I knelt. The reflection in the water wasn't mine.
I opened it.
I was already inside it.
My apartment went cold. Not metaphorically. The little ceramic heater by my desk clicked off. The LED strip under my cabinets flickered once, then settled into a dim, jaundiced yellow. I closed the laptop. Opened it. The email was gone. Searching for- spiraling spirit in-
I stopped at the mill's broken loading dock. The river behind it doesn't run straight—it twists into a corkscrew bend the old-timers call the Devil's Noose. And there, half-submerged in the moonlit water, I saw it: a spiral etched into a flat stone, not carved but grown , like the pattern on a nautilus shell. Water moved through it, but the water didn't flow. It circled. Slowly. Deliberately. Breathing. I knelt
It was me, but older. More tired. A version of myself who had never stopped searching. He—I—wore a coat I didn't own and held a compass whose needle spun in perfect, useless circles. He looked up from the reflection and mouthed three words: You found it. I was already inside it