I got home and my boyfriend was asleep. I went to the bathroom and was horrified to see him there taking a shower. Panicked, I shouted, “There’s someone in our room!”
He turned pale and told me to run to the car, lock it and call 911.
Later that day, I was horrified to discover the police didn’t find anyone inside the house. No signs of forced entry. No muddy footprints.
Nothing missing. Just an unlocked back door and my boyfriend swearing he was in bed the whole time. But I know what I saw.
I saw a man who looked exactly like him. Same build. Same tattoo near the ribs.
Same crooked smile through the frosted glass of the shower. I wasn’t hallucinating. I hadn’t been drinking or anything like that.
I was clear-headed. And now I was being told it was just a “stress-induced illusion.”
His name is Rayan. We’ve been together for almost four years.
Moved in together after ten months of dating. He’s always been calm, gentle. One of those people who seems to run on low battery all the time, always sipping coffee, always quietly humming old jazz tunes.
Nothing about him ever scared me. Until that night. I didn’t sleep for two days straight.
Rayan said I must’ve been exhausted and dreamed it. Said he heard about “false awakenings” and that our brains play tricks in early sleep cycles. But that explanation didn’t land.
I wasn’t sleeping. I remember parking the car. Walking in.
Putting down my purse. Stepping over his shoes. It was real.
And the worst part? That wasn’t the only weird thing that started happening. Three nights later, I woke up around 3 a.m.
and heard footsteps downstairs. Slow, creaking ones. I nudged Rayan and whispered, “Did you hear that?” He was already awake.
Eyes wide open, staring at the ceiling. We both held our breaths. Then we heard the kitchen faucet turn on for three seconds and shut off.
No dishes clinking. No drawers. Just the water.
Rayan sat up and grabbed the baseball bat we keep under the bed. “Stay here,” he said, creeping out of the room. I followed him anyway.
No one was there. Again. Not a window cracked.
Not a sock out of place. But the faucet was still dripping. At this point, my nerves were shot.
I told him we needed cameras. He agreed. Two days later, we installed three—front door, living room, and kitchen.
All motion-detected and streaming to my phone. And for almost two weeks, everything went still. No weird noises.
No strangers in the house. It was quiet enough that I almost convinced myself I had imagined everything. Almost.
Until one night, I came home from a late shift, and Rayan wasn’t there. He texted earlier saying he had a dentist appointment after work, but by 9 p.m. he still wasn’t back.
I checked the cameras. What I saw chilled me. At 6:17 p.m., Rayan walked through the front door with a bag of groceries.
He looked normal. Calm. Set the bag down, took off his shoes, and went into the kitchen.
At 6:41 p.m., he came in again. Same grocery bag. Same entrance.
Same outfit. I blinked. Scrolled back.
Watched it again. The first “Rayan” never left. He was still in the kitchen when the second one came through the door.
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