The storm had passed, but nothing felt still.
The trees around Camp Grit were bent like someone had wrung the sky and let it collapse over them. Branches littered the ground like bones. Tents were shredded. The camp's main trail had turned into a stream of thick brown water, flowing fast and without mercy. All the familiar shapes of the camp—the mess shelter, the fire circle, the cabins—looked crooked now, like the storm had taken a hammer to the place and left it cracked.
Rafi stood at the edge of the dining tarp, soaked to the skin and numb in his fingers. The little boy he had carried out of Cabin Three was wrapped in a scratchy wool blanket now, sitting quietly near the fire pit with two other younger kids. Their counselor had gone off to help find the supply tent. Or what was left of it.
No one had come back yet.
It had been hours since the storm had hit, but it still felt like it was waiting somewhere nearby—just past the treeline, just behind the clouds. The radio didn't work. The power was out. The camp's one emergency generator had flooded. Most of the counselors were too busy checking cabins and gathering supplies to talk to the kids, and no one had a working phone.
There were only a few roads out of the camp, and most of them were gone—washed away by mud or blocked by fallen trees. One of the staff had tried hiking up to the ridge with a signal beacon, but no one had heard anything back.
Rafi kept checking the woods without realizing he was doing it. His eyes flicked to the tree line, then to the washed-out trail, then back to the younger campers. No adults nearby. Just soggy snacks in a plastic bin and one flashlight with weak batteries.
There was something terrifying about the silence that followed a storm. It wasn't peace—it was the kind of silence that made every noise louder. Drips from the tarp roof. A cough. The shuffle of shoes against damp gravel. He felt the weight of it building in his chest, pressing down like the sky hadn't lifted all the way yet.
The counselors hadn't given instructions. They were spread thin, trying to make sense of the damage. One had barked out something about keeping the kids calm, but nobody had come back to follow through. No one had told Rafi what to do, and no one had told him not to do anything either. So he stayed.
He stayed by the little ones. Stayed near the fire pit. Stayed under the ruined tarp with its ripped edges flapping in the breeze.
Eventually, someone needed to stay, and he had already decided it would be him.
His brain kept going back to the moment in the cabin. The way the kid had looked—frozen, silent, holding on to that stuffed rabbit like it could teleport him away. That kind of fear didn't disappear when the rain stopped. It lingered, sticky and electric.
It made Rafi remember the night everything had changed for him. The sirens. The shaking hands. The smell of smoke. That wild, helpless disbelief that followed him into every new place he got sent.
He couldn't forget what it felt like to wait for someone to come fix it and realize they weren't coming.
So when the older kids started showing up at the tarp, tired, confused, hungry—he didn't move. He watched them drag logs to sit on, share what food they could find, try to look calm in front of the younger ones.
None of them said it aloud, but they all understood something in that moment.
They were on their own.
Night crept in faster in the mountains, and the clouds made it worse. When the darkness came, it came thick, like the camp had been swallowed whole. The one flashlight flickered. No fire. No dry wood. Just cold air and wet clothes.
Rafi took the food bin and split up what was inside. Some dry crackers. Two packets of peanut butter. Trail mix that had survived the flood. A few kids nodded at him, but most just watched silently, too tired to speak.
He kept moving. Passing food. Helping the smaller ones with their blankets. Checking to make sure no one had a twisted ankle or bruised arm.
Someone needed to hold it together.
And when he lay down that night, curled beneath a tarp that barely covered him, he didn't think about the counselors or Ms. Tenley or where the rescue team might be. He didn't think about when things would get better.
He thought about morning.
Because if it came—and he wasn't entirely sure it would—he knew he'd have to wake up and be ready. Not because he wanted to. But because someone needed to stand up and keep going.
And this time, that someone was him.