T1 2024 Apr 2026

“The old trail washed out,” the text said. “The one behind the cabin. Creek rose six feet in two hours. Never seen that before.”

Outside her window, the actual January did what it wanted. It rained in sheets that should have been snow, a wet, confused gray that dripped off the fire escape and made the alley below look like a river. Climate change wasn’t a future crisis anymore. It was T1’s weather report. t1 2024

Lin worked in urban climatology, which sounded noble but mostly meant she spent her days arguing with spreadsheets about stormwater runoff. The city had promised a green infrastructure overhaul by Q4—new permeable pavements, bioswales, a rain garden on every corner—but T1 was about approvals. And approvals required a feasibility report. And the feasibility report required data from the old sensors, half of which had frozen solid in the December cold snap. “The old trail washed out,” the text said

Lin looked back at her screen. The email subject line read: DRAFT: Q1 Feasibility Report (v.12 FINAL). The attachment was 47 megabytes of careful lies and interpolated hope. She had a meeting at 9 AM Monday to defend it to the zoning board. After that, another meeting to discuss “T2 deliverables.” Then a third to “reassess KPIs.” Never seen that before

She stared at the words. The old trail was where she’d learned to ride a bike, where she’d hidden from her brother during games of ghost in the graveyard, where she’d gone to cry after her first real heartbreak. A trail her grandfather had cut in 1972.

Washed out.