The lawyer cleared his throat and adjusted his glasses.
“It’s no mistake. Your father left you the house… with one condition.”
My smile faded. “Condition?”
“You must live in it for thirty consecutive days before it legally becomes yours.”
I almost laughed. “That’s it? Why would that matter?”
The lawyer didn’t smile back. “Your father insisted. He said you’d understand… eventually.”
The house stood at the edge of town, just as I remembered—old, quiet, and slightly crooked, like it had been leaning into its own secrets for years. I hadn’t been there since I was a child. After Mom died, Dad sold almost everything… except this place.
The first night felt harmless enough. Dusty floors, creaky stairs, the smell of time trapped in wood. I convinced myself the unease was just nostalgia.
Until I heard footsteps.
Not mine.
Slow. Careful. From the hallway upstairs.
I froze in bed, listening.
Step… step… step…
“Hello?” My voice barely worked.
Silence.
I grabbed a flashlight and forced myself up the stairs. Every instinct told me to leave, but something else—something stubborn—kept me moving.
At the end of the hallway was a door I didn’t remember.
It was slightly open.
Inside, the room was untouched by dust. A single chair. A small table. And on it… a cassette recorder.
My hands trembled as I pressed play.
Static crackled, then—
My father’s voice.
“If you’re hearing this… you stayed.”
I stopped breathing.
“I’m sorry,” his voice continued. “I never told you the truth about this house. I thought I could keep it contained. But it doesn’t belong to me… and now it won’t let me leave.”
A loud bang echoed downstairs. I flinched.
“You’ll hear it. You’ll feel it watching. It mimics footsteps… voices. It wants to be known. But listen carefully—do not open the basement door.”
Basement?
My chest tightened. I didn’t even remember there being a basement.
Another sound—this time right behind me.
A whisper.
“Too late…”
I spun around.
The hallway was no longer empty.
Something stood there—tall, thin, its shape flickering like a broken shadow.
And then I understood why my father left me the house.
Not as a gift.
But as a warning.
Or worse… a replacement.
