I went into the garage to grab an old toolbox, even though I rarely go in there. The light was dim and flickering, and in the far corner, behind the old cabinet, I noticed something moving under a thi
I only meant to spend a minute in the garage. That was all. The plan was simple, straightforward, and utterly mundane: grab an old toolbox from the corner, tighten a loose hinge on the kitchen cabinet that had been squeaking for weeks, and move on with the rest of the day. I had even glanced at the clock before stepping inside, thinking that ten minutes — maybe fifteen if I got distracted — would be more than enough. Yet the instant I crossed the threshold, I noticed something different. The garage, normally a functional, familiar space where tools were stored, bicycles leaned against walls, and boxes of long-forgotten holiday decorations waited quietly in the corners, felt unusually still.
Not silent exactly — there was always the low hum of the refrigerator in the corner or the faint wind rattling a window pane — but a kind of suspended stillness, as if the room itself were holding its breath.