The note behind Door Three was not taped flat.
It had been pressed there in a hurry, one corner folded back, the adhesive peeling from the painted wood like someone had already removed it once and stuck it there again.
My fingers hovered over it.

The other me stood in the kitchen with Mark’s voice still glowing from the phone speaker.
“Did she open it?” he had asked.
“Not yet,” she had answered.
Not I.
She.
That single word did something worse than frighten me. It sorted me. It placed me into a category I had never known existed.
She turned toward the hallway.
For one second, we looked at each other.
Same eyes.
Same clip in our hair.
Same tiny scar above the left eyebrow from when I fell off my bike at eleven.
But her mouth did not tremble. Her shoulders did not rise with panic. She looked at me the way someone looks at a package that arrived earlier than expected.
Then she whispered, “You weren’t supposed to come this far.”
The third door opened without my hand touching it.
Behind it was not another room.
It was our dining room, but stripped down to bones. The table was there, the chairs were there, and the family photo that should have hung in the hallway now lay faceup in the center of the table. My face had been cut out of it with scissors.
Not torn.
Cut.
Clean oval edges.
The air smelled like hot dust from an old lamp, vinegar, and the dry paper scent of file boxes. Somewhere behind the walls, a low electric hum shivered through the floor. My socks dragged across grit, and when I breathed in, the back of my throat tasted metallic.
On the table sat thirteen yellow sticky notes.
Each one had a date.
June 12.
August 3.
October 29.
February 18.
Some were years old.
Beside them was a receipt for $24,600 from a contractor I had never met, paid by Mark from an account I had never seen.
Below the amount, one line had been typed in careful black letters:
STRUCTURAL STABILIZATION — ACCESS POINT A.
Access point.
Not basement repair.
Not sealing.
Access.
A chair scraped behind me.
I turned so sharply my shoulder hit the doorframe, but there was no one in the chair.
Only a cassette recorder.
Old. Gray. Cracked across the plastic window.
The red button was already down.
A voice came through the speaker.
My voice.
“If you find this one, don’t trust the kitchen version.”
The room pressed inward.
The tape clicked, then kept going.
“She remembers what he allows her to remember. You remember what he failed to erase.”
I backed away until my hip hit the table.
On the wall across from me, another door outline appeared beneath the paint. It formed slowly, like moisture bleeding through drywall. First the frame. Then the hinges. Then the brass knob.
The cassette hissed.
“Mark didn’t build the doors. His mother found the first one in 1998.”
The floor seemed to tilt under my feet.
My mother-in-law.
Eleanor.
The woman who folded napkins with surgeon-steady hands. The woman who never raised her voice. The woman who looked through me at Christmas dinner like I had arrived with the wrong coat.
The tape continued.
“She used them to keep the version of her son she wanted.”
A sound came from the kitchen.
The other me was walking closer.
Bare feet on tile.
Slow.
Unhurried.
I grabbed the receipt, the sticky notes, and the family photo. My fingers shook so badly the paper edges sliced a thin line across my thumb.
The cut stung.
Bright.
Real.
I pressed my bleeding thumb to the cassette recorder and whispered, “Which one am I?”
The tape answered with another voice.
Mark’s.
“Subject C retains resistance.”
Subject.
My stomach clenched.
The knob on the new door twisted.
From the other side, Eleanor said, “Claire, step away from the table.”
Her voice was mild. Sunday-dinner mild. Grocery-store mild. The same voice she used when she asked whether I had overcooked the green beans.
The door opened.
She stood there in her beige raincoat, pearl earrings shining softly, one gloved hand resting on the knob. Mark stood behind her.
Not my Mark.
Not exactly.
His hair was parted on the other side. His wedding ring was missing. His eyes moved past me to the papers in my hand, and his jaw tightened.
Eleanor looked at my thumb.
“You’re bleeding on the evidence,” she said.
Not you’re hurt.
Not are you all right.
Evidence.
The other me stepped into the room behind them.
Three versions of my life stood within ten feet of me: the husband who had lied, the mother who had arranged it, and the copy who wore my sweater better than I did.
I did not scream.
My breathing shortened. My fingers closed tighter around the receipt.
“What did you do to me?” I asked.
Eleanor sighed as if I had brought up money at dinner.
“We preserved a marriage.”
Mark flinched, but he didn’t correct her.
The other Claire smiled with my mouth.
“You were always difficult after the miscarriage,” she said.
The room went completely still.
The word struck something buried.
A hospital room.
