The Apartment That Listens
She thought she was talking to herself. She was wrong.

She first noticed it on a quiet evening.
Not because something moved.
Not because something appeared.
But because something… responded.
At first, it didn’t seem strange.
She had a habit of talking to herself.
Small things.
Simple thoughts spoken out loud without thinking.
“I need to buy groceries tomorrow,” she said, standing in the kitchen.
The apartment remained silent.
Or so she thought.
Later that night, as she walked past the hallway, she stopped.
There was a sound.
Soft.
Almost too quiet to notice.
A faint creak.
As if something had shifted.
She frowned and looked around.
Nothing.
The door was closed.
The windows were shut.
Everything was exactly as it should be.
She shook her head.
Old buildings made noise.
That was normal.
She went to bed.
The next morning, she stood in front of the mirror, brushing her hair.
“I really need to clean this place,” she muttered.
Her voice echoed slightly in the room.
Or maybe it didn’t.
Maybe it was something else.
That afternoon, she returned home.
And paused.
The living room looked… different.
Not in an obvious way.
Nothing was missing.
Nothing was broken.
But something felt… arranged.
More ordered.
More still.
Her eyes moved slowly across the room.
The books on the table had been stacked neatly.
She was sure she hadn’t done that.
The chair was pushed in closer to the table.
Perfectly aligned.
She stepped further inside.
A strange unease settled in her chest.
“Did I do this?” she whispered.
The words hung in the air.
And then—
A faint sound.
From the walls.
A soft, almost careful shift.
Like something adjusting itself.
Listening.
She froze.
The silence that followed was different.
Not empty.
Not harmless.
Aware.
She let out a nervous breath.
“This is ridiculous,” she said quietly.
The apartment didn’t answer.
But something inside it…
Reacted.
That night, she tested it.
Just to be sure.
Just to prove to herself that nothing was wrong.
She stood in the center of the room.
Still.
Listening.
“I’m going to the bedroom now,” she said.
Her voice sounded small.
Controlled.
She waited.
Nothing.
She walked toward the door.
Slowly.
Carefully.
And just as she reached for the handle—
The light in the bedroom turned on.
She didn’t touch the switch.
She didn’t move fast enough.
It had already happened.
She stood there, staring into the lit room.
Her hand still hovering in the air.
Her heart beating too fast.
Behind her—
Something shifted.
Soft.
Deliberate.
As if the apartment had moved again.
And this time…
It wasn’t pretending to be quiet.
About the Creator
Dorothea Bautz-John
True crime writer exploring unsolved mysteries, serial killers, and the darker side of history.



Comments
There are no comments for this story
Be the first to respond and start the conversation.