Katrina Colt had grown up in Marlow Bay, left for the city, then returned to teach investigative journalism at the local college. She was the sort of reporter who believed in documents and provenance, who trusted timestamps more than rumors. Daisy Raex was an outsider by temperament and a fixture by choice: a visual artist whose installations wove screens and sound into immersive experiences. Where Katrina pursued cause and effect, Daisy chased the sensory and the uncanny. Together they became the town’s unlikely sleuths. At first swallowed240109 seemed like a harmless curiosity: a compressed folder, 24 KB on the surface, with a single image and a short text file. Those who opened it reported a subtle shift—old voicemail clips resurfaced in odd order, a photo of a seaside pier taken years before showed a figure that no one could place, and snippets of local radio broadcasts appeared inside private message threads. Phones didn’t crash; they rewrote a little of what their owners knew.