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The Loop. SERA.PHIM
The Loop. SERA.PHIM

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The Loop. SERA.PHIM

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The Loop. SERA.PHIM


Cody Wolfhart

© Cody Wolfhart, 2025


ISBN 978-5-0068-3242-8

Created with Ridero smart publishing system

Chapter 1. 3:17

Rain pounded the tiled roofs like drumbeats in an empty church. The night was thick, humid, carrying the scent of asphalt and wet leaves. Alex Reed sat on the edge of his old bed, hunched over as if trying to hold the entire world on his shoulders. His head throbbed with fatigue, and his eyes burned from sleeplessness – for years, nights had become a trial for him, not a rest.

The apartment he rented on the city’s outskirts felt like a reflection of his own life – dusty, abandoned, and full of broken promises.. Old case files, scribbled notebooks, and unanswered letters lay scattered across the desk. All of it – testimonies of his failures, mistakes, and the lives he hadn’t saved. He picked up a notebook, tracing the lines where his handwriting trembled from exhaustion.

The city outside the window slept – or at least tried to. Smoke from chimneys mixed with the streetlights’ murky orange glow. The empty streets shimmered on the wet asphalt like a single, endless mirror. Alex often caught himself staring into those reflections for hours, as if a hidden truth waited somewhere within.

He closed his eyes and thought of his daughter. Sam. Her laughter, the joyful cry on the playground, a voice he now heard only in memory. Ten years had passed since she was gone. Ten years, and every day he wondered what he could have done differently.

A call.

The phone on the desk vibrated – a soft, almost inaudible sound, like a bell tolling in an empty church. Alex grabbed the receiver.The same call he had tried to forget appeared again, like a nightmare lodged in reality.

«You couldn’t save me…» the voice said.

He froze. The voice was painfully familiar – his own. The words repeated, but they sounded like a whisper from a distant future.

«Who…?» he tried to ask, but the line was silent.

The city below lived its slow, drowsy life – cars left trails of light, occasional pedestrians hurried under umbrellas. His heart pounded wildly, a hollow emptiness tightening around his chest. He walked around the room, checking doors and windows. No one. Just the rain outside and his own breathing. Alex stood by the window, listening to the patter of the rain.

Barely noticeable – but his heart clenched, as if struck by an electric shock.And then, the light in his apartment flickered. For a second.

Only now the words sounded different: He turned. In the corner, on the desk, the voice recorder had turned on by itself. The red indicator blinked, a relay clicked, and a rustle came from the speaker. Then – the voice. The same one from the receiver.

«Don’t look back.»

He felt a breath behind him – someone else’s.Alex froze. The world seemed to freeze with him. The rain ceased. Even the ticking of the clock vanished.

It moved independently, as if it had a life of its own. He slowly, very slowly, turned his head. The room was empty. But on the wall above the desk – a shadow. Not his.

When the light returned, the shadow was gone.Alex stepped closer – and the shadow recoiled. A second – and the lamp flickered again.

03:17.He exhaled heavily and turned off the recorder. Only then did he notice: the recording was still running. The display showed the time.

He sat back on the bed. Suddenly he realized – this was not the first call. He had heard it before, always exactly at 3:17. Alex glanced at the clock: 3:17. That moment repeated again and again, like a rhyme that could not be broken.

Memory brought back an old case – a girl he hadn’t managed to save three years ago. And the phrase echoed again: «You couldn’t save me.» Not a call. Not a warning. An accusation carved deep into the essence of his life.

He approached the mirror, the old crack in the corner, and saw a shadow behind him. Its movements no longer matched his. He turned – but the empty apartment met him with a deafening silence.

Memories of other cases, other mistakes, surfaced: the man who died in the alley; the colleague’s wife who never received help; the night he missed his chance. All of it twisted together into one tight knot – a loop with no escape.

The voice repeated the same words, but now it sounded closer, as if it were standing right behind him: The phone rang again. 3:17.

«You couldn’t save me.»

The beat of his heart matched the raindrops hammering against the glass. Alex felt the ground vanish beneath his feet. The world around him became unstable, like reflections in puddles, where the city was no longer a city but a labyrinth of shadows.

