 and 90 per cent of the technology's total energy demand. Training a model is a one-off cost, however large. Inference is what happens every single time anyone, anywhere, uses the thing. And the using has become astronomical.
This matters because it reframes the entire problem. If training were the dominant cost, then the environmental footprint of AI would be lumpy and occasional, a series of expensive sprints punctuating long quiet stretches. You could imagine regulating it the way you might regulate a handful of large industrial projects. But inference is not lumpy. It is continuous, ambient and growing without limit, a constant background draw that scales directly with adoption. The more useful AI becomes, the more it is used, and the more it is used, the heavier its footprint, regardless of how cleverly the original model was trained. The cost is not in the building of the machine. It is in the running of it, forever.
Consider a single product. The report notes that ChatGPT alone fields on the order of 2.5 billion prompts a day, and that running it consumes something in the region of 383 gigawatt-hours of electricity a year. That is one application from one company. Multiply the logic across the entire ecosystem of chatbots, image generators, coding assistants, search summaries and the AI features now wedged into every productivity suite on Earth, and the scale of the inference problem comes into focus.
It is also wildly uneven from task to task. The report draws on research showing that the energy cost of an AI interaction depends enormously on what you ask for. A simple text query is relatively cheap. Generating an image is, by some measures, more than a thousand times more energy-intensive than a basic text-classification task. Producing even a short, high-resolution AI video can require an order of magnitude more energy again, the report putting a single clip at over 415 watt-hours. Even the quiet creep of AI into ordinary web search carries a cost: the report notes that an AI-enhanced generative search can use roughly ten times the energy of a conventional one. The casual user has no way of knowing any of this. The interface is identical. A request that boils a notional kettle and a request that barely warms a teaspoon look exactly the same on screen, and cost the same nothing at the point of use.
Mir Matin, another of the report's authors, frames the accumulation problem precisely. “Every prompt, default setting, generated image, video, and query,” he says, “accumulates when multiplied by billions of users.” This is the crux. No single interaction matters. All of them together matter immensely. And because the cost is spread across billions of weightless-seeming moments, it never lands anywhere a user can feel it. The default settings are perhaps the most insidious detail. When a search engine or an operating system switches on an AI feature by default, billions of people begin paying its resource cost without ever choosing to, and without anyone telling them the choice was made.
If electricity is the part of AI's footprint that gets the headlines, water is the part that gets buried. Data centres are thirsty in two distinct ways. First, the servers inside them generate prodigious heat, and many facilities use evaporative cooling, which works by turning water into vapour and letting it drift away into the atmosphere. That water is gone from the local system. Second, and less obviously, the electricity that powers the centres is itself water-intensive to produce, because thermal power plants use vast quantities of water for cooling. Every kilowatt-hour drawn from a coal or gas plant carries an invisible water cost upstream, before a single drop touches the servers themselves.
The pioneering work on this hidden cost came from Shaolei Ren, a researcher at the University of California, Riverside, whose 2023 paper bore the memorable title “Making AI Less 'Thirsty'”. Ren and his colleagues calculated that training GPT-3 in Microsoft's state-of-the-art American data centres could have evaporated around 700,000 litres of clean freshwater, and that the figure would have roughly tripled had the training run been done in the company's less water-efficient Asian facilities. To make the number concrete, his team noted that this was comparable to the water used to manufacture hundreds of cars. Crucially, Ren extended the analysis beyond training to the everyday business of answering queries, and projected that global AI demand could be responsible for the withdrawal of between 4.2 and 6.6 billion cubic metres of water in 2027, more than the total annual water withdrawal of a country the size of Denmark several times over.
What makes Ren's work so important is not just the figures but the method. Because operators almost never disclose the water consumption of individual sites, he and his colleagues had to infer it from the efficiency of cooling systems, the local climate, and the water intensity of the electricity feeding each facility. The same prompt, run in a cool and hydro-powered region, might cost a fraction of what it costs in a hot, fossil-fuelled one. The footprint, in other words, is not an intrinsic property of the software. It is a property of where and how the software is run, a point that turns out to matter enormously when you ask who ends up paying.
The UNU report takes this body of work and pushes the timeline to 2030, arriving at a figure designed to stop the reader cold. By the end of the decade, it estimates, the annual water footprint of AI could reach 9.3 trillion litres. To make that abstraction tangible, the authors compare it to the basic annual domestic water needs of every one of the 1.3 billion people who live in sub-Saharan Africa. The image is deliberate and devastating: a technology marketed in Silicon Valley and consumed in the world's richest cities, drinking, in effect, the daily water of an entire subcontinent that has barely been consulted about its construction.
The geography sharpens the injustice. Data centres are frequently sited where land is cheap, energy is abundant and tax incentives are generous, and those conditions often coincide with regions that are already water-stressed. Matin, whose expertise is in exactly this kind of spatial analysis, has pointed to the danger of mapping where data centres are being built against where water is scarce, and finding the two maps overlapping. A facility that evaporates millions of litres a year in a temperate, rain-soaked region is a manageable nuisance. The same facility in a drought-prone basin is a direct competitor with farms and households for a resource there is not enough of. Communities in such places have already begun to push back, querying why a hyperscale operator should be granted the water their own crops are rationed.
