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The cold wind whistled through the jagged cracks of the old mansion in Mansoura, a sound like a distant, mourning choir. Dr. Refaat Ismail, a man whose very existence seemed to be a protest against the laws of biology—thin, frail, and perpetually clutching a cigarette—stood before the heavy oak doors. To the world, he was a man of science, a hematologist who believed only in what could be seen under a microscope. But to those who knew the secrets of the "Paranormal," he was a reluctant magnet for the impossible.

The doctor felt a sharp pain in his chest—his "Murphy’s Law" heart acting up again. He realized then that science could not explain the weight of guilt or the persistence of a soul that refused to leave. He wasn't just fighting a specter; he was fighting his own past. The cold wind whistled through the jagged cracks

Explain the by Ahmed Khaled Tawfik?

As the mansion began to dissolve into a swirl of shadows and light, Refaat reached for his notebook. If he couldn't defeat the paranormal with medicine, he would document it with the cold precision of a researcher. He watched as the phantom of Shiraz drifted through a solid wall, her laughter sounding like breaking glass. To the world, he was a man of

เว็บไซต์นี้มีการใช้งานคุกกี้ เพื่อเพิ่มประสิทธิภาพและประสบการณ์ที่ดีในการใช้งานเว็บไซต์ของท่าน ท่านสามารถอ่านรายละเอียดเพิ่มเติมได้ที่ นโยบายความเป็นส่วนตัว  และ  นโยบายคุกกี้