I was three states away, eating a tasteless hotel sandwich, when my phone buzzed with a text from my neighbor, Mrs. Gardner.

“I hate to bother you, Jake, but the noise from your house is… inappropriate. It’s past midnight.”

I stared at the screen, confused.
My wife, Emily, was supposed to be home alone. I’d left for my business trip that morning.

I typed back:
“What kind of noise?”

Her reply came fast.

“Fighting? Screaming? I don’t know… but it sounds like a man and a woman. Very loud.”

A hot spike of anger shot through me.

Cheating.
That was the first thought—dark, instinctive, ugly.

I packed my suitcase in under a minute, checked out of the hotel without returning the keycard, and drove six hours straight back home, barely blinking, my hands shaking the whole way.

By the time I reached my street, dawn was just brushing the sky. The house looked calm, quiet, normal.

Which somehow made everything worse.

I didn’t knock. I didn’t call.
I went straight inside.

“Emily?” I called out sharply.

No answer.

A cold dread crept up my spine as I walked room to room. Everything was in place. No signs of anyone else. No smell of cologne. No shoes by the door.

The only strange thing was that our bedroom door was shut. Emily never shut it.

I opened it slowly.

She was sitting on the floor, knees to her chest, eyes wide and bloodshot like she hadn’t slept all night. Her phone was lying shattered next to her.

“Emily—what the hell happened? The neighbors said they heard—”

She cut me off by shaking her head violently.

“It wasn’t me. Jake… it wasn’t me.”

I knelt beside her. “Then who was in here?”

Before she answered, I noticed something else—deep scratches down her forearm. Fresh ones.

My anger drained instantly, replaced by fear.
“What did you do to yourself?”

She whispered, “It wasn’t me.”

Then she pointed to the wall behind me.

There, above our dresser, were handprints.

Small ones.

Tiny ones.

Children’s handprints smeared across the paint in a dark, dusty streak like fingerprints dragged through ash.

My breath stopped.

We didn’t have kids.

“Emily… what is this?”

Her tears spilled over. “I tried to tell you weeks ago. Something’s been in the house.”

I stared at her. “Something? Or someone?”

She shook her head again, but this time slower, like she was terrified of the word forming in her mouth.

“They’re little,” she whispered, voice cracking. “More than one. I heard them running in the hallway last week. But when I opened the door… nothing.”

My rational mind fought against everything she was saying. Maybe she had a breakdown. Maybe she was sleepwalking. Maybe—

But then I heard it.

Footsteps.

Behind the closet door.

Soft. Uneven. Like barefoot shuffling.

I froze.

Emily grabbed my arm. “Don’t open it. Jake, please don’t.”

But something primal in me needed to know. Needed proof.

I yanked the door open.

Nothing. Just clothes.

But then something moved.

Low.

A shadow beneath the hanging shirts.

I dropped to my knees and lifted the hem of the clothes.

The breath left my lungs.

Two eyes stared back at me.

Wide. Glassy. Childlike.

But the face—
God, the face was wrong.

Pale skin stretched too tight. No eyebrows. Hands too long, too thin, like twigs wired together. A child shape, but not a child.

And then it scurried backward, impossibly fast, disappearing between the wall and the dresser gap.

I stumbled backward. Emily screamed.

Something else moved behind the bed.

Then under the bed.

Then in the hallway.

Multiple somethings.

Emily covered her ears. “They hate the dark! When the power went out last night they got loud. That’s what the neighbors heard. They scratch the walls and laugh. They laugh, Jake.”

Suddenly, a sound echoed from the hallway—

A giggle.

High-pitched. Not human.

I jumped, adrenaline slamming through me.

“We’re leaving,” I said, grabbing Emily’s wrists. “We’re getting out now.”

But as I pulled her up, I noticed something on the carpet.

Footprints.

Small, dusty footprints… leading toward our room.

Not away.

As if they had gathered around us while we slept.

My throat tightened.
“How long has this been happening?”

Emily’s voice cracked into a sob. “Months. It started after we renovated the basement. The contractor said the house used to belong to a foster family. That there were kids here. A lot of them. Some never got adopted. Some… disappeared.”

I felt my skin crawl like ants were under it.

We backed down the hallway together, careful not to look into the shadows.

At the front door, I reached for the handle.

But before I could touch it, the door slammed shut from the inside.

Something small and fast had pushed it.

A whisper brushed my ear.

“Don’t go.”

I spun around, but nothing was there—just the dark outline of the hallway, full of hiding places.

We ran to the garage instead. I punched the code, yanked Emily into the car, and peeled out of the driveway without looking back.


Police searched the house the next day.

They found nothing.
No children.
No footprints.
No handprints.
No signs of forced entry.

The officer looked at me like I was the crazy one.

But Emily refused to go back inside. She stayed in the car the whole time, shaking.

We moved the same week.

Sold everything.

Never took a single item from that house.


Here’s the part that still keeps me up at night:

Two weeks after we moved, I got another text from Mrs. Gardner.

“I don’t know if you’re aware, but whoever moved into your old house… they have kids. A whole bunch. Always running around. Laughing. Playing.”

My heart stopped.

Because the listing for our old house had clearly said:

“Purchased by a single man. No children.”

And attached to her message was a photo she took from her backyard.

The windows of our old bedroom.

Tiny handprints against the glass.

Pressed from the inside.