Neighbor Warned Her at Dawn. By Noon, Her Badge Was at a Crime Scene-eirian

The first warning came before sunrise.

At 5:02 a.m., the front door shook under the force of someone pounding hard enough to wake the whole house.

Alyssa Morrow sat upright in bed with her heart already racing, the room still black around her except for the blue glow of the alarm clock.

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For one suspended second, she did not know where she was.

Then the pounding came again.

Three strikes, a pause, then two more.

The sound seemed to move through the walls before it reached her body, rattling picture frames, the umbrella stand near the entry, and the small ceramic bowl where she dropped her keys after work.

She had lived in that house for six years, long enough to know every ordinary sound it made.

This was not ordinary.

She pulled on a sweatshirt, stepped into the hallway, and felt the cold floorboards under her bare feet.

The house smelled faintly of old coffee, laundry soap, and the rain that had moved through the neighborhood during the night.

Outside the bedroom window, the maple tree scraped its bare branches against the glass.

By the time she reached the front door, she had already imagined fire, an accident, a stranger bleeding on the porch, and the kind of news no one should hear before dawn.

“Who is it?” she called.

“Alyssa,” a man answered. “It’s Gabriel. Open the door. Please.”

Gabriel Stone lived next door.

That should have made the moment safer, but it made it stranger.

Gabriel had moved into the brick house beside hers a little over a year earlier, and in all that time he had behaved like a man trying to leave no fingerprints on anyone’s life.

He trimmed his lawn, brought in his trash bins, accepted misdelivered packages, and disappeared behind his unlit porch before conversations could become personal.

He had once fixed the hinge on Mrs. Alden’s gate without waiting to be thanked.

He had also never come to Alyssa’s door before dawn.

She slid the chain into place and opened the door only a few inches.

Gabriel stood beneath the porch light in a dark jacket zipped to his throat, his hair damp against his forehead and his face drawn tight with fear he was clearly fighting to control.

He looked over his shoulder before he looked at her.

Not toward a sound.

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