1. The Voice That Said Goodnight
In 2018, in a quiet town in Montana, a woman named Clara moved into a small rental house at the end of a gravel road. She wanted peace. After a painful divorce, silence felt like medicine. The house was old, but not frightening at first. It had wooden floors, pale yellow walls, and a narrow hallway that always seemed colder than the rest of the rooms. Clara told herself old houses had strange drafts. She told herself every creak was just wood settling. But on her third night there, just after she turned off the bedroom lamp, she heard a soft voice whisper from somewhere beyond the door, “Goodnight.”
Clara froze under the blanket. The voice was not loud. It was calm, gentle, almost familiar, like someone standing close enough to care. She waited, barely breathing, but the house stayed silent. The next morning, she checked every window, every closet, every lock. Nothing was disturbed. She laughed nervously and blamed exhaustion. But the next night, it happened again. The moment her room went dark, the same voice whispered, “Goodnight.” This time it sounded closer.
For two weeks, Clara ignored it. Every night, the voice came after the light went off. Never before. Never after midnight. Always only once. She started sleeping with the lamp on, but the bulb burned out three nights in a row. She bought a nightlight. It flickered until she unplugged it. Then, as soon as the room fell dark, the whisper returned. “Goodnight.”
Clara finally told her neighbor, an elderly man named Mr. Harlan. He did not laugh. He only looked toward the house and asked, “Is it a woman’s voice or a child’s?” Clara felt her stomach tighten. “I don’t know,” she said. “Maybe both.” Mr. Harlan went pale and told her the previous tenant had moved out in one night. Before that, a widow had lived there for years, claiming she heard someone talking in the hallway after sunset. Nobody believed her.
That evening, Clara placed her phone on the nightstand and recorded the room. At 10:43 PM, she turned off the light. Ten seconds later, the whisper came, clearer than ever: “Goodnight.” Clara did not move until morning. When she played the recording back, the whisper was there. But beneath it was another sound—very faint, very low—like a second person breathing.
Fear became anger. On the twenty-first night, Clara sat upright in bed, waited for the room to darken, and when the voice whispered “Goodnight,” she whispered back, “Who are you?” The hallway stayed silent. Then the floorboards outside her bedroom door creaked. Once. Twice. Three times. Clara stared at the door handle as it slowly turned halfway, then stopped.
A second voice, deeper and colder than the first, whispered from the hallway, “She heard us.”
Clara left before sunrise with only her purse, phone, and car keys. Later, when she reviewed the final recording, the first voice whispered “Goodnight” as usual. Then Clara heard herself ask, “Who are you?” After that came the second voice. But just before the recording ended, there was one more sound she had not noticed that night: someone inside her bedroom, right beside the bed, softly laughing.
2. The House With No Upstairs
In 1991, police in Oklahoma received a call from a terrified neighbor who claimed she heard a child crying inside an abandoned house across the street. The house had been empty for years. Its windows were boarded, its paint had peeled away, and weeds grew so high around the porch that it looked like the earth was slowly swallowing it. Nobody in the neighborhood went near it, especially after sunset. But that night, the crying was so clear that several people heard it from their bedrooms.
Two officers arrived just after 11 PM. Their headlights cut through the dark yard, and for a moment, they thought they saw movement behind an upstairs window. But then they remembered what the neighbor had told them: the house was only one story. There was no upstairs window. Still, the crying continued, soft and broken, like a child calling from deep inside the walls.
The officers forced open the front door and entered with flashlights raised. Dust floated in the air. The house smelled of damp wood and old smoke. Every room was empty. The kitchen cabinets were hanging open. The living room floor had collapsed in one corner. In the hallway, one officer called out, “Police department. Is anyone here?” The crying stopped immediately.
They searched the bedroom, bathroom, basement crawlspace, and closets. Nothing. No child. No footprints in the dust except their own. But as they turned to leave, something tapped lightly from behind the wall near the hallway. Three soft knocks. The officers aimed their lights at the wall. The wallpaper there was faded, but one section looked newer than the rest, as if someone had covered something.
One officer placed his hand against it. The wall was cold. Much colder than the rest of the house. Then a small voice whispered from somewhere above them, “Please don’t go.” Both men looked up at the ceiling. Their flashlights showed only cracked plaster and water stains. There was no attic entrance, no staircase, no second floor.
Outside, neighbors gathered near the street. One officer told them there was nobody inside. But as they stepped onto the porch, the body camera clipped to one officer’s chest caught a sound that none of them noticed at the time. A child’s voice, very close to the microphone, whispered, “You forgot me upstairs.”
The next morning, police returned with the property owner. He insisted the house never had a second floor. Blueprints confirmed it. But one elderly neighbor remembered something strange. Decades earlier, before the house was renovated, there had been a small storage loft above the back bedroom. A family once lived there with a little girl who disappeared. The official story was that she ran away. Her parents moved out within a week.
Workers later opened the ceiling above the bedroom. They found no loft. No stairs. No hidden room. Only old beams and insulation. But inside one beam, carved deeply into the wood, were several childlike scratches. Most were unreadable. One sentence, however, was clear enough to make everyone stop talking: “I am still up here.”
The house was demolished months later. But the empty lot never sold. Neighbors claimed that on quiet nights, especially when the air was cold, they could still hear a child crying above them—from a place where no upstairs had ever existed.
