I Followed The Shadow In My House — And Found Out It Had Been Studying Me For Weeks-thuyhien

The knob stayed half-turned for one long second, then eased back into place with a soft click.

Not Owen’s door. Mine.

The lamp beside the stairs threw a weak amber glow across the wall, enough to catch the tremor in the bat as my grip shifted. The air smelled like damp wood, old paint, and the faint metallic bite I’d noticed that morning in the den. Upstairs, one board gave a slow sigh, then another.

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“Mom?” Owen’s voice came from behind me, small and papery.

I didn’t look back. “Closet,” I said. “Now.”

He moved. I heard the soft slap of his socks, the closet door in the hall, the scrape of the laundry basket I’d told him to hide behind during storms. The house went still again. Not empty-still. Listening-still.

My thumb pressed 911.

The operator answered on the second ring.

“There’s someone in my house,” I said. “Second floor. My son is here.”

She asked for the address. I gave it. She asked if I could leave.

“No,” I said, watching the dark line under my bedroom door. “Not without passing him.”

A pause. Keyboard tapping. Her voice lowered. “Units are on the way. Stay where you are. Keep your son hidden. Do not go upstairs unless you have no choice.”

Too late for that.

A shape moved at the top landing. Tall. Careful. He crossed in front of the lamp glow from my bedroom and stopped where the hallway turned toward Owen’s room.

Then he spoke in a voice barely louder than breath.

“Don’t scream. You’ll scare him.”

My knees unlocked so fast the banister caught my free hand.

He sounded almost like my husband.

Not perfectly. Not enough to fool me in daylight. But there, in the dark, with the soft flattening of certain words and that calm, low register Thomas used when Owen woke from nightmares, it hit the center of my chest like a fist.

Thomas had been dead fourteen months.

The man stepped forward one pace. He wore my black cardigan. One sleeve still turned halfway inside out.

The operator was still speaking through the phone. I heard her as if she were in another house entirely.

“Ma’am? Ma’am, can you describe him?”

“He’s wearing my clothes,” I whispered.

The shadow tilted his head. A gesture so familiar my stomach folded. Thomas used to do that when he was trying to understand a bill, a recipe, a toy half-assembled on Christmas Eve. This man had practiced it. Practiced me. Practiced him.

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