He Tried to Kill Us Both… But Someone Else Was Watching That Night

My husband cooked dinner, and right after my son and I ate, we collapsed. Pretending to be unconscious, I heard him on the phone saying, “It’s done… soon they will both be gone.” After he left the room, I whispered to my son, “Don’t move yet…” What happened next went far beyond anything I could have ever imagined…

The night her husband tried to kill Lucy and her son with a plate of creamy herb chicken, the house smelled of home-cooked food and freshly served betrayal.
Steven moved around the kitchen with an almost theatrical calmness, as if he wanted to convince the world that he was still a family man. He had laid out a clean tablecloth, glass tumblers, and even the good napkins they only used at Christmas or when important guests came over. He poured apple juice into a small glass for Tommy, his 9-year-old son, and smiled with a sweetness so forced that it made Lucy’s chest tighten.
“Just look at my dad,” Tommy said happily. “Today he actually looks like a restaurant chef.”
“Let’s see if he doesn’t charge us for dinner,” Lucy replied with a brief smile.
Steven let out a measured laugh.
“I just wanted to do something nice for you guys today.”
That was the scariest part: it didn’t sound affectionate; it sounded rehearsed.
For weeks, Lucy had noticed something strange about him. It wasn’t kindness. It was caution. As if he were measuring every word, every gesture, every silence. As if he were already living a secret farewell and didn’t want to leave any traces.
They sat down to eat. The chicken tasted normal, maybe a bit over-seasoned, but nothing that immediately raised suspicion. Steven barely touched his plate. He pretended to eat while checking his phone face down, alert to any vibration. Tommy talked about a school assignment, a soccer game, and a classmate who had fallen during recess. Lucy tried to keep up with the conversation, but halfway through dinner, her tongue felt heavy.
Then her arms followed.
Then her legs.
Then the certainty.
Tommy blinked several times, confused.
“Mom… I feel weird.”
Steven reached out and stroked his shoulder with a chilling softness.
“It’s just fatigue, buddy. Rest for a bit.”
Lucy tried to stand up, but the dining room began to tilt as if the house had broken loose from its foundation. She gripped the edge of the table. Her body wouldn’t respond. She fell to her knees and then sideways onto the living room rug. She managed to see Tommy collapse too, small, defenseless, with his glass still close to his hand.
Darkness tried to swallow her whole.
But before that happened, Lucy made the decision that would save her life: she let her body go completely limp and kept her mind awake.
She heard the chair scrape.
She heard Steven’s footsteps approaching.
She felt the tip of his shoe nudge her arm, testing her.
“Good,” he muttered.
Then he picked up his phone.
He stepped away toward the hallway and spoke in a low, fast, relieved voice.
“It’s done. They both ate. They’ll be out in a little while.”
A woman replied on the other end. Lucy couldn’t quite make out every word, but she could clearly hear the sick enthusiasm in her tone.
“Are you sure?”
“Yes,” Steven said. “I used the exact amount. It’s going to look like accidental food poisoning. I’ll call it in when it’s too late to do anything.”
The woman let out an exhale of satisfaction.
“We’re finally going to stop hiding.”
Steven replied with a soul-crushing coldness.
“Now I’m finally going to be free.”
Lucy felt the fear freeze her blood. He didn’t just want to get rid of her. He wanted to get rid of Tommy, too.
She heard a drawer open in the bedroom. Something metallic clinked. Then, footsteps returned, dragging a duffel bag. Steven stopped in front of them again.
“Goodbye,” he whispered.
The front door opened. A gust of cold air rushed in. Then it closed.
Silence.
Lucy waited for a few agonizing seconds before barely moving her lips.
“Don’t move yet…”
Instantly, she felt Tommy’s fingers trembling against her hand.
He was still awake.
The rush of relief almost made her cry, but she swallowed the sob. She waited a little longer, counting every heartbeat. When she was sure Steven had left, she barely opened her eyes. The microwave clock glowed in the background.
8:42.
With unbearable slowness, she pulled her cell phone from her back pocket. The screen lit up her face. She immediately turned the brightness down. She had no signal in the living room. Crawling on her elbows, she dragged herself toward the hallway. Tommy followed as best he could, pale, sweaty, taking short, sharp breaths.
Against the wall, one signal bar appeared.
She dialed 911.
The call dropped.
She tried again.
Nothing.
The third time, it connected.
“911, what is your emergency?”
Lucy spoke almost without a voice.
“My husband poisoned us. My son is alive. I am too. Send help, please, hurry.”
The operator’s tone changed instantly.
“Give me your address. Is he still there?”
“No… he left… but he said he’s coming back to pretend he found us like this.”
“Stay on the line. I have units on the way. Lock yourselves in a room if you can.”
Lucy dragged Tommy into the bathroom. She locked the door. She wet his lips, begging him not to fall asleep, to look at her, to keep breathing. As she answered the operator’s questions about what they had eaten, the weight of her body ebbed and flowed in waves. Then, her phone vibrated.
Unknown number.
CHECK THE TRASH. THERE IS PROOF. HE IS HEADING BACK.
Lucy felt her heart pounding in her throat. She didn’t know who had sent that message, but she knew it was true. In the distance, sirens began to wail. Tommy squeezed her hand in desperation. And just when Lucy thought help would arrive in time, she heard the doorknob of the front door turn once again.
Steven was back.
And he wasn’t alone.