White sheets.
Mark’s hand pulling away from mine.
Eleanor’s voice outside the curtain saying, “He needs a wife who can move forward.”
I had not remembered that sentence until she said it.
Not because it hadn’t happened.
Because someone had cut it out.
My knees bent once, but I caught the back of the chair.
Eleanor’s face softened into something almost tender.
“That grief was ruining him.”
The electric hum grew louder.
The new door behind Eleanor flickered open wider, and through it I saw flashes of other rooms.
A nursery with no crib.
A kitchen with fire damage.
A bedroom where my side of the closet was empty.
A courthouse hallway.
A hospital chapel.
Lives I had almost lived.
Lives someone had rejected.
Mark stepped forward.
“Claire, give Mom the papers.”
Mom.
Not Eleanor.
Mom.
Like he was eight years old again.
I looked at his hand.
It was steady.
That hurt more than if it had shaken.
The cassette recorder clicked again, though no one touched it.
My voice emerged from the tiny speaker, thinner now, like it had been recorded from far away.
“If Eleanor comes through Door Three, open the family photo.”
Eleanor’s head snapped toward the recorder.
For the first time, the polite mask moved.
Not much.
Just a twitch at the corner of her mouth.
I turned the photo over.
The cardboard backing had been slit open.
Inside was a key.
Small.
Silver.
Wrapped in a strip of paper.
My hands knew what to do before my mind did.
I unfolded the strip.
One sentence was written there in handwriting that was mine, but harder.
“Access Point A locks from both sides.”
Eleanor lunged.
Not a wild move.
A clean one.
Fast enough that her glove brushed my wrist.
I stepped back, slammed the silver key into the brass knob of Door Three, and turned it.
The click was small.
The effect was not.
Every door in the room began to knock.
Not one.
Not two.
Dozens.
Inside the walls. Under the floor. Behind the ceiling. From places a door could not be.
Mark grabbed Eleanor’s arm.
“What is happening?”
She stared at me with open hatred now, and the sight almost steadied me.
No more motherly sighs.
No more napkin folding.
No more careful softness.
Just the woman underneath.
“She found the anchor,” Eleanor said.
The other Claire moved first.
She ran for the kitchen door.
I ran for the table.
There had to be more. More notes. More receipts. More pieces of myself hidden where Eleanor had thought grief would make me too tired to look.
The sticky notes were not dates.
They were failures.
June 12 — refused sedation.
August 3 — remembered chapel.
October 29 — questioned basement.
February 18 — hid key.
I was not the first Claire to reach this room.
I was the first one Eleanor had not managed to reset in time.
A door burst open near the china cabinet.
Wind slammed through the dining room, carrying the scent of snow, smoke, wet leaves, hospital disinfectant, and birthday cake all at once.
For a second, I saw them.
Other Claires.
One with shorter hair and a bruised cheek.
One holding a baby blanket.
One in a black dress with no wedding ring.
One wearing a hospital bracelet.
One older, with gray at her temples, standing straighter than all of us.
The older one looked directly at me.
She lifted one hand and pointed to the cassette recorder.
I understood.
I hit rewind.
Eleanor shouted, “Do not touch that.”
The tape screamed backward.
The room shook.
Mark was at the locked door now, twisting the knob, pulling so hard the tendons in his neck stood out.
“Mom,” he said, “open it.”
Eleanor did not answer him.
She was watching me.
Because she knew.
Whatever she had built depended on one thing: each version of me staying isolated. Confused. Ashamed. Convinced she was the broken one.
The cassette stopped rewinding.
I pressed play.
Static.
Then my own voice filled the room, loud and clear.
“Mark, if you are hearing this, tell your mother what happened on March 6.”
His face drained.
Eleanor went rigid.
The other Claire stopped at the kitchen threshold.
March 6.
A date I did not know.
But Mark did.
The tape continued.
“Tell her why the first Claire opened the door.”
First.
My hand tightened around the recorder.
Mark shook his head.
Eleanor turned on him.
“What did you say on that tape?”
His mouth opened.
No sound came out.
The older Claire beyond the wind smiled once.
Not kindly.
Proudly.
Then the wall behind Mark split open into one final door.
This one was different.
No brass handle.
No paint.
No scratch near the keyhole.
Just a dark wooden frame and a mirror where the door should have been.
In the mirror, I saw the dining room.
Eleanor.
Mark.
The copy.
The scattered notes.
The cut family photo.
And behind me, every version of Claire who had ever been forced out of her own life.
