My brother had been missing for seven years. The family held a funeral, placed a headstone, and learned how to live without him. Last night, the doorbell rang at 2 a.m. When I opened the door, a man stood there—thin, covered in scars. He looked at me and said softly, “You still haven’t changed the lock?” My legs gave out—because that was his voice. And then, the story he told me next made my heart nearly stop…
Seven years ago, my brother Daniel disappeared on a winter night, leaving behind a half-charged phone, a car parked crookedly near the river, and a family that never recovered. The police called it a probable death. After two years of waiting, my parents held a funeral without a body, placed a headstone with his name, and learned the brutal skill of pretending to move on.
I am Emma Walsh, Daniel’s younger sister, and I stayed in the same small house we grew up in. I kept the same locks, the same creaky door, and the same habits. People told me it was unhealthy. I called it loyalty. Last night, at 2 a.m., the doorbell rang.
No one rings doorbells at that hour unless something is terribly wrong. My heart raced as I walked down the hallway, already rehearsing excuses to call the police. Through the peephole, I saw a man—tall but painfully thin, his face lined with scars that looked old and badly healed. His hair was longer, streaked with gray that shouldn’t have been there at his age.
When I opened the door, he studied me for a second, then smiled faintly.
“You still haven’t changed the lock?” he said softly.
My knees buckled. That voice lived in my bones. I grabbed the doorframe to stay upright. No one else knew about the lock Daniel used to complain about when we were kids.
“Daniel?” I whispered.
He nodded, eyes filling but not spilling over. He didn’t step inside. He didn’t hug me. He stood there like a man unsure if he was allowed to exist.
I wanted to scream, to cry, to call my parents, but fear tangled with hope. Seven years don’t just vanish. Seven years leave evidence.
“I’m not supposed to be here,” he said. “But you need to know what happened to me. And why I couldn’t come home.”
Sirens wailed somewhere far away. The night felt too quiet. As he finally crossed the threshold, I realized this wasn’t a miracle. It was the beginning of something far more terrifying—and far more real.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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