When my son first told me, “Mommy, a big man comes to my room at night. Tell him to go,” I smiled, kissed his forehead, and brushed it off as childhood imagination. Kids say strange things before bed, and I assumed it was just a dream or a shadow that frightened him.
But weeks later, everything changed.
One night around 3 a.m., I woke up to an unusual thumping sound coming from his room. It wasn’t the quiet tossing of a child having a nightmare. It was louder. Rhythmic. Almost like footsteps… but too heavy to be his.
My heart started racing. I rushed down the hallway and pushed open his door.
What I saw froze me.
My son was sitting upright in bed, stiff as a statue, eyes wide open—but he wasn’t looking at me. He was staring toward the corner of his room, breathing fast, pointing with a trembling hand.
“Mommy… he’s right there.”
The room was cold—much colder than the rest of the house. The air felt thick, heavy, wrong. His nightlight flickered, casting strange shadows across the walls.
I tried to stay calm. “There’s nobody here, baby. Mommy’s here now.”
But he wouldn’t look away from the corner.
“Mommy, he says he wants to sit on my bed.”
That was the moment my stomach dropped.
I grabbed him, wrapped him in a blanket, and took him to my room. He didn’t sleep the rest of the night—and neither did I.
The next day, shaken, I spent hours cleaning his room, moving furniture, trying to convince myself it was nothing. But when I lifted his bed to vacuum underneath, something slid out.
A small toy figure—one I’d never seen before.
Not ours. Not his friends’. Not from any set he owned.
And it was warm… as if someone had been holding it.
That was the moment I realized: whatever my son had been seeing, whatever was visiting him at night… he wasn’t imagining it.
And it wasn’t done with us.
Some things kids say aren’t just stories. Sometimes, they’re warnings.