He sank to the floor, clutching his head, and for the first time realized – the call wasn’t just a signal. It was the beginning of something unstoppable. Something living in a loop between past, present, and future… and now it had come for him.

Outside, the rain thickened, and the streetlights flickered like failing memories. In the mirror behind him, something moved – and Alex froze. Whoever – or whatever – was there did not mimic his movements. It looked straight at him and smiled.

«You couldn’t save me.«The phone vibrated once more. 3:17. The voice:

It poured with relentless persistence, as if the city itself were being washed off the face of the earth. Water streamed down the windows, breaking into droplets that turned the streets into mirrors – and Alex Reed felt those mirrors were watching him with grim curiosity.And in that moment, Alex understood – the night had only just begun. The rain hadn’t stopped for three days.

Sometimes that hum felt like the breath of someone large and weary, asleep beneath the city, about to awaken. He lived on the sixth floor of an old building, in a corner that had once housed a bookstore. Now a twenty-four-hour laundromat occupied the ground floor, its machines filling the nights with a low, lulling roar.

The wallpaper peeled, while stacks of folders and yellowed newspaper clippings littered the floor. Each one was someone’s story he never managed to finish.Alex sat on the edge of the bed, a cup of cold coffee in his hand. The second cup of the night, though it did no good – his eyes still wanted to close.

He wasn’t a detective anymore – at least not officially. After the Hale case, he’d left the department – or rather, they’d let him slip away quietly, like removing a broken part from a machine.

He had asked for it himself, though sometimes he wondered if he should have.

And in all that time, he had never slept peacefully.Two years had passed.

A month after that photo, his wife left. Three months later, Sam was gone. He rubbed his temples, feeling his pulse thrum beneath his skin. An old photograph lay on the desk – himself, his wife, and their daughter, Sam. The photo was taken in summer, by a lake. All three of them smiling. The photographer – his partner, Marlow.

Sometimes Alex felt that everything in his life had stopped that day – like a clock frozen at a single moment.

3:16.He glanced at the wall clock.

Alex rose and approached the window. Under the streetlight stood a cat – wet, black, motionless. It seemed to be staring straight at him.The room dimmed as the lamp on the nightstand flickered once and died. The rain intensified. Somewhere in the distance a train howled, then the sound cut off, as if someone had turned it off.

He sighed, rubbed his face, and was about to lie down when the phone rang.

Exactly at 3:17.

Alex slowly lifted the receiver.The sound sliced through his nerves like a blade scraping glass.

«…You couldn’t save me,» the voice said.

Hoarse, weary, with a slight tremor at the end of the phrase. He froze. The voice was his own.

«Who is this?» he asked, his mouth dry.

No answer – only a faint crackle on the line, as if someone were quietly breathing through the silence. Then a click – and silence.

It had happened the first time two weeks ago. Then again, three days later. And always at the same time, always the same phrase. He set the phone down and paced the room. His fingers trembled.

«You couldn’t save me.»

He heard himself. His own breathing, intonations, pauses. He checked the phone – the number was unregistered. The signal source was impossible to trace. He figured it might be a prank – maybe one of his old colleagues. But when he recorded the call and played it back…

It was him.

No, not his Sam, but in the report, the names kept getting mixed up, in writing and speech alike. As if memory itself was playing a cruel joke on him. He grabbed the folder from the desk – the Wilshire Street fire case. Three dead. Among them, a girl of about ten. Sam.

The mirror. He flipped through the photos – burnt house, melted windows, a charred mirror in the corner of the bedroom.

But when Alex zoomed in on the image on the laptop screen, he saw the photographer holding the camera… with the other hand. And his eyes glowed a ghostly white.In one photo – he saw the reflection of the photographer.

He tried to convince himself it was just an artifact. But the inner voice – the one that always knew when a person was lying – whispered: no. He blinked, leaned back in his chair. «Glitch. Light. Reflection.»

A crack. A soft tapping sounded in the apartment. As if someone ran a fingernail along a mirrored surface. Alex turned. On the wall, where an old mirror hung in a darkened frame, a barely visible line stretched across the glass.

But the reflection didn’t move in sync immediately. One-second delay. Two. He stepped closer. The light from the window lamp fell directly on the reflection. He saw himself – hair disheveled, eyes tired.

