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Wetland -

“I got lost,” the boy whispered. “My dad said it was just a ditch. He said it was nothing.”

He wedged the bar under the stake and pulled. The wood groaned, then surrendered. He tossed it into the reeds. He moved to the next, and the next. Each pop of loosened metal was a small, wet sound—like a frog’s leap, like a turtle sliding off a log. wetland

When the last ribbon lay crumpled in the mud, Elias sat on the root of the old cypress. The sun set, staining the water the color of old blood and honey. The heron lifted from the willow, its vast wings barely disturbing the heavy air. “I got lost,” the boy whispered

He was supposed to sell it. The county had sent the letter—a pale, official thing that smelled of toner and finality. "Acquisition for Commercial Development," it read. A new marina, a strip of riverfront condos. Progress, they called it. To Elias, it sounded like a death sentence. The wood groaned, then surrendered

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