LOGIN
My name is Diane Mercer. I am thirty-two years old. On paper, I have the kind of life most women my age would kill for. A solid husband who brings home a steady paycheck. A beautiful house tucked beside the lake where the water sparkles under the morning sun. And our daughter Lily, only four but already sharp as a tack. She notices everything, asks questions that make me pause and wonder how someone so small can see so much.
This morning started like every other Thursday. The kitchen smelled of fresh coffee and pancakes. Lily sat at the wooden table, her little legs swinging back and forth while she colored a picture of a bright yellow sun. Her crayons scattered across the surface like tiny jewels. Mark stood by the counter, already dressed for work in his crisp white shirt and navy tie. He looked every bit the reliable provider he had always been. He leaned down and kissed the top of my head, his lips warm against my hair. “You look beautiful today,” he said, voice soft and familiar. I smiled up at him and touched his arm. “Thank you, honey.” The words came out easy, the way they always did. But inside my head they landed heavy. Beautiful. Sure. But do you really see me anymore? Or am I just part of the routine, like the coffee you drink and the tie you straighten before you walk out the door? I pushed the thought away fast, the way I had learned to do. Mark is a good man. He works hard at the accounting firm downtown. He never raises his voice, not even when Lily throws one of her rare tantrums. He loves our daughter with everything he has, reading her bedtime stories and carrying her on his shoulders around the yard. I love him too. I do. We built this life together. But love does not always fill every empty space. Some days the quiet in this house feels louder than any argument could. After breakfast Mark grabbed his keys from the hook by the door. He paused long enough to ruffle Lily’s hair and drop another kiss on my cheek. “See you tonight. Love you both.” “Love you,” I called back, waving as he stepped outside. The door clicked shut behind him. I let out a slow breath and leaned against the counter. The house settled into that familiar silence. Sunlight streamed through the big windows overlooking the lake, making everything look peaceful and perfect. But peace was not what I felt. Lily looked up from her drawing, her big brown eyes curious. “Mommy, why do you sigh like that?” I laughed softly and walked over to brush my fingers through her soft curls. “Just thinking about all the fun we’re going to have today, sweetheart.” She seemed satisfied with that and went back to her coloring. I watched her for a moment, love swelling in my chest until it almost hurt. She deserved better than a mother who felt this restless. But the restlessness had been growing for months, like a crack spreading across a frozen lake. One wrong step and everything could fall through. I dropped Lily off at daycare around nine. She ran inside without looking back, already calling out to her friends. That part always stung a little, watching her little backpack bounce as she disappeared through the colorful doors. But it also gave me the time I needed. Time that felt dangerous lately. I drove straight back home, hands tight on the steering wheel. The lake road wound gently through the trees, sunlight dappling the pavement. Victor had texted me the night before. Short and direct, the way he always was. He could come over today if I wanted. Just thinking about it sent heat rushing through my body. Guilt followed right on its heels, sharp as a slap. What kind of mother does this? What kind of wife? The voice in my head never stayed quiet for long. Mark does not deserve this. Lily does not deserve this. But another thought answered immediately, louder and more urgent. God, I need to feel something real. Something that makes me forget I’m slowly disappearing. I parked in the garage and stepped inside. The house was quiet. Too quiet. My footsteps echoed on the hardwood floors as I walked upstairs to our bedroom. I opened the drawer where I kept the things Mark had never seen. Black lace lingerie, soft and delicate, hidden between ordinary cotton panties and sleep shirts. I slipped the fabric against my skin and stood in front of the full-length mirror. My cheeks were already warm. My heartbeat quickened. The woman staring back at me looked alive in a way she hadn’t in the kitchen earlier. This is the last time, I told myself. I had said that before. Too many times. But Victor knew how to pull something dangerous out of me. With him there were no rules. No careful routines. No pretending to be the perfect wife and mother. I straightened the sheets on the bed and lit a vanilla candle. The sweet scent filled the room in soft waves. I checked my phone again. He would be here soon. While I waited I lay back against the pillows and closed my eyes for just a moment. My mind wandered to Mark. The way he had smiled at Lily this morning. The way he still reached for my hand during quiet nights in front of the television. He was safe. Familiar. Steady. But safe and steady had stopped being enough months ago. I wanted fire. I wanted to feel alive again, even if it made me a terrible person. The guilt came in waves. If he ever finds out, it will destroy him. Then another voice whispered back. He will never find out. You are too careful. You wear the perfect wife mask so well. The room felt warm. Heavy. My eyes slowly drifted shut. Just for a minute, I thought. Just until he knocks. A loud knock at the front door jolted me awake. I sat upright, heart pounding hard against my ribs. How long had I been asleep? I glanced at the clock on the nightstand. Not long. Relief mixed with excitement as I quickly fixed my hair, adjusted the lace straps on my shoulders, and hurried downstairs with a smile I could not hide. It was him. I peeked through the small hole in the door. Victor stood there on the porch, tall and confident, dark hair slightly tousled by the breeze. That dangerous look in his eyes always pulled me in like a current. He smiled when he saw the shadow move behind the peephole. I opened the door.The young family, the Patels, had barely settled when the house began whispering louder than ever. Priya found herself drawn to the sealed basement door more often, her doctor’s curiosity pulling her toward the unknown. Raj tried to distract her with garden plans and quiet evenings by the fire, but the sounds at night grew impossible to ignore. Footsteps. Whispers. The faint scent of vanilla that lingered in the air long after the candles were blown out.One evening Priya suggested they try something different. “Another seance,” she said over dinner. “Just to see. Maybe it will bring some peace.”Raj laughed at first, but the look in her eyes made him agree. They invited Elena back, the local medium, along with a few friends who had heard the stories. They sat in the living room with candles flickering. The children were with grandparents for the night. Elena began the ritual with low chanting, her hands resting on the table. “We call to the spirit who walks these halls,” she said. “S
