The first knock sounded too polite for the weather.
Mabel Broussard stood on Mr. Landry’s porch with rain shining on her silver hair, one hand wrapped around that chipped yellow mug, the other hand resting on the red notebook pressed against my chest.
Behind her, Caleb was already backing our truck down the driveway, headlights cutting through sheets of water. The wind had started to bend the oak branches over the street, hard enough to make the power lines hum.
Inside Mr. Landry’s house, something scraped across the floor.
Mabel knocked again.
“Henry,” she called, calm as Sunday service. “Open the door.”
A curtain moved.
His voice came through the glass, thinner than it had sounded when he was laughing from the porch.
“I’m fine, Mabel. Go bother somebody else for flour.”
Mabel did not flinch. She turned her face slightly toward me.
My fingers were wet, and the paper tried to stick together. I found his name circled twice. Under it, Mabel had written three lines in careful blue ink.
Bad hip. No truck. Pride worse than pain.
Garage floods first. Keeps medication in kitchen drawer. Sister in Lafayette unreachable after 8 p.m.
The porch light flickered.
I looked through the narrow window beside his door and saw the truth before he said it. Mr. Landry was gripping the hallway table with one hand and holding a cane with the other. His right slipper was soaked. Muddy water had already crept across the tile behind him.
“Mabel,” I said, low.
She only lifted the yellow mug and tapped it once against the doorframe.
“Henry, I am not asking you to like me. I am asking you to unlock this door before Caleb has to break it.”
The curtain dropped.
For three seconds, there was only rain, the warning siren in the distance, and the slap of water rising in the gutter.
Then the deadbolt turned.
Mr. Landry opened the door six inches. The laugh was gone from his face. His gray hair was stuck flat to his forehead, and the skin around his mouth had turned the pale color of old paper.
“I didn’t think it would come up this fast,” he muttered.
Mabel stepped inside without answering that. She did not lecture him. She did not ask if he remembered what he had shouted five minutes earlier.
She pointed at me.
“Medication drawer. Blood pressure pills first. If there is insulin, wrap it in a towel and put it in the cooler.”
Then she pointed at him.
“Shoes. Not slippers.”
He blinked at her.
“Mabel—”
“Shoes, Henry.”
His mouth closed.
I moved through his kitchen while rain hammered the roof so loudly the cabinets seemed to tremble. The house smelled like damp carpet, stale coffee, and the sharp bite of floodwater. A small radio on the counter hissed between emergency updates. In the second drawer, I found four pill bottles, a pharmacy receipt for $183.47, a folded Medicare card, and a photograph of a woman in a green dress tucked under the tray.
The water touched my ankle.
Cold climbed through my sock.
Caleb burst through the doorway, rain dripping from his jaw.
“Truck is running. We have maybe fifteen minutes before the low end is blocked.”
Mabel nodded once.
“Cooler on the counter. Cane in his left hand. You take his right side.”
Mr. Landry’s face folded in on itself. Not crying. Not yet. Just a man discovering his pride had no wheels, no traction, and no plan.
“I can walk,” he said.
“Good,” Mabel replied. “Then walk now.”
He looked at her yellow mug.
“That the one you keep bringing around?”
“Yes.”
“For sugar.”
“For answers.”
He swallowed. His throat moved like the words had edges.
Caleb took his elbow. Mr. Landry did not pull away.
We made it to the truck in a sideways wall of rain. The street had changed in less than twenty minutes. Water was already covering the curb. A trash can floated past Mrs. Alvarez’s mailbox. Somewhere down the block, a car alarm wailed and died.
Mabel climbed into the back seat beside Mr. Landry like this was not the man who had mocked her in front of half the neighborhood.
She opened the red notebook on her lap.
“Next is 118,” she said. “Mrs. Alvarez. Oxygen concentrator. Grandson works nights. She answers slow because she takes the batteries out of her hearing aids when the alerts scare her.”
Caleb glanced at me in the mirror.
I nodded.
We drove.
At 10:06 p.m., Mrs. Alvarez was sitting in a recliner under a crocheted blanket, the television flashing red warnings with no sound. She did not hear the first knock. Mabel knew where the spare key was because two months earlier, Mrs. Alvarez had borrowed half a cup of cornmeal and mentioned hiding it under the frog planter.
