For fifty years, the woman who lived on the 8th floor was nothing more than a quiet mystery. She never smiled, rarely spoke, and lived alone. Everyone in the building had seen her — but no one really knew her.
Last month, she passed away. The news didn’t surprise anyone; she was old, frail, and had no family left — or so we thought. A few days later, police officers knocked on my door. They said my name had been found on a note inside her apartment, asking that I be present when they entered.
I followed them upstairs, unsure why this woman, who had barely spoken to me, would mention me in her final wishes.
When the door opened, a wave of cold air and dust filled the hallway. The apartment was frozen in time — old furniture, untouched mail, faded photos. But as we stepped further in, the officer called me over.
There, on the living room wall, hung dozens of framed pictures — of me. From childhood to adulthood. Some were school photos, others looked like they were taken secretly from the hallway, from the park, even from my own balcony.
My stomach turned.
It turns out the woman had been keeping a silent watch over me for decades. She wasn’t just a lonely neighbor. She was the stranger who never missed a moment of my life — and I had never noticed.