My male coworker saw my lunch one day and asked, “That smells amazing. Any chance you could make me one?” I smiled and said, “Sure. Just bring the container back clean.” He did. But when I opened it, I gasped in horror. Inside was a note: “Get away from him before it’s too late.”
I stared at it, my hands frozen. The note wasnโt signed. It was scribbled in thick, blocky letters on a ripped piece of paper towel. For a second, I wondered if it was a prank. Maybe someone was just being dramatic or funny.
But something about the shaky handwriting and the word “before itโs too late” made my stomach drop. I looked up across the office, scanning faces. My coworkerโAndreiโwas at his desk, typing something, completely unaware. Or pretending to be.
I slid the note into my bag and sat down, pretending nothing had happened. But all I could think about for the rest of the day was: who wrote that, and why?
Andrei had only been working at the company for two months. He was charming, good at his job, and most people liked him. I had been friendly with him, nothing romantic, but we talked often, and he always seemed genuinely kind.
Maybe too kind.
That evening, I showed the note to my roommate, Mara. She raised her eyebrows. โYou sure it wasnโt from him? Maybe itโs his weird way of being funny?โ
I shook my head. โIt doesnโt make sense. Why would he ask for lunch, then leave a note in the container warning me about himself?โ
Mara nodded slowly. โUnless he didnโt pack it back himself. Maybe someone else got to it.โ
That thought chilled me even more. Was someone else watching? Who else knew I was making lunch for him?
The next morning, I took a longer route to work. I wasnโt paranoid exactly, but I kept checking over my shoulder. Nothing unusual. But I couldnโt let it go.
When I got to the office, I decided to try something. I casually asked Andrei, โHey, how was the chicken yesterday?โ
He smiled. โDelicious. You have magic hands.โ
I chuckled, but I was studying his face. โDid you pack the container back this morning yourself?โ
He paused. โYeah. Why?โ
โNo reason. Just wondering if the sauce spilled or anything.โ
He shook his head, not even a flicker of suspicion on his face.
That shouldโve eased my nerves, but it didnโt. If he was lying, he was a very good liar. And if he wasnโt, someone had tampered with his stuff.
I decided not to make him lunch again. When he asked a few days later, I said I was too busy.
But I started paying more attention to the people around him. And around me.
Thatโs when I noticed her.
There was a woman in the officeโOliviaโquiet, always kept to herself. She had started around the same time as Andrei, but they didnโt talk much. At least not in front of others.
But once, during lunch break, I saw Olivia staring at us while Andrei was chatting with me. Not subtly. Just… watching.
And when our eyes met, she looked away quickly, almost guilty.
I started wondering if Olivia wrote the note.
So one afternoon, I stayed late and waited until the office was nearly empty. Then I walked over to Oliviaโs desk, pretending I had a question about a client. She looked nervous when I came over.
โHey,โ I said casually. โCan I ask you something weird?โ
She nodded slowly.
โDid you write this?โ I showed her the note.
Her eyes widened. She looked down quickly, then back at me. โYou found it.โ
โYou did write it?โ
She glanced around the office, lowered her voice. โI had to. I wasnโt sure how else to warn you.โ
My heart pounded. โWarn me about what?โ
She bit her lip. โAndrei. Heโs not who he says he is.โ
I frowned. โWhat do you mean?โ
She looked around again. โNot here. After work?โ
We met at a little coffee shop nearby. Olivia looked pale, like someone carrying a weight for too long.
โI used to work with him before,โ she said. โAt another company. Different city. He went by a different name thenโAdrian. I didnโt recognize him at first, but itโs definitely him.โ
I stared at her. โAre you serious?โ
She nodded. โThere was… an incident. A coworker of mine. She was friendly with him too. Started bringing him lunch, just like you. Then she started getting weird messages. Things would move around in her apartment. She thought she was losing her mind.โ
โWhat happened to her?โ
โShe quit. Filed a police report before she left, but there wasnโt enough evidence. She said he followed her. Harassed her. But he covered his tracks. Left town before anything stuck.โ
My stomach turned.
Olivia continued, โI wanted to go to HR when I realized who he was. But I didnโt have proof. If I went to them with just a hunch and no evidence, theyโd think I was paranoid. So I figured… maybe I could warn you.โ
I sat back, stunned. It sounded unreal. But Olivia didnโt seem like the kind to lie.
โDo you still have anything? Emails, photos, something from back then?โ I asked.
She shook her head. โI deleted everything when I left. I just wanted to be safe.โ
I thanked her and walked home in a daze. Part of me didnโt want to believe her. But the more I thought about it, the more pieces started to click.
Andrei had once asked me where I lived, casually. Said he might move into the neighborhood. Another time, he mentioned seeing me at the gymโexcept I hadnโt told anyone at work I went there. That had felt odd then. Now it felt… calculated.
The next day, I made a decision. I went to HR.
I didnโt accuse him outright. I just said Iโd heard some troubling things and was uncomfortable. I asked them to look into his background.
They said theyโd handle it discreetly.
A few days passed. Then a week.
Then Andrei didnโt show up for work.
Later that afternoon, our HR rep called me in. She looked tense.
โWe need to thank you,โ she said. โAfter your concern, we ran a background check. Turns out โAndreiโ applied using a fake identity. Heโs been using multiple names over the last five years. Several complaints of harassment. None led to charges, but enough to be alarming. Weโve reported him.โ
I was stunned. โSo heโs gone?โ
โTerminated. Weโre assisting law enforcement now.โ
I walked out of that office feeling like Iโd dodged something huge.
That night, I messaged Olivia and told her the news. She cried. Said she finally felt free from something she didnโt even realize still haunted her.
But it didnโt end there.
About two weeks later, I got a message from a random email. Just two words: โThank you.โ
I froze. No sender name. Just those words.
I told Olivia. She said she got the same.
We both blocked the address.
Life started going back to normal. But the experience changed something in me.
I became more careful. More aware. Not paranoidโbut attentive. I started helping newer women at work feel safe. I told HR we needed better vetting processes. They listened.
And I stayed in touch with Olivia. We became close. Turns out we had more in common than just a shared scare. We liked the same books. Same stupid office memes. We even started a lunch swap once a week.
Six months later, we took a trip together. No notes. No shadows. Just laughter and the sound of waves on a beach we both needed more than we realized.
There was one last twist.
One morning, Mara called me into the living room, pale.
โUh… I think you need to see this.โ
She pointed at the TV. A news report. โA man known to use multiple identities has been arrested in another state under allegations of stalking and impersonation.โ His mugshot appeared.
It was him.
But his name wasnโt Andrei. It wasnโt Adrian either.
It was something else entirely.
He had taken on at least four aliases over six years, always targeting workplaces with high turnover, charming his way in, then causing psychological chaos before vanishing.
They caught him this time because of a tip. Anonymous. But I had a gut feeling Olivia and I had something to do with it.
The karma had finally caught up to him.
And maybe the note in that lunchboxโscary as it wasโsaved both of us.
Life Lesson? Sometimes the smallest thingsโa lunchbox, a quiet warning, a gut feelingโcan change everything. Listen to your instincts. Look out for others. Speak up even if your voice shakes.
And never ignore a warning just because itโs inconvenient.
If this story moved you or made you reflect, share it with someone. You never know who might need to hear it. And donโt forget to likeโso more people learn that even kindness can come with courage.