3. The Door That Did Not Exist
In 2022, a man named Eric lived alone in a newly built house in Virginia. He was a careful person, the type who checked locks twice and kept security cameras at every entrance. His home was modern, clean, and safe. At least, that was what he believed until one rainy night when his phone buzzed at 2:13 AM with a smart lock notification: “Front door unlocked.”
Eric sat up immediately. He grabbed his phone and opened the security app. The front door camera showed nothing but rain falling on the porch. The door itself was closed. He walked downstairs, heart pounding, and checked it by hand. Locked. Deadbolt secure. No scratches, no forced entry. He told himself it was a glitch.
Then another alert appeared: “Front door locked.” Eric frowned. He had not touched the lock. The app showed a timestamp from that exact second. He restarted the system, changed his password, and went back upstairs. But he did not sleep. At 2:26 AM, his phone buzzed again.
This time the message read: “Back door opened.”
Eric’s house did not have a back door.
He stared at the words until they blurred. The floor plan was simple: front entrance, side garage door, sliding glass door to the patio. No back door. Never had one. He opened the app, expecting an error code. Instead, a new camera feed appeared on the screen—labeled BACK DOOR. The image showed a dark hallway he had never seen before. At the end of it was a wooden door with peeling white paint.
Eric’s blood went cold. He checked every room in his house. There was no hallway like that. No white door. But on the phone, the camera feed remained live. The hallway was still. Then, slowly, the doorknob on the white door turned.
Eric called the security company. The technician said no extra camera was registered to his system. No “back door” device existed in their records. While Eric was on the phone, the app sent another notification: “Back door closed.” The strange feed vanished.
For three nights, nothing happened. Eric almost convinced himself it had been a software error. Then, at exactly 2:13 AM, his phone lit up again: “Back door unlocked.” The camera feed returned. This time the white door was already open. Beyond it was complete darkness. Eric watched, unable to move, as something pale slowly reached from the black space and placed a hand against the doorframe.
The next morning, Eric searched the house more carefully. In the laundry room, behind a storage shelf, he noticed the drywall sounded hollow when he knocked. He cut a small opening and found old wooden boards behind it. That made no sense. The house was supposed to be newly built.
A contractor came the next day. Behind the wall, they discovered a narrow sealed passage, barely wide enough for a person. It led nowhere now, ending in concrete. But carved into one board were the words: “Do not open the back door.”
Eric moved out within a month. After he left, the house was sold to another family. Three weeks later, the new owner posted online asking for advice because his security app kept showing alerts for a door he could not find. The message was always the same: “Back door opened.”
4. The Marbles in the Attic
In 1984, a family in Nebraska moved into an old farmhouse that had been empty for nearly a decade. The parents, Robert and Elaine, thought it was perfect for raising their two children. It had a wide porch, a big kitchen, and a dusty attic full of old boxes left behind by previous owners. The first week was peaceful. Then, on the eighth night, just after everyone went to bed, they heard marbles rolling across the ceiling.
At first, Robert thought the children were awake and playing upstairs. But both kids were asleep in their rooms. The sound continued above the hallway: click, roll, stop. Click, roll, stop. It moved slowly from one side of the attic to the other, as if someone were dropping marbles one by one and watching them travel across the floorboards.
The next morning, Robert climbed into the attic with a flashlight. He found old trunks, broken picture frames, and layers of dust so thick that every step left a clear print. But there were no marbles. No animals. No signs of movement except his own footprints. That night, the sound returned.
Elaine began keeping a notebook. Every night, the marbles started at 12:17 AM. Every night, they rolled for exactly nine minutes. Sometimes the sound passed directly above the children’s rooms. Sometimes it stopped above the parents’ bedroom. One evening, their youngest child, Annie, asked why the “boy upstairs” always played after bedtime. Elaine asked what boy she meant. Annie pointed to the ceiling and said, “The one who says he lost his toys.”
Robert grew angry. Fear was easier to handle when he could turn it into a problem to solve. He searched the attic again, this time during the day. He swept the floor, moved every box, and sealed every hole where an animal might enter. He even spread flour across the attic floor to catch footprints. That night, the marbles rolled louder than ever. In the morning, the flour was untouched.
Weeks passed. The family stopped inviting guests over because nobody believed them until they heard it themselves. One night, Robert’s brother stayed in the house and laughed about the story. At 12:17 AM, the rolling started. He climbed the ladder before Robert could stop him. The moment his head entered the attic, the sound stopped. He shined his flashlight around and said, “There’s nothing here.” Then something small rolled out of the darkness and tapped against his hand.
It was a black glass marble.
Robert’s brother dropped it and nearly fell down the ladder. When Robert climbed up seconds later, the marble was gone. But in the dust near the far wall, where no footprints had been before, someone had written with a finger: “Mine.”
Elaine researched the house at the county office. She discovered that a boy had lived there in the 1930s and died after falling from the attic ladder. His favorite toy, according to an old newspaper clipping, had been a bag of glass marbles. His parents moved away shortly after his death.
The final night the family stayed there, the rolling began as usual. But when Robert and Elaine looked at the ceiling, the sound was no longer above them. It was below them, under the floor. Then a marble rolled slowly out from beneath Annie’s bed and stopped at Elaine’s feet. A child’s voice whispered from the darkness, “Can I play now?”
They left before dawn. The farmhouse still stands, but locals say nobody keeps children there for long. Every new family eventually hears the same thing: marbles rolling where no child should be.



