Desperate Amateurs Hayden -

He didn’t know who “we” were. Maybe ghosts. Maybe a prank. Maybe something stranger. But as he walked out into the cold morning, the finch rode on his shoulder, and for the first time in years, Hayden smiled.

On the birdhouse’s perch sat a real bird—a tiny finch with a folded note tied to its leg. Hayden unfolded it. One sentence, in his father’s handwriting: desperate amateurs hayden

At hour four, the others gave up. They curled into sleeping bags on the concrete, muttering about scams and wasted weekends. Hayden stayed. He placed his palms flat on the box and closed his eyes. He didn’t think about the money. He thought about his father’s workbench. The smell of sawdust. The way his father would tap a stubborn birdhouse roof three times, then whisper, “There you go, friend. Out you come.” He didn’t know who “we” were

The warehouse smelled of rust and old rain. Fifteen other "amateurs" stood in flickering fluorescent light: a retired nurse, a kid with a skateboard, a woman in a sequined dress clutching a wrench like a crucifix. No blueprints. No instructions. Just a metal table in the center of the room, and on it, a box. Maybe something stranger

The first hour was chaos. The nurse tried to pry it with a crowbar. The skateboard kid kicked it. The woman in sequins poured her water bottle over it, convinced it was heat-sensitive. Nothing. The box simply sat there, humming a low, patient note.

Desperate amateur. That’s what they’d called him.

It was a trap. He knew it. But the promise of five thousand dollars cash—just for showing up—had a way of smoothing over common sense.