He raised his hand – and the reflection raised it later.

And then it smiled.

He grabbed his pistol, checked the safety, scanned the room – no one.Alex jerked back. The tapping at the window, thunder, the cat’s scream from below – all merged into a single, deafening sound.

And then he realized – the phone was ringing again.

3:17.

«The loop has begun.«He approached slowly, lifting the receiver. «Who is this?» Silence. And then a faint whisper – barely audible but unmistakable:

The line went dead.

His own breathing. Not from his chest – from the mirror.Alex stood frozen, until he heard… himself.

3:18.He turned slowly. In the reflection, he was holding the receiver, but the mirror showed a different time.

And the last words: «The loop has begun.«He didn’t sleep at all until morning. When dawn came, the city looked just as weary as he felt. People hurried, faces hidden beneath umbrellas. Alex sat by the window, drinking cold coffee, writing down everything he remembered. Three calls. The same voice.

He didn’t know what it meant. But deep down, he felt:

something had already happened, and time had not yet caught up with him.

Chapter 2. The Old Case

Gray dawn filtered into the room through the blinds, slicing the desk with streaks of cold light. Alex sat in the chair, still fully dressed. His jacket still smelled of rain and cigarette ash.

The clock read 6:42. He hadn’t slept for two days straight.

The phone vibrated on the desk with a short, almost guilty buzz. A message:

«He’s dead. Morgue on Jefferson Street. Come.»

No signature. But he knew who it was from.

His fingers trembled.

The name surfaced immediately – Eli Monroy. Young, daring, with eyes that held more confidence than the entire department combined.

Three years ago he had disappeared while they were investigating the church case in the industrial zone – «Seraphim Loop.»

Alex had made a mistake back then.

A mistake that had cost a man his life, his career – meaning itself.

He stood up, lit the stove, poured water into the kettle – but didn’t turn on the gas.

Everything felt unnecessary, redundant. Even the light. Even breathing.

The number on the phone screen blinked—3:17.

At that exact time, according to the doctor, Eli had died.

At that same hour three years ago, Alex had stood in the church basement, staring at the symbol – a loop of rope woven into a golden ring.

And now, for some reason, he was certain: it was no coincidence.

The wind slammed against the window, as if someone outside was trying to get in.

Alex stepped closer and looked out. On the street, right across the building, sat a gray car – an old Chevy Impala. Empty. But he could clearly see the glass trembling, as if someone inside was breathing too rapidly.

He glanced at the message again.

«He’s dead. Morgue on Jefferson Street. Come.»

And for some reason, he said aloud:

– Yes. I’m coming.

He threw on his coat, tucked an old police badge into his pocket – long unnecessary, but still heavy, like guilt that couldn’t be shaken off.

Outside the building, the air was thick and damp. The world seemed frozen in anticipation.

Alex’s footsteps echoed sharply against the concrete, as if someone were walking beside him.

The morgue on Jefferson Street greeted him with the smell of formaldehyde and the hollow echo of footsteps on the tile.

Behind the glass door, a steady, dim light burned – like a dawn trapped between worlds.

Behind the desk in the reception area sat Michael Grant – his former partner.

A weary face, gray streaking through the temples.

Once, they had pulled people from the dirt together; now, they pulled each other from memories.

– You’re fast, – Michael didn’t look up. – Didn’t think you’d come at all.

– You wrote briefly. I thought it was worth it.

– It’s worth it, – he replied dryly, handing Alex a disposable gown. – Come on, see for yourself.

The door to the refrigerated storage creaked open with a metallic groan.

Cold hit him in the face.

Alex felt a shiver run beneath his coat.

On the second table, under a gray sheet, he lay.

Eli Monroy.

The same as ever – only pale, as if not blood had been drained from him, but time itself.

Michael slowly lifted the edge of the sheet.

– Found him this morning near the cliff. Documents were on him.

– Three years, – Alex said quietly. – Three years he’s been gone.

– And all that time… nobody saw him. No traces, no body.

Michael paused, then added: – Death occurred at night. At 3:17.

Alex tensed.

– Are you sure?

