CHAPTER 4 - A FACE IN THE FOG
Larry didn't know how long he ran. Minutes. Hours. Maybe more. Time had turned into a looping blur of breath, footsteps, and the pounding question in his skull:
Who is Ella?
He didn't trust the stranger who had saved him-not fully-but the man's words felt like a hook caught in the center of Larry's chest. He could still hear them:
"You told us to protect her... Before you disappeared."
Every time the sentence replayed, something inside him twisted. Like the sound of a lock turning on a door he didn't remember closing.
By the time he found shelter, the rain had started.
He ducked beneath the sagging roof of an old bus stop, empty and forgotten at the edge of a long road that vanished into mist. Traffic hummed faintly from somewhere far away, but here-in this abandoned pocket of the city-there was nothing except the hiss of falling rain and his breath fogging in the cold air.
His clothes were damp. His hair plastered to his forehead. But his hands-
They shook.
Not from fear. Not from cold.
From the ache.
Ella.
Her face existed inside him like a half-remembered dream-edges blurred, center sharp, emotion unmistakable. Every time he closed his eyes, she looked back at him with a softness that felt like both salvation and loss.
He didn't know her.
Yet she felt like the only real thing in his entire world.
He sat on the splintered bench, chest tight, rain dripping from the roof in irregular rhythms. The city lights blurred into the fog like distant ghosts.
Larry dug through his pocket, searching for anything that might ground him. His fingertips brushed something thin-paper.
He pulled it out.
A folded sheet of cheap notepaper from the hospital where he'd woken. Blank. Unmarked.
But the moment he felt the paper in his hands, something shifted inside him. The weight of memory-not the memory itself-pressed against his ribs.
He needed to see Ella's face.
Not just in his mind.
Not just in flashes.
He needed to bring her into the world in a way his brain couldn't erase.
His fingers moved before his thoughts did-instinct again, always instinct-and he reached for a pen on the bus stop ledge, discarded like someone forgot it mattered. He didn't question how or why it was there.
He simply took it.
He unfolded the paper.
Flattened it against his knee.
And began to draw.
At first, his hand hesitated. His lines wavered. But the moment the curve of a cheek formed-the faintest suggestion of her eyes-something inside him unlocked.
Then the pen flew.
Drawing wasn't a skill he remembered having. He didn't remember anything. But his hand moved with a quiet certainty, strokes smooth, controlled, deliberate. Not practiced.
Lived.
The fog thickened around him, softening the orange glow of street lamps. Rain smeared the horizon. But he didn't look up. He didn't blink. He didn't breathe fully until her face-her face-took shape on the paper.
Her jawline: elegant, soft but strong.
Her eyes: dark, observant, steady.
Her mouth: a hint of determination curved around something warmer.
Her hair: waves that framed her face like they were meant to.
She wasn't smiling.
She wasn't frowning.
She was looking at him.
Like she always had.
Like she still did.
Larry's vision blurred.
His throat tightened.
And a deep, aching grief poured into him with the force of a wave crashing through a broken door.
He pressed a trembling hand to the paper, not touching her face-just the corner, just enough to keep it from sliding away.
"Ella," he whispered.
The name cut him open.
It echoed through the empty fog-drenched street as though the world already knew her. As though the air itself held the memory he couldn't reach.
He closed his eyes, and the pain behind them rose-not physical, not even emotional.
It was recognition.
Sudden.
Violent.
Overwhelming.
He saw flashes-fragments-impressions:
Her hand grabbing his wrist.
Her voice whispering urgently: "Stay with me."
The smell of burning tires.
Rain hitting pavement.
Her face inches from his, framed by flashing red lights-
Her scream-
Larry's eyes snapped open.
He gasped for air like a man who had been underwater too long.
His fingers dug into the paper. "What happened to you?"
The wind answered with a cold shiver across his skin.
Something was writhing inside his skull-something that wanted to break through, but the moment he tried to focus, a harsh static sound filled his head. Like an old radio stuck between channels.
He dug his nails into his palms, forcing the rising panic down.
Not yet.
Not here.
Not when the fog made everything feel closer... sharper... wrong.
A car passed in the distance.
Then another.
Then-
A pair of headlights turned onto the long road leading toward the bus stop.
