The elderly doctor drew out a long sigh. “You were in the car with someone else, do you remember her?”
There was someone else in the car? “No no, I don’t. I thought I was alone. Maybe if I saw her though, I might be able to remember her.” It sounded unreasonable, even to her hearing. How was she going to remember another person when she couldn’t even remember her own name, or age or life?
The doctor drew out another long sigh. This was very bad. She could feel it in her bones. She saw the door open and shifted her gaze back to the doctor when she saw that it was the nurse from the other time that walked in.
“You said you didn’t remember anything?” she doctor asked again, this time worry spread all over his features. She closed her eyes and tried to rack through her brain to come up with something. Nothing. No memory of work, or school, or family, nothing at all. She was completely blank. She opened her eyes slowly to the worried look on the doctor’s face.
“Nothing. I’m completely blank.” She felt herself begin to sweat as the reality dawned on her. She was a complete stranger, even to herself. Her mouth suddenly went dry