I don't turn the lights on when I go into the
apartment at night. Not until I've checked the rooms first for intruders. With
nothing but the sound of my own breathing for company, I push open the heavy,
teak front door, pocketing the key as I slip inside. Standing there in the darkness, I let my eyes
adjust to the murk and gloom of the shadow-riddled hall. I can feel a worrying
tightening in my chest as I turn back to face the front door.
There’s a spy
hole embedded at eye-level. The number of times I’ve peered out into the
stairwell, half expecting to see a crazed, knife-wielding stranger, well it's often, even if
it’s never happened so far.
I can see more clearly
now, so I make my rounds. To the right, a small, sparsely decorated bedroom
stands empty. No one there, check. There’s a small closet in the hall, I even
look in that too. No one there, check. The bathroom is silent, but a mix of
aftershave and perfume dances up to my nostrils. No one there,
check.
The main bedroom is
next; the neatly made bed is empty, and there are no wardrobes for anyone to
hide in. Outside, the rumble of passing traffic breaks the silence, and the
glare of a car’s headlamps scatters the shadows around the room much as a
startled flock of birds.
I make my way
back through the gloom of the hall, turning left to the lounge, the walls lined with vast swathes of curtains,
drawn against the darkness. No one there, check. There’s a deep bay window
behind them on the west wall, and my heart gives rampant pause as I stand there,
hand poised to pull back the fabric and reveal... nothing other than closed blinds that serve to
further deepen the darkness in the room.
There’s only the kitchen left. Tidy, clear of clutter, just how I like
it. Empty save for the blinking pulse of the LED clock on the oven, the ever-present sentinel of this apartment.
A shudder of relief seeps through my
frame. The place is empty. Safe. Ideal.
Moving back through the lounge, I slip behind the curtains of the bay
window, standing there, silent, waiting. My hand reaches into my coat pocket,
resting on the comfortable hilt of my blade. My instrument of choice.
It’s then that I hear a key turn in the lock of
that heavy, teak door, and I brace myself for the inevitable. Drawing the knife,
I wait for my prey. You see, this is not my apartment. Maybe it's
yours...
A good twist to the end of the story,i thought perhaps it would be he was a security guard at a stately home.Well done Craig
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