I looked down. Water was rising through the grate beneath my boots. Not backing up from the main—coming up from the pipe, against gravity. And in the rising murk, something pale and long turned over, like a finger uncurling.
The meter was installed last Tuesday, but the numbers made no sense. Every morning at 6 a.m., the flow rate spiked to 99.9 liters per minute, then dropped to zero. No taps, no toilets, no sprinklers. Just a ghost in the pipes.
The house belonged to a man named Arthur Cross. He’d been dead for three years. The bank owned the property, but the water board still logged usage—steady, impossible usage. My boss, a tired woman named Darnell, handed me the file and said, “Go read the drain. Not the meter. The drain itself .” blocked drain reading
I pulled it out. Pages dripped. The cover showed a beetle, but someone had drawn over it—inked lines connecting the insect’s legs to a diagram of the house’s sewer system. Handwritten notes in the margins: Flow as metaphor. Blockage as memory. The drain reads you back.
The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka.
READ ME BACK.
The pipe was clear. No blockage. But the water inside wasn’t still. It moved in a slow, deliberate circle, like a drain trying to swallow its own tail. And stuck to the inner wall, just at the bend, was a book. A paperback, swollen but legible. I zoomed in. I looked down
I lowered the camera.