Every Photo Shows Her… Before She Was There — She Walked Out Part 4
The next photo didn’t show where she was going… it showed what was coming toward her.

Her hand was still on the door.
Cold metal beneath her fingers.
Solid.
Real.
Too real.
Elena’s breath came in short, uneven bursts.
Her eyes fixed on the reflection in the glass.
On the version of herself inside.
The one who was already there.
Already moving.
Already ahead.
“No…” she whispered.
Her voice barely holding together.
“I’m not going in.”
Her grip tightened.
She tried to pull her hand back.
Tried to step away.
But her body didn’t respond.
It hesitated.
Just for a second.
Like it was waiting for permission—
from something else.
Her phone buzzed.
The sound cut through her thoughts like a blade.
She didn’t want to look.
Didn’t need to.
She already knew.
Slowly—
almost mechanically—
she raised the screen.
A new photo.
Her heart stopped.
The image loaded.
And for a moment—
her mind refused to understand it.
It didn’t show her inside the café.
It didn’t show her walking in.
It showed—
the door opening.
From the inside.
Her fingers went numb.
“No…”
Her voice broke completely now.
“That’s not possible…”
Her eyes snapped up.
To the glass.
To the reflection.
And there—
For the first time—
she saw it clearly.
The other version of her.
Standing just behind the door.
Hand on the handle.
Looking straight at her.
Not calm.
Not relaxed.
Aware.
Watching.
Waiting.
Elena stumbled back.
Her heart hammering violently.
Her breath collapsing into panic.
“That’s not me…”
But it was.
Exactly her.
Every detail.
Every movement.
Every expression.
Except—
the eyes.
The eyes were wrong.
Too focused.
Too certain.
Too early.
The handle moved.
Slowly.
Deliberately.
From the inside.
The door began to open.
A small gap forming.
Darkness slipping through.
Cold air brushing against Elena’s skin.
Her entire body locked.
Frozen.
Unable to move.
Unable to think.
Her thoughts lagging behind the moment—
again.
Always again.
The gap widened.
And the other version of her—
stepped forward.
Out of the café.
Into the real world.
Elena’s vision blurred.
Her chest tightening painfully.
“No…”
A whisper.
A plea.
A realization.
Too late.
Because the moment she had feared—
the moment she had tried to avoid—
had already happened.
Already been captured.
Already been decided.
The other Elena stood in front of her now.
Close.
Too close.
Their faces inches apart.
Identical.
Except for one thing.
One of them was breathing in panic.
The other—
was perfectly calm.
A slow smile spread across the other Elena’s face.
Soft.
Controlled.
Final.
And quietly—
almost gently—
she spoke.
“I told you.”
A pause.
A heartbeat.
A truth that shattered everything.
“You’re always late.”
About the Creator
Dorothea Bautz-John
True crime writer exploring unsolved mysteries, serial killers, and the darker side of history.




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