Mabel stepped inside and touched her shoulder gently.
Mrs. Alvarez woke with a gasp.
“No time to pack dishes,” Mabel said. “Medicine, oxygen tubing, purse, shoes.”
By 10:19 p.m., Mrs. Alvarez was in the truck holding a plastic grocery bag full of pill bottles and a framed picture of her late son.
Mr. Landry sat beside her, silent.
His cane lay across his knees.
At 10:27 p.m., we stopped at the duplex with the peeling white railing. Two teenage brothers opened the door before we knocked. Their mother was a nurse stuck at the hospital, and Mabel’s page said they had a nervous beagle, no generator, and a back bedroom window that never latched.
The older boy tried to act annoyed.
“We’re good, Miss Mabel.”
Mabel held up the notebook.
“Your mother told me you say that when you are scared.”
His face changed.
The younger one appeared behind him carrying the beagle wrapped in a towel.
Caleb loaded them in the bed under a tarp with the dog crate, two backpacks, and a bag of kibble Mabel had somehow already packed in a plastic bin near her own back door.
Nobody laughed now.
At 10:41 p.m., we reached the corner house where all the porch lights were off.
Mabel’s handwriting there was darker, pressed harder into the paper.
Darlene Webb. Lives alone. Says daughter checks in. Daughter does not. Keeps house cold to save money. Will pretend she left already.
The water was shin-deep when Caleb stepped out.
Mabel tried to follow, but I touched her arm.
“Let me.”
She looked at me for a long second. Rain ran down the lines beside her mouth.
Then she handed me the yellow mug.
“Knock with that.”
I walked through brown water that tugged at my calves. Something soft brushed my ankle and floated away. The front steps were slick under my shoes.
I knocked with the mug.
Once.
Twice.
On the third knock, a small voice answered from behind the door.
“I don’t need anything.”
I looked back at Mabel in the truck. She lifted one finger.
Say the line.
“Mabel sent me,” I called. “She says your daughter would want you wearing the green coat.”
The lock clicked.
Darlene Webb opened the door wearing pajamas, one sock, and a face powdered with fear. A battery lantern shook in her hand.
“How does she know about the green coat?”
I held out the mug.
“She knocks.”
Darlene looked past me at the rising street. The fight left her shoulders.
“I need my cat.”
“We’ll get the cat.”
By 11:03 p.m., Caleb’s truck was too full to take one more person. The emergency shelter at the high school was still open, but the route behind the church had flooded. Caleb called his brother. I called a coworker with a lifted Ford. The teenage boys texted their mother at the hospital. Mrs. Alvarez started calling church friends from a paper address book with a rubber band around it.
Mabel kept reading names.
Not frantic. Not dramatic. Organized.
Every page was a small map of who had been seen and who had been missed.
By 11:38 p.m., three more trucks were following ours through the storm. The men who had laughed earlier were wading up porches, carrying coolers, chargers, medication, and sleeping children. Someone brought a stack of towels. Someone else brought a gas can. A woman who had once rolled her eyes at Mabel’s sugar requests was now standing in knee-deep water shouting house numbers from the notebook so Caleb could mark them off with a carpenter pencil.
Mr. Landry stayed quiet until we reached the high school.
The gym smelled like wet clothes, floor wax, instant coffee, and frightened pets. Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead. Volunteers pointed families toward cots. A little girl cried because her stuffed rabbit had fallen in the parking lot, and one of the teenage boys ran back through the rain to find it.
Mabel sat on a folding chair near the registration table, blue cardigan soaked dark at the cuffs, yellow mug in her lap, notebook open.
The shelter worker asked for her household size.
Mabel looked around at Mrs. Alvarez, Darlene Webb, the boys, the beagle, Mr. Landry, Caleb, and me.
Then she smiled with only one corner of her mouth.
“Tonight? Complicated.”
The worker blinked, then wrote something down.
At 12:14 a.m., Mr. Landry stood in front of her.
He had found dry socks from a donation bin, but his pant legs were still muddy. His cane trembled against the gym floor.
Mabel looked up from the notebook.
He cleared his throat.