Lucy froze.

Heavy footsteps entered the house—two sets.

One she knew.

The other… slower, deliberate.

A woman’s voice.

—“Are they—?”

—“Yeah,” Steven whispered. “Both down. We just have to make it look right.”

Lucy felt Tommy’s grip tighten in terror.

The stranger stepped closer.

—“We don’t have much time. You said the dose was enough.”

—“It was,” Steven snapped quietly. “They won’t wake up.”

Lucy closed her eyes again, forcing her breathing to stay shallow.

Then—

The bathroom door handle moved.

Once.

Twice.

Locked.

Silence.

—“Why is this locked?” the woman asked.

A pause.

Lucy’s pulse roared in her ears.

Steven’s voice dropped.

—“…Lucy?”

He knocked.

—“Lucy?”

No response.

He knocked harder.

—“Lucy, open the door.”

Lucy didn’t move.

Tommy didn’t move.

Another pause.

Longer.

Colder.

Then—

The sound of footsteps rushing away.

A drawer opening.

That metallic sound again.

Lucy’s stomach dropped.

—“What is that?” the woman asked.

Steven answered calmly.

Too calmly.

—“Plan B.”

Lucy’s eyes snapped open.

She leaned close to Tommy’s ear.

—“When I say run… you run.”

He barely nodded.

The footsteps came back.

Closer.

The handle jerked violently.

Once.

Twice.

Then—

BANG.

The door cracked.

Tommy flinched.

Lucy held him tight.

Another hit.

BANG.

Wood splintered.

And just as the door began to give—

Sirens screamed right outside the house.

Loud.

Close.

Immediate.

Everything stopped.

Silence.

Then chaos.

—“Police! Open the door!”

The woman cursed.

—“You said we had time!”

—“I didn’t call them!” Steven snapped.

Lucy’s heart skipped.

If he didn’t call…

Then who did?

The woman’s voice turned sharp.

—“You idiot. Someone knows.”

A beat.

Then something shifted.

The tone.

The tension.

Lucy heard it before she understood it.

Fear.

Not from her.

From them.

—“We need to go,” the woman said quickly.

—“No,” Steven replied. “If we run, it’s over.”

Another silence.

Then—

The woman spoke again.

Lower.

Colder.

—“It already is.”

And then…

A sound Lucy would never forget.

A gunshot.

Deafening.

Close.

Tommy gasped.

Lucy covered his mouth instantly.

Footsteps stumbled.

A body hit the floor.

Another scream—cut short.

Then silence.

Heavy.

Final.


Seconds later, the front door burst open.

—“Police! Hands where we can—”

They stopped.

Lucy could hear it in their voices.

Confusion.

Shock.

—“We’ve got two down!”

—“Check the house!”

The bathroom door was forced open moments later.

Bright lights flooded in.

Hands reached for Lucy.

For Tommy.

Voices overlapping.

—“They’re alive!”

—“Get EMS in here now!”

Lucy clung to her son as they pulled them out.

And as they passed through the living room…

She saw it.

Steven.

On the floor.

Motionless.

Blood spreading beneath him.

And next to him—

The woman.

Also down.

Also still.

A gun lying between them.


Hours later, in the hospital, wrapped in blankets, IV in her arm, Tommy asleep beside her…

An officer sat across from Lucy.

—“We need to ask you something.”

Her voice was gentle.

Careful.

—“Do you know a woman named Carla Mendes?”

Lucy frowned weakly.

—“No…”

The officer nodded slowly.

—“She was your husband’s partner. We found messages. They planned everything.”

Lucy closed her eyes.

Of course.

But then—

The officer continued.

—“But that’s not the strange part.”

Lucy looked up.

—“What do you mean?”

The officer hesitated.

—“The 911 call… wasn’t the first one.”

Lucy’s breath caught.

—“…What?”

—“We received another call about your address. Five minutes before yours.”

Her heart started pounding again.

—“Who called?”

The officer met her eyes.

And for the first time…

Lucy felt something colder than fear.

—“We don’t know.”

A pause.

Then the final blow:

—“The caller didn’t speak.”

Lucy’s voice barely came out.

—“…Then how—”

The officer slid a small evidence bag onto the table.

Inside—

A phone.

Old.

Cracked.

Not hers.

Not Steven’s.

—“It just played a recording.”

Lucy stared at it.

Her pulse echoing in her ears.

—“What recording?”

The officer’s voice dropped.

—“A child’s voice.”

Lucy stopped breathing.

—“…What did it say?”

The officer hesitated.

Then answered quietly:

—“‘They’re hurting my mom. Please hurry.’”

Lucy’s world shattered.

Because Tommy had been beside her the whole time.

And there had never been…

another child.