The call came just after midnight, the kind of hour when even the smallest noise feels amplified and wrong. My phone lit up with my sister’s name, and before I could even say hello, she whispered urgently, “Turn off every light. Go to the attic. Don’t tell your husband.” Her voice was trembling in a way I had never heard before—thin, controlled, like she was afraid someone else might be listening. I sat up in bed, my heart pounding, trying to make sense of it. I almost laughed it off, ready to tell her she’d been watching too many late-night horror shows. But something in her tone stopped me cold. Without another word, she hung up.
I lay there in the darkness, staring at the ceiling, debating whether to ignore her or follow her bizarre instructions. My husband slept beside me, completely unaware, breathing steadily. The house felt different somehow—too quiet, too still. After a few minutes, curiosity and unease got the better of me. I slipped out of bed, turned off the hallway light, and made my way toward the attic ladder. Each step creaked louder than usual, echoing through the silence. I hesitated for a moment, hand on the pull cord, questioning my sanity. Then I pulled it down.
The attic air was cold and stale, carrying that dusty smell of old wood and forgotten things. I climbed up slowly, my pulse hammering in my ears. Moonlight filtered faintly through a small window, just enough to make out shapes. I didn’t know what I was looking for—until I remembered the way my sister had emphasized it. I knelt down and pressed my eye against a narrow gap between the floorboards. At first, I saw nothing but darkness. Then, as my eyes adjusted, movement caught my attention. Below me, in the living room, a shadow shifted where there should have been none.
My breath caught as I realized the truth—someone was inside our home. Not my husband. Not me. A figure stood near the hallway, barely visible, as if waiting… watching. My mind raced, trying to process how my sister could have known, why she had called me instead of the police, and what I was supposed to do next. Frozen in the attic, I understood one terrifying thing with absolute clarity: whatever was happening, it had started long before that phone call—and I had just stepped directly into it.