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The Babysitting Job That Haunted Me Until I Learned The Truth

Posted on August 20, 2025 by ShakeelAhmed

Years ago, I babysat a quiet 5-year-old girl.

Her dad had told me he was a widower.

He had a locked room in his house and seemed uneasy every time I went near it.

One night, I saw the door slightly open.

He was inside, talking to someone. When I moved closer, I heard a woman’s voice.

Curious, I peeked in. I froze when I saw—

—him sitting alone in the dark, facing a photo on the wall.

It was a large framed picture of a woman—beautiful, long dark hair, soft smile, holding a newborn.
He sat cross-legged on the floor, speaking in low tones.
But I’d heard a voice. A real, living voice. Not a recording. Not in his head.
It had come from that room.

I stepped back, heart racing, suddenly unsure if I’d imagined it.
Maybe it was a TV from the other room? Maybe he was playing a video?
But when I stepped on a creaky board, he turned fast, eyes wide like I’d caught him doing something illegal.

He stood up, fast. Shut the door.
Said, “That room is off-limits. Please respect that.”

I nodded, apologized, went back downstairs to the girl, whose name was Suri.
She was coloring on the floor, humming to herself.
Didn’t seem to notice or care about what had just happened.

After that night, I didn’t go near the door again.
But the feeling stayed. Like there was more going on.

I was 17 then, just trying to make extra money.
Her dad—Kavian—seemed like a decent guy. Quiet, polite, paid on time.
Maybe a little too polite, honestly. Always kept a distance.

But little things would stick in my mind.

Sometimes I’d come over and see two mugs in the sink.
Or a scarf thrown over the chair—definitely a woman’s.
Once, I found a gold earring under the couch when I helped Suri look for her doll.

I asked him about it.
He just gave me a tight smile and said, “My wife passed, but some of her things are still around.”

Okay. Fair enough.

But things got weirder.

One day Suri said, “Mommy says you have pretty hair.”
I blinked. Asked her gently, “Honey, your mommy’s not here, remember?”
She looked confused. Then she just shrugged and kept coloring.
Kids say strange things. I told myself that.

But I started watching more closely.

A few times, I thought I heard footsteps upstairs while I was alone with Suri.
Once I came back from the bathroom and Suri was sitting in the hallway, staring at the locked door.
She said, “They’re fighting again.”

They.

That’s when I started to worry something darker was happening.

So I started arriving a little earlier than usual, just to catch the tail end of Kavian’s day before he left.
Once, I saw a woman leaving through the back gate as I came in the front.
She wore a long coat and had a hood up.
I called out, but she kept walking fast, never turned around.

I went in.
Kavian looked rattled. Said he had to go.

I wanted to ask him straight up—Who’s the woman? Is she living here? Why is your daughter saying her mom’s still around?
But something in his eyes stopped me.
It wasn’t fear. It was something closer to shame.

Still, curiosity ate at me.

So one night, I made a mistake.

Suri had fallen asleep early. Kavian wouldn’t be home for another hour.
I stood outside the locked door, listening.
Nothing.

But the door wasn’t locked this time.
It creaked open when I touched it.

Inside, it looked like a time capsule.
Photos, clothes folded neatly in drawers, perfume bottles, an old pair of heels under the dresser.
The woman’s presence was everywhere.

I walked in slowly, looked around, and then I saw something that made my stomach drop.

A phone.

Lit up on the nightstand. Still warm. Recently used.

I backed out fast. Didn’t say a word when Kavian got home.
But I didn’t sleep that night.
And I didn’t go back the next week.

I made up an excuse. Said I was busy with exams.

But the guilt of leaving Suri tugged at me.

So two weeks later, I called Kavian to check in.
He sounded surprised but relieved to hear from me.

He asked if I could come back—just for one evening.
He had an emergency work meeting and no one else could watch Suri.

I said yes.

That night changed everything.

When I got there, Suri was sitting on the porch, barefoot.
Kavian wasn’t home yet.

I asked her who let her outside.

She pointed to the door and said, “Mommy said we could wait for you.”

My blood ran cold.

We went inside. I locked the door behind us.
I wanted to stay calm. Maybe she just imagined it. Maybe this was some elaborate grief pattern Kavian had let run wild.

But then I noticed the hallway light was on upstairs.

And soft music playing. A lullaby.

I picked up Suri, heart pounding, and went up slowly.
The music came from that room.

I stepped inside.
Nobody was there.

But on the mirror, written in fog—like someone had breathed on it—were the words:
“She needs stability. Leave her alone.”

I backed out. Fast. Called Kavian, voice shaking.
Told him what I saw.

He got home in ten minutes flat.

For the first time, he looked panicked.

He sat me down and said something I’ll never forget.

“You’re right. My wife’s not dead. But she’s not exactly here, either.”

Turns out, she had a psychotic break when Suri was a toddler.

He found her one morning sitting in that room, rocking back and forth, insisting the baby was missing—while Suri was asleep in the crib.

She was diagnosed with schizophrenia.
But every time she got treatment, she’d slip back into denial.
She refused medication. Said everyone was lying.

Kavian didn’t want to institutionalize her.

So instead, he kept her in the house.

She lived in that room. Ate there, slept there, whispered through vents when she thought no one could hear.
He installed locks on the inside and out, for her safety and Suri’s.

He told Suri her mom had passed—because what else could he say?
He didn’t want her living in fear.

But the woman wouldn’t stay hidden. She kept coming out when he was gone.

That’s who I’d seen. The scarf, the earring, the footsteps.
It wasn’t ghosts or grief.

It was a sick woman, trapped in a world her mind had created.

I was speechless. I didn’t know whether to cry or run.

But Suri was still sitting there, innocent, humming.

I asked Kavian why he didn’t get help.

He looked down. Said, “Because I love her. And because I know the moment I hand her over, they’ll sedate her until she’s not the person I fell in love with anymore.”

I didn’t agree with it. I still don’t.

But I understood it.

That night, I stayed with Suri while Kavian talked to his wife.
He told her gently that something had to change. That it wasn’t working anymore.

I don’t know what exactly happened in that room.
But I heard sobbing through the wall.

The next morning, I came back.
And for the first time, I met her.

Her name was Taraneh.

She looked frail, but her eyes were sharp.
She offered me tea. Apologized for scaring me.

She said, “I wanted to protect her. I didn’t know how to be a mother anymore.”

After that, Kavian arranged for her to get treatment.

It took months.

There were relapses.
And tears.
And custody visits with court supervision.

But slowly, things started to heal.

Suri was told the truth in gentle doses.
She didn’t hate them.
She was confused, sure—but kids are more forgiving than we think.

Fast forward five years.

They live in a new house now.
Smaller, quieter.
Taraneh takes medication. She’s stable.
Kavian is still by her side.

Suri’s in middle school. Wants to be a writer.

And me?
I still babysit sometimes.
But mostly, I visit as a friend.

Sometimes we sit on the porch, and I think about how close I came to walking away forever.

It would’ve been easier.

But sometimes the hard choice is the one that changes everything.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s this: silence protects no one. Speak up. Ask questions. Stay curious—but stay kind.
You never know whose life you might quietly help change.

If this moved you, please like and share. You never know who needs to read this today.

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