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  • I Went to the Grocery Store at 2 A.M.—I Still Think About What Happened That Night
Written by Deborah WalkerJanuary 5, 2026

I Went to the Grocery Store at 2 A.M.—I Still Think About What Happened That Night

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I had to run to the grocery store at two in the morning.

It wasn’t planned. One of those nights where you realize you’re out of something important, and sleep isn’t happening anyway. The streets were nearly empty, the air too quiet, the kind of quiet that makes you feel like you’re the only one awake in the world.

Inside the store, there were only two other people.

The cashier—and another man.

The man kept looking at me.

Not just a glance. Not curiosity. Real eye contact. Repeated. Lingering. Every time I shifted in my spot, his eyes followed.

I told myself I was imagining it. That I was tired. That late-night paranoia does that to you.

I paid as fast as I could, barely meeting the cashier’s eyes, and headed out.

The automatic doors slid shut behind me, and I exhaled like I’d been holding my breath the entire time.

That’s when I heard footsteps.

I looked back.

It was him.

He smiled like we were sharing some private joke.

“Why so fast, miss?” he called out.

My stomach tightened.

I didn’t answer. I just walked quicker.

So did he.

When Walking Turned Into Fear

I crossed the parking lot, keys already threaded between my fingers. My car felt way too far away.

His footsteps stayed steady behind me—not rushing, not slowing down. Like he knew he didn’t need to.

I told myself not to panic. Panic makes mistakes.

But then I heard him laugh. Soft. Close.

That’s when I heard a scream.

It came from behind us.

High-pitched. Sharp. Terrified.

I spun around.

The cashier had run outside.

And she was screaming at him.

What I Didn’t See Inside the Store

“GET AWAY FROM HER!” she yelled.

The man froze.

For the first time since I’d walked into that store, the confidence drained from his face.

The cashier pointed at him with shaking hands. “I called the police,” she said. “I saw what you were doing on the cameras.”

He backed up slowly, eyes darting between us.

“I wasn’t doing anything,” he muttered.

But the cashier didn’t stop.

“You’ve been following women here for weeks,” she shouted. “You wait until they leave alone.”

My knees felt weak.

This wasn’t random.

This was a pattern.

The man turned and ran.

The Part That Still Haunts Me

I stood there shaking, barely aware of my surroundings. The cashier rushed over and grabbed my arm.

“I’m so sorry,” she said breathlessly. “I didn’t want to scare you, but I couldn’t let you walk home alone.”

She told me everything.

She’d noticed him as soon as he walked in. The way he hovered. The way he kept checking the door. The way his eyes locked onto me and never let go.

When she saw him follow me out, she didn’t hesitate.

She hit the panic button under the register and ran.

The police arrived minutes later. They took statements. They searched the area.

They didn’t find him.

But they told us something neither of us expected.

He’d been reported before.

What Could Have Happened

That night, I didn’t sleep.

I replayed everything over and over—the looks, the smile, the way he matched my pace without trying.

I thought about what would have happened if the cashier hadn’t been paying attention.

If she’d been tired.
If she’d been distracted.
If she’d decided it wasn’t her problem.

I realized how close I’d come to something I don’t even want to name.

The Conversation That Stayed With Me

Before I left, the cashier hugged me.

“I almost didn’t run after you,” she admitted. “I was scared I’d make things worse.”

I swallowed hard. “You saved me.”

She shook her head. “We look out for each other. Especially at night.”

I thanked her about a hundred times.

It didn’t feel like enough.

Why I’m Telling This Story

I still go to that grocery store—but never that late.

I walk differently now. I notice people more. I trust my instincts faster.

And I tell every woman I know this:

If something feels off, it probably is.

And if you ever think, Someone else will notice—be that someone.

Because sometimes, the difference between a normal night and a nightmare is one person who refuses to look away.

And I’ll be forever grateful to the cashier who didn’t.

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