The lukewarm coffee in my mug sloshed over the rim and onto my keyboard, but I couldn’t tear my eyes away from the phone screen. Maya, the sweet, highly-recommended college student we had hired just two days ago, held her chilling smile at the lens for three agonizing seconds. Then, she casually rolled the blueprint back into a tight cylinder.
“It’s going to be the ultimate game of hide-and-seek,” Maya’s voice chirped through my phone’s tiny speaker, her tone instantly snapping back to a sickeningly sweet singsong. “But remember the rules. If she finds you, you lose the game.”
My seven-year-old, Leo, nodded eagerly, while five-year-old Mia bounced in her chair. They thought this was an adventure. They had no idea they were pawns in whatever psychotic trap this woman was setting.
I didn’t bother locking my computer. I bolted from my office, sprinting down the hallway while frantically stabbing my husband Mark’s number into my phone. It went straight to voicemail. I dialed 911 next, practically flying down the concrete steps of the parking garage.
“911, what is your emergency?”
“My babysitter! She’s—she’s planning something. She has blueprints of my house. She knows about the hidden cameras!” I stammered, throwing myself into the driver’s seat and gunning the engine.
I propped my phone on the dashboard, keeping the live feed open. On screen, Maya was no longer acting like a cheerful caregiver. She was moving methodically, with the calm, terrifying precision of a soldier. She ushered the kids out of the kitchen frame. I quickly toggled to the hallway camera.
She wasn’t leading them upstairs to the master bedroom, like she had pointed out on the map. She was ushering them down the hall, toward the heavy door of our unfinished basement.
Why point to my bedroom on the blueprint, but take them to the basement? A sudden, horrifying realization hit me like a physical blow. She wasn’t preparing a trap for me. She was hiding them from whoever, or whatever, she was expecting to arrive in my bedroom.
“Ma’am, officers are dispatched and three minutes away,” the operator’s voice crackled. “Do not enter the home alone.”
I ignored her, tires screeching as I swerved into my driveway. A sleek, unmarked black utility van was idling silently across the street, its windows heavily tinted. My front door was standing wide open.
I dashed inside, grabbing the heavy iron fire poker from the hearth. “Leo! Mia!” I screamed, the silence of the house swallowing my voice.
A loud, splintering crash echoed from upstairs. It came directly from the master bedroom.
Footsteps—heavy, booted, and definitely not belonging to a twenty-year-old college student—thudded aggressively across the floorboards overhead.
Suddenly, the basement door clicked open behind me. Maya materialized from the shadows. She had shed the oversized cardigan she wore this morning; beneath it, a dark tactical vest hugged her chest, and a suppressed handgun was gripped firmly in her right hand. She pressed a finger to her lips, her eyes deadly serious.
“Your husband isn’t an accountant, and he isn’t in Chicago on a business trip,” she whispered, stepping smoothly between me and the staircase. “The cartel he’s been skimming from just came through your second-story window. The kids are locked in the reinforced storm shelter downstairs.”
Before my brain could even begin to process the words, the bedroom door upstairs blew off its hinges, and a man in a balaclava appeared at the top of the landing, leveling an automatic weapon at the foyer.
Maya didn’t flinch. She raised her gun, and the real rules of the night were enforced.
