When The Ocean Turns Violent

They stand in doorways and under tables, listening to the house speak a language of strain and splinter, each creak a reminder that wood and brick were never meant to argue with an ocean. When the surge finally comes, it doesn’t knock; it takes. Floors vanish under black water. Familiar rooms twist into alien landscapes of floating drawers, family photos, and overturned chairs. There is no time to mourn what’s lost, only to grab what can still be held: a hand, a flashlight, a breath.

Miles away, evacuees huddle under fluorescent lights that never dim, because sleep won’t come anyway. Updates arrive in fragments—an intersection gone, a roof peeled away, a name not yet accounted for. Between the static and rumors, something quieter grows: people passing blankets down a line, translating news for strangers, writing lists of shelters on cardboard. In that fragile, flickering togetherness, they begin to believe that enduring the storm is not the end of the story, but the beginning of how they will remember each other.