The year was 2010. The air in Kraków, Poland, hung with that unique blend of history and everyday bustle. My mother and I found ourselves at Płaszów station, a place usually associated with the mundane routine of travel. But what unfolded that day was anything but mundane. It was an experience that has etched itself into my memory, a chilling moment that still makes me question the fabric of reality itself.
We were standing there, waiting, when the first oddity occurred. The automatic doors to the station entrance, which had been perfectly still, suddenly slid open. There was no one approaching, no one leaving, just an empty space beyond. My mother and I exchanged a glance, a silent acknowledgment of the strangeness. It was a minor anomaly, easily dismissed as a technical hiccup, but in retrospect, it felt like the prelude to something far more profound.
Then he appeared.
He was unlike anyone I had ever seen. His face was pale, almost unnaturally so, and framed by a shock of bright red hair. But it was his resemblance to Michael Jackson that truly struck me. Not a healthy, vibrant Michael Jackson, but a spectral, almost otherworldly version. His eyes seemed to hold an ancient weariness, a depth that was unsettling. He moved with a peculiar stiffness, as if his limbs weren't quite accustomed to the human form. I found myself staring, captivated and disturbed in equal measure. My mother, too, seemed to sense the strangeness, her gaze fixed on him.
He walked past us, his presence almost vibrating with an unsettling energy, and then, just as quickly as he had appeared, he was gone. He didn't turn a corner, he didn't enter a shop – he simply vanished. One moment he was there, the next, the space he occupied was empty. It was as if he had dissolved into the very air.
My mind reeled. Had I imagined it? Had the light played tricks on my eyes? My mother, however, confirmed my vision. We both saw him. We both saw him disappear. The experience left us disoriented, a quiet buzz of unease settling between us.
But the "glitch" wasn't over.
Moments later, another man appeared. And he looked identical to the first. The same pale face, the same distinctive features, the same unsettling aura. Except for one crucial difference: he was completely bald. It was as if the first man had shed his hair, or perhaps, as if a different iteration of the same being had manifested. He, too, moved with that same unnatural stiffness, that same unsettling presence.
Again, the fleeting glimpse, the unsettling sensation, and then, he too vanished.
The experience at Płaszów station remains a vivid, perplexing memory. Was it a coincidence of extraordinary doppelgängers? A trick of the mind influenced by fatigue or suggestion? Or did we, for a brief, bewildering moment, witness a genuine tear in the fabric of our reality?
I'm not sure I'll ever have a definitive answer. But what I do know is that the encounter left me with an unshakeable feeling. The men I saw that day… they didn't feel entirely human. There was an alien quality to them, a sense that they were merely passing through, briefly touching our world before retreating back to wherever they came from.
Sometimes, late at night, I still think about those doors opening on their own, the pale, red-haired man who looked like a ghost of a pop icon, and his bald counterpart. It's a reminder that beneath the predictable surface of our everyday lives, there might be layers of existence we can barely comprehend, waiting to reveal themselves in fleeting, unsettling glimpses.