Slow.
Quiet.
Purposeful.
Larry stiffened.
The car crawled along the curb-too slow to be casual. Its windows were deeply tinted, blacker than the night around them. Rain slid across the windshield like veins.
The pen slipped from Larry's fingers.
He didn't breathe.
The car stopped.
Idled.
Engine humming like a predator pacing behind a thin fence.
The driver's window began to lower.
Larry shoved the paper into his jacket, rose from the bench, and backed toward the far end of the stop.
A man leaned out slightly. Just enough that Larry could see the glint of something metallic near his hand.
Recognition flared-instinct again, not memory. He had seen that gesture before. He had seen that position. He had seen that angle-
A gun was being raised.
Larry's pulse spiked.
He sprinted into the fog, feet pounding the wet pavement, breath ripping from his lungs.
A shot shattered the silence.
The world exploded behind him.
And Larry ran harder, faster, as the fog swallowed him whole-
-before he realized the shot wasn't aimed at him.
It was aimed at the drawing in his pocket.
And when he pulled it out-
A bullet hole pierced Ella's drawn heart.
Larry froze, staring at the paper in his hand. The bullet hole tore through the center of Ella's drawn chest, black ink smudged with the wet smear of rain. His stomach twisted violently. His mind screamed, but his body reacted before he could think.
The car door behind him creaked open. Wet tires hissed as it shifted. The dark figure leaned out again, this time aiming at Larry directly. He didn't wait. He dove into the fog, moving blindly, arms flailing, feet skidding on slick pavement. Heart pounded like a jackhammer, each beat threatening to split his chest open.
Branches clawed at his clothes as he plunged into a nearby alley. Every instinct told him to keep moving, but every fiber in his body screamed for him to stop, to breathe, to catch his bearings. He had to survive. He had to survive-not for himself, not yet, but for her-the girl whose face lived in his memory, whose image burned deeper than any wound.
He slid behind a dumpster and pressed himself into the shadows, chest heaving, rain dripping down his face. The drawing was folded in his hand, its torn heart a scar. Somehow, that scar felt alive. It pulsed with the same urgency his own blood carried.
From the fog came the sound of tires crunching gravel. The car idled outside the alley now, engine low, menacing. Larry strained his ears. Footsteps. Not one-multiple. Coordinated. Predatory. They knew he was here. They were trained. They had him cornered.
He pressed his back to the dumpster and scanned the alley. Wet, slick walls, fire escapes, a trash pile to his right, a narrow exit to the street behind him. Limited options. Limited time. He swallowed the rising panic and forced himself to focus. He couldn't fight them all. Not head-on. Not yet.
Then a thought-a memory without context, without explanation-surfaced like a flash of lightning: duck, roll, aim low, strike hard.
Larry blinked. The alley felt smaller, tighter, but his feet remembered the rhythm. He rose slightly, just enough to see a hand slipping from the shadows-another assailant closing in. He pivoted, using the dumpster as cover, and swung his arm with raw force. A metal trash can lid caught the man's forearm, knocking him off balance. The figure cursed, stumbled, but immediately recovered.
Larry ran.
Rain splashed against his boots as he bolted to the end of the alley. He burst onto the foggy street, mud splattering his jeans. He had a split-second view of the car-the driver's door now open, the man with the metallic glint emerging. Larry's stomach flipped. Not aiming at him directly anymore. Now they were playing a game of pursuit. He could feel it: hunted.
He zigzagged instinctively through the street. Each turn was calculated but unconscious. He dodged trash bins, leapt over puddles, ducked beneath a broken street sign. His muscles screamed in protest, but he moved with a precision he couldn't claim as his own.
Then he saw her.
Ella.
She emerged from the fog ahead, her figure familiar even from the depths of his fractured memory. But something was different. She wasn't just the image in his head; she was real, tangible, and terrifyingly dangerous. Her eyes, dark and unwavering, locked on him with a blend of command and desperation.
Larry's heart leapt. Relief, joy, terror-all collided.
"Larry!" she shouted, her voice cutting through the fog like a whip. "Get to me, now!"
