When I was six, my sister was swept away in a flood after saving me. For 25 years, I believed I was the only one who had survived. Then a woman walked into my office and said a word only my sister ever used.
That’s when I knew something wasn’t right. I’m Kurt, and I run a company now. We design and manufacture flood rescue platforms and emergency flotation systems.
Every product line is named after a flood survivor. I started the company at 22 with a borrowed workspace and a set of hand-drawn blueprints that looked more like a 10-year-old’s sketches than engineering schematics. Last month, I was interviewing candidates for an executive assistant position.
My secretary had handed me a schedule with six names on it. I was halfway through the third interview of the afternoon when the door opened. The woman who walked in held her resume slightly tilted.
I noticed that first, before her face. Then the moment I saw her face, I forgot every word I’d been planning to say. She had the same eyes, the same line of her jaw, and the same quiet way of standing that reminded me of someone I’d never been able to forget.
For a second, I genuinely couldn’t breathe. The woman looked at the nameplate on my desk and said the words:
My hands went flat on the desk. No one had said that name out loud in 25 years.
She reached into her bag and placed a small wooden box on the desk between us. When I opened it, something inside me that had been very carefully held together for a very long time came close to giving way. Let me go back to August 2005 for a moment, because you need to understand what that box meant.
The flood came faster than anyone had warned us. One hour the sky was gray and the next our street was a river moving sideways. I remember our mother’s yellow curtains floating out the front door, and thinking that was the strangest thing I’d ever seen.
Then the water came through the hallway and nothing was strange anymore. Everything was just terrifying. My sister, Leila, was 15.
I was six. Our parents were at work and unreachable. The roads were blocked.
Leila grabbed my hand the moment the water came in, and she didn’t let go. She pulled me outside into the current, chest-deep on her and over my head. She kept one arm around me and moved us toward higher ground, but the water was pushing against us.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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