Intrusion 3 Apr 2026
Then, the worst part: he didn’t enter. He simply slid a single piece of paper under the crack of the door. I watched the white rectangle slide across the moonlight like a tongue.
It didn’t break the window. It didn’t kick the door. That would have been a relief.
I live alone. And my name is not Sarah.
The first was a thief—crude, violent, all adrenaline and shattered glass. He took the television and left a smear of blood on the curtain. The second was a ghost (or so I told myself), a draft that moved pictures on the wall and left faucets dripping.
The third intrusion came at 3:17 AM, not with a crash, but with the soft click of a key that shouldn’t have worked. I lay frozen, listening to the floorboards in the hallway confess their secrets one by one. Creak. Pause. Creak. intrusion 3
I heard him stop outside my bedroom door. Not at the lock. Just… there. The silence that followed was heavier than footsteps. It was the silence of someone reading a sign. Here lies the sleeper.
But the third? The third knew my name.
“You left the back door unlocked again, Sarah.”
When I finally dared to read it, there was no threat. No ransom. Just a single, handwritten line: Then, the worst part: he didn’t enter
This was different from the first two.