The Man Who Stopped Looking Back
Marvin kept a rear-view mirror on his desk. It wasn't from a car. It was a small, round mirror he'd found years ago, propped against a stack of books like a tiny window into nowhere. Whenever Marvin felt uncertain, he would stare into it, not at his own reflection, but through it, as if the glass could show him everything he'd already lost. And lately, Marvin stared at it constantly. The past had become his favorite room. He visited it at 3 a.m., when sleep wouldn't come. He visited it during lunch, chewing slowly while replaying conversations he should have handled differently. He visited it in the shower, wondering what would have happened if he'd taken that job, asked out that woman, moved to that city. His sister called it "Marvin's museum of ghosts." He didn't argue. One Thursday evening, Marvin walked to the corner café he'd been going to for eleven years. Same table. Same coffee. Same view of the same street. But when he sat down, a youn...