CHAPTER ONE — THE NEW PLACE

640 Words
Mira Daniels arrived at the apartment building just before sunset, dragging two suitcases that felt heavier than her whole past. The street was quiet—too quiet for a Friday evening. Only the hum of distant traffic and the soft rustle of dry leaves broke the stillness. She paused at the entrance and looked up. The building stood tall, gray, and narrow, like it had been squeezed between the others on purpose. The windows were dark, except for one light flickering on the fourth floor. Her new floor. She pushed through the front door and stepped inside. The hallway smelled faintly of old paint and something like damp wood. The air was cool, almost cold, and her footsteps echoed louder than she expected. “Great,” she muttered. “Haunted already.” She climbed the stairs, gripping the rail that shook slightly with each step. A thin layer of dust covered it, as if no one touched it anymore. When she reached the fourth floor, she found her door—Apartment 4C—with a tiny metal number hanging crookedly. Before she could unlock it, a voice came from behind. “You must be the new tenant.” Mira turned sharply. An old man with tired eyes and thin white hair stood in his doorway. He wore a faded sweater and held a cup of tea that shook slightly in his hand. His face was kind, but there was a nervousness in his eyes, like he was always waiting for something to happen. “Yes,” Mira said, smiling politely. “I’m Mira.” He nodded slowly. “I’m Mr. Alden. I live in 4B. Been here… oh, almost sixteen years.” “Wow. So it’s a good place to stay then?” she asked. He hesitated for a moment—a moment too long. “It’s… quiet.” Something in his tone made Mira’s skin prickle. But he stepped back and forced a smile, waving as he closed his door. The lock clicked three times. Mira frowned. Three locks? On an old lady–quiet floor like this? She pushed the thought away, opened her own door, and wheeled her suitcases in. The apartment was small but clean. Pale walls, wooden floors, one big window that caught the fading light. She let out a shaky breath. After everything she’d run from, this place was supposed to be her fresh start. She set her bag down and froze. A faint tapping echoed from inside the wall. Tick… tick… tick. Slow, steady, like someone drumming with one finger. She held her breath and listened harder. Nothing. Just silence. She shook her head. “Old buildings make noises,” she whispered to herself. “Relax.” But as she unpacked, the tapping started again, this time softer, almost like whispering fingers. It continued for a few seconds, then stopped just as suddenly. Mira rubbed her arms. Maybe the pipes. Maybe a mouse. Maybe her nerves. After arranging a few things, she stepped out to get some air. On her way back in, she noticed a small white square on the floor in front of her door. A note. She bent down, picked it up, and opened it. LEAVE WHILE YOU CAN. Her heart slammed against her ribs. She glanced up and down the hallway, but every door was shut. The entire floor looked empty, silent, abandoned almost. She swallowed hard. “Probably a stupid prank,” she whispered, but even she didn’t believe her own voice. The paper trembled slightly in her fingers. As she stepped back into her apartment, she felt it for the first time— that quiet, crawling sense that someone was watching her. Everything in the room felt colder. The shadows felt longer. And the tapping in the walls finally stopped. Almost like it knew she was listening.
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