
In the gray space of independent intelligence contracting, success is silent and failure is scrubbed from the record. Inspired by real events, this narrative follows a clandestine team recruited for a task too sensitive for official channels. They were sent to avert a plague in a foreign city drowning in poverty, but the mission unraveled into a night of silent devastation.
This is an intimate, character-driven account of the human cost hidden behind the indifference of distant government and corporate decisions. The narrator’s path crosses with a young, barefoot girl in a red shirt in the shadow of a decaying chemical plant. She is just one child among many, a symbol of all that was transformed in an instant: a curious, smiling child unaware of the danger as she lives among the shanties. What begins as a fleeting, tender moment of human connection becomes an indelible scar when a catastrophe engulfs the area.
Reed Dalton explores the moral burden of witnessing tragedy without the power to stop it. The story focuses on the sudden silence where laughter once was and the enduring weight of a world where poverty, innocence, and resilience once thrived before the chemicals and the chaos took hold. Rooted in real-world consequences, this is a poignant testament to the fragility of life and the lingering echo of what one person cannot unsee. Some moments change everything.

Reed Dalton
It’s ok
It made me sad
Not enough pictures
Worth a read



