The old lamp flickered, casting dancing shadows across the walls of Martín's study. The room was a sanctuary, a place where he could retreat from the world and lose himself in books that explored the mysteries of existence. Tonight, however, the space felt different—heavy, oppressive, as if the very air conspired to weigh him down.
Martín sat at his desk, his gaze fixed on the large, antique mirror that hung on the opposite wall. It was a family heirloom, a relic passed down through generations, its once-bright surface now clouded with age. He had always found comfort in the familiar, distorted reflection it offered, but tonight, something was off.
His own eyes stared back at him, yet there was something unsettling about them—an intensity, a depth that he couldn't place. The reflection seemed almost…alive. As if the glass held not just a mirror image but a consciousness, a presence that watched him as much as he watched it.
Martín shook his head, trying to dispel the thought. It was absurd. He was a man of reason, a professor of philosophy who prided himself on his logical mind. Yet lately, logic had become a fragile thing, slipping through his fingers like sand. His thoughts were no longer his own, twisting and turning in directions that left him disoriented and disturbed.
He reached for his journal, the one place where he could attempt to make sense of the chaos inside him. But as he flipped through the pages, his heart skipped a beat. There were entries he didn't remember writing—paragraphs filled with thoughts that felt alien, foreign. The handwriting was his, but the words…they were not.
What is real? one entry read. What if everything I believe, everything I see, is a lie? A carefully constructed illusion?
Martín's hand trembled as he read on. The words blurred together, forming a web of paranoia and doubt. He closed the journal abruptly, unable to bear the weight of his own thoughts.
Just then, the silence of the room was broken by the soft rustle of paper. Martín looked up, startled, his eyes darting around the room. There, on the floor near the mirror, lay a folded piece of paper. It hadn't been there before, he was certain of that. He hesitated, a cold knot forming in his stomach, before crossing the room to pick it up.
The paper was old, yellowed at the edges, as though it had been there for years, forgotten by time. Unfolding it, Martín saw a single sentence scrawled in a jagged, hurried hand: Your reality is a construct. The truth lies within.
A shiver ran down his spine. He backed away from the mirror, unable to tear his eyes from his reflection. The figure in the glass no longer seemed like him—there was a darkness there, a malevolence that twisted his features into something unrecognizable.
His reflection smiled, a cold, sinister curl of the lips that Martín had not made. He gasped, stumbling back until he hit the wall, his breath coming in shallow, panicked bursts. This was madness—pure, unadulterated madness.
And yet, a voice in the back of his mind whispered that it was not madness at all. It was revelation. The world he knew, the reality he had trusted, was unraveling before his eyes, revealing the cracks in the facade. He could feel it—the boundaries between what was real and what was not were breaking down, leaving him in a liminal space where nothing was certain.
Martín clutched the paper in his hand, its crumpled edges digging into his palm. He had to know the truth, no matter how terrifying it might be. But where would he begin? Who could he trust, when even his own mind seemed to betray him?
His eyes flicked back to the mirror, where his reflection stood still, watching, waiting. The smile had faded, replaced by an expression of cold calculation. Martín swallowed hard, forcing himself to step closer. He reached out, his hand hovering just above the glass.
The surface was cold, and as his fingers brushed against it, a shock of electricity shot through him. He yanked his hand back, staring in disbelief. For a brief moment, the mirror had felt like something more—something alive.
He stared at his reflection, meeting those dark, hollow eyes. And then, slowly, deliberately, his reflection moved. Not to mimic him, but of its own accord.
Martín froze, paralyzed by the realization that whatever was in the mirror was not him. It was something else—something that knew him, that understood his deepest fears and desires, and that now watched him with a predatory intensity.
The figure in the mirror leaned forward, its lips parting as if to speak. But no sound came out. Instead, it raised a hand, pressing it against the glass, palm flat. Martín watched in horror as the glass began to ripple, the surface distorting as though it were liquid.
He stepped back, heart pounding in his chest. The reflection's hand pushed further, the glass stretching and bending, as if it were about to break through. Martín stumbled, his back hitting the desk, his breath ragged.
Then, with a sound like shattering ice, the mirror returned to its original state. The figure in the reflection stood there, its hand still pressed against the glass, a twisted smile playing on its lips.
Martín fell to his knees, the paper slipping from his grasp. His mind raced, a torrent of thoughts and emotions crashing over him. He was losing his grip on reality, that much was clear. But what was real? What could he trust?
As he sat there, trembling, the voice in his mind whispered once more: The truth lies within.
And in that moment, Martín knew that his search for answers had only just begun. The world he had known was gone, replaced by a twisted reflection of reality that would challenge everything he believed.