The mirror-door opened inward.
A woman stepped through.
She was me, but not from another choice.
From the beginning.
Her hair was longer. Her eyes were hollowed by years I had not lived. In her arms, she carried a box filled with cassette tapes.
She looked at Eleanor first.
Then at Mark.
Then at the copy.
Finally, at me.
“You’re the one who kept the key,” she said.
The room fell silent except for the ticking clock.
She placed the box on the table.
Each tape had a label.
Claire A.
Claire B.
Claire C.
Claire D.
There were more than fifty.
Eleanor backed away.
The first Claire opened the top tape case and removed a folded document.
Not a note.
A deed.
My name was on it.
Not Mark’s.
Not Eleanor’s.
Mine.
The house had never belonged to him.
The access points had never belonged to her.
They had found the doors inside my inheritance, inside the house my grandmother left me when I was a child. Eleanor had not discovered a miracle. She had stolen a map.
Mark had married the doorway.
Not me.
The copy whispered, “That isn’t true.”
The first Claire turned to her.
“It is. That’s why you can’t leave unless she lets you.”
The copy’s face changed.
For the first time, she looked less like a replacement.
More like a prisoner wearing my skin.
Eleanor recovered before anyone else.
She reached into her coat and pulled out a small black remote.
The first Claire’s eyes flashed.
“Claire, down.”
I dropped.
Eleanor pressed the button.
Every light went out.
The sound that followed was not an explosion.
It was a thousand locks turning at once.
When the emergency light flickered on, red and weak, Door Three stood open.
Beyond it was the basement hallway.
Our real basement hallway.
I could see the stairs. The lemon-cleaner wall. The ticking clock above the landing.
Home.
Or something close enough to use.
Mark saw it too.
He ran.
The copy grabbed his sleeve.
He shoved her away.
She hit the table, and the cassette tapes spilled across the floor like bones.
That was the moment I stopped seeing her as me.
Not because she wasn’t.
Because she was.
Another woman used. Another version trained to smile when he called.
I caught her wrist and pulled her upright.
Her skin was warm.
Real.
Eleanor screamed, “There can only be one.”
The first Claire laughed.
It was a dry sound.
“No. That was only the rule you needed us to believe.”
Mark reached the basement door.
The silver key was still in my hand.
He pulled the knob.
Locked.
He turned back.
For the first time since I had opened the basement door, my husband looked afraid of me.
Not of the rooms.
Not of his mother.
Me.
“Claire,” he said, “please.”
I walked toward him.
Every step sounded solid.
My thumb still bled. My throat still burned. My hands still shook.
But the shaking no longer belonged to fear alone.
I looked at the man who had asked, “Did she open it?” as if I were a defective lock.
Then I looked at Eleanor, clutching her useless remote.
Then at the copy beside me, breathing hard through my mouth.
I put the key into the basement door.
Mark’s eyes lifted.
Hope made him younger for half a second.
I turned the key.
But not toward open.
Toward shut.
The lock clicked deeper.
The hallway vanished.
Mark slapped both palms against the blank wall where escape had been.
Eleanor’s remote cracked in her fist.
The first Claire gathered the tapes.
One by one, the doors stopped knocking.
The room settled.
The air warmed.
The copy touched the black clip in her hair and began to cry without making a sound.
I took the deed from the table and folded it into my pocket.
The first Claire handed me one last cassette.
No label.
Just a piece of yellow tape across the front.
I knew what it was before she said it.
“The original memory,” she told me.
Mark slid down the wall.
Eleanor stood perfectly still.
There was no apology in her face. No collapse. Only calculation searching for another door.
She would not find one.
The first Claire looked at me.
“You decide what survives now.”
I pressed the cassette against my chest.
Behind us, the copy Claire reached for my hand.
I took it.
Together, we walked past Mark, past Eleanor, past the table where my face had been cut out of the family photo.
At the far wall, a new door appeared.
This one had no note.
No warning.
No handwriting from my husband.
Only a small brass plate with my full name engraved into it.
Claire Whitaker.
I opened it.
Morning light poured through.
Not basement light.
Not duplicate kitchen light.
Real sunlight.
The front porch smelled of rain and wet lilacs. A trash truck groaned two streets over. Somewhere, a neighbor’s dog barked at nothing important.
I stepped outside with the deed, the tape, and the other Claire beside me.
Behind us, inside the house, Mark shouted my name once.
The door closed before he could finish it.
This time, I did not turn back.