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I even peek out through the peephole once. Nothing.

But when I close my eyes?

I see her.

That shape. That coat. That lipstick. Watching me from across the street, a ghost who didn’t get invited inside.

Meatball shifts on my legs. Lets out a low, sleepy snort.

“I’m being paranoid, right?” I whisper. “Like, definitely not on a government watchlist level, but maybe a WebMD page about stress-induced delusions?”

He lifts one paw and plops it on my arm, sayingyes, you’re crazy, but I live here too, so you need to pull it together.

I let out a shaky breath.

Then another.

And then I say it out loud, for the first time.

“I need to tell him.”

The words fall into the silence, heavy and unforgiving. I press a hand to my stomach. Meatball shifts in my lap, exhales sharply, then settles again, absorbing the tension like only he can.

I don’t even know what I’m waiting for—maybe the right time, maybe the right way. But whatever it is, I can’t wait anymore.

I’m about to grab my phone and call Nick when there’s a softslapat the front door.

Not a knock.

Something sliding through the slot.

I freeze.

Meatball lifts his head and growls. My pulse slams against my ribs.

I set him down, tiptoe to the door, and peek through the peephole.

Nothing.

Not a soul in the hallway. Just a flickering ceiling light and the stale smell of old carpet.

Still, I wait a second longer before unlocking the deadbolt. My fingers shake as I reach down and pick up the envelope lying face down on the floor.

It’s unsealed. Heavy stock. No address. No stamp.

Inside, there’s a single sheet of paper. No greeting. No context. Just one line typed clean across the middle:

I think we should talk. You deserve to know the full story.

Beneath it, a name:

Isla Vale—Edge Magazine

My stomach drops.

I rush to the hall and yank the door open. I scan the corridor.

The elevator remains shut. The stairwell holds its silence. No footsteps echo. No one waits in the shadows.