Life stories 23/05/2026 23:12

He Came Back for the Baby

The fluorescent lights buzzed softly above the newborn nursery, bathing the spotless hospital room in a pale, sterile glow. Rows of glass bassinets stretched beneath the ceiling like silent little islands, each cradling a sleeping infant wrapped in white cotton blankets. Nurses in crisp white uniforms wheeled bassinets between stations, whispering quietly to one another while the rhythmic beeping of monitors echoed through the stillness of the night.

Then the lights flickered.

Once.

Twice.

The room trembled.

A sharp electrical buzz screeched overhead as every fluorescent panel began strobing violently. One nurse gasped and grabbed the nearest bassinet while another froze in place, staring up at the ceiling. The polished floor reflected the chaos in broken flashes of white light. Somewhere deep within the hospital, a low, unnatural rumble vibrated through the walls.

And suddenly, panic erupted.

Nurses screamed and ran between the rows of newborns as the lights continued pulsing like a dying heartbeat.

Outside the nursery, separated only by a massive wall of reinforced glass, a young couple stood frozen in horror.

The young woman pressed both trembling hands against the glass, tears streaming down her pale face. Her long light-brown hair clung to her cheeks as sobs tore through her chest. Beside her, the young man slammed one hand against the window frame, leaning forward with wild desperation burning in his eyes.

“Stay away from him!” he shouted.

Inside the nursery, near the farthest bassinet, something stood motionless beneath the flickering lights.

A little boy.

No older than seven.

His skin was deathly pale, almost gray beneath the fluorescent glare. Thick black hair hung messily across his forehead, partially hiding the deep shadows surrounding his eyes. Those eyes—sunken, black-ringed, hollow—never blinked.

He stood hunched over a glass bassinet.

Both thin hands gripped the metal rails.

And he was smiling.

Inside the bassinet, a newborn baby slept peacefully, wrapped tightly in a white cotton blanket. Tiny breaths lifted and lowered the child’s chest in slow, innocent rhythm.

The ghost boy tilted his head.

Watching.

Waiting.

Then the entire nursery went black.

The power died with a violent crack.

For one terrifying second, the hospital vanished into complete darkness.

A second later, emergency lights flooded the room in deep crimson.

Every wall, every bassinet, every polished tile glowed blood red.

The newborn continued sleeping peacefully beneath a soft white lamp that somehow remained glowing above the crib. In the middle of the nightmare, the child looked impossibly calm—small fingers curled gently against the blanket, unaware of the darkness surrounding him.

Then a gray hand slowly entered the light.

Long fingers.

Thin as bones.

The hand drifted downward and softly touched the baby’s tiny fingers.

A nurse standing nearby let out a piercing scream.

“Ah!”

Her mouth hung open in horror as she stumbled backward, unable to move. Her eyes locked onto the impossible hand resting against the infant’s skin.

Outside the glass, the young mother’s breathing shattered into sobs.

Her lips trembled.

“That’s impossible…” she whispered.

Inside the nursery, the ghost boy slowly intertwined his fingers with the baby’s hand.

His smile widened.

The red emergency light illuminated the dark hollows beneath his eyes as he leaned closer to the sleeping child.

Then he whispered in a voice that sounded layered—like several voices speaking at once beneath water.

“He remembers me.”

The words echoed unnaturally through the room.

Outside, heavy footsteps thundered down the hallway.

Two police officers rushed toward the nursery doors, their dark uniforms flashing beneath the rotating red and blue lights from the corridor alarms. One officer pounded violently against the glass while the other shouted toward the control room.

“Turn on the light!”

But the nursery remained drenched in crimson.

Inside, beneath one of the metal bassinets, something appeared on the spotless floor.

A footprint.

Small.

Bare.

Dark like dried blood.

No body walked across the tiles.

Yet another footprint stamped itself beside the first.

Then another.

Each one appearing with a deep, sickening thump.

The sirens outside grew distant.

Muted.

As if the room itself were swallowing sound.

The young mother stared through the glass, shaking uncontrollably. Tears and sweat covered her face while the red light painted one side of her skin like fresh blood.

Then—

A handprint suddenly slammed onto the glass directly in front of her face.

Wet.

Fogged.

Almost human.

She screamed and stumbled backward into the young man’s arms, staring at the shape pressed against the window.

Her pupils trembled.

Her breathing became frantic.

And through the crimson reflection of the nursery behind the glass, she saw the ghost boy standing perfectly still beside her baby.

Watching her.

Smiling.

The young woman’s voice cracked into a whisper.

“He’s still here…”

The emergency lights flickered one final time.

Then everything went black.

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