The screen flickered. For a second, the desktop wallpaper—a high-res photo of the Swiss Alps—distorted into static. Then, a single window popped open. It wasn't a folder of documents or photos. It was a terminal window, text scrolling so fast it was a blur of emerald green. "Stop," Elias whispered, tapping the escape key.

The scrolling stopped instantly. A single line of text remained at the bottom: CAUTION: DATA ARCHIVE UNLOCKED. SUBJECT: ELIAS THORNE.

His heart skipped. He hadn't entered his name anywhere. He scrolled up through the extracted data. There were logs of his keystrokes from three years ago. There were audio files of conversations he’d had in private. There were photos taken from his own webcam—images of him sleeping, working, and staring at this very screen.

It arrived in his inbox at 3:00 AM, sent from an address that was nothing more than a series of zeroes. No subject line. No body text. Just the blue hyperlink of the zip file, sitting there like a dare. Elias was a digital archivist, a man who spent his days cataloging the forgotten corners of the early internet, but he had never seen a file naming convention like this. It didn't look like a standard backup; it looked like a cipher.

The file was just a string of characters on a glowing screen, but to Elias, it was a ghost story waiting to be told.

Elias didn't turn around. He didn't have to. The zip file hadn't just been a download; it was a door. And on his screen, a new line of text appeared in the terminal: Extraction complete. We’re in.

Elias opened it. The image showed the back of a man’s head, illuminated by the blue light of a computer monitor. In the reflection of the monitor within the photo, he could see a dark shape standing in the corner of the room—the corner directly behind him.

But it was the last file in the folder that froze his blood. It was a JPEG titled current_view.jpg .