A Soldier Heard His Mother Scream From 5,000 Miles Away In The Rain-congtien

Rain was the first thing Blake Dean heard that night.

Not thunder.

Not wind.

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Just rain tapping the canvas roof of the overseas operations tent, steady and cold, while the generators outside hummed like nothing important could happen under that sound.

He sat on the edge of his cot with one boot tied and the other loose, holding a paper cup of coffee that had gone bitter.

Down the row, a few men laughed over a card game.

Somebody dragged a chair across plywood.

Everything around him sounded ordinary, which was exactly why the phone in his hand felt wrong when it lit up with his mother’s name.

Mom never called at that hour.

She knew the time difference.

She knew the rules.

She also knew Blake would answer if the world was burning, because she had earned that right long before he ever put on a uniform.

Her contact photo filled the screen.

It was ten years old, taken on the front porch of the little Virginia house where she had raised him after his father died.

The mailbox leaned at the end of the driveway.

A small American flag sat in a flower pot beside the steps.

His mother stood in sunlight with her gray hair tied back, one hand shading her eyes, looking like a woman who had been tired for twenty years and still refused to sit down.

That was Mary Dean.

Not soft.

Not helpless.

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