My husband said goodnight after p0isoning my son and me with a plate of chicken in green sauce, picked up his phone, and whispered, “It’s done… soon you’ll both be gone.” And I, lying on the floor, didn’t even dare to breathe.
The doorknob turned again, slower this time.
Then I heard it.
Two sets of footsteps moving through the house.
My son, Noah, pressed himself tighter against me on the bathroom floor, his forehead damp with sweat, his breathing shallow and uneven. I still had 911 on the line, the phone clutched so tightly in my hand that my fingers had gone numb.
“They’re on their way,” the operator whispered calmly. “Do not open that door under any circumstances.”
My husband came in first.
I recognized Daniel Carter instantly—not by sight, but by the rhythm of his footsteps. Quick. Controlled. The same confident stride he used whenever he believed he was in charge of a situation.
The woman with him wore heels.
Thin heels.
Each click against the hardwood floor echoed through the house like a countdown.
“They’re not here,” she said nervously.
A suitcase hit the floor.
“What do you mean they’re not here?” Daniel snapped.
Cabinets opened.
Drawers slammed.
I heard him moving through the kitchen, then the living room.
Then his footsteps changed direction.
Straight toward the hallway.
Toward us.
Noah’s fingers dug into my wrist.
I stroked his hair, trying to calm him even though my own hands were shaking uncontrollably.
The bathroom handle jerked violently.
“Rachel,” Daniel called.
The fake tenderness he normally used was gone.
“Open the door.”
I said nothing.
The handle rattled harder.
“I know you’re in there.”
The woman spoke again.
This time her voice trembled.
“Daniel, maybe we should go.”
“Be quiet.”
His palm slammed against the door…
My husband said goodnight after p0isoning my son and me with a plate of chicken in green sauce, picked up his phone, and whispered, “It’s done… soon you’ll both be gone.” And I, lying on the floor, didn’t even dare to breathe. 0