
When my neighbor showed up at my door before sunrise and whispered urgently, “Don’t go to work today—please believe me,” I was confused and uneasy.
I couldn’t understand why he would say something like that. By midday, the real reason behind his warning became horrifying—and it turned my world upside down.
The knocking started a little after 4 a.m., loud and urgent. I opened the door carefully and found my neighbor, Graham, standing there in a sweatshirt, hair still damp, eyes constantly scanning the street as if he feared being watched.
“Do not go to work today,” he said quietly. “Please. Stay inside.”
I tried to ask questions, but he refused to explain. He only repeated his wa:rning, then added something that made my stomach drop:
“Especially you.”
After he left, I couldn’t calm the sense of dread. Ignoring my routine, I called in sick. A few hours later, unfamiliar numbers began ringing my phone. I didn’t pick up.
Close to noon, a breaking news alert flashed across my screen:
An ongoing investigation near the downtown courthouse. A targeted threat against a courthouse employee.
That employee was me.
Police had located a dangerous device near the parking spot I used every day. My supervisor later confirmed there was a note with my name on it and a chilling message: I was not meant to testify.
That was when everything clicked. I wasn’t just a staff member—I coordinated witnesses for a sensitive case linked to organized crime. I had recently reported an irregular detail in official records, something minor but critical.

Soon after, a man appeared at my door claiming to be a detective. Something felt off. I didn’t open it. Moments later, Graham texted me:
Don’t open the door. They followed me.
Officers arrived just in time.
The man outside was taken into custody, and police confirmed my neighbor had alerted them before anyone else. He had overheard plans to target me during my commute.
When Graham finally explained, the truth was even darker: the voices he recognized belonged to people connected to his own brother, who had ties to the very case I was involved in.
What followed happened quickly—protective measures, investigations, and the collapse of my normal life. I was moved to a secure location. Evidence I had quietly saved suddenly became vital.
The most terrifying realization wasn’t that someone tried to hurt me.
It was that I had been selected.
And somewhere out there, someone had written my name down.














