I RISKED MY LIFE TO CUT THE CHAIN FROM A DROWNING DOG’S NECK AS THE FLOODWATERS ROSE ABOVE THE FENCE LINE, BUT THE REAL HORROR WASN’T THE STORM—IT WAS THE MAN IN THE DRY BOAT WHO ARRIVED MINUTES LATER, NOT TO THANK ME, BUT TO ACCUSE ME OF THEFT FOR SAVING WHAT HE CALLED ‘PROPERTY’ AND I CALLED A SOUL.
The water didn’t look like water anymore. It looked like a bruised slurry of oil, sewage, and the pulverized remains of people’s living rooms. I was waist-deep in it, fighting the current that whipped around the corner of Elm Street, my waders sucking against the mud with every step. The silence of the neighborhood was…