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Chapter 4 - The Note

The next day passed like any other — lectures, short conversations, and a quiet walk back to the PG.

But my mind wasn't quiet.

Last night kept replaying in my head. The footsteps. The whisper. The empty hallway.

I tried brushing it off. Maybe someone came in late. Maybe the sound echoed. Maybe I was just overthinking.

But that evening, something strange happened again.

It was around 6 PM. I had just come back from class and changed into my pajamas. A soft drizzle had started outside — again — and I was about to make myself a cup of tea.

That's when I noticed something on the floor.

A folded piece of paper. Just slightly slipped under my door.

I bent down and picked it up.

No name. No markings. Just one word written in rough, unfamiliar handwriting:

"Stay."

That was it.

No explanation. No context. Just that one word.

A chill ran down my spine.

I looked outside into the hallway. Empty. As always.

I locked the door, bolted it this time, and sat on the bed with the note in my hand.

Was it a warning? A message? From whom?

I checked my phone. No missed calls. No texts from Tanya. No PG group messages either. Nothing.

For a moment, I thought about going downstairs to ask the owner — but I stopped myself. What would I even say?

"Someone left me a creepy note. But I don't know who, when, or why."

I'd sound paranoid.

That night, I couldn't sleep.

The lights stayed on. My ears stayed sharp. Every creak and whisper of the wind made me alert.

I even thought about calling Papa.

But I didn't. I didn't want him to worry. I didn't want to sound scared. But I was.

Something wasn't right here.

The next morning, I slipped the note into my diary and tried to act normal.

At breakfast, I finally saw one of the girls who lived in the PG. She had a large backpack and a sleepy face.

I tried to strike up a conversation.

"Hey, do you usually stay at the library late?"

She looked at me, a bit surprised. "Yeah, I study there most nights. Why?"

"Oh, nothing," I smiled. "I just thought I heard someone in the hallway yesterday."

She nodded. "Wasn't me. I came back around midnight."

Midnight?

I heard the footsteps hours before that.

So who was walking outside my room?

And who left the note?

That evening, I taped a small sticky note to my door before leaving for class. It said:

"If you have something to say, say it properly."

It was part sarcasm, part challenge.

When I came back three hours later… the note was gone.

And in its place, a new one was stuck:

"Some things are better left quiet."

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