Tonight, as he watched the blue light through his camera lens, the sequence changed. Short. Short. Short.
Elias turned around. The blue light wasn't coming from his router. It was coming from a small, palm-sized device tucked into the vent duct above his bed—a device that shouldn't have been there, broadcasting a signal to someone waiting in the parking lot below. IMG_20230131_014326_328.jpg
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. Tonight, as he watched the blue light through
Room 328 wasn't where he was. He was in 32B. The "8" was a smudge on the brass plate. It was coming from a small, palm-sized device
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.