Lately, my dog kept climbing onto the top kitchen cabinets and growling loudly — at first, I thought he’d gone mad, until I realized what he was barking at 😲😱
My dog had never behaved like this before. Rick was a smart, calm dog who had always obeyed me and never barked without reason. But something had changed in the past few weeks — he began barking at night, standing on his hind legs near the kitchen cupboards, and, strangest of all, climbing onto the top shelves — places I myself rarely reached.
At first, I blamed it on age or stress; maybe the neighbors were making noise, or perhaps there was a cat hiding somewhere. But his persistence was unsettling — he knew the rules: no climbing on the furniture. Yet he sat there stubbornly, staring at the ceiling and growling softly, as if warning me about something very important.
— “What is it, buddy? What do you see up there?” — I asked, kneeling beside him. He turned his head, ears up. His bark was short and sharp. And every time I tried to get closer, he barked even louder.
One night, Rick began whining insistently, and his barking grew stronger. I was tired of the tension — I couldn’t spend another sleepless night listening to sounds only he seemed to hear.
I grabbed my flashlight, threw on a jacket, and brought the old folding ladder from the storage room. My heart was pounding strangely — from irritation, from worry, or maybe because I finally wanted to put an end to this.
Rick calmly but deliberately stepped aside, staring upward. I climbed up. The ventilation grille hung slightly askew — I don’t think I’d ever noticed it before. I thought to myself: “Finally — must be a mouse or something trivial.” I removed the grille — and at that very moment, I saw something terrifying 😲😱 Continuation in the first comment 👇👇
Behind it, inside the dark duct, there was a man. Bent over, his face covered in dust, his eyes full of panic — as if he had been hiding there for ages.
He started moving immediately, gasping for air, trying to stand — but failed. In his hands, he held a few small stolen items: an empty wallet, a cellphone, and a keychain that didn’t belong to us.
My hands trembling, I grabbed my phone and dialed 911. The words came out on their own, my voice shaking, but the dispatcher understood:
— “There’s a man hiding in my ventilation system. Please, come quickly!”
While I was talking, Rick wagged his tail, sniffing the vent nonstop, as if to confirm — yes, that’s him.
The police arrived quickly. They carefully pulled the man out, laid him on a blanket, and checked his breathing. He was thin, exhausted, with cuts on his arms and frantic eyes darting around.
One of the officers removed a small treasure from his neck — a silver chain with a pendant engraved with initials. Someone out there was probably missing it.
Then the investigation began. It turned out this man wasn’t the first to use the ventilation shafts in our building.
Neighbors, questioned by the local officer, suddenly remembered strange disappearances: one couple noticed missing jewelry; another lost a bank card; someone else, a pair of rings.
There were no signs of forced entry. But he, cunning and agile, had crawled through the narrow, dark passages between floors. At night, he would choose the smallest, least noticeable things — easy to hide and quick to take away.