While saving people, they forgot how to save themselves… Being a rescuer is not just a job, but a way of life, where any mistake can determine someone else’s fate. Fires, car accidents, storms—there’s no time to be afraid here: speed, endurance, and sober calculation matter. But what if the most dangerous catastrophe happens not outside, but inside? When the past burns more fiercely than fire, and losses pull down harder than an enraged flood of water.
This is a story about those who are used to holding out under pressure, but fear asking for support. About men and women for whom saving others is an obligation, not a privilege. About a feeling that can flare up where, it seemed, only ash remained. And about whether they can, risking themselves for others, finally pull themselves out of trouble.