SleepWalker: A Nighttime Thriller
The first time Mara woke on the porch, it was still dark and the house smelled of rain. Mud crusted the hem of her nightgown; a neighbor’s wind chime, tangled and soggy, clinked in a wind that hadn’t reached the windows. She had no memory of leaving the bed, no recollection of the steps that took her down the hallway and through the back door. She told herself it was a dream—one of those heavy, movie-like dreams that leave you with a bruise of unease—but when she opened her hands there were twigs embedded in her palms.
For months the episodes were isolated curiosities: misplaced keys found in the freezer, a phone left in the bathtub, a bruise on her arm that she could not explain. Mara’s sleep seemed to fracture into a second life, one where she moved with purpose while her waking mind stumbled through fog. When she found a torn scrap of paper in her pocket with an address on it, fear replaced curiosity. The address was downtown—a block-long warehouse that, according to a single online listing, had been vacant for years.
She told no one. Talking about the nights made them more vivid, as if the confession were a match that could ignite the dark. Instead, she began to watch herself. She set up a cheap webcam facing her bed, ironed a camera into the inside of a bedside lamp, taped a phone to the headboard. The footage, when she could keep herself asleep long enough to record it, showed her sitting up, whispering words she couldn’t hear. She rose, moved through the room with a slow, precise deliberateness, and left—not as a sleepwalker stumbling, but as someone with intent.
The discovery of intent changed everything.
She went back to the warehouse address one Sunday. It sat like a wound in the city—brick blackened with soot, windows boarded, graffiti like angry stitches. The front door was chained; someone had pried open a narrow side entrance. Inside, the air was old and metallic. She moved through the echoing rooms following the faint impression that had tugged at her in sleep: a rhythm of footsteps, a sculpture of shadow. On a pallet in the main room lay a mattress with a single pillow. On that pillow was a photograph of Mara, sleeping in her own bed.
The photograph had been taken the night she first woke on the porch.
Panic sharpened into paranoia. Mara considered police, considered the camera footage, considered the possibility that she was being stalked. But the footage offered nothing beyond her own motion; no third figure, no other hand. Whoever watched her had mastered a way to be present and absent—close enough to place a printed photograph on a pillow, remote enough to avoid the lens. She needed answers and the only other person who might have them was Jonah.
Jonah had been her boyfriend for two years before he left—calm, practical, the kind of man who labeled spices and sorted receipts. He left three months ago with a single note: “I can’t stay with a haunted house.” He had not returned calls. When Mara knocked on his door, he opened with a face like a closed book.
“You should leave this alone,” he said. “Whatever this is, it’s bigger than sleepwalking.”
“Then tell me what you know.”
He sighed, the tight surrender of someone who has been carrying a secret until the weight breaks them. “Do you remember the old Somers factory? When I first moved here, people said it was—” He paused, eyes drifting to the street as if expecting someone to pass. “—people said it was where they ran experiments. Sleep studies. They said participants woke different.”
Mara wanted to scoff. She wanted to believe in rational explanations: stress, trauma, undiagnosed narcolepsy. Instead she felt the thread tighten. She thought of the photograph, the mattress, the whispering in the footage. Someone was trying to tell her something—someone who had watched her sleep enough to know the angle of her face, the curve of her jaw.
Her next recordings captured a new behavior. Mid-episode she would pause, as if listening to a voice only she could hear, then pick up a pen and begin to write. The handwriting was jagged and urgent, phrases that made less sense on their own: “Basement—six—left,” “Red door,” “Not them.” The last line, written twice, trembled across the page: “Wake me.”
She took the papers with her to Dr. Havel, an old neurologist who treated sleep disorders with a clinical blend of skepticism and compassion. He read the notes, watched the video, then ran a slow, practiced hand along his jaw.
“There are reports of parasomnias being triggered by external cues,” he said. “Smells, sounds—people can react to stimuli without conscious recall. But this,” he tapped the handwriting, “this shows planning. That’s rare. You could be in a dissociative state. Or…” He paused. “Or someone could be conditioning you.”
Conditioning. The word felt like a key turned in a lock. Suddenly the narrative that had felt personal—one woman’s sleepbroken life—expanded into a pattern. Someone had built a system around her nights, assembled triggers and messages, tailored a script and placed props at street addresses. Whoever did it had resources and a patient, poisonous focus.
The next night Mara staged a trap. She filled her room with cameras, a recording device, and a single cheap alarm set to blare if she left the bed. She slept on the mattress with a rush of nerves that made her stomach a taut wire. In the footage she rose, turned toward the door, and stopped. Her hand hovered over the knob but did not touch it. The alarm did not sound.
A whisper threaded through the footage—not audible on the recording but clear in the way she flinched, the ripple across her face. It wasn’t a voice in her ear; it was the sensation of being addressed. She felt the instruction as if it had been placed under her skin. She wrote, again and again, a single word: “Find.”
Find what? A person, a place, herself? The word multiplied into a map of small directions: “Underpass—blue graffiti—midnight,” “Locker 227,” “Do not tell.”
