Cold air rushed into the house, carrying with it a faint metallic smell that made his stomach twist.
"Lena?" His voice was louder this time, cracking slightly. "Lena, are you out there?"
No answer.
Her mother joined him on the porch, her hands trembling slightly. "Maybe she… went further down the street?"
Her father shook his head. "No. The sound—the thud—I know what I heard. Something's wrong."
They both stared into the darkness. The shadows between the houses seemed too heavy, too still.
Then they saw it.
A movement.
Not a person walking—something sliding, smooth and silent, close to the ground. The faintest glint of metal flashed in the streetlight.
Her mother gasped. "What… what is that?"
Her father's hand gripped hers, but he didn't move. "Stay inside. Lock the doors."
He ran back into the house, yanking the front door closed and bolting it. Her mother followed, panic now rising in her chest.
Inside, the house felt smaller, tighter, suffocating. Every creak of the floorboards, every whisper of wind against the windows seemed amplified.
Then came the phone.
Lena's phone, buzzing on the driveway.
Her mother grabbed it with shaking hands. She pressed the screen—it glowed faintly. A message.
You'll serve well.
Her mother froze. "Who… who would—?"
Her father snatched the phone. The text disappeared as quickly as it had appeared. The screen went blank.
A cold, heavy silence fell. Neither of them moved.
Outside, the faint sound of an engine starting broke the stillness. A dark SUV rolled into view, headlights off. The vehicle moved like it knew exactly where it was going, sliding into the driveway and stopping at the exact spot Lena had been standing minutes ago.
Her father lunged to the window. "No… it can't be—"
But the SUV didn't stop. It paused for a heartbeat under the streetlight. Then a figure stepped out.
Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dressed in dark clothes that swallowed the night. Hands gloved. And in one hand, something small—but unmistakably deliberate.
Her mother stumbled backward, gripping the table. "Oh my God…"
The figure walked slowly, measured, almost ceremonial, toward the edge of the house—toward the shadow where Lena had vanished. The air outside seemed to press against the windows.
Her father pulled her behind him. "Call 911!"
Her mother's hands trembled as she dialed. The line connected. The operator's voice was calm, distant.
"911, what's your emergency?"
Before her mother could speak, a sudden, muffled scream echoed from the direction of the driveway—Lena's voice. Only a whisper, strained and filled with terror.
Her father bolted to the door, yanking it open again. The street was empty.
The SUV was gone.
No figure.
No sound.
Her mother fell to her knees. "She… she can't just disappear!"
But the scratches in the gravel, the faint marks on the asphalt, and Lena's abandoned jacket told another story.
Somewhere—somewhere very close—someone had taken her.
And that someone was not ordinary.
Lena Harper lay in the back of a vehicle. The windows were tinted, the air cold and sterile. She tried to move but realized her wrists were bound. Panic surged—hot and suffocating.
Her mind raced. She remembered the shadows, the dark figure, the metallic glint in the streetlight. The muffled sounds outside her house. Every small detail clicked into place—too late.
She screamed.
No one could hear.
The vehicle rolled on, silent as a predator. The headlights occasionally lit fleeting glimpses of the road ahead—toward a place she didn't know, toward a fate she couldn't imagine.
The vehicle turned onto a road she didn't recognize. Darkness pressed against the windows like a living thing. Lena's heart pounded.
She had no idea how deep the obsession ran.
No idea how far it would go.
No idea she was only the beginning.
And as the night swallowed her whole, the first chapter of terror had only just begun.
