I found the diary by accident. I had been looking for a misplaced screwdriver in the small storage room behind the guest bedroom when a black leather notebook fell from the top shelf and hit the floor with a dull thud. I recognized the handwriting immediately—Daniel’s, my son-in-law. Curious, assuming it was something harmless, I opened it.
The first line on the page read: “Today is the day. The old man won’t make it…”
My heart froze.
The old man. That’s what he jokingly called me sometimes, but in the diary… it didn’t look like a joke. I felt a cold pressure around my ribs, as if the room had shrunk.
I kept reading, my pulse pounding in my ears. Daniel had written about my daily schedule—when I woke up, when I took my afternoon walk, when I usually napped, what medications I used. There was even a line: “He doesn’t lock the back door until after dinner.”
My breath turned shallow. Why was he tracking me like this?
I flipped to the next page, my hands trembling so badly the paper crinkled. This entry was even worse: “Once it’s done, everything falls into place. Claire will grieve, but she’ll accept the truth. No one will question my timing—not after the fall.”
The fall.
My knees nearly buckled.
I scanned the rest of the page. A crude sketch of our staircase. Notes about the handrail being “loose enough.” A reminder to “check his tea earlier that evening.”
My stomach churned. I wasn’t imagining it—Daniel was planning something. Something that ended with me gone.
And then, from the hallway, I heard a sound.
A soft thump.
Footsteps.
He was home early.
I snapped the diary shut and shoved it under my shirt. I didn’t even know why—panic made every decision for me. All I understood was that I had to get out. Now.
But as I reached for the doorknob, the footsteps grew louder, slower… purposeful.
“Robert?” Daniel called from somewhere just outside the room. “You in there?”
The doorknob started to turn.
I had only seconds left before he walked in.
And I still had no idea how to escape.
My mind raced. Every instinct screamed at me to run, but the storage room had only one exit—the door Daniel was already pushing open. I scanned the cramped space desperately. Boxes, cleaning supplies, old tools… Nothing that could help me slip past him unnoticed.
The door creaked. His shadow stretched across the floor.
I forced my breathing to steady, shoved the diary into the toolbox beside me, and pretended to be sorting through a drawer. When he stepped in, I looked over my shoulder as casually as I could manage.
“There you are,” Daniel said. His tone was friendly—too friendly. “Claire asked if you wanted coffee.”
Coffee. The diary mentioned tea, but the implication was the same. My skin prickled.
“No, thank you,” I said, forcing a smile. “Just fixing something real quick.”
His eyes slid over the shelves, lingering a little too long on the one where the diary had been. “Find what you need?”
“Yep.”
A beat of silence hung between us. His jaw twitched, almost imperceptibly. Then he stepped closer. “Let me help you carry anything heavy.”
I tightened my grip on the drawer handle. “I’m fine.”
I needed a plan. Fast.
“Actually,” I said suddenly, “I promised my neighbor I’d help him with something today. Completely slipped my mind.” I walked past Daniel, praying he wouldn’t stop me.
But he did. His hand landed on my shoulder—firm, insistent. “You sure you’re okay? You seem… off.”
I turned slowly, meeting his eyes. I knew I couldn’t let him guess what I’d read. “Just tired,” I said softly. “Didn’t sleep well.”
His grip loosened. “Then rest. No need to go anywhere.”
Panic surged through me. Staying in the house meant putting myself exactly where he wanted me. I had to get out.
“I’ll just check in with the neighbor for a minute,” I insisted. “I’ll be right back.”
For a long moment, Daniel didn’t move. He studied me—too carefully. Then he stepped aside. “Alright,” he said. “Don’t be long.”
I walked out, every step stiff with fear. Once I hit the front yard, I didn’t turn back. I didn’t slow down. I didn’t even breathe properly until I reached the sidewalk.
But running solved nothing.
If Daniel was planning to kill me…
I needed proof.
I needed help.
And I needed to know why.
I didn’t go to a neighbor. I didn’t go anywhere familiar. Instead, I crossed three blocks, ducked behind a strip mall, and sat on a bench behind a laundromat where I knew no one would look for me. My hands shook as I pulled the diary back out of the toolbox I’d carried with me.
I reread the entries, this time with the clear intention of finding evidence. Dates, times, motives—anything I could present to the police. But the more I read, the more I noticed something odd.
On an earlier page—one I hadn’t looked at before—Daniel had written:
“The inspector’s coming Monday. If he confirms the structural issues, we might finally convince Robert to move into assisted living. Claire’s right—he won’t listen unless there’s a push.”
Another entry:
“He nearly slipped again today. The stairs are a disaster. I hate that he thinks I’m meddling, but we need to protect him.”
My mouth went dry.
I flipped to the page about “the fall.” The drawing I’d seen wasn’t a plan to create one—it was a diagram of the broken handrail I’d been refusing to repair for months. He had circled weak spots, noting: “This will give out eventually. Fix before he gets hurt.”
I skimmed the page I’d panicked over:
“Today is the day. The old man won’t make it…” followed by a scratched-out sentence and a note: “Rewrite later. Meant: ‘won’t make it to the appointment unless I drive him.’ Got distracted while writing.”
My stomach twisted with humiliation and relief all at once.
I had misunderstood everything. Terribly.
Daniel wasn’t planning to kill me—he was trying to protect me. The “tracking” was him noting behavior to show a doctor. The “loose railing” was something he intended to repair. The tea comment was about switching me off caffeine because I’d been having heart palpitations.
And I had just run out of the house like a fugitive.
I covered my face with my hands. How was I supposed to walk back in and explain this?
After a few deep breaths, I headed home. When I walked through the door, Daniel and Claire were both waiting, worried sick. Before I could say a word, Daniel blurted out, “Robert, where did you go? I thought something happened to you.”
I looked at him. Really looked. And felt a wave of shame.
“Daniel,” I said quietly, “we need to talk. And I owe you an apology.”




