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.