I didn’t cry when he slapped me. I didn’t shake when they threatened to “teach me a lesson.”
But my hands start trembling the second someone whispers “the 13th.”
My name is Maya Carter, and until last month, I thought fear was something you could measure—raised voices, bruises, the kind of danger you can see coming. Then Lena Brooks moved into Unit 3B at our women’s transitional housing in Tulsa, and my definition of fear changed.
Lena was eight months pregnant and quiet in a way that made the hallway feel loud. She didn’t flinch when the intake counselor warned her about curfew violations. She didn’t argue when the night supervisor searched her bag. She didn’t even blink when her ex showed up once, drunk, shouting in the parking lot until security dragged him out.
But whenever the calendar got close to the 13th, Lena started acting like she was listening for a sound no one else could hear. Her eyes kept drifting to the front door. She slept in her sneakers. She taped cardboard over the peephole.
On the 10th, I cornered her in the laundry room. “Lena, you’re scaring me,” I said, keeping my voice gentle. “Talk to me. What happens on the 13th?”
She stared at the spinning dryer like it was counting down her life. Her hands went to her stomach, protective and trembling.
“On that day… they’ll come.”
“Who?” I asked. “Your ex?”
She shook her head. “Not him.” Then she finally looked at me, and the fear in her face wasn’t dramatic—it was practiced. “It’s not about love. It’s about debt.”
I tried to get her to tell me more, but she shut down the way someone shuts a door against a storm. All she said was, “If the lights go out, don’t come.”
I told myself she was spiraling. Trauma does that. Stress does that. Eight months pregnant in a shelter does that.
Then the 13th arrived.
At 11:47 p.m., every light in the building died at once—no flicker, no warning. The emergency exit signs glowed red. The hallway turned into a tunnel.
And then I heard it: footsteps. Slow. Confident. Coming closer.
They stopped right in front of Lena’s door.
A muffled scuffle. A sharp, strangled breath. The sound of something hitting the wall.
I ran. I didn’t think. I just ran.
I slammed into the corridor darkness and reached her door—
and it was already open.
Empty.
Only the smell of warm milk in the air…
and a snapped hair clip on the floor.
Then, behind me, a man’s voice whispered, almost amused:
“You weren’t supposed to come out, Maya.”
My whole body went cold. I turned toward the voice, but the hallway was pitch black except for that dull red glow. I couldn’t see a face—only the outline of a man leaning against the stairwell door like he belonged there.
“Where is she?” I demanded, forcing my voice steady.
He chuckled softly, like I’d asked something adorable. “You work here?”
“I live here,” I snapped. “Where’s Lena?”
He didn’t answer. Instead he pushed off the door and walked past me, close enough that I caught the scent of cologne and cigarette smoke. He didn’t rush. That’s what made it worse. People who are scared rush. People who are in control take their time.
When he disappeared down the stairs, my legs finally remembered how to move. I ran into Lena’s unit. Her bed was stripped. The drawer was open. Her prenatal vitamins were scattered like someone knocked them over with a careless hand.
On the nightstand sat her phone—screen cracked, still unlocked. The last thing open was a text thread labeled “DANIEL” with one message at the bottom:
LENA: If I’m gone by morning, it’s the 13th. Call Maya. Call the police. Don’t wait.
My hands shook so hard I almost dropped the phone. I hit call anyway. It rang twice.
“—Maya?” a man answered, voice thick with panic.
“I’m in her room,” I said. “She’s gone.”
There was a sound like he punched a wall. “God. She was right.”
“Who are ‘they’?” I asked.
Daniel exhaled hard. “Lena got involved with a fake ‘maternity assistance’ group online. They promised rent help, baby supplies… all the stuff desperate women click on at 2 a.m.” His voice cracked. “They had her send paperwork. Photos. Medical info. Then they started threatening her. Said she owed them for ‘services.’”
“What services?” I asked, even though I already hated the answer.
“Access,” Daniel said, sickened. “They sell leads—pregnant women, due dates, hospitals. Then they pressure you until you pay or… until you disappear.”
I swallowed bile. “Why the power outage?”
“They know shelters are understaffed at night,” he said. “They cut the breaker outside. Quick, quiet. No cameras.”
The building’s security cameras were on a separate backup battery, but the hallway cameras had been “glitchy” for weeks. I’d complained. Management had shrugged.
I called 911 with one hand and grabbed a flashlight with the other. Outside, the air was cold and wet, and the parking lot felt too open. At the far end, a van sat running with its lights off—just a dark shape with a faint engine hum.
I started toward it, heart hammering, when my phone buzzed.
A new text—unknown number.
UNKNOWN: Stop walking. Or the baby gets hurt.
I froze mid-step, breath trapped in my throat.
From inside the van, a woman’s voice screamed—cut off instantly.
For a second, my brain refused to process what I’d heard. Then instinct kicked in. I lifted my hands so whoever was watching could see I wasn’t reaching for anything. My flashlight hung useless at my side.
“Please,” I said out loud, voice shaking despite my effort. “She’s pregnant. Don’t do this.”
Another text arrived immediately, like someone was enjoying the timing.
UNKNOWN: You’re not her family. Walk away.
I didn’t. I couldn’t. I backed toward the entrance slowly, keeping my eyes on the van. My mind raced through every true-crime episode I’d ever watched, every warning pamphlet in our lobby, every safety training our staff skipped because “nothing ever happens here.”
Inside, I sprinted to the front desk where the landline sat. Our night supervisor, Tanya, was already on the phone with 911, eyes wide and wet.
“They’re saying officers are on the way,” she whispered. “Maya—what did you see?”
“A van,” I said. “Back lot. Lights off. They threatened the baby.”
Tanya’s face drained. “The cameras—”
“The cameras don’t work,” I snapped. The words came out harsher than I intended, but anger was the only thing keeping me upright. “They haven’t worked. We all knew.”
I ran to the maintenance closet and grabbed the building’s old emergency floodlight from the shelf—battery-powered, heavy, bright. I didn’t stop to ask permission. I just ran back outside and aimed it at the lot.
The sudden beam flooded the darkness like a spotlight on a stage.
The van jerked forward instantly—tires squealing, no hesitation. For a split second, the light caught a partial plate: 7K… 3… 9. That’s all I got. But it was something. It was proof.
I shouted it to Tanya, who repeated it to the dispatcher. I watched the van punch out of the lot and disappear into the night like it had done this before.
When the police arrived, they took statements and searched the area. They found the cut breaker box behind the building, exactly like Daniel said. They found a dropped disposable glove near the stairwell. They found Lena’s broken hair clip in my palm because I hadn’t realized I was still clutching it like a lifeline.
Two hours later, an officer approached me. “Ma’am,” he said, gentler now, “we’ve got a lead. A patrol car spotted a van matching the description near the highway. We’re pursuing.”
My knees almost gave out. “Is she alive?”
“We don’t know yet,” he admitted. “But you did the right thing turning that light on. You gave us a plate start.”
I stood there in the cold, shaking for a reason that finally made sense—because Lena wasn’t paranoid. She was prepared. And the 13th wasn’t superstition. It was a schedule.
If you’ve ever stayed in a shelter, worked in one, or even just lived in a building where “maintenance issues” get ignored—what would you have done in my place? Would you have chased the van, stayed inside, or tried something else entirely?
Drop your take in the comments—because the way we answer that question might be the difference between someone going missing… and someone making it home.




