The highway ended where the ocean began.
By the time I reached Myrtle Beach, the sun was high and very bright. It reflected off the front of my car like a mirror. The town was busy and loud. There were neon signs, big restaurants, and shops selling seashells and colorful t-shirts.
But I drove past all the noise. I went to a quiet part of the beach to find what I was looking for.
The Seaview Inn.
The blue-green paint on the sign was peeling, just like in the photo. The wooden boardwalk looked old and tired. As I pulled into the gravel parking lot, I felt sick to my stomach. I felt this way because everything looked exactly like I remembered it.
And yet, I had no memory of ever being there.
The building looked exhausted. The wooden beams were bent from years of salty air. A flag moved in the wind on the roof. The lobby doors were open. It looked like the hotel was welcoming people, but the welcome felt fake.
I parked the car. I put the backpack with the photos over my shoulder. I forced myself to walk inside.
The air inside smelled like pool chemicals and sunscreen. It was a sour smell that seemed to live in the walls. A woman with gray hair and glasses sat behind the desk. She looked up and gave me a quick smile.
"Checking in?" she asked.
Her voice sounded kind, but her eyes were different. For a second, they looked sharp. She looked at me like she knew exactly who I was.
I froze. "Yes," I said. "Just for a few nights."
She typed something on her computer. "Name?"
I hesitated. "Lena."
Her fingers stopped moving. When she looked up again, her smile was gone. "Of course. Room 17. Second floor, at the end of the hall."
My stomach turned. I had not told her my last name. I had not even shown her my ID card. But she slid the room key across the counter as if she had been waiting for me to arrive.
I took the key with shaking fingers. "Thanks," I whispered.
The hallway smelled like carpet cleaner and salt. My footsteps made loud thudding sounds on the old floor. The sounds lasted longer than they should have. At the very end of the hall, I found Room 17. The gold number on the door was dull because so many people had touched it.
The key turned easily in the lock. It felt like someone had oiled it because they knew I was coming.
Inside, the room looked normal. It had tan walls, a flowery blanket on the bed, and a lamp that flickered when I touched it. But I didn't care about the furniture. My heart stopped because of a picture on the wall.
It was a framed photo of the beach.
It was the same photo from the Polaroid I found in the box.
I walked closer to it. In the frame, a younger version of me was laughing in the sun. My head was thrown back and my hair was messy from the wind. Next to me was my ex-boyfriend. He was holding a drink.
I touched the glass. It felt cool. This was too real.
Someone had taken my memory and hung it on the wall like art.
I pulled the frame off the wall. The nail made a scratching sound against the paint. I dropped the frame onto the bed. The glass cracked, but it did not break.
This was not just someone watching me. This was planned. Everything was arranged. It was like a museum of a life I could not remember.
The air in the room felt heavy and thick. I started to walk backward toward the door. Then I stopped.
A Polaroid photo was sitting on the small table by the bed.
It wasn't hidden. It was just sitting there, waiting for me to see it.
My fingers shook as I picked it up.
The image showed me. I was standing in the room exactly where I was standing right then. In the photo, I was holding a Polaroid in my hand.
I turned it over. The date on the back said: Today.
My legs felt weak. I sat on the edge of the bed. My hands were trembling so much the photo shook. Whoever was doing this was not just nearby. They were inside the building. They were watching me at this very moment.
Suddenly, I heard the floor creak outside my door.
I looked at the door. My heart was beating like a drum.
I heard another creak. It was closer this time.
I shoved the photo into my pocket and turned off the lamp. The room became very dark. I pressed my back against the wall and tried not to breathe.
The doorknob started to turn.
It moved slowly. Very slowly.
The door opened just one inch. Then it stopped. It felt like the person outside wanted me to know they could come in whenever they wanted. Then, slowly, the door clicked shut again.
I did not move for a long time. My chest hurt because I was holding my breath. When I finally breathed out, I was shaking so hard I almost dropped my bag.
I had to leave. I had to leave right now.
