Her Ex Called It Stress Until The Leasing Office Camera Showed Who Held The Key-myhoa

Lucas did not look at me first.

He looked at Denise.

That small choice told me more than anything he could have said. He did not step into the leasing office like a worried ex-husband. He stepped in like a man checking whether the front desk still belonged to him.

Image

Denise’s fingers stayed suspended above the phone. Her acrylic nails were pale pink, glossy, perfectly still. The cheap wall clock behind her desk clicked once, then again, each sound landing harder than the last.

Lucas lifted his paper cup slightly.

“Mara,” he said, calm enough to make the room colder. “You should have called me before upsetting people.”

The old version of me would have answered too fast.

The old version of me would have explained the dreams, the recordings, the open closet, the brass key on the monitor, the man in red standing outside my bedroom door at 2:10 a.m.

Instead, I kept my palm over the panic remote and slid my other hand toward my phone.

Denise whispered, “Mr. Harlan, why did you give that man a key?”

Lucas’s smile thinned.

“I didn’t give anyone anything.”

On the monitor behind her, his hand was frozen in full color, passing the brass key to the man in the red shirt.

Denise turned slowly toward the screen.

Lucas did not.

He kept his eyes on me.

“You always did this,” he said softly. “You build stories until people start believing them.”

The air in the leasing office smelled like burnt coffee, printer heat, and lemon disinfectant. My throat tasted like pennies. Somewhere behind the wall, a copier warmed itself with a low mechanical hum.

Denise’s hand dropped to the receiver.

Lucas took one step forward.

I pressed the panic remote under my palm.

The sound was not dramatic. No siren screamed. No lights flashed. Just a tiny click under my hand.

Lucas heard it anyway.

His eyes moved down to the desk.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *