When the water runs out, knowledge becomes survival.
Carmen Silva is a hydrological engineer in a quiet mountain town that believes systems don't fail-until they do. When a regional power collapse knocks out the water treatment plant, Carmen runs the numbers and reaches an impossible conclusion: Ridge has less than forty-eight hours before the taps run dry.
The town votes to wait.
Carmen refuses.
Armed with maps, data, and a truth no one wants to hear, she organizes an evacuation to four ancient mountain springs-water sources she alone knows how to find and measure. What follows is not a disaster movie fantasy, but a brutally realistic fight to turn frightened neighbors into a functioning community before thirst, panic, and denial kill them first.
As hundreds flee into the wilderness, others stay behind-certain help will come, certain she is wrong. When the water finally stops, the cost of waiting becomes permanent.
The Water Table is a tense, character-driven survival novel about:
infrastructure collapse without apocalypse theatrics
expertise versus politics
leadership earned, not granted
and the thin line between civilization and chaos
This is not a story about the end of the world.
It's about what happens when the world stops working-and the people who step forward anyway.