One week after we moved into our new home, my phone rang at 9:17 p.m.
The man on the line didn’t introduce himself. He didn’t ask how I was settling in. He just said,
“I forgot to disconnect the living room camera.”
Then he paused long enough for my stomach to drop.
“I saw what your father and your brother did while you were on base,”
he continued.
My grip tightened around the phone.
“Don’t tell anyone,”
he said quietly.
“Come see me alone.”
I didn’t answer him right away.
I stood there in the dim kitchen, the low hum of the refrigerator filling the silence.
My new house still smelled faintly of fresh paint and cardboard boxes. The counters were bare except for a roll of paper towels and a half-opened packet of screws we still hadn’t found a home for.
My husband was in the living room folding flattened boxes for recycling, the soft scrape of tape peeling in the background. Normal sounds.
Safe sounds. Sounds that didn’t match the cold spreading through my chest.
Who is this? I asked, finally keeping my voice level.
Years in uniform had trained me not to give emotion away for free.
“It doesn’t matter,”
the man said.
“What matters is what I saw.”
I recognized his voice.
The previous owner.
Mark.
A man in his late 50s, recently divorced, polite to a fault.
When we’d signed the final papers, he’d shaken my hand and thanked me for my service like it meant something personal to him.
I remembered thinking he looked relieved to be done with the house. Ready to move on. Like he’d closed a door and didn’t want to hear it creak again.
I thought you reset everything when you sold, I said.
I did, he replied.
At least I thought I did. Turns out the camera was still linked to my old cloud account. I only realized because I got a motion alert.
My pulse ticked up, but my posture didn’t change.
And instead of deleting it, you watched.
I didn’t mean to, he said quickly.
But once I saw who it was, I couldn’t look away.
I leaned against the counter, the cool stone grounding me.
What exactly did you see?
Another pause. Shorter this time. Controlled.
Your father.
Your brother. In your living room. Late.
They weren’t there to reminisce.
I closed my eyes for a brief second, just long enough to keep myself steady.
You said not to tell anyone, I said.
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