– Yes. The doctor noted the exact time by body temperature. The strange part is something else.

He carefully rolled up the corpse’s sleeve.

On Eli’s wrist was a thin scar in the shape of a loop woven into a circle.

The skin around it – burned from the inside.

Alex was silent.

His throat felt dry.

– What is this? – he asked.

– You should tell me, – Michael replied. – You were there. Back then. In the church.

– Back then, I thought it was just a cult, – Alex whispered. – Rituals, symbols… But now?

He leaned closer.

For a moment, it seemed to him that Eli’s fingers twitched.

But when he blinked – they were still.

– Do you see it? – Michael asked.

– No. – Alex stepped back. – It was just my imagination.

Michael sighed, rubbed his forehead.

– There’s one more thing. At the place where he was found, on a tree – same symbol.

As if someone is continuing that ritual.

Alex nodded slowly.

He remembered that three years ago, on the church wall, the same symbol had been drawn – and beneath it, barely visible under soot:

«The cycle closes.»

Now he stood again before a dead body, and the words rang in his head like a spell.

– The loop closes, – he repeated under his breath.

– What did you say?

– Nothing, – Alex turned away. – I need to see where he was found.

Michael nodded, though fear flickered in his eyes.

– Fine. But be careful. That place… it’s not good.

When they stepped outside, the morning was already bright but offered no warmth.

The sun looked like a dead disk, and in Alex’s head one thought kept pounding:

3:17. The loop closes. And someone is starting the game again.

After the morgue, Alex did not go home.

Home – was where the walls smelled of cold coffee, and the clocks never moved past 3:17.

He turned onto Madison Avenue, toward the old police building. Once, this corridor had known his steps. Now – only echoes.

The archive was in the basement.

It always smelled of dust, dampness, and something else – strange, like wet ash.

The duty officer nodded without asking questions. Old men returning to their dead were a frequent sight here.

The archive smelled of dust, old paper, and rusty staples. Alex sifted through photographs – dim, yellowed, like memories trying to be forgotten. One showed a stairwell bathed in flash light. Another – a body covered with a tarp. And in the window reflection – himself, photographed from behind.

He didn’t remember this photo existing.

«Don’t dig deeper. Time will close itself.»

His heart thumped painfully, sharply. He flipped the photo. On the back – someone else’s handwriting. Thin, even, like in official reports. The inscription read:

Someone switched on the old projector.

He turned – archive empty. But from the dark corridor came a soft click.

– You knew how this would end.

On the wall, frames came alive: blurred figures, a flashlight flash, the staircase… and again – him, young, standing before a child’s body. A voice whispered from the frame:

– «3:17.»

Alex stepped closer – and the image wavered. The face on the screen turned to him. The same gaze, the same eyes. And the lips on the screen whispered:

Alex remained in darkness, a lump in his throat, with the feeling that the archive had just looked back at him.

The light flickered. The projector went out.

He switched on the desk lamp. Light fell in a narrow stripe across the shelves.

The shadows shifted, as if alive.

Case No. 314/22. Disappearance of Eli Monroy.

The original report:

«Blood traces found at the church ruins. No signs of struggle. Cult symbolism. Suspects not found. Case suspended.»

Alex ran his finger along the margins of the report.

He had signed it himself.

He clenched his fist, feeling dust under his nails, like ash.

– Three years, – he muttered. – And I didn’t even try to come back.

Memory returned that night.

The forest. An abandoned chapel. Screams.

And a strange, flickering light inside, like the Northern Lights – but black.

Then it all stopped. His partner was wounded. One of the suspects vanished.

And then – the report, the signature, the dull «case suspended.»

He closed his eyes.

And suddenly… the phone rang.

A low, rattling sound from an old model that shouldn’t even be here.

The device on the wall in the corner – a relic from the nineties, long since unplugged.

But it rang.

Alex approached slowly.

His heart pounded too loudly, as if a spring were rattling inside him.

He lifted the receiver.

– Hello?

Silence.

Only a rustle, like wind running through the wires.

And then – a voice.

The same one that called him at night. Only now it sounded closer.

– You’re late again.

Click.

The line went dead.

Alex stood, staring at the phone as if it were a weapon.