She began to follow them.
At the underpass, a locker barely hanging open revealed a key taped to a photograph—a picture of her childhood bedroom. A locker labeled with a sticker from a defunct gym yielded a cassette tape. The tapes were old-school, hiss and breath and a voice that sounded suspiciously like her own, layered and slowed until it was almost other. The tapes spoke in fragments: “Remember the gown… the porch… he watched… wake me…”
Jonah’s face grew paler each time Mara presented him with a discovery. He called the name of the factory quietly, like a spell. “Somers did behavioral trials for military contractors. They wanted operatives who could act while asleep—perform tasks without conscious recall. People were paid to forget. Some of them—”
“You’re saying someone used those protocols on me?” Mara said.
He didn’t answer. Instead he handed her a sealed envelope he’d kept since he left: court documents, invoices, a single typed name—Elias Kade.
Elias Kade was a private security entrepreneur whose contracts were folded into black budgets. He had hosts, donors, and a short list of men who were willing to bend ethics when the price was right. His company had once bid on a contract with the city to “improve surveillance outcomes.” The bid was rejected, but the language in the proposal—conditioning, operant conditioning, sleep-state performance—ached with relevance.
Mara found Elias Kade’s office three nights later. The building was glass and brass and smelled faintly of citrus; the receptionist treated her like a stray customer. She waited until after hours when the offices emptied and the streetlights locked the city in amber. Inside, the records room was a small closet under a staircase, unlocked. She rifled through folders until she found a file stamped with her name: participant ID 77. Photocopies of bank transfers, a redacted consent form, a list of triggers. At the bottom of the file was a single line she read until the letters blurred: “Maintain plausible deniability. Subject must not be aware.”
A siren jangling through the city made her drop the papers. When she looked up, a shadow moved at the far end of the corridor. He was tall enough that the ceiling light cut him in half; he was not Elias Kade, but he carried the same hush of power. He smiled the way predators smile when they expect their prey to freeze.
“You shouldn’t have come here,” he said. His voice folded into the hum of the building.
Mara had rehearsed a thousand lines. She said none of them. She said, instead: “Why me?”
He tilted his head. “Because you were available. Because you were quiet. Because you sleep.”
They say madness and sanity live on opposite sides of small habits: a step taken at night, a taste for silence. The man—whose name was Quinn—spoke about protocols and profit like a lecture about weather. “We were hired to see how far a person could be pushed,” he said. “We needed someone with a life that would not be missed. Someone with stability. You were perfect.”
“You used me to test—what? Assassins? Couriers? Puppets?” The questions piled in Mara’s mouth like stones.
Quinn smiled, as if the questions pleased him. “We targeted tasks that required deniability. Leave a package, open a door, plant a camera. The subject wakes with no memory. You can’t pin it on them. And in the meantime, we learned how to embed commands that will persist into wakefulness.”
“You can’t keep doing this,” Mara said. Her voice cracked, but she kept it level. The first thing she had learned in the warehouse was that panic made the scripts stronger. Calm broke them.
“Perhaps,” Quinn said. “Or perhaps you will continue to help us. You did, after all, follow our directions.”
That was the worst cruelty: he was right. Once the machinery was in motion, it required only a patient operator to keep it turning. Mara thought of the photograph on the pillow, of the mattress in the warehouse, of the nights she had obeyed without knowing. If she fought, she might be crushed. If she continued, she would become the very instrument used to erase others.
But somewhere under the fear there was a stubbornness that had nothing to do with bravery—only with refusal. Mara left the office with a copy of the file hidden in her coat and a plan that was less strategy than a collection of small, dangerous acts. She set more cameras. She bought a frequency jammer and a cheap metronome. She taught herself to sleep with one hand clamped to the bedpost, to wake when certain rhythms pulsed through the room. She practiced waking mid-episode by forcing herself to rise from naps and act against the script.
She also fed the machine. In the weeks that followed she obeyed one instruction and then two and then none. She let the handlers see what they expected while she gathered evidence, mapped routes, memorized faces that flashed behind the masks. She left crumbs for the system: false addresses that led to empty lots, packages filled with rocks, decoy lockers. She learned how to be a subject who would betray the experiments from within.
Quinn noticed. The responses escalated. The notes on her pillow turned into threats. Her bedroom windows were scratched at night. Jonah’s truck was sideswiped. The city felt suddenly small and energetic with danger, every alley a potential stage for another staged act.
On a rain-slimmed night she followed an instruction that led her to an old theater. The marquee’s lights were dead. Inside, the chairs smelled of dust and shoe polish. She found a door marked “STAGE—NO ENTRY.” The key in her hand trembled. In the wings, someone had set up a single spotlight and a lone chair. On it sat a tape recorder.
She pressed play.
Elias Kade’s voice filled the theater—calm, excused, corporate. “Phase three will refine the model. Subject 77 is demonstrating reliable obedience. We proceed to deploy in situ.” Then, softer, a voice she did not expect: Jonah’s.
“You promised you would stop,” Jonah said. He sounded raw. “You said you’d stop if it hurt her.”
