The Dispatcher Said I Already Called

It started at exactly 3 a.m., the kind of silence that feels too heavy, like the night is holding its breath. Then came the sound—soft, slow scratching against my window. Not wind. Not branches. Something deliberate. I sat up instantly, heart pounding, trying to convince myself I was imagining it. But then it came again. Tap… scrape… tap. That’s when fear took over. I grabbed my phone and called the police, my voice barely steady as I told them someone was outside, right by my window.

Before I could even finish explaining, the dispatcher interrupted me in a calm, almost rehearsed tone. “You already called. A unit is on the way.” My entire body went cold. I froze, gripping the phone tighter. “No,” I said quickly, “this is my first time calling.” There was a long pause on the line, the kind that makes your stomach twist. I could still hear the faint noise near the window, like whoever was out there hadn’t left. Something felt very wrong.

When the dispatcher spoke again, his voice had changed completely. Lower. More serious. “Stay where you are,” he said quietly. “Do not approach the window.” My eyes locked onto the dark outline of it, barely visible in the dim light. The scratching stopped suddenly, replaced by complete silence. That silence was worse. It felt like whoever was out there knew I was listening… and was waiting for something.

Then he said something that made my blood run cold. “The earlier call we received…” he paused, like he didn’t want to say it, “…came from inside your house.” I stopped breathing. My mind raced as I slowly turned away from the window and looked toward the hallway behind me. Every shadow suddenly felt alive. Every corner felt like it was hiding something. I wasn’t just afraid of what was outside anymore.

And then it happened. From somewhere deep inside the house… a phone started ringing. Not mine. Not the one in my hand. A different one. Echoing through the darkness, getting louder with every second. I whispered into the phone, barely able to speak, “I’m not alone, am I?” The dispatcher didn’t answer right away. When he finally did, his voice dropped to almost nothing. “No… you’re not.”

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