I came home late that night, tired and ready to collapse into bed. As I walked past the hallway, I saw my roommate slip into her bedroom, wrapped in a dripping wet towel. Her hair was soaked, water trailing on the floor. She didn’t say a word. She didn’t even look at me.
It was strange — she always joked after showers. But this time, she practically ran into her room.
Five minutes later, I heard the front door open.
She walked in from outside.
Fully dressed. Dry hair. Not a drop of water on her.
I stared at her, confused.
“Weren’t you just in your room?” I asked.
Her face instantly changed. The color drained from her skin. She looked past me toward the hallway, her eyes widening in fear.
Then she whispered, trembling:
“Grab your keys. Go to the car. Lock it. Call 911. Right now.”
My heart dropped. I didn’t ask questions — I ran.
Sitting inside my locked car, hands shaking, I called emergency services. Within minutes, police swarmed our house. They ordered us to stay outside as they moved in carefully, guns drawn.
When they came back out, one of the officers looked at us and said:
“You did the right thing tonight. Someone was hiding in the house.”
They found wet footprints leading from the bathroom to my roommate’s room. They found a towel on her bed — not hers. And in the corner of her closet, wrapped in shadows…
A man was crouched behind her clothes.
He had broken in hours earlier. He had been watching us.
The chilling part?
The person I saw entering her room — wrapped in a towel, avoiding eye contact, moving strangely…
Was not my roommate.
That night, I realized just how close we came to walking straight into a nightmare — and how fast one wrong choice could have changed everything.