-jbd-202- I Was Tied Up By My My Neighbor Hana Site

I don’t know what she’s looking for. Some secret I don’t even know I have. A confession I’ve never made. Maybe she just likes the quiet control. The way a person’s voice cracks when they realize they’re completely powerless.

And every few hours, she tightens the ropes.

When I woke, I was here. This unfinished basement. Concrete walls. A single bulb overhead buzzing like a trapped fly. My wrists bound with thick rope to an old wooden dining chair. My ankles tied to the legs. My mouth wasn’t gagged — she wanted me to speak. -JBD-202- I Was Tied Up By My My Neighbor Hana

Over the past two days, I’ve learned a few things. She’s done this before. The notebook is filled with names, dates, and entries labeled “JBD” — her personal case files. She calls herself a “collector.” Not of things. Of people. Of their fears.

It started with a knock. Tuesday evening, just after 8 p.m. Rain was coming down hard. Hana stood at my door, soaked through, asking to borrow a phone charger. Her voice shook — said her power had gone out, and she needed to call her mom. I didn’t think twice. I let her in. I don’t know what she’s looking for

Hana lived two doors down. Quiet. Kept her lawn neat. Waved sometimes when I took out the trash. We exchanged polite nods at the mailbox. I thought I knew her — the way you think you know a neighbor. Harmless. Maybe a little lonely.

If you live next to a quiet woman named Hana, and she smiles a little too long when she sees you… Maybe she just likes the quiet control

“You’re number 202,” she said calmly.