The digital clock on Elias’s nightstand flipped to . He didn't need to look at the clock to know the time; he could feel it in the sudden, rhythmic hum of the radiator and the way the streetlamp outside cast a jagged shadow across his desk—a shadow that looked like a reaching hand.
He picked up his phone. The screen’s glare was a physical weight against his tired eyes. He opened the camera app, the lens struggling to focus on the frost patterns crystallizing on the windowpane. Click. was saved to his cloud. IMG_20230131_014326_328.jpg
X. S. S. It made no sense. He scrolled back through his gallery, looking at the metadata of the previous shots. He realized he had been reading the "328" in the filename as his room number, but looking at the photo again, he saw it. In the reflection of the window, just behind his own ghostly silhouette, was a floor plan tacked to the back of the door. The digital clock on Elias’s nightstand flipped to
The floorboards in the hallway creaked. Heavy, deliberate steps stopped right outside his door. Elias looked back at his phone. The photo he just took—ending in —wasn't just a filename. It was a countdown. The doorknob began to turn. The screen’s glare was a physical weight against
To anyone else, the photo was a blurry mess of dark shadows and a single, piercing blue dot from a router across the room. But to Elias, it was evidence. He had been staying in Room 328 of the Oakhaven Inn for three nights, and every night at exactly 1:43 AM, that blue light didn't just blink—it pulsed in a sequence. Long. Short. Short. Long. He pulled up a Morse code translator on a separate tab. The next night: S.