He sprinted faster, ignoring the pounding in his chest, the burning in his lungs. Every step felt like flying, every breath a struggle. As he neared her, a figure emerged from the fog-a tall silhouette with a rifle, the unmistakable glint of the sniper's scope catching the dim light.
Time slowed.
Larry dove to the side, narrowly avoiding the line of fire. The bullet tore through a lamp post, showering sparks. He rolled to his feet and tackled the nearest object-a dumpster lid-and used it as a shield. Behind him, the sniper reloaded, the mechanical click echoing in the misty street.
"Ella!" he gasped. "What's going on? Who are they?"
She grabbed his arm, yanking him behind her with startling strength. "No time!" she barked. "You're not ready to understand yet! Move!"
Larry stumbled, trying to process the chaos. The fog twisted around them, turning familiar streets into a maze of shadows. His fingers brushed the drawing in his jacket. The torn heart seemed to throb in his pocket. Somehow, it felt like it was guiding him, pulling him toward her, toward safety-or at least toward an explanation.
But the danger wasn't done.
The sniper had repositioned. Another figure emerged from the fog, blocking their path forward. Trapped.
Larry's instincts surged again. The reflexes that had saved him in the alley-moves he didn't remember learning-kicked in. He grabbed a loose pipe from the ground, swinging it with brute force at the man nearest him. The figure went down with a grunt, but another emerged immediately, boot pressed to Larry's ribs, forcing him to the ground.
Ella didn't hesitate. She drew her gun with fluid motion, firing twice, precise, controlled. Both men dropped.
Larry scrambled to his feet, adrenaline surging. He didn't think. He only ran, following Ella through a narrow passageway that opened into the edge of an industrial complex. The fog thickened, and the sounds of pursuit echoed off the warehouses, making it impossible to know how many were following.
Finally, they reached a shipping container stacked between two buildings. Ella pushed him inside, then sealed the door behind them.
Inside, darkness enveloped them. The faint smell of oil and rust filled the cramped space. Larry's breath came in ragged gasps.
"Who... who are they?" he whispered.
Ella didn't answer immediately. She leaned against the container wall, gun still at the ready, eyes scanning the small gap at the container's corner. Her chest rose and fell steadily, but her expression was unreadable.
"They want you dead," she said finally, voice low but firm. "And they'll stop at nothing until they get what they're looking for."
Larry swallowed. His hand went to the drawing in his jacket. The bullet hole had torn through the chest again, even in his mind's eye. He held it close. "Then why... why am I the target? What did I do?"
Ella's gaze softened, just for a fraction of a second. "You don't remember, do you?"
He shook his head, frustration boiling over. "No! I don't remember anything! I wake up, and all I have is your face! And now... now they're trying to kill me! And I don't even know why!"
Ella stepped closer, lowering the gun. "Your memory isn't gone," she said. "It's buried. But it's there. And once you start remembering, they'll know what you know."
Larry's stomach sank. "What do I know?"
Ella's eyes flicked toward the container wall, then back at him. "Enough to be dangerous."
Larry's hands shook. "I don't even know what that means..."
Before she could answer, a sudden sound cut through the fog outside the container-a mechanical click, almost silent, but sharp.
Larry's blood ran cold.
Footsteps. Not many. Only one. But deliberate. Heavy. Slow. Calculated.
"They're close," Ella whispered, pressing herself against him. "Hide. Don't make a sound."
Larry pressed himself against the wall, heart hammering so hard he thought it might break through his ribs. The fog pressed against the container like a living thing, carrying the faint metallic scent of danger.
The door of the container rattled. A shadow fell across the small gap where light seeped in.
Larry's pulse froze.
The figure outside leaned close, peering in. Hands reaching. Breath visible even in the faint glow.
Ella's gun raised. Steady. Controlled. Ready.
Larry's fingers tightened around the drawing, Ella's face staring up at him, her eyes alive in the paper despite the torn heart.
And then-
A voice, chilling and low, whispered directly against the steel wall of the container:
"Larry... I know you're in there. And this time... you won't get away."
The container door shook violently, a metallic groan echoing through the cramped space.
Larry's knees buckled. His chest tightened. His mind raced.
He had no memory.
No weapons.
No plan.
But one thing burned brighter than fear:
He had to survive.
For her.