The recorder clicked off. Light came from the wings like a blade. Jonah stepped into the circle, rain on his shoulder, eyes rimmed red.
“You went into business with people who use people,” he said. “I thought walking away would be enough. I was wrong.”
“How much did you know?” Mara asked.
“Enough,” he said. “I worked the logistics. I signed things. But I told myself I was making a choice for money. When I realized what they did, I left. I thought leaving would exonerate me. It didn’t.”
Mara reached for him and he flinched. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
“Because I was ashamed,” Jonah said. “Because I thought you’d hate me. Because I wanted to protect you—stupid, I know.”
They did not have to find forgiveness. They needed a plan. They made one on a napkin under the theater’s exit sign: evidence to distribute, a server to destroy, a contact in an investigative newspaper. They would expose Elias Kade and his clients. They would take back the night.
The night of the leak was cold and metallic. Mara wore headphones and a hoodie and felt like a ghost in her own body. Jonah drove; she navigated. They moved like people with nothing left to lose. They had access to what mattered: a server farm rented under a shadow company, keys that fit locks and hearts that had been paid for silence. They did not expect ease, only opportunity.
Quinn’s men were waiting.
The ambush happened under sodium lights. Jonah took two hits and stayed conscious. Mara felt a fist against her temple and the world winked out the way it always did when she slipped toward sleep. But this time the fall was different. She had trained herself to bring an anchor back into the dark: a single word, a name, a face. She imagined Jonah’s cheek pressed to her palm. She thought of the porch and the mud and the photograph on the pillow. She clung to the image like a rope.
When she woke, she was in the back seat of a car, hands bruised, Jonah slumped beside her, blood at his temple. They had both been drugged, left in a parking lot as if the handlers wanted them to be found. The files were gone. The server had been wiped. Elias’s operation had been one step ahead. It was a defeat and a message: you can resist, but we can always reset the board.
Defeat, however, was not the end of the story. The leak had been partial; some records had already been copied to offsite drives. The investigative reporter they had contacted had published a tentative piece that named contractors and hinted at experiments. It was not the full exposure they wanted, but it was enough to make quiet offices shiver. The city council called inquiries. A handful of former employees came forward, murmuring like birds in winter.
Elias Kade’s name became a stain. Quinn disappeared. The warehouse where Mara had first found the mattress was raided and sealed. But the system—clever, modular, resilient—did not disappear. It simply retreated, leaving the city with new shadows and new questions.
Mara rebuilt small things: her curtains, her phone, her trust. She slept with a light on and a camera always rolling. She left town for a month and returned with a haircut and a thinner fear. But the nights remained partial. Sometimes the whisper returned, a ghostly instruction folded into the hum of the refrigerator. Sometimes she woke on a stranger’s stoop with a taste of copper in her mouth. The conditioning had not been fully erased; it had become a scar.
And scars have memory.
One evening, years later, Mara received a package with no return address. Inside, wrapped in tissue, was a photograph: herself asleep, years earlier, hair fanned across the pillow. Underneath, a single line written in a careful hand: “Wake me.”
The note was both a threat and a plea. She folded it slowly and put it in a drawer. She thought of Jonah, who had learned to sleep without leaving the house, who still jumped at the sound of certain alarms. She thought of the reporter who kept pressing at things no one wanted looked at. She thought of Quinn’s smile and Elias’s citrus-scented office and the ways power reconstitutes itself.
Mara did not call the police. She did not throw the photograph away. Instead she slid it into her wallet beside a small, worn key that she kept for luck—an artifact from a locker that had yielded only a tape. She left the key there as a reminder: the world was capable of terrible precision, and people were capable of more terrible forgetting. But people could also choose to wake.
On most nights she slept normally. Sometimes she woke suddenly and laughed at how small and human the fear felt. Sometimes she rose in the dark and moved with a purpose she recognized. When she did, she left notes for herself—little reminders: “Call Jonah,” “Buy milk,” “Listen.” They read like talismans against a life that would otherwise be shaped by unseen hands.
The city settled into a brittle calm. Investigations led to fines and closed doors; whistleblowers found safer lives elsewhere. The market for clandestine control shifted, adapted, and sought new models. Mara learned to live with the knowledge that the system could return wearing another face, that the photograph in her wallet might be the beginning rather than the end.
In the end, the story was not about the perfect unraveling of a conspiracy. It was about a person who refused to be reduced to an instrument in someone else’s scheme. It was about the small, stubborn work of waking—training a body to recognize when it had been moved, teaching a mind to reclaim the night. The thriller’s climactic moments were the raids and the ambushes, the secrets scrawled in typed files. But the quieter victory belonged to the ordinary acts: a camera left by the bed, a written anchor, a friend who returned.
SleepWalker is a story about the nights we do not own and the mornings we willfully take back. It is about surveillance that begins in the rooms meant to be private and the courage it takes to demand them back. It is, finally, about waking—not as a single dramatic moment, but as a habit. Wakefulness is an adhesive: applied—daily—it holds.