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Chapter 14 - The Shape of the Debt

The woman survived.

I didn't need confirmation.

The knowledge settled into me the way truth does — heavy, quiet, irreversible.

But survival doesn't mean clean endings.

I learned that three hours later, standing in line at a pharmacy, staring at a rack of cough syrup I didn't need.

The memory hit without warning.

Not a vision.

A reaction.

My left arm went numb.

Not painful.

Disconnected.

I dropped the bottle.

It shattered at my feet.

Glass scattered.

Someone swore.

Someone laughed awkwardly.

"You okay?" the cashier asked.

I nodded too fast. "Yeah. Just clumsy."

But my fingers wouldn't close properly.

The mirror-version of me appeared faintly in the reflection of the freezer door.

"That's not yours," she said.

"I know," I whispered.

The numbness faded slowly, leaving behind a dull ache that didn't belong to my body.

A residue.

A payment.

I paid and left, heart pounding.

Outside, the world felt sharper — sounds too crisp, colors too defined, like my senses had been turned up a notch without my consent.

That night, the memories came differently.

Not as images.

As echoes in my body.

A tightness in my chest that wasn't fear.

A limp that vanished after a few steps.

A headache that pulsed in someone else's rhythm.

I lay on my bed staring at the ceiling, counting breaths.

"So this is how it works," I murmured.

The mirror-version of me sat on the edge of the reflection.

"You altered an outcome," she said. "The system doesn't like loose ends."

"I didn't steal anything," I said. "I just… redirected it."

She tilted her head. "Nothing is free. Especially survival."

My phone buzzed.

Unknown Number.

I didn't rush to answer anymore.

This is the cost, isn't it? I typed.

I save someone, and I carry the damage.

The reply came slower than usual.

> Damage is not the correct term.

Debt is.

My jaw tightened.

So I'm paying for people Tomorrow erased?

> You are balancing outcomes.

"That's not balance," I whispered aloud. "That's punishment."

The air stirred — not sharply, but enough to acknowledge me.

> Balance is indifferent to comfort.

I closed my eyes.

Images bled in around the edges of my thoughts — not full memories, just impressions.

A man who never made it to the hospital.

A woman who waited for a call that never came.

A child who grew up without knowing why something always felt missing.

I felt them all.

Not fully.

Enough.

My hands curled into the sheets.

"How much can I carry?" I asked quietly.

The mirror-version of me didn't answer.

My phone buzzed again.

> That depends on how much you are willing to owe.

Sleep finally came near dawn.

It was restless and shallow, filled with unfamiliar sensations — running without knowing why, falling without hitting the ground, pain that stopped just short of injury.

When I woke, my body felt… altered.

Not broken.

Adjusted.

I stood in front of the bathroom mirror.

My reflection looked the same.

But my eyes—

They were sharper.

Heavier.

Like someone who had started keeping score.

The mirror-version of me studied me.

"You're changing," she said.

"I don't feel stronger," I replied.

She shook her head.

"That's not what this kind of change feels like."

I leaned closer to the glass.

"Then what does it feel like?"

She met my gaze.

"It feels like responsibility."

My phone vibrated one last time.

> Debts accumulate.

Choose carefully what you save.

I stared at the message.

Then at my reflection.

And for the first time since all of this began, the question wasn't whether I could survive.

It was how much of myself I was willing to spend.

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