Water and electricity do not exhaust the inventory. The UNU report adds two further footprints that rarely make it into the conversation at all.
The first is land. Server farms are not small. The report projects that the physical land footprint of AI infrastructure could exceed 14,500 square kilometres by 2030, an area it likens to roughly twice the metropolitan expanse of Jakarta, home to more than 32 million people. That is land taken out of other uses, reshaped, fenced, paved and wired, often on the rural fringes of communities that gain a handful of permanent jobs in exchange for a permanent neighbour that never sleeps. The footprint extends well beyond the perimeter fence, too, taking in the substations, transmission corridors and access roads that a facility of this scale demands, and in many cases the dedicated power generation built specifically to feed it.
The second is carbon. For all the talk of powering data centres with renewables, the grids they plug into remain substantially fossil-fuelled, and the sheer scale of new demand is, in many regions, keeping coal and gas plants running that might otherwise have closed. The report projects that AI-related activity could be responsible for around 400 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions annually by 2030. To offset that volume of carbon, the authors calculate, would require growing on the order of 6.7 billion trees over a decade. The “green” technology, in other words, is leaning heavily on a decidedly un-green energy system. There is a bitter irony in the fact that some of the same companies championing AI as a tool to fight climate change are, through that very tool, adding materially to the emissions driving it.
Then there is the rubbish. Artificial intelligence runs on specialised hardware, principally graphics processing units, that becomes obsolete with brutal speed as each new generation outperforms the last. When the chips are retired, they become electronic waste, a category laced with lead, mercury and other hazardous materials. The scale of the looming problem was quantified in a 2024 study published in Nature Computational Science, led by Peng Wang of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, which projected that the rapid expansion of generative AI could create between 1.2 and 5 million tonnes of additional e-waste over the period to 2030. Under an aggressive-growth scenario, the study found, the annual e-waste stream attributable to generative AI could reach 2.5 million tonnes by 2030, the very figure the UNU report cites. As with water and land, the burden of dealing with that waste tends not to fall on the cities that generated the demand. The world's discarded electronics have a long and grim habit of ending up in informal recycling yards across the global South, where they are picked apart by hand, often by people with no protective equipment and no choice, releasing toxins into the soil, the water and the bodies of the workers themselves.
All of this might be merely alarming if the costs and the benefits were borne by the same people. They are not, and this is where the UNU report moves from environmental accounting into something closer to political economy.
The capacity to build and run frontier AI is astonishingly concentrated. The report finds that more than 90 per cent of the world's AI-specialised computing capacity sits in just two countries. The picture is corroborated by independent analysis: a study of the global data centre landscape drawn on by Oxford University researchers found that only 32 countries host AI data centres at all, and that the United States and China between them operate the overwhelming majority of the specialised facilities. By contrast, more than 150 nations have no significant domestic AI compute infrastructure whatsoever. The IEA's own figures show the United States accounting for the largest single share of global data centre electricity consumption, followed by China, with Europe a distant third and the rest of the world barely registering.
The concentration runs deeper than geography. The same handful of corporations that own the compute also own the leading models, the training data, the cloud platforms on which everyone else builds, and increasingly the energy deals that keep the whole edifice powered. Oxford's analysts have argued that this clustering of compute, talent, data and capital means that even mid-sized economies, let alone poor ones, face barriers to independent frontier development that are close to insurmountable. The result is a world in which AI is not a general-purpose technology that diffuses outward to everyone, the way electricity or the internet eventually did, but a service piped out from a couple of national hubs, on terms set by their owners.
Think about what that distribution actually means. The intelligence is manufactured in a tiny number of places, owned by a tiny number of companies, and rented out to the rest of the planet as a service. The economic returns, the share prices, the productivity gains, the strategic advantage, accrue overwhelmingly to those two countries and the firms headquartered in them. But the environmental costs, as the report documents, are not so neatly contained. They leak. The carbon enters a shared atmosphere that warms everyone. The water is drawn from local basins that, increasingly, sit in the very regions least able to spare it. The discarded hardware migrates down the global waste stream to the poorest places on Earth.
This is the asymmetry at the heart of the report, and it deserves to be stated plainly. When someone in a wealthy country generates an image, summarises a document or asks a chatbot for advice, the water, land and energy costs of that interaction are being distributed across communities and ecosystems that had no say in the choice and will see little of the benefit. The convenience is privatised. The cost is, in large part, socialised, and socialised on to exactly the populations with the least power to refuse it. It is a near-perfect inversion of the polluter-pays principle that environmental law spent half a century trying to establish: here, the polluter mostly does not pay, and the payer mostly does not pollute.
There is a comforting story the industry likes to tell about all this, and it goes like this: the chips keep getting more efficient, the models keep getting leaner, and so the problem will shrink itself out of existence. Every generation of hardware does more computation per watt. Every clever algorithmic trick squeezes more capability from less silicon. Surely, the argument runs, efficiency will win.
It will not, and the reason has a name. It is called the Jevons paradox, after the nineteenth-century English economist William Stanley Jevons, who noticed something counterintuitive about coal. As steam engines became more efficient and burned less coal per unit of work, Britain did not use less coal. It used vastly more, because cheaper, more efficient steam power made coal worth using for a thousand new purposes. Efficiency did not curb consumption. It unleashed it.
