
Eli was nine years old when she grabbed my forearm outside a gas station and said the sentence that split my life open.
It was a cold gray morning in Roanoke. The pavement was still wet from early rain, the air thick with the smell of gasoline and coffee. I had just helped an older man waiting for a shelter ride and was heading back to my cruiser when she appeared.
Skinny. Hoodie too big. One shoelace undone. Eyes too serious.
She didn’t look at my badge.
She looked at my arm.
Before I could react, she grabbed it, staring at the tattoo—a winged fox curled in on itself.
“Wait… my dad has that same tattoo.”
Everything went quiet.
“Only one person has that,” I said carefully. “Who’s your father?”
“He doesn’t remember anything,” Eli said. “Not since the accident.”
The cold sank deeper.
That tattoo wasn’t random. My sister Mason and I designed it after our parents died. Same fox. Same wings. Same meaning.
Seven years ago, she disappeared.
And now a child was telling me her father had that exact mark.
A volunteer rushed out, calling Eli back to Ridgeview Children’s Residence. I followed not long after.
Inside, the director confirmed it. Eli had described the tattoo before. Her mother never gave a name. Only said the father had been in an accident.
A truck crash. Brain injury. No ID.
Alive.
But lost.
For seven years… my sister hadn’t disappeared.
She’d been forgotten.
PART 2: THE MAN WITHOUT A NAME