Chapter 2
MORGAN
Today’s shift had dragged on longer than usual, with the afternoon crowd lingering well past the lunch rush, everyone nursing their coffees like they had nowhere better to be.
Or maybe they just didn't want to step back out into the streets.
It had been a week since that last body turned up in the underpass, and in that time, three more had been found, each with the same clean sword wound that made no sense.
The news was calling him the Blade Phantom now, some tabloid nickname that stuck because it sounded dramatic enough to sell papers.
People talked about it constantly, in line at the counter, over their laptops at the corner tables, their voices a mix of speculation and barely concealed panic.
Lena had spent half our shift recounting the latest theories from her true crime podcast, her eyes wide as she described how the victims were always alone, always in those shadowed parts of the city where the lights flickered or failed entirely.
"It's like he’s just picking people at random," she'd said, wiping down the counter with more force than necessary.
I nodded along, steaming milk for yet another latte, but I kept my responses short.
Talking about it too much just amplified the knot in my stomach, that low-level anxiety that had settled over everything like a fog.
The cafe itself felt different now, smaller somehow, with customers glancing out the windows more often, checking their phones for updates between sips.
Even the regulars, the ones who usually buried themselves in books or work, were on edge.
One guy, a professor type who came in every day with his battered notebook, had asked me outright if I felt safe walking home alone.
"You should get one of those apps," he'd said, "the ones that share your location with friends.
" I smiled and told him I was fine, that I varied my route and stayed alert, but his concern stuck with me, a reminder that the fear was seeping into every interaction.
By the time I clocked out, the sky was already bruising into evening, the kind of early dusk that came with the shorter days and the perpetual overcast. Lena offered me a ride again, her car keys jingling as she grabbed her bag.
"Come on, Morgan, it's getting dark earlier.
And with all this..." She trailed off, gesturing vaguely at the world outside.
I appreciated it, I really did, but I turned her down.
Accepting felt like admitting defeat, like the killings had already won by making me change my habits.
Besides, my apartment was really not that far, and I'd done it a thousand times.
"Text me when you get home," she called after me as I pushed through the door, the bell chiming behind me like a half-hearted farewell.
The air outside hit me with a chill that went straight through my coat, sharper than it had been that morning.
The streets were quieter than they should have been for rush hour, people hurrying along with their heads down, avoiding eye contact as if looking at someone too long might invite trouble.
Street vendors who'd normally hawk their wares until sunset had packed up early, their carts chained to lampposts as they headed home for the night.
I zipped up my jacket and started walking, sticking to the main avenue at first, where the traffic hummed steadily and the storefronts spilled warm light onto the sidewalk.
But even here, the atmosphere had shifted.
Posters were plastered on every other pole, police warnings about traveling in pairs after dark, with a hotline number for tips on the Blade Phantom.
A digital billboard overhead flashed the same message, the words "Stay Vigilant" pulsing in red letters that reflected off the wet pavement from last night's rain.
I tried to shake off the weight of it all, focusing on the rhythm of my steps, the familiar landmarks: the bookstore with its window display of mystery novels that suddenly seemed too on-the-nose, the corner deli where the owner nodded at me through the glass.
But the conversations I'd overheard all day kept replaying in my head.
Customers debating whether the killer was targeting specific types, or if it was all random, just bad luck for whoever crossed his path alone.
One woman had sworn she'd seen a shadow figure near her building the night before, tall and cloaked, but her friend dismissed it as nerves.
I wanted to dismiss it too, to chalk everything up to collective hysteria, but the bodies were real, the wounds documented in grainy photos that leaked online despite the police trying to keep them contained.
About five minutes into my walk, I turned off the avenue onto a side street, the one that cut through a quieter block lined with brownstones and the occasional parked car.
It was my favorite bad weather shortcut, shorter and less crowded, but tonight it felt exposed, the buildings casting long shadows that stretched across the road like fingers.
I quickened my pace without really thinking about it, my hand slipping into my bag to grip the pepper spray canister, its shape reassuring under my fingers.
That's when I first noticed it, or thought I did: a faint echo of footsteps behind me, not quite matching my own.
I paused for a second, pretending to check my phone, and the sound stopped too, leaving only the distant rumble of a passing truck.
Coincidence, I told myself. Probably just someone else heading home, their rhythm syncing up by chance.
The city was full of people, after all, even if it felt emptier these days.
I kept going, but now I was listening, really listening, to the sounds around me.
The wind rustling leaves in the gutters, a dog barking from an open window somewhere above.
And then, as I crossed an intersection, there it was again, that soft scuff of boots on concrete, maybe twenty feet back.
I didn't turn around right away; instead, I slowed my steps, making it look natural, like I was window-shopping at the closed antique store on the corner.
The footsteps slowed too, not stopping entirely but dragging out, as if whoever it was didn't want to close the gap.
My pulse picked up, a steady thump in my ears, but I kept my breathing even.
This could be nothing, I reasoned. Paranoia from all the talk at work, my mind turning ordinary noises into threats.
I'd read about how fear could do that, amplify the mundane until it felt sinister.
To test it, I picked up speed again, crossing to the other side of the street where a small cluster of people waited at a bus stop.
Safety in numbers, or at least the illusion of it.
I glanced back then, casual, like I was checking for traffic, and scanned the sidewalk I'd just left.
