The video skipped. The forest was gone. Now it showed his own bedroom—from the perspective of the webcam he’d covered with tape. But the tape was gone in the footage. And on his screen, inside the film, he saw himself watching the film. An infinite regression of Alexes, each one older, sadder, holding a cup of cold coffee.
His hand trembled over the keyboard. This was nonsense. A virus. Some art-school prank. He reached for the power strip—but his fingers stopped. Because the film had unpaused. The magicians were now looking directly at him. Through the screen. Their blurred faces had resolved into three familiar strangers: the old woman from the bus stop who’d smiled at him last Tuesday, the cab driver who’d said “Careful, son” two weeks ago, and a child he didn’t recognize—but who was crying his mother’s maiden name: “Makarova.”
The Hindi-Russian audio synced perfectly: “Press Y. Forget. Or keep watching and remember what magic really costs.” Download - Volshebniki.2022.480p.WEB-DL.HIN-RU...
He tried to close the player. It wouldn’t. The cursor typed again: “Accept the deal? Y/N”
He never opened his door that night. But in the morning, the coffee cup by his bed was cold. And on his desktop, a new folder appeared: “Episode 2 – The Price of No.” The video skipped
Alex should have deleted it. Instead, he double-clicked again.
The file was small—barely 700 MB. He’d expected a bootleg fantasy flick, maybe some schlocky Russian Harry Potter rip-off to laugh at before bed. But as the progress bar filled, his screen flickered. Not a glitch—a deliberate pulse, like a heartbeat. The download finished with an abrupt ding , and a new icon appeared on his desktop: a cracked hourglass. But the tape was gone in the footage
He looked at the file name again: Volshebniki.2022.480p.WEB-DL.HIN-RU… The ellipsis at the end had changed. It now read: …real-time.
The screen went black. Then, grainy 480p footage flickered to life: a winter forest at twilight. Three figures in tattered coats stood around a stone table. Their faces were blurred—not by poor resolution, but deliberately, as if reality itself couldn't decide who they were. One spoke in Hindi-dubbed Russian, the audio track switching languages mid-sentence: “Har jaadu ki keemat hoti hai… (Every magic has a price…)”
Then the film paused. A cursor—not his—moved across the screen. It typed into a white text box that had appeared at the bottom: “Alex, age 31. Last wish: to forget the accident.”