The same logic stalks artificial intelligence, and the parallel is not merely rhetorical. A 2025 paper presented at the ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability and Transparency, titled “From Efficiency Gains to Rebound Effects”, examined precisely how Jevons' paradox applies to AI, arguing that the efficiency improvements the industry trumpets as environmental wins are systematically reinvested to expand markets, stimulate new demand and drive aggregate resource consumption upward rather than down. When a model gets cheaper to run, it does not get used the same amount more cheaply. It gets used more. Features that were too costly to ship get shipped. AI gets stuffed into products that never had it. The summary, the autocomplete, the always-on assistant proliferate precisely because each one became cheap.
The episode that made this concrete for the whole industry arrived in early 2025, when the Chinese firm DeepSeek released a model that matched the performance of far costlier systems at a fraction of the computational expense. The market's first instinct was to assume this would mean less demand for chips. The more sophisticated reading, which gained ground quickly, was the opposite: drastically cheaper AI would mean drastically more of it, everywhere, all the time. Cheaper inference is not a brake on consumption. It is an accelerator. Madani's co-authored framing captures the trap exactly: more efficient and more affordable AI does not mean less consumption, it means more.
This is why the report insists that judging AI's sustainability by efficiency metrics alone, or by carbon alone, is a category error. A model that uses half the energy per query but is used twenty times as often has not solved anything. It has made the problem worse while looking, on the relevant dashboard, like progress. The footprint that matters is the total one, and the total one is going up. The rebound effect is not a quirk to be engineered away. It is the structural reason that efficiency, on its own, can never be the answer, and that some external limit, whether regulatory, economic or physical, will eventually have to do the work that efficiency cannot.
If the costs are this large and this skewed, an obvious question follows: why has it taken so long for anyone to say so clearly? Part of the answer is that the numbers are genuinely hard to pin down, and the companies that hold the best data have shown little appetite for sharing it.
Operators rarely disclose the water consumption of individual facilities, the energy mix powering them, or the per-query resource cost of their models. Researchers like Ren have had to reverse-engineer estimates from patchy public filings, regulatory disclosures and educated assumptions about cooling systems and grid composition. The result is a literature full of ranges rather than precise figures, and those ranges are routinely weaponised by industry defenders who point to the uncertainty as a reason to wait. The argument is circular and convenient: the companies decline to publish the data, then cite the resulting uncertainty as grounds for inaction, all while the build-out accelerates.
Aczel, the report's lead author, locates the deeper hazard in the metrics themselves, warning that the choices which look greenest on a narrow accounting can disguise real costs that a fuller reckoning would expose. Judge AI's sustainability by carbon alone, and you will systematically miss the water and the land and the waste. Her broader point is that the environmental footprint of AI is not a fixed fact of nature. It is shaped, she argues, by infrastructure decisions, by the energy sources chosen, and by how models are designed, which means it can be shaped differently. That is, in its way, an optimistic claim. If the footprint were destiny, there would be nothing to do but despair. Because it is the product of choices, it is open to better ones.
The opacity is not accidental. A technology whose costs are invisible to its users and unmeasured by its public is a technology that faces very little pressure to change. The first act of accountability, then, is simply measurement. You cannot govern what you refuse to count, and for the moment the people best placed to count have every incentive not to.
The UNU report does not stop at diagnosis. It proposes a framework built on six principles: transparency, efficiency by design, equity and environmental justice, lifecycle responsibility, global cooperation, and sustainable use. The list can read as the usual policy boilerplate, but underneath it sits a genuinely radical proposition, which is that the relationship between AI's beneficiaries and its bill-payers should be made visible and then made fair.
Transparency comes first because nothing else works without it. If operators were required to disclose, in standardised and audited form, the energy, water and carbon footprint of their facilities and ideally of their models, the entire debate would shift from contested estimates to verifiable fact. Users could, in principle, see the resource cost of a request the way a car displays its fuel consumption. Regulators could site facilities with full knowledge of local water stress. Investors could price environmental risk properly. The information asymmetry that currently protects the industry would begin to close. None of this requires a technological breakthrough. It requires a disclosure regime, and the political will to impose one.
In the weeks after the report appeared, something close to that political will began, tentatively, to surface. On 23 June 2026, at London Climate Action Week, the United Nations Secretary-General, António Guterres, launched what he called the AI Environmental Transparency Initiative, a charter inspired directly by the UNU-INWEH findings. It asks every major AI company to do two things: to measure and publicly disclose the full carbon, water and land footprint of its systems, and to commit to powering every data centre with renewable energy by 2030. “No more hidden costs,” Guterres said. “If AI is to help build a better future, it must be honest about what it costs us now.” Madani, whose report had supplied much of the initiative's intellectual scaffolding, called it “a gift” and “an opportunity to be proactive instead of reactive”, returning to the principle that had animated the whole project: “We cannot properly manage what we do not measure.” The significance is real, and so are the limits. The initiative is a voluntary call rather than a binding rule, an invitation to companies to come clean rather than a mechanism that compels them to. It is the sound of the political will clearing its throat, not yet the disclosure regime itself, and the distance between an industry being asked to disclose and an industry being made to is precisely the distance this report has spent its length measuring.