A few pedestrians scattered along the block: an older man with a grocery bag, a woman on her phone, hurrying past. No one stood out, no tall figure lurking in the shadows like the rumors described.
But the feeling didn't fade, that prickling at the back of my neck, like eyes boring into me from somewhere I couldn't see.
I lingered at the bus stop for a moment, pretending to read the schedule posted on the pole, giving whoever it might be a chance to pass by or lose interest. The group around me chatted quietly, their voices a low murmur about the weather or work, but I caught snippets of the killings again, one guy saying he'd started carrying a knife just in case.
When the bus pulled up, I didn't get on, but I used the movement of people boarding to slip away, turning down a different street than my usual route.
This one led toward the park, a bit longer but more open, with benches and paths that were usually dotted with joggers or dog walkers even at this hour.
The detour added a few minutes, but if someone was following me, it might throw them off.
Or confirm it, if the footsteps reappeared.
I walked briskly, the park coming into view ahead, its iron fence gleaming faintly under the streetlights.
The trees inside swayed gently, their branches casting shifting patterns on the ground, and for a second, the openness felt safer, less confined than the narrow side streets.
But as I entered the park, cutting across the main path, the unease crept back stronger.
The area was emptier than I'd expected, only a handful of people visible: a couple on a bench, heads close together, and a lone runner disappearing around a curve.
The lamps here were spaced farther apart, pools of light separated by stretches of dimness where the shadows thickened.
I heard it again, that echo, fainter now but persistent, like someone matching my pace from a distance.
I stopped abruptly, bending down as if to tie my shoe, and listened.
The sound halted too, then resumed a beat later, closer this time.
My mouth went dry, logic clashing with instinct.
Maybe it was an echo off the buildings bordering the park, sound bouncing in weird ways.
Or someone innocent, heading in the same direction.
But why stop when I stopped? I straightened up and kept moving, veering off the main path onto a side trail that looped back toward the busier streets.
If this was real, I needed to get to a place with more eyes, more light.
The trail wound through a denser section of trees, the leaves overhead blocking out the sky, and the air grew cooler, almost heavy.
Every rustle seemed amplified, every snap of a twig underfoot making me flinch inwardly.
I glanced over my shoulder again, this time more openly, but the path behind me curved out of sight, hiding whatever might be there.
Still, the sensation intensified, a weight pressing on me, like the air itself had thickened with attention.
I pulled out my phone, thumb hovering over Lena's number, but I didn't call yet.
What would I say? That I thought someone was following me based on footsteps that might not even be there?
She'd tell me to head straight home or find a cop, but admitting it out loud felt like making it real, and part of me still clung to the idea that I was overreacting.
To shake it off, I doubled back suddenly, retracing my steps for about thirty feet before ducking behind a thick oak tree, out of the direct line of the path.
My heart hammered now, loud enough that I worried it might give me away, but I forced myself to stay still, breathing shallowly.
If no one was there, I'd feel foolish but relieved, and I could laugh it off later.
Seconds ticked by, the park sounds filling the silence: wind in the branches, a distant car horn.
Then, faintly, the footsteps approached, steady and measured, passing the spot where I'd veered off.
I peered around the trunk, careful not to make a sound, and caught a glimpse of movement, a dark shape moving along the path I'd just left.
Too far to make out details, just a silhouette against the lamplight, tall and unhurried.
It paused for a moment, as if scanning the area, then continued on, disappearing around the bend.
Relief washed over me, mixed with a fresh wave of doubt.
Had that been my follower, or just another person cutting through the park?
The timing fit, but it could still be coincidence.
I waited a full minute, counting in my head, before stepping back onto the path, heading in the opposite direction now, toward the park's exit that led to a well-lit commercial strip.
The shops there would be closing soon, but there'd be foot traffic, delivery bikes, maybe even a security guard outside the convenience store.
As I walked, I kept glancing back, varying my speed again, slow then fast, to see if the echo returned.
For a stretch, it didn't, and I started to relax, telling myself I'd imagined the whole thing, that the city's fear had gotten under my skin after all.
But as I neared the exit, the gates looming ahead with their wrought-iron spikes, the feeling surged back, stronger and unmistakable.
No footsteps this time, or none I could hear over my own, but that sense of being watched, like a gaze locked on my back, tracking every move.
I spun around once, scanning the trees and benches, but saw nothing out of place.
Still, it persisted, turning the park's once-comforting openness into a trap, every shadow a potential hiding spot, every quiet corner a blind alley.
My apartment was only a few blocks away now, but going straight there felt risky, like leading whatever this was right to my door.
Instead, I decided to loop around to the diner on the next street over, the one that stayed open late with bright lights and a counter full of truckers and night owls.
I'd sit there for a bit, order a coffee, watch the door.
If the feeling faded, great. If not, I'd call Lena or flag down a cab.
I pushed through the gate, the metal clanging softly behind me, and hurried toward the diner's neon sign glowing in the distance.
The street here was busier, cars zipping by, but the sidewalks were thinning out, people vanishing into doorways or subways.
I was almost there, the warmth of the diner's windows in sight, when I heard it again: a single, clear footstep, close enough that it cut through the traffic noise, as if whoever it was had given up on subtlety.
My stomach twisted, certainty flooding in. This wasn't imagination.