Dark Obsession
Section 1
Rain slicked streets glimmered under the pale streetlights. Evelyn Hart pulled her coat tighter around her, feeling the chill seep into her bones. Something about the night felt… wrong. A shadow moved just at the corner of her vision, and she spun—nothing there.
Section 2
Her apartment door clicked behind her. She always checked the lock twice. Always. Tonight, though, the lock felt… different. Too easy, too smooth. She shrugged it off. Paranoia, she told herself.
Section 3
At work, small things unsettled her. A notebook slightly out of place. Coffee stirred when she hadn’t touched it. She laughed nervously to her coworkers, masking the rising unease.
Section 4
Jordan watched. Outside the café, across the street, hidden in the dim light. He traced her movements carefully, noting her routines with a precision that sent a shiver through him—pleasure mixed with obsession.
Section 5
A message appeared on Evelyn’s phone. I see you. No number. No sender. She froze, heart pounding. It had to be a prank… right?
Section 6
Back home, Evelyn’s reflection in the mirror startled her. The room was dark, but she swore she saw someone behind her in the reflection. She spun around. Empty. The silence was louder than any noise.
Section 7
Jordan lingered in the shadows outside her window. He traced her silhouette, memorizing it like a work of art. Each detail mattered—the way she moved, the way she breathed when scared.
Section 8
At night, Evelyn heard faint footsteps outside her apartment door. She pressed her ear to it, straining. Nothing. But the unease stayed, curling in her stomach like smoke.
Section 9
Detective Simon Cross had seen cases like this. At first, harmless pranks. Then escalating. He filed the reports in his mind: misplaced items, messages, untraceable sightings. Someone was watching.
Section 10
Evelyn’s friends noticed her anxiety. “It’s just stress,” they said. She wanted to believe them, but the shadow in her peripheral vision wouldn’t vanish.
Section 11
Jordan left small “gifts” outside her apartment—an empty coffee cup she’d had that morning, a leaf from the park she passed. Not threatening. Not yet. But unmistakably present.
Section 12
She started documenting everything, writing down dates, times, odd events. Her hands shook. The paranoia she’d laughed off became a pattern, and patterns were dangerous.
Section 13
One evening, a stranger appeared near her favorite bookstore. Too familiar, too casual. Evelyn’s pulse quickened. The man lingered, then vanished into the night before she could get a good look.
Section 14
Jordan smiled at the memory of her expression. Fear, confusion, the thrill of uncertainty. Each reaction was proof of control, proof that he existed in her life without her realizing it.
Section 15
And then, a new note appeared, slipped under her door: You’re not alone. Never alone. Evelyn stared at it, frozen. The first act of terror was complete. The game had begun.
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