Efficiency by design and lifecycle responsibility push the engineering upstream. The e-waste research is instructive here: Wang's team found that extending the working life of AI hardware, and refurbishing and redeploying ageing chips for less demanding tasks rather than scrapping them, could cut projected e-waste dramatically, by more than 40 per cent in some scenarios. The point generalises. A great deal of AI's footprint is the product of decisions, where to build, what to cool with, how long to run the hardware, whether to bolt an AI feature on to a product that did not need one, and decisions can be made differently. Lifecycle responsibility means the firm that profits from a chip's first life is also accountable for its last, rather than letting the carcass become someone else's problem in a recycling yard half a world away.
But the principles that carry the real moral weight are equity, environmental justice and global cooperation, because they speak directly to the asymmetry the rest of the report documents. If 90 per cent of the compute and almost all of the profit sit in two countries, while the water stress, the e-waste and the climate impact land disproportionately on the 150-plus nations with no AI infrastructure of their own, then any honest framework has to grapple with redistribution. That might mean siting standards that steer facilities away from water-scarce regions and on to genuinely surplus renewable power. It might mean the wealthy beneficiaries of AI financing water security, grid resilience and proper e-waste recycling in the places absorbing the downstream costs. It might mean giving those nations a real voice in the governance of a technology that is reshaping their environment without their consent. At minimum, it means refusing to pretend the costs are not there.
What the report stops short of, sensibly, is pretending that any of this will be easy. Each principle cuts against a powerful commercial interest. Transparency threatens a competitive secret. Lifecycle responsibility threatens a margin. Equity threatens a status quo from which the powerful benefit enormously. A framework is not a mechanism, and the gap between the two is where most well-meaning governance goes to die. But the value of naming the principles is that it makes the trade-offs explicit. It turns a set of invisible, deferred costs into a visible political question, and visible political questions can at least be argued over, which is more than can be said for costs nobody admits exist.
Return, for a moment, to the windowless building in the desert, and to the four-second dragon. There is nothing wrong with wanting the dragon. The case against the hidden bill is not a case against artificial intelligence, which is already delivering genuine value in medicine, science, accessibility and a hundred mundane corners of working life. The case is against the invisibility. A technology this physical, this thirsty and this geographically lopsided should not be allowed to present itself as weightless, because the weightlessness is a kind of accounting trick, and the trick has victims.
The deepest finding of the UNU report is not any single number, alarming as the numbers are. It is the structure those numbers reveal: a global system in which the pleasure of generating is decoupled, almost completely, from the pain of providing. The user in London or Toronto or Sydney experiences AI as frictionless because the friction has been exported, to an aquifer in a dry country, to a grid burning fossil fuel to meet demand it never planned for, to a recycling yard where someone breaks apart a dead processor with their bare hands. The friction did not disappear. It moved to where it could not be seen and could not be refused.
Building accountability into that relationship means, in the end, putting the friction back where it belongs. It means the price of a prompt, somewhere, somehow, reflecting the water it evaporated and the carbon it emitted. It means the firms reaping the trillion-dollar valuations carrying the cost of the cleanup, the refurbishment and the repair, rather than letting it flow downhill to people who never typed a word into a chatbot. It means measuring honestly, siting responsibly, and granting the communities on the receiving end something they have never been offered: a say.
The world is not about to stop using artificial intelligence. The 2.5 billion daily prompts will become more, not fewer, and the rebound effect guarantees that every efficiency gain will be spent on more usage rather than less impact. The only real question is whether the bill will keep arriving, silently, at the doorsteps of people who never ordered anything, or whether the world musters the will to redirect it to the address where the dragon was actually conjured. The report's authors have done the arithmetic, and in the weeks since, a first move has been made: a United Nations Secretary-General asking the industry to come clean. But it remains an asking, not a requiring, a voluntary charter rather than a bill redirected, and the choice about who pays is still, for now, ours to make. It is worth remembering that someone is already paying, and they are not the ones holding the phone.

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
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Notes I Won’t Reread
Its 3 am, and again, i cant sleep. i cant help it. i just cant sleep when it comes to this hour, So, ill stay here, talking nonsense and complaining until it makes me feel something either miserable or frustrated, and eventually ill sleep it off. maybe ill dream of that lovely woman, shes closer to me in my dreams, and if thats the only way i can have you, then i wont complain, i love it. if its just my own delusion keeping me closer to you, then ill stay delusional. it was never suffocating to love you. it was never suffocating to be by your side. whats suffocating is being away from you. Not hearing your voice. not seeing your beautiful face anywhere except in my dreams. And god, How miserable that makes me feel. you lose everything around you, one thing after another, and then somehow you lose the only person who made staying alive feel easy. and yet we make promises to ourselves. Silly little promises. how much longer am i supposed to stay alive when my heart tears itself apart ever time it remembers im not yours anymore? i could wait years for you, i could wait until my heart stops beating, until i rot in my own bed. i’d waste my last breath just calling your name. Today, july 4th. was supposed to be our day, the day we’d laugh about old memories. Ther day you’d remind me of the first time we met and tell me how miserable it was putting up with me. and id still. id still tell you that every time we spoke, it felt like falling in love for the first time. well, you’re probably somewhere out there, living your life while im here turning memories into bedtime stories. laughable. isnt it. i spend more time talking to someone who isnt here than to the people standing right in front of me. I should probably stop writing before morning comes and i start wondering who possessed me at three in the morning. thats usually how this goes. i write something embarrassingly honest, fall asleep and ten wake up and pretend i wasnt the one who wrote it.
what a great timing. honestly. i was just getting sentimental, then i saw something and ruined my own mood. now everything in my head just snapped off at once.
