For months, I couldn’t shake the feeling that someone was in my house when I wasn’t home. I’d hear faint noises coming from upstairs at night — soft footsteps, the sound of something shifting — even though I live completely alone. I told myself it was just my imagination, maybe the house settling or the wind. But deep down, I knew something wasn’t right.
Yesterday, everything changed. I came home from work and froze in the doorway — my living room furniture had been rearranged. The lamp was on the wrong side, the couch was pushed back, and a blanket I never use was draped over the chair. My stomach dropped. I grabbed my phone and called the police.
They searched every inch of the house. The windows were locked, the doors were secure, and there were no signs of a break-in. I was embarrassed but also terrified. As the officers were about to leave, one of them stopped suddenly. He stared up at the ceiling, then turned to me and asked quietly, “Ma’am, have you been in your attic lately?”
I shook my head. He nodded to his partner, and they pulled down the ladder. When the first officer climbed up, the silence that followed felt like an eternity. Then I heard him say, in a trembling voice, “You need to come see this.”
I stayed at the bottom of the ladder, shaking. Later they told me what they found — a small mattress, food wrappers, and a camera pointed straight through a vent into my bedroom. Someone had been living above me the entire time, watching, waiting, moving things when I was gone.
That night, I didn’t sleep at all. The police said it’s possible the person had been there for months, maybe longer. And now, even after they’re gone, I still can’t walk into my house without feeling like eyes are on me from somewhere I can’t see.