Dr Elena Vasquez floated in the
cramped confines of Orbital Research Station K-27, securing herself with a
thigh strap as she checked her reflection. The station had no proper
mirrors—glass was a hazard in microgravity—but a sheet of polished metal had
been bolted to the far wall for convenience.
Elena squinted at her reflection. It lagged. Not by
much—just a fraction of a second—but enough to notice.
She turned her head left. The reflection followed.
She turned right. The reflection obeyed.
She lifted her hand—slowly, deliberately. The mirror Elena
did the same, but the movement felt… delayed, like a glitch in an old video
feed.
“Must be tired,” she muttered.
She unstrapped herself, pushing off towards her sleeping
quarters.
A faint sound echoed through the station. A tap.
Elena paused mid-air.
Another tap.
It came from behind her.
She turned her head slowly.
The mirror… the sound was coming from the mirror.
The metal had no reason to make noise—no heat fluctuations,
no structural stress, nothing that could produce a sound like that.
She hovered in front of it, staring herself down.
The reflection stared back.
She lifted a hand to touch the surface.
The reflection smiled.
Elena did not. Her own face remained frozen in horror, but
the mirror version of her curled its lips into a slow, deliberate grin. The smile
dropped—like a mask slipping, the muscles of its face resetting into a blank,
unreadable expression.
Elena recoiled, shoving herself away from the mirror. She
twisted in midair, crashing against the opposite wall, scrambling for
something—anything—to hold onto.
The reflection didn’t follow her movement. It stayed in
place, staring out from the glass. Watching.
Then, impossibly, it lifted a hand and knocked.
A slow, deliberate tap, tap, tap. From the other side.
This wasn’t real. This wasn’t real. She pressed the
emergency comm button on her wrist. “Control, this is Vasquez. I—I need a
systems check on Module Three. I think—I think I’m experiencing a
hallucination.”
Static. Then:
“Dr Vasquez.”
A voice. Familiar. Hers.
“Please don’t turn around.”
Her breath hitched.
She was facing away from the mirror.
And she hadn’t spoken.
In the silence, she heard it move.
Something shifted behind her—smooth, fluid, like a body
unmoored from gravity.
Right. Behind. Her.
And then—
Nothingness descended over her eyes.
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