The Recursive Murder
The rain in New York doesn't wash things away; it just makes the grime shine. I stood under the awning of a closed deli on 42nd Street, watching the droplets race down the glass. My name is Leo, and my life is a broken record.
I have "Temporal Fragmentation Syndrome." That's the medical term. In plain English, it means my consciousness doesn't move forward; it loops. I'll be eating breakfast, and suddenly I'm back at the moment I woke up. I'll be walking to work, and I'm suddenly standing in the rain three hours ago.
Most of the time, it's just an annoyance. But lately, the loops have started to change.
It began with a woman. A woman in a red coat, standing across the street, looking at me with an expression of absolute horror. Every time the loop reset, she was there. And every time, she was closer.
I started keeping a journal, a frantic map of my own fragmented time. I noticed a pattern. Every loop ended at 11:14 PM. And every loop ended with a scream.
I became obsessed. I spent my days tracking the woman in the red coat, trying to figure out who she was and why she was terrified of me. I followed her into subway stations, through crowded plazas, into the dim light of jazz clubs. I tried to talk to her, but she would only scream and run, her face a mask of pure panic.
"I'm not hurting you!" I would yell, chasing her through the rain. "I just want to know why this is happening!"
Then came the night of the 14th.
The loop reset. I woke up under the awning. I saw the woman in the red coat. But this time, I didn't chase her. I decided to wait. I followed the clues in my journal, the fragmented memories of things that hadn't happened yet. I found myself in a narrow alleyway behind a theater, the air smelling of ozone and old garbage.
I saw a man. He was hunched over, his face obscured by a heavy coat, his hands shaking. He was holding a knife. And in front of him, cowering against the brick wall, was the woman in the red coat.
I didn't think. I lunged. I tackled the man, the two of us crashing into the trash. We fought in the mud, a desperate, animal struggle. I managed to pin him down, my forearm pressed against his throat.
"Who are you?" I screamed. "Why are you doing this?"
The man looked up. He looked at me, and I felt a jolt of electricity run through my spine. He had my eyes. He had my scar. He had my voice.
He was me. Not a twin, not a double. He was me from a loop that had lasted longer, a version of me that had finally snapped under the weight of the repetitions.
"You don't understand," he gasped, his eyes wide with a manic intensity. "The only way to stop the loop is to kill the anchor. She is the anchor, Leo. If she dies, we wake up. We finally move forward."
I looked at the woman. She wasn't an anchor; she was just a terrified human being.
I pushed the other Leo away and stood between him and the woman. "Get out of here!" I yelled at her. "Run!"
As she fled into the rain, the other Leo laughed. It was a hollow, broken sound. "You think you're the hero? Look at the clock, Leo."
I looked at my watch. 11:13 PM.
The other Leo didn't attack me. He simply stepped aside and pointed behind me. I turned around and saw a third Leo, his face cold and determined, holding a gun.
The shot rang out. The pain was a sudden, white-hot explosion in my chest. As I fell, I saw the woman in the red coat stop at the end of the alley. She turned back, her face filled with that same, eternal horror.
The world flickered. The rain vanished.
I woke up under the awning of a closed deli on 42nd Street. I looked across the street. A woman in a red coat was standing there, looking at me.
I smiled. I knew exactly what was going to happen.
*** TENSOR_CODE: [M1:8.0, M6:9.0, N1:0.5, K1:0.8, I:0.8, R:0.2, TI:68.9, θ:180°] OTMES_v2: { "Core": "M6-N1-K1", "Dynamics": "Recursive-Suspense", "Vector": [9.0, 0.5, 0.8] }
Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:
OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN
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