Frame by frame, the tape rewound itself into stories. Part 1 and 2 had been small revelations: a summer picnic with faces she almost remembered, a man who hummed tunelessly while fixing a clock. The footage was a collage of the ordinary stitched with oddities — a child feeding pigeons who didn't blink, a neighbor folding laundry that folded itself just a hair too neat. Part 3 promised something that made the house feel thinner, like weathered paper ready to tear.