What was i writing about again?
Sincerely, i am miserable and frustrated.
from Lao Tzu, Literally

Chapter / Line. Ivanhoe, Chapter 1. “Always eliminate desires in order to observe its mysteries / Always have desires in order to observe its manifestations.”
What the Day Did. I ran the couplet as a switch I could flip, desireless first, then desire, and tested it three times.
Jasper's litter boxes. Mask on, I paused five seconds and let what was actually there arrive: cat piss hitting through the mask, the texture of the litter, the tracks, the litter he kicks out of the box. The holistic view, everything I normally block out by cleaning in haste. Then I let desire kick in. I wanted it done and the smell gone. Baking soda in each box, and my vision narrowed on the spot. Scoop, poop, bag. I no longer saw the litter box, only its contents. Without desire, more was revealed and I knew better what was needed. With desire, two clean boxes got manifested.
Old Testament study, fifteen minutes, Elijah and the priests of Baal. The desireless look at the lesson landed like an unappetizing plate of food. Lots to read, a story I already knew, no interest. I skimmed it. Not a failure, though, because the skim exposed the real mechanism: my active desire was never to study Elijah. It was to get the lesson finished, and once that desire took over, skimming became the shortest route to done.
Saint John's Kitchen, Kitchener, scorching Friday, 1pm. In with no desire, no expectations. People everywhere, chatting, dogs, bikes brought inside so they don't get stolen, volunteers working the kitchen, tables covered in half-eaten food and used containers. I found an empty table, sat, surveyed, and looked at my watch. Not a good sign. Barely in the door and already clocking time. So I looked with desire and immediately saw the need to clean, my own table included. I asked a cook if I could help, got a pail and cloth, and went to work. Cleared tables, emptied garbages, mopped up a dog's spilled water and gave him a fresh container full. I was trying to clear as many tables as I could. I can get very goal oriented. Mid-work, I though of Mary and Martha in Luke 10. Martha careful and troubled about many things, Mary at the feet of Jesus choosing the good part. I wondered if all this busyness was me missing the better part, sitting with the clients, friendly conversation, the humanity in the room instead of wiping the crumbs on the tables.
The Snag. Being desireless is the part I have difficulty with. I'm not in that state long enough. The watch-glance came inside the first minute. Desire arrives uninvited and narrows me without asking, and the same tunnel vision that clears tables efficiently is the tunnel vision that misses the people sitting at them. Elijah showed the quieter version: desire will substitute “finished” for the thing itself, and I only catch the swap afterward. Going in desireless first, unrushed, reveals a truer picture of how things really are. Remembering to hold that stance is the hard part.
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Another scorching hot day outside, and I got no yard work done. All my work was done inside and was mostly laundry related.
Looking forward to wrapping up the night prayers and turning in early.
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night.
Health Metrics: * bw= 227.41 lbs. * bp= 145/88 (70)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups, BP breathing exercises, pilates
Diet: * 05:45 – 1 ham & cheese sandwich * 07:35 – cooked, sliced sweet potatoes * 11:30 – 1 pb&j sandwich * 14:00 – scrambled eggs and white bread
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:30 – listen to local news talk radio * 05:30 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 05:50 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap * 08:15 – load weekly pill boxes * 08:45 – pack winter clothes * 12:00 – doing laundry * 14:00 – now listening to 104.3 The Score The Score is Chicago's No. 1 and most-listened to sports station. The Score is also the exclusive audio home of the Chicago Cubs. I'll stay here for the radio call of this afternoon's Cubs /Cardinals. * 18:13 – and the Cardinls win, 17 to 1.
Chess: * 13:30 – moved in all pending CC games
from
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Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil
Amen
Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!
Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!