I grabbed my bag and ran out of the room. The hallway felt like it was getting longer. Every light that flickered felt like a spotlight on me. My footsteps were as loud as gunshots.
When I reached the lobby, the gray-haired woman looked up. She was smiling again, but her eyes looked empty.
"Is everything okay, Ms. Hart?" she asked.
Hart. That is my last name. She should not know that.
I stopped. "How do you know my name?"
She tilted her head to the side. "We have breakfast at seven o'clock. We will see you then."
She spoke politely, but she sounded like she was giving me an order. She was telling me I wasn't allowed to leave.
I ran out into the sunlight. I was breathing hard, like I had been underwater. My car was still in the parking lot. I reached for my keys, but my hands were sweaty and I couldn't grab them.
Before I could unlock the car door, I saw it.
There was another Polaroid photo. It was tucked under the windshield wiper of my car.
I pulled it out. My fingers felt numb.
The photo showed me at the front desk of the hotel. In the picture, I was leaning over the counter and talking to the gray-haired woman.
I turned it over. The date on the back said: Tomorrow.
I stood still in the parking lot. The sun was hot on my skin. The salty air burned my throat.
They didn't just know where I was. They knew where I was going to be tomorrow.
I realized that no matter how fast I ran, I was already caught in their plan.
I did not sleep at all. Not even for a second.
After I found the photo on my car window, I couldn't rest. I drove around the beach without a goal. My car lights moved over the empty sand and the closed carnival rides. The ocean was a big, black space on my right. my heart did not slow down. My hands squeezed the steering wheel so hard that the plastic made a cracking sound.
When the sun finally began to rise, the sky turned gray. I found myself back at the hotel parking lot. I felt like a dog returning to its cage.
I told myself I would not go inside. I planned to stay in the car, watch, and wait. But when the clock on my dashboard showed seven o'clock, I felt a knot in my stomach.
Breakfast at seven, the desk clerk had said.
I looked at the lobby doors. The light coming from inside looked like a trap meant to pull me in. I don't know why I got out of the car. Maybe I was angry. Maybe I was desperate. Or maybe I realized that I could not leave until I got some real answers.
The lobby smelled like coffee and fried eggs. There was a food table against the far wall. I saw trays of steaming eggs, piles of toast, and glass jars of orange juice.
The desk clerk was there. She was sitting behind the counter as if she had stayed there all night. Her glasses were perfect on her nose. Her smile was ready, but I could not tell what she was thinking.
"Good morning, Ms. Hart," she said.
I stopped moving. My voice sounded rough as I spoke. "How do you know my name?"
She tilted her head. She looked like my question was funny to her. "We know all our guests," she replied.
"I never checked in," I said. "I didn't give you my ID. I didn't give you a credit card."
"And yet," she said calmly, "you are staying in Room Seventeen."
Her calm voice made me feel dizzy. My fingernails pressed into my skin. "I want to know what is happening. Tell me about the photos. Tell me about the ones you left for me."
Her smile changed just a little bit. "Ah. The photos."
"Yes, the photos!" I yelled. My voice was getting loud. "Who is taking them? How do they know where I will be? How do they know when?"
She leaned back in her chair. She folded her hands neatly on the desk. Her eyes became sharp, like she was looking right through me.
"You should not have come here," she said quietly.
Her words felt like a punch to my stomach. "Why not?"
"Because this is where the story folds back on itself," she said. "This is where things stop making sense."
I shook my head and took a step back. "What does that mean?"
Her smile returned. It looked weak. "You think the photos are a warning. You think they are a threat. But they are not. They are... documentation."
My heart pounded. "Documentation of what?"
"Of revisions," she said.
That word felt like a splinter in my chest. "Revisions?"
She nodded. She looked happy that I repeated the word. "Time is not what you think it is, Ms. Hart. It does not move in a straight line. It writes itself like a book. It edits. It corrects. Some moments are kept. Some are thrown away. You are in the middle of that process."
