My neighbor called at one in the morning and told me not to open the door. Then i saw my son’s face at the peephole.

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At one o’clock in the morning, in my quiet little suburb outside Columbus, Ohio, the phone rang. I woke up with a start. The house was drowned in silence, the kind of deep, American Midwest stillness where even the traffic on the distant interstate feels like a faraway memory.

But inside my chest, my heart was pounding like a war drum.

That was when I realized what had dragged me out of sleep.

The phone.

It rang with a sharp, piercing insistence, tearing through the silence of 1 a.m.

Stumbling, I got out of bed and grabbed the phone from the nightstand.

The blue light of the screen hurt my eyes.

A familiar name appeared. Mrs.

Miller.

She was my widowed neighbor, the elderly lady who lived alone in the small white house directly across the street, the one with the faded American flag on the porch.

Mrs. Miller would never call me at this hour unless something truly terrible was happening.

I slid my finger across the screen and brought the phone to my ear, my voice still raspy from sleep.

“Mrs.

Miller?”

On the other end, there was no usual greeting.

I could only hear ragged, agitated breathing.

Her voice finally appeared, trembling violently. It dropped until it became a desperate whisper, as if she had a knife to her throat.

“Eleanor… listen to me.

Whatever happens, even if you hear things… do not open the door to anyone.”

The warning stabbed straight into my mind. A shiver ran down my spine.

“What’s wrong, Mrs.

Miller?

Where are you?” I tried to ask.

But before I could finish the sentence, a sharp screech of static exploded on the line—and then nothing.

The call cut off. Just at that instant, a dull thud sounded at the front door.

My heart froze.

My whole body went rigid.

Two more knocks.

It wasn’t the knocking of someone polite. They were open-handed slaps against the wood, loud, rhythmic, persistent.

Each blow was like a hammer directly against my chest.

I tiptoed out of the bedroom.

I pressed my ear against the cold wall of the hallway.

The sound rumbled through the house, making my whole body vibrate with each hit.

Gathering all my courage, I shouted, trying not to let my voice break with fear.

“Who is it?”

There was no answer. Only the knocking continued, constant, as if it would never stop.

Fear overwhelmed me. I ran to the foot of the stairs, looked up into the darkness of the second floor, and yelled:

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