from
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Move On
Stereo time and Santa’s big war In entry by the stadium,- we wished for a start And were promptly muted- for rain at four And what is meaning, but this Songs to our order The tin at will,- at time’s release Justice to the heart And covert insert to the pledge Fine nights of her And Invictus the Hard- Laying for torture,- This move that was Showing no gold but to them The proven boy and analogue Dented by players in the hut And a IIe at breakfast to apprehend The visions of Small And an interlude for war And surely a misunderstanding Every great poet in power And time as well Victory to the great mutiny- Time at the self and rod regret The happenstance of the heart And making lines amend; what is it for And they play with the dots- of a sudden fodder by light A twinkling in his hair Blessed hair, for religion and famous Three is the time to play Myth A cousin of war in the lit But made admin, a sixth person in tow A night for solid free Mittens and garland to the end The worry of a paranoid year Children who can’t eat A Labrador as Jim And shoes to know memory that remains But in a solid hold, The Eucharist Days of portend and uncommon Ceded power to God From the free and able Abstentions to glow in this through A blessed country, for comets revisit And the Earth shall remain Lights to our symphony but remain Christ is in store and I remember Fading lights at that man And running to be free Perpetuance of sin Victory knows I am near But therefore in endurance And a faithful regret Life in deliverance to the poor Deception cease Lighting our doors such as this Mayhem as a blunder And sympathy draw There is lemon in the summertime and at will I know where this has been Time’s regret to the antecedent Victory I know has a story Long be forgotten The World for all close A beckon of thirst to the Cup Victory is The Lord Let not be last, those in sin I would try as they are to be that Simply willed but unsure This is our Victory Day in the Summer A crucifixion unto you The Son of God in proclaim Night’s war and free Laying all weapons to the pond The lost would in their Hearts Making the right turn Burning free And turning to them The borne dedication to our lot Crucified- in dust to the ear at our home Victory South to the victims- Such terrible wrong Nights in return to that River The funeral and accompaniment of valour In a Spring year we folded Times of unfaith and in London Paris for the grey orange and forget Sympathy Magog to our Spare Exulted benew Time says amen, and be free The simplest code, Giving Nature her way And Heaven at the door saying “Come in.” In virtue we can; in mercy Trusted to shallows of the sea, the merciful one Gifts of God and tempered bet A faithful run to the end Simple sharing of Hers is by day Citizens implore, and Earth to be Devon Solace unfold to our star This and Hearts believe Dedication to the Blessed Virgin Mary Christ carrying our Cross to the end; no faithful and further Peace for the living Genuflect to our Saviour The Earth as sacred, what it was And miserable deep in prayer North Korea is no longer In time at war like this And hitmen to the day Peace lumbering On this day made of gold And early in May Life is giving- And sympathy still- The Blood of Christ.
In final stanza of Longfellow's long poem, “The Building of the Ship,” we find out this page was long poem is not about building a ship but about building a nation. These words ring just as true as they did nearly 200 years ago when Longfellow first penned them
Many are cynical and discouraged about the future of America. I used to be, though I am not now. But we must no longer be complacent. I have realized that what our Founding Fathers struggled to establish, we must similarly struggle to maintain. Entropy, entitlement, historical amnesia, and indifference threaten our blessed inheritance as much as Socialism, division, and foreign threats. Ours is the time to re-learn from books and put into practice through political involvement before we have to re-learn from suffering and put into practice through arms.
Read Longfellow's words, then read them again, then re-read the Declaration, and have a blessed Independence Day, America!
Thou, too, sail on, O Ship of State! Sail on, O Union, strong and great! Humanity with all its fears, With all the hopes of future years, Is hanging breathless on thy fate! We know what Master laid thy keel, What Workmen wrought thy ribs of steel, Who made each mast, and sail, and rope, What anvils rang, what hammers beat, In what a forge and what a heat Were shaped the anchors of thy hope! Fear not each sudden sound and shock, 'T is of the wave and not the rock; 'T is but the flapping of the sail, And not a rent made by the gale! In spite of rock and tempest's roar, In spite of false lights on the shore, Sail on, nor fear to breast the sea! Our hearts, our hopes, are all with thee, Our hearts, our hopes, our prayers, our tears, Our faith triumphant o'er our fears, Are all with thee, — are all with thee!
#culture #history #politics
from
Field Notes
Concise working reference for ongoing research and eventual synthesis.
Cadmium is a bioaccumulative toxic metal absorbed by plants from soil. It concentrates in kidneys, bones, and blood, with a biological half‑life measured in decades.
Heavy metal — soft, silver‑white, naturally occurring. Bioaccumulation — slow clearance; long-term body burden. Carcinogenicity — classified as Group 1 (IARC).
France treats cadmium as a structural food-chain contaminant, not an episodic pollution event. Population exposure: ~1 in 2 adults exceed recommended urinary thresholds. Children: higher dietary exposure relative to body weight. Primary source: food, not water or air, for non-smokers. Policy posture: ANSES frames it as a long-term agricultural and industrial legacy issue.
Phosphate fertilizers — naturally contain cadmium; accumulate in soil over decades. Industrial deposition — metallurgy, incineration, battery recycling. Root uptake — cereals, rice, potatoes are efficient cadmium absorbers.Soil pH — acidic soils increase cadmium mobility.
Cereals (bread, pasta, biscuits, pastries) Rice Potatoes Leafy vegetables (variable by soil conditions) These foods are both high-uptake and high-frequency, explaining population-wide exposure.
Kidney damage — proximal tubule dysfunction. Bone demineralisation — fractures, osteomalacia. Cardiovascular risk — hypertension associations. Cancer — lung, prostate (inhalation vs ingestion pathways differ). Cadmium’s danger is chronic accumulation, not acute poisoning.
ESTEBAN study — ~47.6% of adults exceed urinary reference values. ANSES 2026 — confirms widespread exceedance and rising long-term risk. Testing — reimbursed blood/urine tests available (~€27.50).
