Then—
Metal scraping.
Lockpicking.
“He’s breaking in,” I whispered into my phone as the call finally connected.
The lock cracked.
Wood splintered.
Then the man spoke again.
This time, cold.
“Open the door, Claire.”
My blood froze.
He knew my name.
Then—
Sirens.
Loud.
Close.
The man cursed and ran.
Moments later, chaos exploded downstairs.
“POLICE! DON’T MOVE!”
A crash. Shouting. Footsteps.
I dropped the lamp and ran to the closet.
“Mia, it’s me.”
She flew into my arms, shaking.
We were alive.
But it didn’t feel over.
Not even close.
The police arrested the intruder—Leonard Pike. Criminal record. Tools. Gloves. Instructions on his phone.
Instructions.
From someone.
From my husband.
Officer Reynolds sat across from me, his voice careful.
“We found messages. Detailed entry plans. Camera blind spots. Timing. Payment after completion.”
I felt like I was drowning.
“You think my husband hired him?”
“We’re investigating that possibility.”
Possibility.
But we both knew.
Then came the detail that shattered everything.
An officer had seen a man across the street during the arrest.
Watching.
Holding a phone.
Gone before they could reach him.
I didn’t hesitate.
“Ethan,” I said.
He had never left.
He had stayed to watch.
We left the house that afternoon.
I told my friend Tessa the truth in one sentence:
“My husband tried to make me disappear.”
That night, my phone buzzed.
Unknown number.
I answered.
Breathing.
Slow. Familiar.
Then his voice.
“You were supposed to trust me.”
Ice ran through my veins.
“Ethan… what did you do?”
“I did what I had to,” he said calmly. “You forced this.”
“You locked us in. You sent someone to hurt us!”
A soft chuckle.
“You don’t understand the bigger picture.”
“You’re insane.”
“No,” he said. “I’m prepared.”
Silence.
Then—
“You should leave, Claire. Take Mia. Disappear.”
“Or what?”
A pause.
Then softly:
“Things will get worse.”
The line went dead.
Minutes later, a text arrived:
You won’t be comfortable for long.
Then another:
You made me angry.
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