PART 2
The flashlight beam flickered as my grip tightened on the handle. My mind raced through a thousand impossible scenarios. Could Chloe have skipped the school trip? Did she sneak back home in the middle of the night and lock herself in the basement? It made no sense. I had watched her board the charter bus myself.
“Chloe?” I whispered, my voice cracking under the weight of the suffocating dread.
I took two steps forward, the damp concrete floor chilling my bare feet. The small, pale hand remained outstretched from behind the heavy iron boiler, trembling violently. Buster’s barking turned into a high-pitched, frantic whine. He refused to step off the bottom stair, his claws scratching uselessly against the wood as he tried to pull himself backward.
“Mommy, it hurts… please help me,” the voice whimpered again. It was the exact cadence, the exact pitch of my daughter’s voice.
Overcome by a sudden surge of maternal instinct, I dropped all caution. I lunged forward into the narrow, dusty gap behind the furnace, my hands reaching out to grab the child. I lunged forward and grabbed the small wrist. It felt ice-cold, shockingly thin, and covered in a sticky, wet substance. I pulled forcefully, dragging the figure into the faint light of my flashlight.
It was Chloe. She was wearing the exact same denim jacket and yellow hoodie she had worn when she left for Washington, D.C. Her hair was matted with dirt, and her face was streaked with tears and dark bruises. She collapsed against my chest, her small frame shaking violently as she sobbed into my shoulder.
“They grabbed me from the rest stop, Mommy,” she wailed, her hands gripping my shirt with terrifying strength. “They brought me back here. They said you belonged to them now.”
I wrapped my arms around her, tears blinding my vision. I was so consumed by the sheer relief and shock of holding my daughter that I didn’t stop to think about the logistics—how anyone could have brought her back here, or why Buster was still snarling at us with his teeth bared, his eyes fixed not on the girl in my arms, but on the dark corner behind the stairs.
Suddenly, a loud, sharp vibration buzzed against my thigh. It was my phone, tucked into my back jeans pocket.
With one arm tightly wrapped around Chloe, I used my free hand to pull out the phone. The caller ID displayed ‘Mrs. Gable’—Chloe’s history teacher and the lead chaperone for the D.C. trip.
My thumb swiped the screen automatically. “Hello?” I gasped, my voice muffled against my daughter’s hair.
“Sarah? Oh, thank goodness,” Mrs. Gable’s voice came through the speaker, crisp and clear, accompanied by the distant sound of chattering teenagers and city traffic. “I’m so sorry to call this late, but Chloe dropped her souvenir bag at the museum, and we found your emergency contact number inside. She wanted to say goodnight to you before we check into the hotel.”
The basement seemed to drop twenty degrees in an instant. The air left my lungs.
“What?” I choked out, my body freezing completely. “Mrs. Gable… where is Chloe right now?”
“She’s right here next to me, dear. Hold on, I’ll hand her the phone.”
A second later, a voice came through the speaker. “Hey, Mom! We just saw the Washington Monument lit up! It’s so cool here!”
It was Chloe’s voice. Alive, cheerful, and three hundred miles away.
My heart stopped beating. If Chloe was on the phone, then who was I holding?
Slowly, terrifyingly, the fingers gripping my shirt tightened with an unnatural, crushing force that bruised my ribs. The girl in my arms stopped crying. She slowly lifted her head from my shoulder. The face looking up at me wasn’t Chloe’s anymore. The features began to shift, stretching into a sickening, distorted grin, her eyes completely black and hollow.
Before I could scream, she slammed her forehead hard into my nose. A sickening crunch echoed in my ears, and blinding pain exploded behind my eyes as blood spurted down my face. I stumbled backward, dropping the flashlight as it shattered on the concrete, plunging us into absolute darkness.
If you’ve read this far, don’t hesitate to leave a like and comment before reading part 3. It makes us as happy as reading a complete story! Thank you. 👍❤️
PART 3
Pain blinded me, a sharp, metallic taste filling my mouth as blood poured from my fractured nose. In the total darkness of the basement, I was completely disoriented. I scrambled backward on my hands and knees, my palms scraping against the rough concrete and broken glass from the shattered flashlight. Above the sound of my own ragged breathing, I heard a wet, clicking sound—the creature, or whatever it was, shuffling toward me with terrifying speed.