The Bennetts had barely unpacked when the house began whispering louder than ever. Margaret found herself drawn to the sealed basement door more often, her librarian’s curiosity pulling her toward the unknown. Harold tried to distract her with garden plans and quiet evenings by the fire, but the sounds at night grew impossible to ignore. Footsteps. Whispers. The faint scent of vanilla that lingered in the air long after the candles were blown out.One evening Margaret suggested they try something different. “A seance,” she said over dinner. “Just to see. Maybe it will bring some peace.”Harold laughed at first, but the look in her eyes made him agree. They invited a local medium named Clara, a woman in her fifties with sharp eyes and a calm voice. Clara arrived on a foggy Thursday night, carrying a small bag of herbs and crystals. The three of them sat at the dining table with candles flickering. Bella had been left with neighbors, but the house seemed to know what was happening.Clar
The Bennetts had barely unpacked when the house began whispering louder than ever. Margaret found herself drawn to the sealed basement door more often, her librarian’s curiosity pulling her toward the unknown. Harold tried to distract her with garden plans and quiet evenings by the fire, but the sounds at night grew impossible to ignore. Footsteps. Whispers. The faint scent of vanilla that lingered in the air long after the candles were blown out.One evening Margaret suggested they try something different. “A seance,” she said over dinner. “Just to see. Maybe it will bring some peace.”Harold laughed at first, but the look in her eyes made him agree. They invited a local medium named Clara, a woman in her fifties with sharp eyes and a calm voice. Clara arrived on a foggy Thursday night, carrying a small bag of herbs and crystals. The three of them sat at the dining table with candles flickering. Bella had been left with neighbors, but the house seemed to know what was happening.Clar
The retired couple, the Bennetts, moved into the lake house with quiet determination. Harold, a former accountant in his late sixties, saw the property as a peaceful place to spend their golden years. His wife Margaret, a retired librarian, fell in love with the lake views and the potential for a small garden. They unpacked slowly, filling the rooms with books and photos of their grown children. I watched from the shadows, my form bound to these walls, unable to step beyond the front porch no matter how I strained.Bella had left one last drawing by the sealed basement door before the family moved out. The Bennetts found it on their first full day. Margaret picked it up and smiled at the colorful image of a woman by the water. “Children have such imaginations,” she said to Harold. He nodded, but I saw the way his eyes lingered on the dark marks around the woman’s neck.Their first week passed in relative calm. Harold tinkered with small repairs while Margaret organized bookshelves. Th
Victor did not wait for Lily to call him back. Three days after their last meeting, he showed up at her front door at dusk, rain dripping from his gray hair. Daniel answered, his jaw tightening at the sight of the older man, but Lily stepped forward and invited Victor inside. Samuel was already asleep upstairs. The three adults sat in the living room, the air thick with unspoken accusations.“I went digging,” Victor said, pulling out a worn folder. Inside were police reports he had paid a retired detective to pull. They showed inconsistencies in Mark’s statements, small lies about timelines, and a note from the initial officer who visited the house describing Mark as “unnaturally composed” for a man whose wife had just vanished. “He planned this,” Victor continued, voice low and rough. “That calm you saw as a kid? It was the same calm he had when he caught us. He didn’t snap. He executed.”Lily read the papers with trembling hands. Each line carved deeper into her. “He raised me after
Victor met Lily again two nights later in the same dingy diner. Rain hammered the windows as he slid into the booth, his hands trembling around a mug of black coffee. The years had not been kind, but tonight his eyes burned with something sharper than regret. “I went back to the old neighborhood,” he said without greeting. “Talked to people who knew Mark before you were born.”Lily leaned forward, her fingers tight around her own cup. She had not slept since their last meeting. Daniel had noticed the change but respected her silence for now. “Tell me.”Victor spoke in a low rush. Mark’s father had been a tyrant who ruled the house with fists and silence. When the old man died, Mark buried him in the backyard without ceremony, then told neighbors his father had simply left town. No funeral. No questions. The pattern was there even then. Control at any cost. “Your dad learned early that the perfect face hides everything,” Victor said. “When he caught us that day, he didn’t see a wife wh
The tension in the house had been building for weeks like a storm that refused to break. Mark’s perfect behavior continued without any cracks showing. He still brought home flowers and small gifts. He still played with Lily like the devoted father everyone saw. But my fear grew stronger every singl
The weeks continued to blur together in a haze of forced normalcy. Mark’s new perfect behavior never slipped even once. He brought me flowers every few days, always with that same gentle smile. He helped with Lily’s bedtime routine without being asked, tucking her in and singing the silly songs she
Time folded in on itself within the walls of the lake house. I drifted through the years like a leaf caught in an endless current. Lily turned twenty two. She had grown into a confident young woman with a job at the gallery in town and a social life that kept her busy. Mark had settled into his six
Months dragged into years inside the house that had become my prison. Time moved strangely for me now, a ghost caught between what was and what could never be again. Lily turned six, then seven. I watched every birthday, every scraped knee, every nightmare where she called out for me in the dark. M