Fertilizer regulation — tightening cadmium limits in phosphate imports. Soil remediation — slow, expensive, politically difficult. Agricultural guidance — crop selection, soil pH management. Food-chain monitoring — EAT3 study expansion. Industrial emissions — stricter controls on cadmium-emitting sectors.
Ireland’s soils are generally less cadmium‑rich than parts of continental Europe, but two structural factors matter: Phosphate fertilizers — Ireland imports almost all of its phosphate, and imported phosphate rock varies widely in cadmium content. Legacy industrial sites — smelting, waste incineration, and historic landfills contribute localised hotspots. Soil pH — Irish soils tend to be acidic, which increases cadmium mobility and plant uptake.
(grassland-dominant) reduces exposure compared with cereal-heavy countries, but tillage regions (Wexford, Carlow, Kildare, Meath) are more relevant.
Ireland’s exposure pattern mirrors France’s but at lower intensity: Cereals — bread, porridge oats, breakfast cereals. Potatoes — Ireland’s high per‑capita potato consumption makes this a key vector. Vegetables — especially leafy greens grown in acidic soils. Ireland does not have national biomonitoring data equivalent to France’s ESTEBAN study. Exposure estimates rely on EU-wide EFSA modelling, which places Ireland in the mid-range of European dietary cadmium intake.
Ireland’s cadmium emissions are low by EU standards, but relevant sources include: Battery recycling (small-scale, regulated) Waste incineration (Poolbeg, waste-to-energy plants) Historic smelting sites (e.g., Avoca) Landfill legacy — older sites with mixed industrial waste These are localised risks, not population-wide drivers.
Ireland follows EU cadmium limits rather than setting its own: EU food cadmium limits — strict thresholds for cereals, vegetables, baby foods. EU fertilizer regulation — gradual tightening of cadmium content in phosphate fertilizers. EPA monitoring — soil and water cadmium tracked at industrial and agricultural sites. No national biomonitoring — Ireland lacks a French-style population-level cadmium testing programme.This means Ireland may not detect a rising trend until EU-wide studies flag it.
Three features make Ireland interesting: High potato consumption — potatoes are efficient cadmium accumulators. Acidic soils — increase cadmium uptake. Imported phosphate — Ireland depends entirely on external sources, making fertilizer policy a geopolitical issue. These factors suggest Ireland could be more vulnerable than it appears, especially if fertilizer cadmium limits remain loose.
Exposure inequality — Are certain French regions more affected? Agricultural economics — Costs of fertilizer reform. Soil legacy — How long until soils recover? Risk communication — How France frames chronic contaminants. Comparative policy — EU vs US cadmium thresholds. Dietary mitigation — Practical consumer-level strategies.
Irish exposure, EU regulatory history, soil chemistry
Ireland has not done the equivalent of France’s ESTEBAN biosurveillance. Key gaps: Human biomonitoring — no national urine/blood cadmium dataset. Soil cadmium mapping — EPA data exists but is patchy. Agricultural uptake studies — limited crop-specific research. Regional exposure differences — tillage vs grassland dynamics not fully studied.
Feature: These gaps are should be explored in policy brief
Treat this as a modular dossier: Add new sections as I discover more (soil chemistry, EU trade, industrial sources). Keep short, factual entries rather than prose. Mark items that feel like policy levers vs essay themes. When the note becomes too dense, split into: 1: Marshall Policy Brief (regulatory, agricultural, biosurveillance) 2: dm.ie/marshall.ie Essay (food-chain fragility, environmental legacy, chronic toxicity)
from Out of Office
I feel super down and low today. I don’t know if it is everything going on, or maybe depression sneaking in. Or maybe it is just one of those days. I am trying to keep optimistic. I am trying to find positivity in my day to day, in the content I’m consuming, the activities I am involved in, and even just within myself. I have to admit, it is one of the hardest things I have had to do.
I would love nothing more than to come on here and be negative, but I have been reading up on neuroplasticity and how our brains are affected by how we perceive things, and how our inner thoughts shape the experiences around us. For those reasons, I am trying to remain positive. I believe things will work out even better than I imagine and I will overcome these emotions and these struggles.
Thank you for your message. I am currently out of office with no set return date. I will get back to you when the time is right.
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

The Chicago Cubs vs the St. Louis Cardinals, a classic MLB rivalry game, is scheduled to start this afternoon at 3:05 PM CDT. As I usually do, I'll follow the game's score and stats in real time via MLB's Gameday Service where we can also find a link to the radio-call of the game.
And the adventure continues.
from
The happy place
I was listening today, on my last day of work, to the Irreligious album by Moonspell. It’s my favourite one, not because the best track is on there, but rather because every single track (except Raven Claws) is 100/100
And that’s my firm conviction
My cousin, a great philosopher, he played me this album a long time ago and it blew my mind then.
It was during my most eccentric period of life, I had a green cape and green nail polish which miscoloured my nails, a green jacket, hair which was also green, cut in a Romulan fashion (from star trek of course), and green hoodie.
I don’t know why I was so strangely clothed back then, I think it may have been a natural progression of the style I adopted in high school, a rejection from a norm which I felt had rejected me. I wasn’t aware of anyone dressing like this.
Only by becoming very strange, I found a sense of self deep within.
