I scrubbed my hands three separate times before reaching for the flash drive again. It rested on the table like misplaced evidence — something tied to an event I couldn’t fully recall but instinctively feared. For a few minutes, I considered tossing it in the trash and reclaiming my peace of mind. But curiosity has a quiet persistence. Eventually, it outweighed caution.
The device contained a single folder, boldly labeled: “OPEN ME.” It felt less like a filename and more like a challenge. After a long pause, I clicked. Inside was one photograph — nothing graphic, nothing obviously threatening — yet deeply unsettling. A man leaned close to the lens, smiling in a way that felt deliberate, almost intimate. His expression suggested awareness, as if he anticipated the exact moment I would find myself staring back at him.
There was no explanation attached. No metadata that offered clarity. No identifying clues. The image itself held no overt violence, but its ambiguity was precisely what made it disturbing. It felt intentional, like a communication crafted for an audience of one. I searched for context, retraced my steps, questioned my memory — but answers never surfaced.
To this day, I don’t know who he was or how the flash drive ended up hidden in my food packaging. What lingers isn’t fear in the cinematic sense — it’s uncertainty. Since that afternoon, even the most ordinary sealed box carries a faint tension. Not paranoia, exactly. Just the quiet awareness that sometimes the most ordinary objects can hold questions you’re not prepared to ask — or answer.