The street was too quiet. That was the first thing seven-year-old Emma Parker noticed as she walked home from school that afternoon. The usual hum of life—the sound of dogs barking, cars pulling into driveways, neighbors chatting by their fences—was gone.
Only the long shadows of the bare trees stretched across the empty sidewalk, flickering in the pale orange sunlight. Her pink backpack bounced against her side, and every few steps, she had to tug her striped scarf back onto her shoulder. Her notebooks were half falling out, but she didn’t care.
She was thinking about showing her dad the drawing she made at school—a family portrait with bright smiles and a yellow sun that filled the whole page. Then she saw him. A tall man stood near the entrance to her apartment building.
He wore a long black coat, a dark scarf that covered half his face, and a black cap pulled low over his eyes. He wasn’t moving, not even checking his phone like most adults did. He was just… standing there.
Watching. Emma’s steps slowed. Something deep inside her twisted—an instinct she couldn’t explain but felt certain of.
Something was wrong. The man’s head turned slightly. His eyes found hers.
Even from a distance, she could feel the weight of his stare. Her father’s voice flashed in her mind:
“If something feels wrong, don’t ignore it, Emmy. Make light.
Make noise. People can’t help if they don’t see or hear you.”
Her small hands tightened around her backpack straps. The man took a step forward.
Then another. His pace quickened. Panic surged through her chest.
The stairwell door to her building loomed just a few feet away. She looked left—no cars. Right—no people.
The man was coming faster now, his shoes crunching the gravel. Emma ran. She burst through the stairwell entrance, heart hammering, and slammed her hand on every light switch she could reach.
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