My daughter begged to skip swim practice, so I let her stay home while I ran errands. Halfway through checkout, my phone BUZZED with our Ring alert. I tapped the video and my stomach DROPPEDโshe was opening the front door, smiling, and whispering, โCome in, hurry.โ
Behind her, stepping into our house, was a man I donโt recognize. Heโs tall, wearing a dark hoodie with the hood up, and sunglasses even though itโs overcast. I canโt see his face. My heart pounds as I fumble with my credit card, eyes locked on the screen. My daughter pulls him inside quickly, looking around nervously before shutting the door.
I abandon my cart. Groceries spill across the belt, the cashierโs voice fading into background noise. Iโm sprinting toward the car before the second Ring notification even buzzes. The drive home feels like molasses in my veins, every red light a gut punch. I keep glancing at the live video feed, but the cameraโs positioned just outside the door. I canโt see whatโs happening inside.
I call her phone. No answer.
I call again. Voicemail.
I try the landline. Nothing.
I hit the gas harder, speeding through yellow lights with my hands locked on the wheel. Iโm halfway home when another alert pingsโmotion detected in the backyard. I flick to that feed and see them: my daughter and the man, slipping out the back door. Heโs carrying a backpack. Sheโs gripping his wrist tightly.
Sheโs not being dragged. Sheโs leading him.
My brain fights to make sense of it. Is she in danger? Is she helping him? Who the hell is this guy?
I screech into the driveway, barely shifting into park before jumping out. I burst through the front door, shouting her name.
โLily!โ
No response.
I run from room to room. Her phone is on the couch. The TV is still on, paused on a baking show. A half-eaten bag of popcorn spills across the rug. The back door is cracked open, swaying in the breeze.
I sprint outside, calling for her. The woods behind our house are dense, and the trails fork off into several directions. My lungs are on fire, my voice hoarse as I yell her name again and again.
A sound to my leftโbranches snapping.
I bolt toward it, nearly tripping over roots. I glimpse movement ahead. Then I hear her voice.
โMom?!โ
Relief floods me, but it curdles just as fast.
Sheโs alone.
Sheโs standing in a clearing, hugging herself, her face pale and confused. When I reach her, I grab her shoulders.
โWhere is he? Who was that?โ
She stares at me, blinking like sheโs just woken up.
โIโฆ I donโt know.โ
โWhat do you mean you donโt know? You let him in!โ
Her eyes brim with tears. โI thought it was Dad.โ
I freeze.
Her father has been dead for three years.
โLily, sweetheartโฆ you know thatโs not possible.โ
She nods slowly, trembling. โI know. Butโฆ when I opened the door, I saw him. I swear. He looked just like Dad. Same eyes. Same voice. He said he needed my help.โ
My stomach twists. โWhat did he ask you to do?โ
โHe said he left something here. That he needed to get it before someone else found it. He told me not to tell anyone. That it was a secret just for us.โ
โWhat did he take?โ
She looks at the ground. โThe old laptop. From the basement.โ
My blood turns to ice. That laptop hasnโt been touched since her dad passed. He used it for everythingโwork, finances, even his journal. I never could bring myself to throw it out.
โLily, where did he go?โ
She points toward the trail leading to the old quarry, a restricted area sealed off after a landslide last year.
I hesitate only a second before grabbing her hand. โCome on. Weโre going after him.โ
โNo!โ she yanks her arm back. โHe said if I followed, heโd disappear forever.โ
Terror flashes in her eyes, but itโs not fear of the man. Itโs fear of losing him again.
I kneel in front of her, gently holding her face. โSweetie, that wasnโt your father. I donโt know whoโor whatโthat was. But I need to make sure weโre safe.โ
She nods slowly, though doubt still flickers in her eyes.
โI need you to go home,โ I say softly. โLock the doors. Call 911. Tell them everything. Iโll follow the trail.โ
โButโโ
โNo buts. Please. Go.โ
She takes off toward the house, and I run in the opposite direction, toward the quarry.
The air shifts as I near the chain-link fence, a weight pressing against my chest. I climb it anyway, ignoring the signs and landing hard on the other side.
The quarry is eerily silent, wind brushing through the dead trees. I scan the area, my heart thudding louder than my footsteps.
Then I see him.
Standing on the edge of the drop-off, facing away from me. The laptop open in his hands, screen casting a faint glow.
โHey!โ I shout.
He doesnโt turn around.
โPut the laptop down and turn around!โ
He speaks without moving. โShe wasnโt supposed to remember.โ
My skin crawls.
โShe was too young. But the brainโฆ it stores everything. I just needed the trigger.โ
I take a cautious step forward. โWho are you?โ
He finally turns.
And I see why she thought he was her father. The resemblance is uncannyโexcept the eyes. Too bright. Tooโฆ aware.
โMemory is a strange thing,โ he says, tilting his head. โEspecially in children. So easy to shape. So easy to borrow.โ
โBorrow?โ
โShe saw something, once. Something I needed to unlock. Your husband stumbled onto it before I could finish. He documented itโon this.โ He lifts the laptop. โI couldnโt let it disappear.โ
โWhy not just steal it yourself?โ
โI needed her to invite me in. Otherwiseโฆ well, rules are rules.โ
My hands curl into fists. โYou manipulated my daughter.โ
โI gave her hope,โ he says quietly. โAnd she gave me access.โ
He presses something on the laptop, and a low hum begins to build in the air around us. The ground vibrates beneath my feet.
โNo,โ I say, stepping forward. โI donโt care what youโre afterโshut it down. Right now.โ
He looks at me, almost regretfully. โItโs already begun.โ
With a sudden screech, the earth cracks behind him. A blinding light shoots upward, splitting the sky in a jagged beam. I shield my eyes, heart slamming against my ribs.
And then it stops.
Silence.
When I lower my arm, heโs gone.
The laptop lies at the edge, screen shattered, keys melted.
I stumble forward and kick it over the cliff. It tumbles into the darkness below.
The sky is still again. The hum is gone.
But something lingers in the air, a tension I canโt shake.
I hurry back home, breath shallow, legs trembling.
Lily is waiting at the door, tears streaking her cheeks. She throws herself into my arms.
โDid heโฆ did he leave?โ
I nod, holding her close. โHeโs gone.โ
โBut heโs not really Dad, is he?โ
โNo,โ I whisper. โHe never was.โ
We sit in silence for a long time.
That night, I lock every door and window. I check them twice. I make Lily sleep in my bed, where I can hear her breathe.
But I canโt sleep.
At 2:17 a.m., the Ring camera buzzes again.
I stare at the screen, throat dry.
Nothing but darkness.
Then, slowly, a shape steps into view.
A child.
A little girl.
She leans toward the camera, eyes wide, and whispersโ
โCan I come in?โ
I bolt upright, heart pounding. I rush to the window, but the yard is empty.
The camera shows nothing now.
No girl.
No voice.
Just stillness.
The next morning, I delete the Ring app.
I drive Lily to her grandmotherโs house three states away and promise her weโll stay as long as we need.
But even there, even surrounded by the warmth of family and the buzz of normalcy, I feel it.
Something followed us.
It doesnโt knock. It doesnโt speak.
But it waits.
And I knowโsome doors, once opened, donโt close again.




