I woke up at 3 a.m., my throat dry, my mind still foggy with sleep. The house was quiet as I walked down the hallway toward the kitchen.
That’s when I heard it.
From my son’s room.
“Mom… can you turn off the light?”
His voice.
Soft. Sleepy. Exactly the way he sounded when he didn’t want to get out of bed.
I didn’t even think.
I reached into the room, flicked the switch, and mumbled, “Go back to sleep.”
Then I went back to bed.
—
I had barely pulled the blanket over me when something snapped me fully awake.
A cold, sharp realization.
My son wasn’t home.
He was on a camping trip with his class.
Hours away.
—
My heart started pounding so hard it felt like it might shake the bed.
I sat up, every second replaying in my mind.
The voice.
The tone.
The way it came from inside his room—clear, close, real.
Not a dream.
Not distant.
Right there.
—
I got up slowly this time.
Every step down the hallway felt heavier.
Colder.
I reached his door and pushed it open.
The room was empty.
Perfectly still.
His bed neatly made. His backpack gone. Everything exactly as it should have been.
Except…
The light was off.
Because I had turned it off.
—
I flipped it back on.
The brightness didn’t help.
If anything, it made the silence feel louder.
I stood there, listening.
Waiting.
For anything.
A whisper.
A movement.
A breath.
Nothing.
—
Still, I checked.
Closet.
Under the bed.
Behind the curtains.
Every corner.
I knew how ridiculous it was.
But I couldn’t stop.
Because something had spoken to me.
And it had known exactly what to say.
—
Then my phone buzzed.
The sound made me jump so hard I nearly dropped it.
A message.
From my son.
“Miss you, Mom. Wish you were here.”
I stared at the screen.
3:02 a.m.
—
My stomach twisted.
Two minutes after I heard his voice.
—
I told myself it was coincidence.
It had to be.
Maybe I was half asleep.
Maybe my brain filled in the sound.
Maybe—
But deep down…
I didn’t believe that.
—
I turned slowly back toward his room.
The light was still on now.
Nothing moved.
Nothing made a sound.
And yet…
Standing there in the doorway…
I couldn’t shake the feeling that I hadn’t imagined it.
That something had been there.
Something that knew my son’s voice.
Knew his words.
Knew me.
—
I reached for the switch again.
Paused.
And for a second—
I thought I heard it.
Not words this time.
Just the faintest shift in the air.
Like someone waiting.
—
I left the light on.
Closed the door.
And didn’t walk down that hallway again until morning.
Because whatever had called out to me that night…
I wasn’t ready to hear it speak again.