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At 5:02 a.m., my reclusive neighbor hammered on my door and whispered, “Don’t go to work today—by noon, you’ll understand,” then vanished like he’d just broken every rule keeping me alive

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past me, scanning the hallway behind my shoulder as if he expected someone else to be there. When he looked back at me, something in his face softened for half a second. Regret, maybe. Or pity. Then it was gone.

“Promise me,” he said. “Promise you won’t go to Henning and Cole today.”

“How do you know where I work?”

His mouth pressed into a thin line.

I continue reading …

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