SOMEONE KNEW MY ROUTINE BETTER THAN I DID

For months, I kept telling myself it was nothing.

The faint noises at night. The creeping sensation of being watched. The way small things seemed… different. A misplaced remote. A window slightly ajar. A chair nudged just an inch off.

I live alone. I work from home. I’m careful.

So I convinced myself I was overthinking. Tired. Stressed. Paranoid.

Until yesterday.

I came home late from dinner with a friend. As soon as I stepped inside, I knew something was wrong. The entire living room had been rearranged — subtly, but undeniably. The couch shifted, throw pillows out of place, a picture frame crooked on the wall.

My blood ran cold.

Terrified, I called the police. They searched the house top to bottom, attic included. Nothing. No signs of forced entry. No evidence of anyone inside.

As they were about to leave, one officer paused.

“Ma’am… have you hired any contractors or workers recently? Anyone who had access to your home?”

I froze.

Six months ago, I hired a man named Rainer to install new windows upstairs. Quiet, polite, borderline awkward. I remembered how he asked odd questions about my schedule — how often I left, whether I traveled.

Back then, I thought he was just making small talk.

Now, I wasn’t so sure.

The officers couldn’t act on suspicion alone, but they strongly suggested I install security cameras. I did — immediately. Front door, back door, hallway, and a discreet one facing the staircase.

That night, I barely slept.

Three days later, I got the notification that confirmed my worst fear.

3:12 a.m.

Motion detected.

Heart racing, I opened the live feed.

And there he was.

A man emerging silently from the attic hatch, lowering himself into the hallway like he’d done it a hundred times before. Calm. Confident. Dressed in black.

He tiptoed to the kitchen. Opened my fridge. Drank straight from my orange juice. Then disappeared back into the attic.

I could barely breathe.

The police came back instantly. This time, they found what they’d missed before: blankets, protein bars, bottled water, a burner phone, even a small stash of my missing clothing — all hidden neatly between insulation in the attic crawlspace.

He hadn’t just broken in.

He’d been living there.

For six months.

He knew when I worked. When I slept. When I showered. When I left for groceries. And God only knows how many nights I was unaware of him moving through my home as I slept feet away.

But the horror didn’t end there.

On the burner phone, police found hundreds of photos.

Not just of me inside my house — but outside too.

Photos of me walking my dog. Grocery shopping. Sitting at stoplights. Months’ worth of surveillance — many taken long before I ever hired him for the window job.

That’s when I learned his real name wasn’t Rainer.

It was Ellis Druen. A convicted stalker who’d reinvented himself under stolen identities, drifting from town to town, slipping through background checks, always finding vulnerable women to study and exploit.

I wasn’t his first victim.

But I became, thankfully, the last before they caught him.

He’s behind bars now — facing multiple charges: breaking and entering, stalking, unlawful surveillance, and identity theft.

And yet, even with him locked away, the worst part is what no one tells you: how deeply your sense of safety shatters. How foreign your own home feels. How hyper-aware you become of every creak, every shadow.

For weeks, I couldn’t sleep alone. I stayed at my cousin Siara’s, leaving my house empty under a strict police watch.

Eventually, I reclaimed it.

I repainted. I rearranged. I adopted Mozzie — a large, loud, overly protective rescue dog who barks at everything that moves. And I introduced myself to my neighbors, especially Mrs. Fern across the street — a retired teacher with binoculars and a sharp eye who now watches out for me like a hawk.

The hardest part wasn’t replacing locks or installing cameras.

The hardest part was trusting my instincts again.

Because here’s what I know now: when your gut whispers that something is wrong, listen.

Even if it feels silly. Even if people roll their eyes.

Because I wasn’t being paranoid.

I was being hunted.

And trusting that little voice — even months late — may very well have saved my life.

If this story gave you chills or made you rethink your own sense of safety, share it. Because someone you know might need that reminder today.

❤️ Stay safe. Trust your gut.

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