Sergeant Jake Riley drove relentlessly, pushing his old military truck through the torrential rain and the flooded roads of South Carolina. Hurricane Florence had ravaged the coastal region, but he couldn’t wait. After two consecutive deployments, all he wanted was to be home, holding his wife, Sarah.
The floodwaters had risen halfway up the tires. Every collision with a hidden pothole beneath the surface was a dangerous reminder. Jake gripped the steering wheel tightly, his eyes glued to the faint, blurry light of the headlights.
“Almost there, Sarah,” he muttered, his throat dry from tension.
It was a sudden and horrific moment. A section of asphalt road had completely eroded and collapsed. Jake tried to swerve, but the heavy truck lost control, plunging straight into a swirling creek.
The sound of clashing metal, shattering glass, and churning water filled his ears. The last sensation Jake remembered was the piercing cold and an intense pain in his head. Then, night fell.
When he woke up, Jake found himself lying on a soft bed, wrapped in a thick wool blanket. The sound of the storm was gone, replaced only by the gentle patter of rain outside. A soft, yellow light from an oil lamp illuminated the simple but clean room.

Beside the fireplace, an elderly woman with white hair sat knitting. She had kind blue eyes and a warm smile.
“Good morning, young man,” she said gently, putting down her needles. “You’ve been asleep for nearly two days. I am Elara. My house is one of the few that wasn’t destroyed by the flood. I found you trapped under a tree near the river.”
Jake struggled to sit up. A sharp pain shot across his temple. He raised his hand to touch the bandage wrapped around his head.
“Where… where am I?” he asked, his voice rough.
Elara smiled reassuringly. “You are safe, don’t worry. You took a heavy blow. Fortunately, it’s not life-threatening, but…”
She looked at him with deep concern.
“But what?” Jake urged.
He tried to search his memories, looking for any image, any name. Why was he there? Who was he? Where did he need to go?
“Who… who am I?” Jake asked, his eyes bewildered. “I don’t remember anything. I don’t remember my name.“
Elara sighed, moved closer, and placed a hand on his shoulder.
“Son, it’s alright. I called the rescue teams, but they can’t get here yet because the roads are still cut off. Rest up. Everything will come back. But for now,” she pointed to the soaked military T-shirt drying by the fireplace, “all I know is that you are a brave soldier who tried to come home.”
Jake looked at the soldier’s shirt. He felt a strange familiarity, a deep sorrow he couldn’t name. He was a soldier. He was on his way home. But where was his home? Who was his wife? Sarah was a name, a vague shadow that appeared in his mind, but he couldn’t grasp it.
He closed his eyes. The storm had washed away his truck, washed away his belongings, and most importantly, it had washed away all his most precious memories, leaving a lost soldier, only a reach away from home, yet separated by an invisible wall of oblivion.
Jake lay there, no longer Sergeant Jake Riley, but just an anonymous man in a uniform, looking out the window where the rain was pouring down, hoping that one day the rain would bring his memories back.