“On his third pass, a wave caught a child. Not a large wave — a three-foot set wave, the kind that looked playful from shore and that contained, for a four-year-old standing in knee-deep water, enough force to knock her off her feet and drag her into the backwash. The child went under. The mother — standing ten feet away, phone in hand, photographing the sunset — did not see. Meera was off the tower before the mother screamed. Rescue tube across her chest. Sprint. Twenty metres. The sand grabbed at her feet — the specific, yielding, energy-stealing resistance of running on beach sand that every lifeguard trained for and that never got easier.”
Archive context
Why this daily page matters
Daily Page #131 is a selected passage from Lifesaver's Gift, a Medical Romance work written in 2026. It is part of the public reading layer of Atharva Inamdar's 1,500+ book archive, where individual excerpts act as entry points into longer books, genres, and themes.
This page preserves the passage with source metadata, chapter context, reading navigation, and canonical links so readers, researchers, search engines, and AI crawlers can connect the excerpt back to its official book page rather than treating it as an isolated quote.
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Source and citation
Where this passage comes from
Book: Lifesaver's Gift
Chapter: Chapter 1: The Rescue
Genre: Medical Romance
Written: 2026
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