The Last Backup

The room was white, harsh, and small. Soundless except for the gentle hum from the ductwork above and the low click of Captain Eliza Markham’s pen against her notepad. The boy across from her—maybe seventeen—shifted on his metal chair. His eyes flicked to the one-way mirror, then back to Eliza, fingers drumming a nervous rhythm on the battered external hard drive at his side.

Outside, thunder rolled over St. Jude’s Precinct, echoing through a city that smelled like rain and tension. It hadn’t started yet—the collapse—but everyone felt it: a pressure behind their eyes, a gnawing uncertainty about what tomorrow would bring. The lights sometimes flickered now; supplies dwindled. Eliza’s badge felt heavier every day.

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She tapped her pen once more. “Let’s start simple, Jamie.”

He watched her warily, clutching the hard drive like a lifeline. Not some flash stick or ancient USB. This was massive: black casing, cooling vents still whirring, two unused USB ports glinting faintly in the fluorescent light.

“My people found you rerouting power from downtown substations,” she continued. “Then they found this.” She nodded toward the drive. “Want to tell me what you’ve been storing?”

He hesitated. Eliza could see him weighing trust—a thing precious and rare now—against whatever secrets he’d packed into those eight terabytes.

“It’s not just games,” he said finally. “It’s…memories.”

She raised an eyebrow.

“I recorded my sister—before she left for evacuation. My mom reading stories when we thought things would get better.” He swallowed hard, voice trembling. “I saved our favorite streams, our music...even our group chats from when my friends were all still here.”

Eliza considered this. So many parents had begged for lost footage after the first blackout: birthday videos, last calls with relatives who never made it out. All gone in static and smoke.

“Why hack the grid?” she pressed gently.

He stared at his hands. “I needed to finish transferring it all,” he said. “The city net was dying—there wasn’t enough power to keep my old laptop running long enough to move everything over.”

Eliza closed her eyes for a moment—remembered her daughter’s voice from months ago: *Mama, if things get bad, will you promise not to lose my stuff? My drawings? My songs?* She’d laughed then, promising forever as if forever meant anything anymore.

But Jamie hadn’t just risked himself; he’d put others in danger too. That was leadership’s curse: weighing one child against many.

“You know how close you came to taking out life support at City General?” Her words were quiet but sharp.

He flinched. “I checked—the grid map! I only rerouted nonessential lines.”

His tears caught her off guard. She let him cry—it was safer here than outside—and thought about burdens carried in silence: hers, his, everyone’s.

When he’d calmed some, she reached across and turned the drive toward herself—noticing how warm it was even after hours of use. “Why this one?”

Jamie wiped his face on his sleeve. “It’s huge—eight terabytes means I don’t have to pick what matters most.” He managed a thin smile through his tears. “And it charges my phone while I work...so I can keep talking to my little brother while I save our stuff.”

She remembered seeing parents hunched over similar drives in shelter corners—clinging to them as if they were photo albums or diaries from another century.

Eliza nodded slowly and pushed the hard drive back toward him—a silent gesture of understanding more than forgiveness.

“You’re smart,” she said softly. “You care about your family.” Her hand trembled as she stood; authority fading in the hush between thunderclaps outside.

“But leadership,” she continued, voice almost breaking, “means thinking past your own heartache—even when it feels impossible.”

He nodded—not defiant now but listening like her own daughter had once listened during late-night talks about right and wrong.

They sat together in silence for several minutes—the only sound that soft mechanical whirring as Jamie’s drive cooled itself down for another night’s vigil against oblivion.

“You can keep it,” Eliza said finally as she opened the door. “But next time—if there is a next time—you come to me before you plug anything into this city again.”

As Jamie stood to leave, he cradled the drive close—like a torch carried through endless dark corridors—and Eliza watched him go with pride tangled deep inside her worry: pride for him; pride for all children forced too soon into decisions no one should have to make.

Outside, another siren wailed—a reminder that storms didn’t end just because you wanted them to—but inside that tiny white room something had shifted: not forgiveness, not hope exactly…but perhaps a small measure of understanding between burdens shared.

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