Suddenly, a heavy weight crashed into my side. The entity threw itself onto me, pinning my shoulders to the cold floor. Cold, slimy hands wrapped around my throat, squeezing tightly, cutting off my air supply. I thrashed wildly, kicking my legs and scratching at its face, but its grip was ironclad. My vision began to blur with dark spots, and my lungs burned for oxygen.
Just as my consciousness began to slip, a ferocious roar echoed through the dark. Buster. The German Shepherd finally overcame his paralysis of fear and launched himself from the stairs. I heard the sickening thud of eighty pounds of muscle slamming into the attacker, followed by the vicious, tearing sound of teeth meeting flesh. The crushing grip on my throat vanished instantly as the entity screamed—a horrible, dual-toned screech that sounded half-human, half-mechanical.
I rolled over, gasping for air, coughing violently as blood and saliva splattered onto the floor. Nearby, a chaotic, violent struggle was happening in the dark. Buster was snarling savagely, his jaws locked onto the intruder, while the figure beat the dog repeatedly with heavy, dull thuds.
Knowing Buster couldn’t hold it off forever, I forced myself up. My hand brushed against the heavy iron fireplace poker I had dropped earlier. I gripped the cold metal handle, finding a sudden surge of adrenaline. I followed the sounds of the snarling and thrashing, raising the iron rod high above my head, and brought it down with all my might into the darkness.
The poker struck something solid with a sickening crack. The creature let out a sharp cry and collapsed onto the floor. Buster kept growling, but the violent movement stopped.
Trembling, I fumbled through my pockets for my phone. The screen was cracked, but it still worked, emitting a bright blue light that illuminated the gruesome scene. Buster stood over the fallen figure, his muzzle stained with blood, his chest heaving. On the floor lay a person, groaning in pain, clutching a fractured shoulder where my iron poker had landed.
I shone the phone screen directly onto the face of the intruder. To my absolute horror, it wasn’t a monster or a supernatural demon. The distorted face I thought I saw in the dark was actually an incredibly realistic, flesh-toned silicone mask resembling Chloe, which had split open from the impact of my strike. Beneath the torn mask was the bruised, bleeding face of a grown man.
It was Marcus, the gardener.
My jaw dropped as the puzzle pieces slammed into place with horrific clarity. The person who had knocked on my door twenty minutes ago claiming to hear a child crying wasn’t the real Marcus. It was an accomplice who looked similar from a distance, or Marcus had set up a twisted game to lure me into the house alone while his partner cut the main telephone lines. He had used a high-tech voice-mimicking app on his phone, playing prerecorded samples of Chloe’s voice that he had captured by stalking her social media videos for months. He had worn her stolen clothes, which had disappeared from our laundry line a week prior, all to orchestrate the perfect, terrifying trap to incapacitate me and rob or kill me in the secluded basement.
“Stay down!” I screamed, keeping the iron poker pointed at his chest as Buster stood guard, his teeth bared and ready to strike again if the man even flinched.
With my left hand, I quickly dialed 911 on my cracked phone screen. The dispatcher answered on the second ring, and I frantically shouted our address, explaining that a violent home invader was neutralized in my basement.
Within ten agonizing minutes, the red and blue emergency lights flashed through the small basement windows, casting long, dancing shadows across the concrete walls. Four heavily armed police officers rushed down the stairs, their weapons drawn. They quickly tackled Marcus to the ground, cuffing his hands tightly behind his back and dragging him up the wooden steps.
The paramedics treated my broken nose and wrapped a warm shock blanket around my shoulders. As I sat on the back of the ambulance, holding a bloody ice pack to my face, the lead detective walked over with a solemn expression. He informed me that Marcus and his partner were part of a notorious interstate tracking ring that targeted single-mother households by monitoring their children’s school trip schedules online.
I took a deep, shaky breath, looking down at Buster, who was sitting faithfully at my feet, receiving a well-deserved handful of treats from a sympathetic paramedic. My phone buzzed again in my hand. It was a text message from Chloe, containing a photo of her smiling brightly in front of the illuminated Capitol building.
Tears of pure, overwhelming relief streamed down my bruised cheeks. The nightmare in the dark was finally over. I had saved myself, my home was secure, and most importantly, my beautiful daughter was safe and sound, completely oblivious to the horror that had almost consumed her home.
What do you think of this story? Please leave a like and share your thoughts in the comments. Your support means a lot to us and inspires us to keep writing more meaningful and powerful stories. Thank you! 👍❤️