The street was quiet. Too quiet.
I moved first. My foot lifted—then froze. The motion felt wrong, like my body remembered a step I hadn't taken. The fog curled around my arms, brushing my wrists, guiding the motion. The step completed itself before I even thought to push forward.
Relief hit first. My chest loosened, the rhythm of movement smooth and effortless.
Then came the awareness.
I was slower. Just slightly. My reflexes lagged in ways they hadn't before. A loose stone, a twist of debris in the cracked pavement—my balance faltered for the barest fraction of a second.
Enough.
The fog corrected the motion instantly. My foot adjusted. My weight redistributed. The mistake never finished.
I stopped mid-step, heart pounding as if I'd nearly fallen from a height. My hands were steady. Too steady. The fog loosened again, drifting back like it had only stepped in to fix something minor.
Like it had done me a favor.
"I had it," I muttered.
The words felt thin.
I forced myself to move without it.
One step. Then another.
Each one felt deliberate in the worst way—heavy, overthought. My heel caught on a shallow crack in the pavement. A mistake I would've corrected instinctively before.
I didn't.
My balance tipped. Just a little.
The fog surged.
It didn't wait for permission. It didn't feel like a choice this time. My foot adjusted, angle corrected, weight redistributed with effortless precision. The stumble vanished before it could become real.
I froze.
My pulse thundered in my ears. The fog retreated again, patient, satisfied—like it was teaching me a lesson I hadn't agreed to learn.
A memory surfaced.
Not a face.
Not a scene.
Confidence.
The kind that came from knowing your body would finish what your mind started. I felt it like an echo in my muscles—warm, reassuring, and unmistakably not mine.
My jaw tightened.
A sound scraped through the mist ahead. Low. Close.
I raised the blade and forced myself to hold still. No fog. No help. Just me.
The shadow lunged.
I reacted—
Too late.
Pain flared as something grazed my side. Not deep. Not fatal. But sharp enough to steal my breath. I staggered back, vision blurring at the edges.
The fog was already there.
The world snapped into clarity. My stance corrected. My grip shifted. The blade moved before I finished the thought.
Strike. Step. Turn.
The fight ended in three breaths.
When it was over, I stood alone in the street, chest rising and falling in a calm, controlled rhythm that didn't match the panic twisting in my gut.
I hadn't decided to let the fog help.
I'd expected it to.
That realization hit harder than the wound.
I pressed a hand to my side. The pain was distant. Manageable. The fog hummed softly, coiled close, content.
"You're changing me," I whispered.
It didn't answer.
It didn't need to.
Because I could feel it now—the pattern settling in. Every time I tried to act alone, my instincts hesitated. Not gone. Not broken.
Just worse.
Every time the fog moved for me, everything flowed.
I took another step.
This time, I didn't fight the correction.
The fog adjusted my stride before my balance could slip. Smooth. Efficient. Right.
No relief this time.
Just acceptance.
I stopped in the middle of the street and looked down at my hands. They didn't tremble anymore. My grip was sure. Familiar in a way that unsettled me.
The fog lingered close, not pressing, not guiding—just present. Waiting for mistakes. Or maybe waiting for something else.
I understood then what I'd been pretending not to see.
The fog wasn't taking control.
It was making my control unnecessary.
I lowered the blade.
The street stretched ahead, empty and patient. My body twitched—small adjustments, subtle corrections happening before thought could interfere.
Survival felt easier now.
That was the problem.
[Next chapter: The Space Between Commands]
