The Man Who Wouldn't Look Away
Bryan had seen the same sunset a thousand times. But tonight, standing on the porch of a one-room clinic in rural St. Elizabeth, Jamaica, he barely noticed the gold melting into the sea. His eyes were on the meter. The solar panel he'd installed six weeks ago was underperforming by 11 percent. Not a crisis. Not an emergency. The clinic still had lights. The vaccine fridge still ran. But Bryan couldn't let it go. 11 percent meant someone, someday, might not get the care they needed after dark. And in his line of work, that was 11 percent too many. He'd left Kingston at 4 a.m. to drive three hours over unpaved roads. No one had asked him to come. The clinic staff hadn't called. The ministry hadn't flagged it. But Bryan had remote access to every system he'd installed across the Caribbean, from Dominica to Belize to rural Trinidad. And every morning, before coffee, he checked the numbers. That was his discipline. Not the grant proposals or the polished presentation...