2022-12-20-04-03-56.mp4 · Full HD

Elias didn’t see it happen in person. He only found the footage weeks later while clearing out his cloud storage.

On that Tuesday in late December, the world was buried under a heavy, wet snow. At exactly 4:03:56 AM, the motion-sensor light above Elias’s garage flickered to life, casting a harsh, artificial glare across the driveway. 2022-12-20-04-03-56.mp4

At 4:05 AM, she clicks the radio off, tucks it back into her coat, and walks out of the frame toward the street. The motion light stays on for another thirty seconds before clicking off, plunging the driveway back into the pre-dawn blue. Elias didn’t see it happen in person

She dances. Not a frantic dance, but a slow, graceful sway, her boots crunching softly in the fresh powder. She dances for exactly two minutes. At exactly 4:03:56 AM, the motion-sensor light above

She stops right in the center of the driveway, directly under the light. She looks up, not at the camera, but at the sky. For ten seconds, she stands perfectly still as the snow settles on her shoulders and the brim of her hat.

In the video, the frame is mostly static. You can see the rhythmic fall of snowflakes, looking like white static against the dark trees. But at the four-second mark, something moves. A figure—bundled in an oversized wool coat—trudges into the frame. It’s a woman. She isn't scurrying or hiding; she’s walking with a strange, deliberate slowness.

He never found out who she was. But every year on December 20th, Elias wakes up at 4:00 AM, makes a cup of coffee, and sits by the window. He doesn’t expect to see her again, but he likes to think that somewhere out there in the dark, the music is still playing.