Or something, I felt like something.
This was not to get attention, but rather a way to not disappear. Or maybe a way to seize control of my life. Or maybe a ward against ”normal” people.
So we lent this CD or a copy to the girl I was in love with at the time, she who spat in my food. I remember lending it to her because her favourite track was Raven Claws.
But this is of course all in the past, just like the job I just finished.
And I just try to navigate this life as best I can.
from
M.A.G. blog, signed by Lydia
Lydia's Weekly Lifestyle blog is for today's African girl, so no subject is taboo. My purpose is to share things that may interest today's African girl.
Soft Power Dressing for the Accra Girl. Who said corporate fashion has to be stiff, stressful, and smelling faintly of printer ink? Enter the kimono — the effortlessly chic fashion piece quietly transforming office wardrobes from “HR-approved” to “main character energy.”
Why the Kimono Works for Corporate Wear.
A kimono adds instant sophistication without trying too hard. It’s that magical piece that says: “I closed deals today… but I also know the best cocktail spot in Osu.”
The “I’m Busy but Stylish” Hack
The beauty of kimonos is that they make lazy dressing look intentional.
Running late for work? Throw a kimono over:
A plain midi dress
Sleeveless top and pants
Pencil skirt and tank top
Suddenly everyone thinks you planned the outfit for days.
Fashion is funny like that.
Kimono Length Matters
Short kimonos = playful Friday office energy
Mid-length kimonos = polished everyday chic
Long flowing kimonos = dramatic “don’t disturb me unless it’s important” energy.
Choose wisely depending on your mood — and whether your office AC is fighting for its life.
Fashion memo: So next time your wardrobe feels boring, skip the predictable blazer and reach for a kimono instead.
Because spreadsheets are temporary. Style is forever.
African cultural heritage for sale, free of charge. Great was my surprise when I saw a woman dressed as per attached photograph. In a mini village in the French countryside, 600 km from Paris. I’d be very surprised if she had visited family or friends in Ghana and brought this as a souvenir. And it was different, it was printed, not woven. So what are we going to do? Those involved in the production of these local garments, be they kente, adinkra batakari or the recently launched bambolse are quite a few and are earning a little bit of money from it, through local sales and from a few cheap sales at a local tourist market. Whilst a dress as per picture, rightly marketed, should retail for at least 1000 GHC in Europe. But there’s a bit of light in the tunnel. Since September 2025 our kente is WIPO protected (World Intellectual Property Organization), meaning whoever produces whatever can not call it kente unless it is kente made in Ghana. And this WIPO thing is UN recognized (just hoping that Trump does not blow up the UN). Ayeeko to the people behind this, it must have been a lengthy and frustrating process, these things are not done overnight. And pray they will also seek protection for our adinkra, batakari and bambolse. And anything we do officially overseas, cultural events, things organized by our embassies and everything else should show our heritage. Put Ghana on the map. Not only in the knock out.

And what to do if your baby is an idiot? You've taken all the precautions, no sickle or noted madness in your or his family, you did not take alcohol or certain medications during pregnancy and you ate healthy. And still, disaster, your child is born with Down Syndrome or something else which will make it never perform normally in society and which will make it need constant care. Fact is that abnormal children is happening more often these days than 30 years ago. Figures are difficult to get, Down Syndrome is about 0.15% (15 per 10,000), but if you add other problems you get to about 1.5 %, 15 per 1000 (per thousand), or 8000 “abnormal” children born every year in Ghana). You are the mother, so you are going to give that care. So here you are, you are now doomed. Till you die. Is that fair? Or should you rather put the child up for adoption, relinquishment? And continue with your life? Or send it to the village where people are more used to have abnormal children live amongst them, care for them, than in the cities? In some of the far-off villages they still have their own way to solve such problems, at night the child is taken away by ghosts or similar, and not seen again. Food for thought? Anyway, eat healthy during your pregnancy.

Beans and blue zones. Blue zones are areas in the world where many people become an easy hundred years old. Famous are Loma Linda in the USA, Costa Rica, Sardinia in Italy, Ikaria in Greece and Okinawa in Japan. Apart from healthy life styles like lots of walking and moving and busy social lives researchers have of course looked at what these people eat. What really sticks out is that the average blue zoner eats 5 times more beans than the rest of the world. Ghanaian doctors mostly do not recommend beans. It is true that they can be a bit heavy to digest if you are not used to them, so take it easy in the beginning. A little more after a few days and so on. And soak them for at least 24 hours before cooking to get rid of the oligosaccharides, a form of sugar we find difficult to digest, and phytic acids which block iron and zinc absorption. Throw the soaking water away. Beans are also good against constipation, but here again, go easy in the beginning or you may even be misdiagnosed with appendicitis (I know of such a case). An odd fact is that Cubans, who are poor, live about as long as Americans, who have all the modern health gadgets. The staple in Cuba is beans, maybe with a side dish of some rice and veggies. And some fish or meat. Maybe time to re-evaluate our rice with chicken or chicken with rice?

Jollof Goat, delivery from Nyonyo. More bone than goat meat, and the rice not sufficiently cooked, and the oil had a funny taste. Anyone know of an evaluation list of food delivery providers?
