Submitted by Alone-Improvement-46 t3_10k8wn0 in nosleep

To set the tone, I always hated the town I lived in. I moved there alone when I was 18 for college and quickly regretted it. It was a decent sized town but full of not decent people. Nearly every gas station was robbed frequently, there were shootings in broad daylight, robberies, you name it.

Well for the first 3 years I lived with roommates on a side of town that wasnt awful, but it was sketchy. So when I was making decent enough money I moved out on my own.

The house was tiny. Maybe 500 sqft if that, super old and poorly built. It was just me living there so I didn't mind how small it was - but what originally sold me was that it was in the middle of nowhere. It was surrounded by a bunch of fields and some wooded areas with only a few houses nearby. Considering I hated being in the town due to the continuous paranoia of getting mugged or shot, I loved the idea of living out there. So at the beginning of July I moved in. Everything seemed super swell minus not being able to get good internet. A month goes by and everything is still swell to me, and I decided to get a dog to keep me company. He also loved the place, and spent long amounts of time lounging about the yard and trying to convince the nearest neighbor to walk over and pet him. (Important later)

Roughly 2 months into living there I started to notice things out of place. (Something to note is that an old roommate of mine was using my spare room as a storage space until he got moved himself, so he had a key but was never there. He just kinda popped in once every other week to grab something and usually let me know beforehand. ) But I'd come home to my kitchen chair being pulled away from my table, or a bowl in the sink, things like that. They were such small things I wrote it off as my roommate swinging by or just stuff i was forgetting. But then my dog developed this crazy bad separation anxiety. Up until now he didn't even care when I left, he'd just lay on the couch and chew his toys. He never barked, never did anything weird. However, all of a sudden he began acting really awful every time I tried to leave. He'd literally cram his body through the door as I was closing it, screaming and barking and wouldn't stop until I came back in the house. He didn't want me to leave him there alone. At all.

I couldn't afford a kennel for him yet so I decided one day that I'd put a movie in while I was out, thinking maybe the sound of people talking might keep him calmed down. I only had to finish one task up at work and knew I'd be home early, so I put in a copy of Hamlet. I know, boring, but I chose it because the copy I have is 5 hours long. I knew it would be playing when I came back.

Flash forward 3 hours, long before Hamlet should have been over but when I walked in the door not only was the movie not playing, but the TV and the xbox were completely off.
I immediately called my "roommate" and asked if he had been over, and he wasn't even in town. I explained the tv situation to him and he shrugged it off as the tv powering off when it idles for awhile. Even though this is true, there are several reasons I know this isn't the case.

  1. It wasn't idling. A 5 hour movie was supposed to be playing.
  2. Even if it had shut off, my Xbox wouldn't have. I have left it on by accident for weeks I was gone out of town or whatever and it was still on when I came home. Always. But it was completely powered down this time.

The weird thing is none of my stuff was missing and the door was locked when I entered. I eventually convinced myself that it was something weird with the Xbox or whatever and shrugged it off. That is until my dog started acting even weirder. Remember earlier I mentioned he used to play with the neighbor? Well all of a sudden if she even walked by the house while he was out he'd start yelping and running at me away from her. This was incredibly weird to me, and made me incredibly cautious of her.

I put some cheap alarms on my doors, (the kind that go off when the door is opened ) and slept with my pistol handy. The second night the alarms were on my doors I was woken up by the one on the back door going off. I flew out of bed with my pistol, trying to convince myself that I was about to shoot some intruder, but once I got to the door it was shut and there was nobody there. The alarm had been knocked all the way across the room. The door would have had to opened for it to be chucked like that. It couldn't have fallen off and landed there. Something else weird, the door was locked. But not the way I had locked it. I always locked the knob AND the deadbolt, but upon checking my lock after this, only the door knob was locked. The police wouldn't do much as I had no witnesses, no lead, and they didn't have much to go on.

Needless to say I changed the locks. I didn't have any noticable problems inside after that, but later found out that the "close neighbor" that my dog hated had previously lived in the house I was renting, and the locks had never been changed. I have no way to prove my theory but it's pretty obvious she had a key and was coming and going as she pleased. Why though I can't figure out. Nothing of mine ever went missing. The most unsettling part for me though is that she had tried to come in at night until the alarm scared her off. How many times has she been in my house at night while I was asleep....and why???

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Comments

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gregklumb t1_j5pqisy wrote

Get some security cameras with an app for your phone. Find out if the house has any past history. Read up on local folklore and such.

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johnsonbrianna1 t1_j5s3sk6 wrote

Okay but why is your dog so afraid of her?

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Beautiful-Mess7256 t1_j66x18p wrote

Better question. Who buys a house and doesn't change the locks? That's the truly terrifying thing to take away. Op is out there right now. Bumbling their way through life with an intelligence lower than a potato.... Driving.... Taking care of a dog.... Using up our oxygen! What if the stupid is contagious?!?

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HoneyMCMLXXIII t1_j5sbckr wrote

That is terrifying! Especially since your dog, rather than becoming more familiar and therefore friendlier with her, is now afraid of her and never wants you to leave! I’d get security cameras asap! Good luck, and please keep us posted!

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Madelight t1_j5rpqum wrote

Well that's horrifying. Your last sentences made my heart beat faster... But if the deadbolt wasn't locked, doesn't that mean she was already inside ? Brrrr that makes my skin crawl...

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Wooden-Pomegranate-9 t1_j5swqwb wrote

No, the most unsettling part is that your dog went from trying to get her attention to being terrified of her. She had to have done something more than just hang around when she was there.

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xXDracoWolfXx t1_j5sc6xc wrote

Broo why did you not further investigate

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Wishiwashome t1_j5smviq wrote

As soon as you said rural area, as someone who lives in a rural area, I knew this would end badly. Glad you are safe!

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Mo3inaz t1_j5s6s6m wrote

Probably watched you sleep. Sinister motives, thank goodness you changed the locks

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Mysterious-Mist t1_j5sgpbs wrote

Please get a kennel for your dog. You can easily get second hand ones. It’s very clear that your dog is terrified to be alone in the house when you’re at work. You can definitely afford a cheap, used kennel. I worked as a doctor before I quit almost 5 years ago when I had my baby. I used to work long hours, 36 hours straight and that’s not counting the time driving home. On occasions, I only came home after working two days straight.. I used to leave the tv on for my 2 cats, timer controlled food dispenser, plenty of water and my upstairs sliding door to my balcony slightly ajar.. just enough for my two cats to escape in case of fire (or if I died in an accident). Likewise, keep your doggie out in a kennel, providing him a chance to escape in case that neighbour tries harm him. Better to do something about it now than cry over spilt milk.

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