At 3:11 am ,The house began to breathe
Not the wind. Not pipes. Breathing slow, wet, deliberate. The walls expanded with every inhale, contracted with every exhale, as if the building itself had lungs.
Sadiq lay awake, counting the cracks on the ceiling. He had stopped praying three nights ago. Whatever lived in the house did not like prayers. It responded by whispering his name, stretching the syllables like it was tasting him.
Sa..diq...
On the seventh night, he found his name carved into the bathroom mirror. Not etched—pressed from the inside, as though fingers had pushed through glass that should not bend.
He scrubbed until his hands bled. The name stayed.
By the tenth night, the whispers grew angry.
"Say it back."
He tried to leave. The front door opened into the bedroom. The windows showed only walls. The house folded inward, rearranging itself, tightening around him.
At 3:11 a.m., the breathing stopped.
Silence.
Then the house spoke clearly, proudly:
"Now I have your name."
Outside, the neighbors would later swear the house looked empty again.
And at night, if the wind was quiet, they could hear it breathing—
calling a new name.
