Daddy, please don’t leave me alone with the new mommy… she does bad things when you’re not here.” Hiding in the closet, the father stood frozen—paralyzed by the horrifying scene unfolding before his eyes.

“Daddy, don’t leave me with the new mom. She comes to do bad things.”
The little girl’s voice was barely above a whisper, but it cut deeper than any scream.

The rain tapped against the windowpane in an endless rhythm, a lullaby to some, but not tonight. Michael stood in the hallway outside his daughter’s bedroom, the door slightly ajar. The light from the hallway spilled into the room in a golden beam that fell on her small bed.

Lena, his six-year-old daughter, sat upright under her covers, wide-eyed and clinging to her stuffed rabbit. Her voice trembled as she looked at him with a fear that no child her age should know.

Đã tạo hình ảnh

Kids’ outdoor play equipment

“What do you mean, sweetheart?” Michael stepped into the room, crouching beside her. “Mommy loves you.”

“That’s not Mommy,” Lena said, her grip tightening on the stuffed rabbit. “That’s the new mom. The one you married after Mommy went to heaven. She looks like her, but she’s not.”

Michael’s stomach twisted. It wasn’t the first time Lena had said something like this since he remarried. After his wife Sarah died in a car accident two years ago, he was devastated, barely holding himself together for Lena’s sake. But then came Elise—a warm, intelligent woman who had helped him pick up the broken pieces of his life. She had moved in six months ago. At first, things were smooth.

Then the nightmares started.

“She comes at night,” Lena whispered, her eyes shifting to the closet in the corner. “When it’s dark. She opens the closet and talks to someone inside. Then… she changes.”

Michael followed her gaze to the closet. It looked normal—just a wooden door, a brass handle. He got up, walked over, and pulled it open.

Empty.

Clothes hung neatly, shoes arranged in pairs. Nothing unusual. Nothing hiding.

Still, the room suddenly felt colder.

“Sweetheart,” he said gently, “there’s nothing in the closet. Maybe it was a dream.”

“It’s not a dream,” Lena insisted. “I hid in there once. I saw her face change. It stretched… and her eyes turned black. She didn’t know I was watching. She talked to the man in the dark. He lives in the wall behind the closet.”

Michael froze.

Behind the closet was nothing but old drywall and a brick chimney stack from the living room below. There was no “man in the wall.” At least, there shouldn’t be.

That night, Michael barely slept. Elise lay beside him in bed, peaceful, breathing softly. Her presence was calming, her arm resting over his chest. But his daughter’s voice echoed in his head like a curse.

“Don’t leave me with the new mom…”

The next day, Elise baked cookies with Lena in the kitchen. She seemed normal, happy even. Lena was smiling, but her eyes met Michael’s with an unspoken message: Please don’t believe her act.

That evening, as the house quieted and night fell again, Michael stood in the hallway, staring at Lena’s door. He had to know. He had to see what his daughter was so afraid of.

He quietly opened her door.

Lena was asleep.

The closet was shut.

Michael tiptoed in, heart pounding. He opened the closet and, against every rational thought in his head, climbed inside. It was cramped, barely enough space for him to crouch behind the hanging clothes.

He waited.

Time passed.

Then came the creak of the bedroom door.

Soft footsteps.

Elise’s voice. Sweet, lilting, and wrong.

“Time to wake up, little darling.”

Lena stirred, murmured something inaudible.

“You didn’t tell Daddy, did you?” Elise asked.

“No,” Lena whispered. “I didn’t.”

Elise sighed. “Good. Because he wouldn’t understand. He thinks I’m just some pretty new wife. But you and I know better, don’t we? I’m older than this house. Older than your mommy’s bones in the ground.”

Michael’s blood turned to ice. He peered through the crack between two coats.

Elise’s face shifted.

It melted.

Her skin rippled like water, her features warping into something… inhuman. Her mouth widened, revealing rows of tiny, needle-like teeth. Her eyes turned pitch black—reflecting nothing, holding nothing. Just endless, ancient darkness.

And then she turned… slowly… toward the closet.

“I know you’re watching, Michael,” she whispered, her voice no longer hers. “And now it’s too late.”

Michael froze.

Michael couldn’t move.

