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One moment, I was washing dishes—warm light above me, kids laughing nearby. The next, water crept around my ankles, then surged to my knees. The power cut out. Pressure built at the front door. I grabbed Liam and Nora and raced upstairs as our home flooded.

I tried to comfort them, but fear shook me. Then came a thud at the window—a man in a yellow coat, waist-deep in floodwater. “I’m here—just pass them to me!” he called. I didn’t hesitate.

He carried the kids gently through the rising water. A rescue boat arrived, and he handed them in but refused to board. He turned back toward the storm. “What’s your name?” I shouted.

“Just tell them someone kept them safe today,” he replied, disappearing into the rain.

At the shelter that night, I asked around. No one knew him—except one woman who thought he might be the same man who saved a neighbor’s dog.

When we returned home, muddy footprints on the stairs confirmed he’d come inside. Later, the kids taped a crayon drawing to a mailbox: a man in yellow holding two children. “Thank you – from Liam and Nora.”

Weeks passed. Then, one day, he appeared again—toolkit in hand. “Heard your place took a hit,” he said. He stayed three days, quietly repairing our home, then vanished.

In spring, Nora fell ill. A nurse said a man had asked about her at the hospital. I found a note: “She’ll be fine. She’s strong like Mom.” Tucked inside was a toy firefighter badge.

Since then, quiet signs have appeared—rakes, soup, flowers. I’ve stopped looking.

Because maybe it was never about who he was.

Maybe it was about someone who stepped into the storm—and chose to care.

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