It was exactly 3 AM when the noise started. At first, I thought I was imagining it—just one of those sounds you hear when the house is too quiet. But then it came again. A faint scratching, right against the window. Not loud, not aggressive… just enough to make your heart start beating faster. I froze, listening, trying to convince myself it was nothing. But deep down, I knew someone—or something—was right outside.
I grabbed my phone and called the police, trying to keep my voice steady as I explained what I was hearing. The dispatcher listened, then said something that made my stomach drop instantly. “You already called. A unit’s on the way.” I went completely still. My mind couldn’t process it. I told him this was my first call. There was no one else in the house. No one else who could have called.
There was a pause on the line. Not a normal pause—a long, heavy silence like he was checking something again. When he came back, his voice was quieter, more serious. He asked me if I was alone. I said yes. Then he told me, slowly, to stay on the line and not make any noise. That’s when the fear really hit. Because if I hadn’t called before… then who did?
The scratching stopped. Completely. The silence that followed was worse than the noise. Every second felt longer than the last, like something was waiting just outside, listening the same way I was. I could hear my own breathing, too loud, too fast. The dispatcher stayed on the line, but even he sounded different now—like he understood something I didn’t.
When the officers finally arrived, everything changed again. They searched the outside, checked the windows, looked around the house. What they found wasn’t what I expected—but it was enough to explain everything. There were marks near the window… and signs that someone had been there earlier. Watching. Waiting. And somehow, that earlier call had come from a nearby line—someone trying to report movement before disappearing from the area. I wasn’t alone that night. I was just the one who realized it too late.