I stared at her. I felt sick. "That is crazy."
"But you have seen the proof," she said. She pointed at my backpack. "You have pages of your life that were taken before you lived them. You have photos of things that were erased. Would you like me to lie to you? Would it be easier if I told you this was a joke or a mean boyfriend? That would be easier to believe, wouldn't it?"
Her eyes shined. "But you already know the truth."
I swallowed hard. My throat felt as dry as a desert. "Who is doing this?"
She hesitated. For a moment, she looked human. I thought I saw her feel sorry for me.
"You will meet them soon enough," she said.
The lobby suddenly felt like there was no air. The sunlight was too bright and too sharp. "No," I said. "You are going to tell me right now."
Her look softened, but her next words made me feel very cold.
"You have already been told, Ms. Hart. You just do not remember."
The room started to spin. I grabbed the counter to keep from falling. "What does that mean?"
She looked at the clock on the wall. "It means you should eat your breakfast."
The words were so normal that I almost laughed. I almost did-until I looked down.
There was a Polaroid photo sitting on the counter between us.
It had not been there a second ago. I would have bet my life that the counter was empty. But now it was there. The edge of the photo was touching my fingers.
I picked it up with numb hands.
The photo showed me sitting at a table in the lobby. I had a plate of eggs and toast in front of me. In the picture, I was talking to the desk clerk.
I turned it over. The date on the back said: Tomorrow.
I dropped the photo as if it were on fire. I couldn't breathe right.
The desk clerk just smiled. She looked very peaceful. "See? The story is already written."
I felt a huge wave of panic. "I don't want this! I don't want any of this!"
Her smile went away. This time, her voice was soft. It was almost kind.
"No one ever does," she said.
The room tilted. I stumbled back toward the door. I was holding my backpack and my legs were shaking. I had to get out before I collapsed. I couldn't stand the smell of the coffee and the eggs anymore.
I pushed through the doors. The ocean air hit me like a wall. My car was sitting in the lot, but I didn't go to it. I couldn't. My hands were shaking too much to drive.
Across the street, the big ocean moved against the sand. It never stopped. A sound came out of my throat-I didn't know if I was crying or laughing.
The clerk's voice stayed in my head: They are documentation. Revisions.
The worst part was that a small part of me believed her.
The lobby looked different in the dark.
The lamp on the desk still gave off a little bit of light, but it created more shadows than anything else. The corners of the room were pitch black. The woman with gray hair was gone, but I could still smell her perfume. it was a sharp, floral smell that made my nose sting.
I had not planned to go back inside. My car was still in the parking lot. The highway was right there, and I could have escaped. But something stopped me at the edge of the gravel road. Maybe it was the photo under my windshield wiper. Maybe it was because the date on the back said "tomorrow."
I didn't want to run anymore. I wanted to know who was doing this to me.
The carpet made my footsteps quiet as I walked past the front desk. The hallway felt very long. The wallpaper was peeling off the walls in long strips. My skin felt strange, like I was being watched. Every part of me wanted to run away, but I kept moving deeper into the hotel.
Room 17 was waiting for me at the end of the hall like a bad memory.
The door was closed. There was no sign that I had run away just a few minutes ago. It looked like no one had touched it. I felt the heavy key in my pocket. When I put it into the lock, it turned very easily. It felt like the door wanted me to come back inside.
The air in the room was old and still. The picture I had pulled down was still on the bed. The glass was cracked. The Polaroid photo was still on the small table where I had left it.
But something had changed. The lamp was on. I knew I had turned it off before I left.
I stood in the doorway and froze. "Who is there?" I asked.
My voice was too loud in the quiet room. Then, I heard a floorboard creak. The sound came from the bathroom.
My heart moved up into my throat. The bathroom door was slightly open. It was dark inside, and I could only see shadows. My hand searched the wall until I found the light switch. I flipped it on.
The room was empty. I saw white tiles, a mirror, and a faucet that was dripping water. There was no one there.
