I hired a guy to mow the lawn while my daughter was away. Everything is normal… until, an hour later, he called me whispering, “Lord… is there anyone else in the house right now?”

I hired a guy to mow the lawn while my daughter was away. Everything is normal… until, an hour later, he called me whispering, “Lord… is there anyone else in the house right now?”

I hired a guy to mow the lawn while my daughter was away. Everything is normal… until, an hour later, he called me whispering, “Lord… is there anyone else in the house right now?”

I laughed nervously: “No, why?” There was a long, heavy silence. Then he said, “I’m hearing crying… it comes from his basement. And that doesn’t sound like a television.” I felt the blood go to my feet. The door of the house was locked. The windows, the same. And I was twenty minutes away… with the keys shaking in his hand.

I hired a guy to mow the lawn because my daughter was out with her mom that weekend and I had the yard in a mess. We live on the outskirts of Santander, in a semi-detached house with a small basement that I use as a storage room. The boy’s name was Dylan Cooper, nineteen years old, a student, kind, one of those who say “yes, sir” without irony.

Everything was going normal. I was in the office, about twenty minutes away by car, checking emails, thinking about whether to change the hedge for gravel. At the exact time, my mobile vibrated.

Dylan’s number.

“Yes?” I replied in that automatic voice of a busy adult.

On the other side I heard his breathing, too close to the microphone, as if he didn’t want anyone to hear him.

“Mr. Evan Hartley,” he whispered, “is there anyone else in the house right now?”

I laughed nervously, a joyless laugh.

“No. I’m at work. Why?

Silence. Long. Heavy.

“I’m hearing crying,” he said at last. It comes from his basement. And that doesn’t sound like a television.

My back froze. The basement. The basement door is in the kitchen, behind a pantry. Always closed.

“Are you… Sure? I asked, already standing, without realizing it.

“Yes. It is… like someone trying to cry softly. And besides—he swallowed—there’s a blow. As if something hit wood.

I felt the blood run down my feet. My hands began to sweat.

“Dylan, get out of there. Now. Go abroad. Stay on the sidewalk. Do not enter the house.

“I’m out,” he whispered. But I keep hearing it. It can be heard from the kitchen vent. Sir… the back door is closed, but… There is mud on the step. As if someone had entered today.

I looked at the clock. I looked at my keys on the table. They trembled inside my fist as if they were someone else’s.

“Call the police,” I ordered. Right now. I’m going.

As I ran to the car, I got another message from him, written in a hurry:

“I’m not alone here. There’s someone inside. I heard him move. And the crying… just stopped.”

I started without thinking. In the rearview mirror, the city was still normal. Too normal. And I was walking along the highway with my heart beating my throat, repeating an absurd phrase like a prayer:

The windows were closed. The door was locked. So… who was in my house?

I don’t remember the entire journey. I remember pieces: the red light that seemed offensive to me, the beep of a car when I changed lanes without looking, the metallic taste in my mouth. I called 112 hands-free, but my voice was broken.

“There is… “There’s someone in my house,” I said. A worker hears crying from the basement. Santander, a neighbourhood of…

The operator forced me to slow down with short words. He asked me for an exact address, description, if there were weapons, if there were children. When she said “kids?”, I thought of Chloe, my nine-year-old daughter, and I felt dizzy. But Chloe was in Laredo, with her mother. I knew it. Even so, the fear did not obey logic.

“There’s no one else. Only the gardener… he’s out,” I replied.

“Do not enter the house. “Wait for the patrol,” he ordered.

Dylan called me again. This time he wasn’t whispering as much, but he kept talking as if the air could give him away.

“Sir, there’s a white van parked two houses down. He wasn’t there when I arrived. Y… I think someone is watching me from an upstairs window.

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