I almost yelled at my dog, Buster, for being obsessed with the guest room rug.

The room looked exactly as I had left it, except for one thing. The rug was gone.

It wasn’t just moved; it had been pulled entirely into the void beneath the floor. I stood in the center of the room, clutching a heavy kitchen knife, my eyes darting to every corner. Buster stood beside me, his fur standing straight up, his growl turning into a high-pitched whimper.

I looked down at the floorboards. The one that had moved in the video was back in place, but there was a faint, greasy smudge on the wood that hadn’t been there before.

I knelt down, my breath coming in ragged gasps, and pressed my weight into the board. It didn’t budge. I tried the board next to it. Nothing.

Then I saw it. A tiny, silver screw head hidden in the decorative molding of the baseboard. I pressed it.

With a mechanical thud, the locking mechanism released. Three floorboards slid back in a perfect, silent line, revealing a narrow set of wooden stairs leading down into a space that shouldn’t have existed.

This house didn’t have a basement. It was built on a concrete slab—or so the inspector had told me when I bought it two years ago.

I turned on my phone’s flashlight and descended. The air was cold and smelled of old laundry and copper. At the bottom of the stairs was a room about ten feet wide. It was wired with a single dim bulb and lined with soundproofing foam.

There was a twin mattress on the floor, my missing guest room rug laid over it. On a small folding table sat a stack of my own mail, a laptop, and a set of high-end headphones.

But it was the wall that made me sick.

It was covered in Polaroids of me. Me sleeping. Me gardening. Me sitting on the couch watching TV. There were even photos of the inside of my car.

I heard a soft rustle from the shadows behind the water heater.

“I wasn’t going to hurt you, Sarah,” a voice whispered.

A man stepped into the light. He was thin, wearing one of my old college hoodies I thought I’d lost in the move. It was the “handyman” I had hired six months ago to fix the guest room windows.

He hadn’t left. He had spent months living literally inches beneath my feet, watching my every move through tiny, pin-sized holes drilled into the floor vents. He had timed his movements with my work schedule, coming up to eat my food and use my shower while I was at the office.

I didn’t say a word. I turned and bolted up the stairs, slamming the hidden door shut and sliding the heavy oak coffee table over it before he could reach the top.

The police found him ten minutes later, curled in a fetal position in his “nest.” They found several of my spare keys and a journal detailing my “routine” down to the minute I brushed my teeth.

I sold the house a month later. I couldn’t walk across a hardwood floor without flinching, waiting for the wood to slide open.

I live in a high-rise apartment now. No floorboards. No crawl spaces. No “hidden gems.”

People ask me why I’m so obsessed with my dog’s behavior. They think I’m crazy when I stop and watch him if he stares too long at a corner. But I know better now. Dogs don’t growl at nothing. If your pet is trying to tell you that something is wrong with your home, believe them the first time.

The most dangerous things aren’t the monsters under the bed; they’re the people who have figured out how to hide in the places you think are the safest.

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