His legs refused to obey. His breath hitched in his throat. Every instinct screamed at him to run—drag Lena out and flee—but he was trapped in the small, dark space of the closet, staring into the eyes of something that should not exist.

Elise—or the thing wearing her skin—stood in the middle of the room. Her head was slightly tilted, her eyes pitch black and glowing faintly like dying coals. Her lips peeled back in a slow smile, revealing jagged teeth that didn’t belong in any human mouth.

“I’ve been so careful,” she said, her voice a sickening mix of honey and rot. “Six months of playing house, baking, laughing, kissing you goodnight. All for her.”

She turned to Lena again, her monstrous form slowly twisting back into Elise’s familiar appearance. Blond hair, soft features, warm eyes—but it was all just a mask now. Michael could see the seams.

Lena didn’t move. She sat stiffly on the bed, eyes locked on her father’s hiding place. Her lips parted slightly, but she said nothing.

“You see, children are different,” Elise went on, as if delivering a bedtime story. “They can see through masks. They remember things the world wants them to forget. That’s why I need her. She can open the door.”

Michael’s fingers brushed against the floor of the closet. He was sweating. Desperate. His phone was in his pocket, but he couldn’t reach it without making noise. He had no weapon. No plan.

He just knew he had to get to Lena.

“You should’ve believed her sooner,” Elise whispered. “But now you’re mine too.”

With a snap, the closet door slammed shut on its own.

Total darkness.

Then silence.

Then… scratching.

From behind.

Michael twisted in place, his back pressing against the rear wall of the closet. The scratching wasn’t coming from the room. It was coming from inside the wall behind him.

Just like Lena said.

The plaster groaned, then cracked. A thin split formed along the brick, as if something on the other side were trying to get through.

A voice slithered through the gap. Deep. Cold.

“You brought him. Good. Now we take the heart, and the girl will open the gate.”

“No,” Michael muttered. “This isn’t real. This isn’t—”

The bricks burst outward.

A hand—long, pale, and skeletal—shot out and grabbed him by the chest. Michael gasped, thrashing, as the wall gave way and something crawled out.

It had no eyes. Just folds of gray flesh wrapped tightly around a skull-like head. It moved like liquid, impossibly fast and horribly slow at the same time. It hissed in a language that scraped across his mind like broken glass.

Michael kicked, punched, screamed—but the thing dragged him through the wall into the void behind it.

Then—

Light.

He was lying on the floor. The closet was gone.

So was Lena.

He scrambled to his feet. The room was cold, empty, and dark. No furniture. No toys. Just cracked plaster and dust.

The house was abandoned.

He stumbled into the hallway. Peeling wallpaper. Cobwebs. The stairs creaked beneath his feet as he descended. The front door hung open, wind blowing through like a sigh.

Outside, the world was gray and dead.

Not a sound.

Not a bird.

Not even his car.

Time didn’t feel right here. Minutes stretched into eternities. Hours blinked past in seconds. The sun sat frozen behind black clouds that never moved.

Then he heard her.

Lena.

A whisper—fragile and distant.

“Daddy…?”

He turned.

She stood at the end of the hallway. Same dress. Same rabbit clutched in her hand.

He ran to her.

“Lena!”

She didn’t move.

When he reached her, she looked up with tears in her eyes.

“I’m sorry, Daddy,” she said. “I opened the gate. I didn’t mean to. But she made me say the words. Now we’re stuck.”

Michael’s heart sank.

“Where is she? Elise?”

Lena turned and pointed to the wall.

Carved into the plaster in blood-red symbols was a door.

Not a real one—just the outline of one. But it pulsed, like it was breathing.

“She’s behind there now,” Lena said. “Waiting. And if we ever try to leave, she’ll come out again.”

Michael stared at the door.

“Then we won’t let her.”

He reached for his daughter’s hand.

She pulled away.

“You’re not Daddy,” Lena whispered.

Michael blinked.

“What?”

She stepped back. Her eyes filled with new horror.

“You… came out of the wall.”

Michael looked down at his hands.

Pale.

Gray.

Not his.

He opened his mouth to scream, but what came out wasn’t his voice.

It was hers.

“Time to wake up, little darling.”

Lena ran.

And behind her, the door began to open.