But then I looked at the mirror. It did not show me standing in the doorway. Instead, the mirror showed me standing inside the bathroom at the sink.
I couldn't breathe. I stepped backward, staring at the glass. The "other me" in the mirror looked back at me. She looked sharper and clearer. She was smiling a little bit, as if she had been waiting for me to find her.
I closed my eyes tightly. When I opened them again, the reflection was normal. It was just me, looking pale and shaking with fear.
Suddenly, I felt a wave of anger. "Enough!" I shouted. My voice sounded rough. "If you want me, come out! Stop hiding in the walls and the pictures. Show yourself!"
The room was very silent. For a second, I thought nothing would happen. Then, the lamp flickered. The door behind me clicked shut and locked.
A voice whispered right into my ear. There was no one standing next to me, but the voice was very close. "You came back," it said.
The voice sounded exactly like mine.
I spun around, my heart racing. The room looked empty, but I felt a heavy pressure in the air. It felt like the air itself had teeth. The lamp flashed brightly and then went dark. I was in total darkness.
I ran for the door, but when I touched the knob, it was burning hot. It burned my hand. I screamed and pulled my hand away.
In the bathroom, the mirror started to rattle.
Slowly, a hand pressed against the glass from the *inside* of the mirror. It was a pale hand. It was my hand. The person inside the mirror leaned forward until her forehead touched the glass. Her smile was too wide. It stretched my face into something scary and wrong.
"You can't run," she said.
I struggled to breathe. "What do you want?" I asked.
She put her whole palm against the glass. "To trade places," she replied.
The mirror shook. Small cracks started to spread across the glass like tiny veins. A low humming sound came from the walls. It was a deep, scary sound, like something very old was moving.
I stepped back and felt something crunch under my shoe. It was the broken picture frame on the bed. I looked at it. The photo was bent, but I could see myself and my ex-boyfriend. It was a life I didn't remember, but the photo said it was real.
The girl in the mirror pressed harder. The cracks got bigger.
I felt a sudden burst of energy and fear. I grabbed the heavy frame from the bed and threw it as hard as I could at the mirror.
The glass exploded. The reflection broke into a thousand jagged pieces.
Suddenly, the room was heavy and silent again. I stood there shaking, surrounded by broken glass. I was breathing very hard.
But the fear did not go away. From the bathroom, I heard a wet, bubbling sound. It was the sound of breathing. It wasn't my breathing. Something was still in there.
I didn't wait to see what it was. I grabbed the door handle. This time, it wasn't hot. I pulled the door open and ran down the hall. The glass cut into my shoes, but I didn't stop. I ran as fast as I could.
I reached the lobby. The desk was empty. I could see the night sky through the glass doors. I almost made it to the exit.
But she was there.
She wasn't behind the desk or in the hall. She was standing right in front of the glass doors, blocking my way.
It was me.
Her smile was even wider now. "Leaving already?" she asked.
I stopped. My heart felt like a drum. The "other me" tilted her head to the side. "You wanted me," she said. "Here I am."
The words were mine. The voice was mine. But the person was a stranger.
I backed up slowly. "Stay away from me," I whispered.
Her eyes shined in the dark. "You will only make it harder," she said.
She took a step toward me. The doors behind her stayed closed, even though she didn't touch them.
I didn't try the doors again. I ran to the side, hiding behind a large pillar. Then I ran into a hallway for the hotel staff. I hit a "No Entry" sign with my shoulder. I was in the back of the building now. It was full of narrow halls, pipes, and the smell of bleach.
I heard footsteps behind me. They were light and perfectly timed with my own.
I turned corners without looking. I prayed for a way out. Instead, I hit a dead end. I was trapped at a locked door.
The footsteps stopped behind me.
I felt like I was going to collapse. I turned around.
She was right there. She was inches from my face. I could feel her warm breath on my cheek.
Then, she whispered into my ear. Her voice was like a sharp knife.
"You don't understand," she said. "You are the copy.”