Around us, the shelter noise thinned. Not stopped. Just shifted. People noticed the man who always had a joke standing in front of the woman he had made into one.
“I owe you,” he said.
Mabel closed the notebook over one finger to keep her place.
“No,” she said. “You owe Mrs. Alvarez a ride to her cardiology appointment next Thursday, if the roads are open.”
His face tightened.
“Mabel.”
“And Darlene needs someone to clean the leaves out of her gutter before the next storm. The twins need plywood for that back window. Caleb will measure it.”
Caleb, standing behind me with a paper cup of coffee, nodded before anyone asked.
Mr. Landry’s eyes shone under the harsh lights.
“You still put my name on that list.”
Mabel touched the chipped rim of the mug.
“My Earl was stubborn too.”
That was when Mr. Landry sat down.
Not on the chair beside her. On the low bleacher step in front of her, like his knees had run out of argument.
“I thought you were just lonely,” he said.
Mabel’s fingers rested on the red cover.
“I am lonely.”
The words landed without begging.
She looked across the gym, where rescued neighbors were wrapped in blankets, passing phone chargers and crackers from her pantry boxes.
“But lonely people can still count.”
No one spoke for a moment.
Then Mrs. Alvarez reached into her grocery bag, pulled out one of Mabel’s flashlights, and set it on the registration table.
“This came from her pantry,” she told the volunteer. “Write her name on the supply sheet.”
The teenage boys brought over two cases of bottled water.
Darlene Webb placed a gallon bag of cat food beside them.
Caleb carried in the plastic bin from Mabel’s kitchen: batteries, wipes, crackers, bandages, peanut butter, a hand-crank radio, and three envelopes labeled in blue ink.
One said OXYGEN.
One said PETS.
One said BABIES.
The volunteer stared at the labels, then at Mabel.
“How long have you been preparing this?”
Mabel rubbed one thumb over the handle of the mug.
“Since the storm that took my husband.”
At 1:02 a.m., the shelter coordinator asked Mabel to sit beside the check-in table and help identify who was still missing from the neighborhood.
She did not stand taller. She did not make a speech. She only opened her notebook and turned to the next page.
I sat beside her with a pen.
For the rest of the night, people came to that folding table with wet hair, shaking hands, dead phones, and names they were afraid to say out loud. Mabel knew which back door stuck. Which uncle drank too much and forgot his medication. Which retired teacher had three cats and would not leave without all of them. Which house had a crib upstairs. Which man claimed to be fine because he did not want anyone seeing the unpaid bills on his counter.
By morning, the worst of the wind had moved north.
The neighborhood was bruised. Fences down. Mailboxes tilted. Lawns buried under branches and brown water lines. But every name in Mabel’s red notebook had a checkmark beside it.
At 8:36 a.m., Mr. Landry walked over to our cot carrying two paper cups of coffee.
He handed one to Mabel first.
She accepted it with both hands.
He looked at the yellow mug beside her.
“There’s a chip in it,” he said.
“There has been for years.”
“I can fix that shelf in your pantry when we get back.”
“You can fix Mrs. Alvarez’s porch rail first.”
He nodded.
This time, no joke came after it.
Three days later, when the water pulled back enough for us to return, the first sound on our block was not a hammer.
It was a knock.
Mr. Landry stood on Mabel’s porch holding a carton of eggs, two bags of sugar, and a handwritten list of every person on the street who owned a truck, a generator, a medical cooler, a spare bedroom, or strong arms.
Behind him stood half the neighborhood.
Nobody had called a meeting. Nobody had printed flyers.
They had just come.
Mabel opened the door in her blue cardigan, the missing button still gone, the yellow mug in her hand.
Mr. Landry held out the carton.
“I brought what you asked for,” he said.
Mabel glanced at the eggs.
“I didn’t ask today.”
His ears turned red.
“No, ma’am.”
He unfolded the paper list and held it out instead.
“I figured it was time we started answering before you had to knock.”
Mabel took the list.
Her thumb pressed the corner flat.
For a second, she looked past all of us toward the far end of the street, where storm debris still clung to the fences and the air smelled like mud, pine, and gasoline.
Then she stepped aside and opened her door wider.
“All right,” she said. “Come in. We’ll need coffee.”