ADVERTISEMENT

My Neighbor Claimed She Kept Hearing a Girl Crying Inside My House… I Thought She Was Exaggerating Until I Hid Beneath My Own Bed “Thomas, I hate interfering in other people’s lives, but every afternoon I hear a young girl screaming from inside your home. And honestly… it sounds like she’s pleading for someone to help her.” I stopped dead at my front gate, my keys still clenched in my hand. It was nearly eight in the evening, and I had just returned from a construction project outside Newark, New Jersey. My boots were coated in dried cement, my lower back was throbbing, and the only thing I wanted was a hot shower and silence. The last person I expected to deal with was Mrs. Ellis—the elderly neighbor everyone joked knew more about the neighborhood than the police did. “I think you may have misunderstood what you heard, Mrs. Ellis,” I replied carefully, trying not to sound disrespectful. “Nobody’s even home during the afternoon. My wife’s at work, and my daughter is in school.” But she didn’t back down. Instead, she stepped closer, and the fear in her expression sent an uneasy chill through me. “Then you have no idea what’s happening inside your own house,” she whispered. That sentence hit me harder than anger ever could. My name is Thomas Miller. I’m forty-three years old, and for most of my life I believed being a good father meant sacrificing everything—working until my hands split open, paying every bill on time, keeping groceries in the kitchen, and making sure the electricity never got shut off. My wife, Veronica, worked at a dental office. I left home before sunrise and usually returned after dinner had already been reheated. Somewhere during those years, my fifteen-year-old daughter, Lucy, slowly disappeared behind the closed door of her bedroom. I convinced myself it was normal. Teenagers changed. Teenagers became distant. Teenagers stopped laughing at their fathers’ jokes for no reason. Lucy barely touched her food anymore. She answered questions with short, empty responses, constantly wore headphones, and spent hours locked in her room without music, television, or the loud laughter that once filled our small home. Still, every time I felt that something was wrong, I found another excuse for it. That evening, I mentioned Mrs. Ellis’s warning to Veronica. She sighed heavily, tossed her purse onto the couch, and rolled her eyes. “Tom, seriously? Mrs. Ellis is old and lonely. She hears one strange sound and suddenly thinks someone’s being murdered.” “But she said it sounded like Lucy.” “Lucy’s fine,” Veronica answered immediately. “It’s just teenage drama. Don’t make things worse by encouraging it.” I wanted to believe her. Believing her was easier. But two days later, Mrs. Ellis stopped me again near the driveway, and this time her hands were trembling. “She was crying even louder today,” she said quietly. “I heard her say, ‘Please stop, I can’t do this anymore.’ Thomas… please. Check on your daughter.” That night, I went upstairs to Lucy’s room. She sat on the edge of her bed wearing her oversized school sweatshirt, headphones covering her ears while she stared blankly at her phone as though the screen had swallowed every trace of the lively little girl she used to be. “You okay, sweetheart?” I asked gently. She never looked up. “Yeah, Dad. Everything’s normal.” Normal. Suddenly, that word sounded completely hollow. The next morning, I pretended to leave for work like usual. I drank coffee, grabbed my jacket, kissed Veronica goodbye, and walked out the front door. Lucy left shortly after in her school uniform with her backpack hanging from one shoulder, and Veronica headed out not long afterward. Instead of driving to work, I parked several blocks away behind a closed laundromat and quietly walked back home like a stranger sneaking into his own life. I slipped through the back door without making a sound. The house was silent. Unnaturally silent. I checked the kitchen. The hallway. The living room. Lucy’s bedroom. The bathroom. Nothing. No screams. No hidden secret. No proof that anything was wrong. For a moment, I felt stupid. Maybe Veronica had been right. Maybe Mrs. Ellis really was imagining things through old walls and too much loneliness. Then something inside me said not to leave. I walked into my bedroom, lowered myself onto the floor, and slid beneath my own bed. Twenty minutes went by. Then I heard the front door open. Quick footsteps raced up the stairs. Someone entered my room. The mattress dipped above my head. First came a muffled sob. Then another. Then a trembling voice filled with so much fear it nearly stopped my heart. “Please… stop. I can’t do this anymore.” It was Lucy. My daughter—the girl who was supposed to be sitting in class—was curled up on my bed crying as though her entire world was falling apart. From under the bed, all I could see were her dirty white socks and worn sneakers trembling against the hardwood floor. Then through tears, she whispered… LIKE THIS POST AND COMMENT “YES” TO READ THE FULL STORY

ADVERTISEMENT

Another voice, a girl this time. “Come on. You don’t want everyone to see the rest, do you?”

Lucia made a strangled sound and dropped the phone onto the mattress. The video kept playing, and Thomas felt his blood turn cold.

Then came a voice he recognized.

Veronica.

His wife.

Not yelling. Not comforting. Not angry.

Calm.

Too calm.

“Lucia, if you keep making continue reading …

ADVERTISEMENT

Leave a Comment

ADVERTISEMENT