The Mirror's Alibi

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8

The rain in Los Angeles didn't wash anything away; it just turned the grime into a mirror. I sat in my office, the neon sign from the diner across the street blinking a rhythmic, bleeding red across my desk. I was nursing a glass of cheap rye when she walked in.

She looked like a million bucks and a thousand regrets. She called herself Elena, and she wanted me to find a woman who had disappeared five days ago. The twist? The woman she was looking for was herself.

"I wake up in hotels I've never booked," she told me, her voice like velvet dragged over gravel. "I find clothes in my suitcase that I've never worn. I'm losing time, Max. And I think someone is stealing it from me."

I took the case because I liked the way she smelled of jasmine and desperation. For a week, I followed the breadcrumbs. I found a trail of different identities: a high-society gambler in Bel Air, a terrified waitress in a roadside diner, and a cold-blooded fixer for the mob. They all used the same face, but they had different souls.

The deeper I dug, the more the case started to smell. I found a series of photographs in a locker at Union Station. They showed Elena—or the others—meeting with a man who looked exactly like the kind of shark that runs this city.

The climax happened in a warehouse by the docks, under a sky the color of a bruised plum. I found her there, standing over a body. She wasn't the trembling girl from my office. She was wearing a trench coat and holding a .38 with a steady hand.

"Who are you?" I asked, my hand on my own holster.

She smiled, and it was the coldest thing I'd ever seen. "I'm the one who cleans up the mess, Max. The girl you're looking for? She was too weak to survive this city. So I took over."

I realized then that there was no kidnapping, no conspiracy. Just a mind that had shattered under the weight of a dark past, creating a predator to protect the prey.

I didn't turn her in. In this city, the only thing worse than a monster is a witness. I walked back to my office, poured another drink, and watched the neon sign blink. Some mirrors are better left broken.

*** TENSOR CODE: [M1:7.0, M6:9.0, N1:0.6, K1:0.8, I:0.8, R:0.2, theta:210°]


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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