The first time I saw the hand, I thought my mind was breaking. For weeks, my eight-year-old begged us not to make her sleep in that beautiful, cursed bed.
We blamed nightmares. We blamed stress. We blamed everything except the unthinkable.
Then the night-vision camera caught something moving where no one should be, a hand sliding from the dar… Continues…
I still remember the sound of the bed scraping across the floor as we yanked it away from the wall,
my fingers numb, my mind insisting there would be nothing there. Instead we found that narrow, wrong-looking seam in the wood, the trapdoor so carefully cut beneath where my daughter’s head had rested.
That was the moment the house I loved stopped feeling like ours.
Knowing a stranger had listened to our whispers, watched us sleep, collected my child’s ribbons like trophies—it rewrote every memory
I had of that home. The police took her away, but they couldn’t take the image of that pale hand from my mind. We moved,
reinforced every vent, bought a solid platform bed. People say time heals. Maybe. But now, every quiet night carries a question
I can’t silence: what if the danger isn’t outside at all, but already underneath you?