Lena hesitated. Her fingers hovered. Then, unbidden, a name surfaced: Marcus.
Curiosity overriding caution, she typed it into the address bar: www.scex.com .
The figure tilted its head, too far, at a broken angle.
She never spoke of it again. But sometimes, at 2:33 AM, her laptop would wake on its own. And the cursor would blink in an empty text box, waiting for her to remember. Note: The story treats "scex" as a fictional domain. If you intended a different meaning (e.g., a real exchange or organization), please clarify, and I’d be happy to write a new story.
She’d never heard of the domain. A quick search pulled up nothing—no cached pages, no forum threads, no warning labels. It was a digital ghost.
She typed it. Pressed Enter.
Lena’s hands shook. She looked at the figure, now turning slowly—face still hidden. Then she looked at the blinking cursor.
She typed: forget.
The page loaded with impossible speed. No images, no logos, just a single text box in the center of a void-black screen. Above it, words flickered like candlelight: "Enter the name of your deepest regret."
The figure dissolved into static. The knock faded. Her lamp returned to full brightness. The website was gone, replaced by a blank white page with two words:
The screen didn’t change, but the room did. The air thickened. Her desk lamp dimmed. From the laptop speakers came a soft, wet sigh—then a knock. Not from the speakers. From her front door.