I was riding home from work, sitting quietly by the window, when a man took the seat directly across from me. At first, I didn’t think much of it — trains get crowded. But then I felt it.
He was staring at me.
Not blinking.
Not pretending to look elsewhere.
Just staring.
I shifted, looked out the window, checked my phone — nothing broke his gaze. My stomach tightened. I decided to get off one stop early just to lose him. The moment the doors opened, I stepped out quickly and blended into the crowd.
Five minutes later, my phone rang.
It was my husband — but his voice was nothing like I had ever heard before.
“Were you on the train just now?! Answer me!”
“Y-yes,” I said, confused and nervous. “Why? What’s going on?”
He shouted — not out of anger, but pure terror:
“Go back to the station NOW. You have to come back immediately!”
My heart dropped. I turned around, almost running back toward the platform.
“What is happening? You’re scaring me!”
He took a breath and said the words that froze me in my tracks:
“Police just called me… they found a man on your train following women home. They recovered photos — and one of them was YOU.”
Everything inside me went cold.
My husband continued, voice shaking, “They’re at the station waiting to take your statement. They said the man might have tried to follow you off the train.”
I felt my legs go weak as I realized how close I had come to walking home alone… with him behind me.
When I returned, two officers immediately recognized me. They showed me a blurred photo taken from the man’s phone — it was me, sitting exactly where I had been minutes earlier.
They told me he’d been riding that same line for weeks.
Watching women.
Following them.
Learning their routines.
And today, he had chosen me.
Thanks to a passenger who noticed his behavior, police intervened before anyone could get hurt. They said getting off early might have been the very thing that kept me safe.
I walked out of that station shaking, clutching my husband like I never wanted to let go.
I used to roll my eyes when people said “trust your instincts.”
Now I know — sometimes your intuition isn’t being dramatic.
Sometimes it’s saving your life.