The air in the archive thickened, sticky like resin.

He turned – and saw something on the wall behind the shelves.

A black streak, drawn with something like charcoal.

A loop.

The same symbol. Only fresh.

He turned toward the entrance – nobody there.

The bulb flickered.

The shadows moved again.

Alex swore, grabbed the folder, and stepped outside.

The corridor smelled of burning – though nothing was on fire.

He reached the street.

The city moved on – cars, footsteps, shouts from the streets.

But everything seemed muffled, as if behind glass.

He walked without feeling cold, without feeling time.

Only one thing itched in his mind:

3:17. Eli. The call. The symbol.

And the feeling that someone – or something – was watching him – not from around a corner, but from within time itself.

He returned home late.

The rain still drizzled, tracing fine, trembling ripples across the windows.

The key turned in the lock with a dry click – strange, as if no one was waiting inside, not even the air itself.

The apartment greeted him with silence.

No creak, no sound from the street. Only his own footsteps.

On the table – a cold cup of coffee from the morning.

Next to it – a voice recorder, a stack of old, and an old alarm clock, its hands frozen at 3:17.

He exhaled.

It was beginning to feel like a cruel prank.

But there are no pranks when the dead call from the archive.

Alex sank into his chair and opened his laptop.

He opened the folder labeled «Eli Monroy.»

A photo – young guy, shaggy-haired, with a tattoo on his neck.

The tattoo… a loop.

Back then, he hadn’t thought much of it. Just an infinity symbol, youthful folly.

Now, it looked different.

He opened the autopsy report.

Date of death: October 14. Time—3:17.

Tonight.

He flipped through further.

The doctor noted: the body had been found in an abandoned apartment on the outskirts.

Cause of death – heart failure, no signs of violence.

On the wall – the same charcoal loop.

Alex closed his eyes for a moment.

In his mind’s eye, it flashed: darkness, the phone call, the words – «You couldn’t save me.»

Now – «You’re late again.»

So, someone knows. Or something.

He grabbed his phone, played the recording from the night call.

Noise. Words. Pause.

But at the end – an almost imperceptible sound he hadn’t noticed before.

A click. As if… his own voice inhaled.

He rewound.

Yes.

The voice. With a faint echo, like from an empty room.

His breathing, his rasp.

Alex straightened abruptly.

His heart thundered.

He grabbed the recorder, turned on the microphone, and whispered:

– Who are you?

Silence.

And suddenly – a quiet crack.

The alarm clock on the table trembled.

The hands, frozen at 3:17, twitched and… began to move.

The second hand made one circle, then another, speeding up until it became a blurred line.

Alex recoiled.

The clock stopped.

Now the hands showed 3:18.

The first minute in three years.

He stayed seated, motionless.

His own reflection stared back at him from the window – tired, grey-haired, with darkened eyes.

But the reflection… blinked.

Before he did.

Chapter 3. The Mirror Suicide

The phone rang at dawn.

The number – a work line, though he hadn’t been listed in the department for years.

– Reed, we need you, the voice of Captain Hale sounded weary. – Suicide. Girl. But… you have to see this.

Alex pulled on his coat, grabbed his keys, and stepped outside.

The morning was gray and sticky, as if the city hadn’t yet awoken from a nightmare.

The air carried the scent of damp and iron – the same that had haunted him since the archive.

The apartment was on the sixth floor of a standard high-rise.

The door was ajar. Police tape stretched across the corridor, medics moving quietly, murmured conversations.

– Seventeen years old, Hale said. – Name – Lora Dane. Mother and younger brother found. Recording on a laptop. You need to watch it.

Alex nodded.

The girl’s room looked like a museum of teenage dreams – purple walls, band posters, a full-length mirror opposite the bed.

On the floor – a phone, a torn photograph, and a drop of dried blood.

But the most terrifying thing was the silence.

The kind that lingers after a scream.

On the desk sat a laptop.

Hale pressed play.

The screen came to life.

The girl sat in front of the mirror. Her face pale, eyes swollen from crying.

She whispered something indistinct – a prayer or an apology.

Then – she lifted her gaze.

Behind her – her reflection.

And in that moment, Alex felt goosebumps crawl across his arms.

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