I Checked Our Security Camera for a Missing Key — The Face Standing in the Circle Was Mine-QuynhTranJP

The hallway light died so fast it felt slapped out.

For one second the only glow came from my phone screen, a cold blue square shaking in my hand while the doorknob gave one slow turn from the other side. The brass clicked. The static from the app whispered against my thumb. Downstairs, something brushed the living room rug. Then my mother spoke through the wood in the same voice she used to remind me to take chicken out of the freezer.

“Open the door, Daniel. You’re making this harder.”

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The window over my desk had been painted shut three summers in a row, but the old frame still lifted if I shoved it high enough with both palms. Dry paint cracked under my fingers. Night air rushed in, cold and wet with the smell of mulch from the flowerbed below. When the knob turned again, I got one knee onto the sill, slid onto the garage roof, and dropped the last six feet into the side yard hard enough to send a hot sting up both ankles.

The house behind me looked exactly the way it always had from outside. Beige siding. Porch light off. Dad’s truck in the driveway, my mother’s classroom tote on the passenger seat, the wind chime Ava bought at a county fair barely moving. Inside that shell, somebody with my face had just turned around in the dark.

My truck sat at the curb under the sycamore. I locked the doors, bent over the steering wheel, and sucked cold air through my teeth while my phone kept playing the living room feed. The app timestamp still read 2:47 a.m. The circle had broken now. My father was gone from frame. Ava stood near the sofa, arms wrapped around herself. My mother remained in the center, looking toward the staircase. Then she tilted her head and stared straight into the lens again.

Every decent memory I had of that woman arrived all at once and made the inside of my chest tighten harder. Her handwriting on my lunch bags in third grade. The way she cut my grilled cheese into four perfect squares even when I was too old for it. The winter she stayed up with me on the couch during a stomach virus, pressing a cool washcloth to the back of my neck while the furnace clicked and the kitchen clock marched toward dawn. Dad teaching me to throw a curveball in the side yard until the webbing of my glove smelled like leather and dust. Ava at nine years old, gap-toothed and laughing, stealing fries off my plate and wiping ketchup on my sleeve so I’d chase her through the kitchen.

The house had always run on routines. Marker labels on leftovers. Shoes lined in pairs. Birthdays at six, cake at seven, dishes by eight-thirty. The only strange thing, if I was honest, was how much my mother hated cameras inside bedrooms and how badly she reacted when clocks drifted out of sync. Every March 3, she changed every battery in the house. Every March 3, she vacuumed the living room twice. Every March 3, she made us go to bed early and told us not to come downstairs if we heard voices.

When I was seventeen, I woke once at 2:48 a.m. with the taste of metal in my mouth and my father sitting on the edge of my bed. He had one hand on my shoulder and tears on his face. By breakfast, he acted like it had never happened. Mom slid pancakes onto my plate, asked if I wanted orange juice, and smiled too quickly when I said I didn’t remember dreaming.

At the time, I let that pass.

Sitting in my truck with my shirt stuck damp to my back, I replayed March 3 again. Four people in the circle. Mom. Dad. Ava. Me. Not this week. Not tonight. Six weeks earlier. Same rug. Same time. Same slight bend in the picture where the air seemed wrong. On the final frame before the file ended, my mother stepped closer to me—closer to that other me—and touched two fingers to the scar over my eyebrow like she was checking whether a label had been applied straight.

A soft knock hit the passenger window.

I nearly drove through my own mailbox.

Ava stood outside in flannel pants and a hoodie, hair shoved into a knot, shoulders pulled tight against the cold. She held up both hands first so I could see they were empty. Then she lifted something small and silver between two fingers.

My spare key.

I cracked the window an inch.

“If Mom sees me out here, she’ll lock me in again,” she whispered.

The word again sat between us like another person.

I unlocked the door. She slid in fast and shut it without slamming. Her skin looked gray under the dashboard light. Mascara had dried in a faint shadow under one eye.

“You need to leave,” she said.

“Who’s in my house?”

Ava swallowed, looked at the dark windshield, and set the spare key in my palm. It was warm from her hand.

“You are,” she said. “Just not the one I’ve been living with.”

The heater clicked on. Neither of us touched it.

From inside her sweatshirt she pulled a thin banker’s box key and a folded index card. The card had Dad’s square handwriting on it.

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