Hospitals had a way of erasing time.
Days blended into nights. Meals were skipped. Sleep came in fragments—ten minutes here, twenty there. He lived on the plastic chair beside his mother’s bed, his world reduced to the rise and fall of her chest and the soft beeping of machines.
He no longer checked job portals.
He no longer prepared for interviews.
Nothing outside this room mattered.
His mother was improving slowly, the doctors said. “Stable,” they called it. But he noticed things others didn’t—how she looked at him longer than usual, how her hand searched for his even when she slept.
She knew something was wrong with him.
A Change
One evening, as rain lashed against the hospital windows, she spoke suddenly.
“You’re not the same,” she said softly.
He looked up. “I’m fine, Amma.”
She shook her head weakly. “You’re here… but your mind is somewhere else.”
He didn’t answer.
She tightened her grip on his hand. “Promise me one thing.”
“What?”
“Don’t let darkness sit inside you. Talk. Don’t keep everything buried.”
Her words hit him like a blade.
Darkness.
She had no idea how close she was to the truth.
The First Crack
That night, he stepped out to the hospital terrace for some air. The rain had stopped, leaving the floor wet and shining under dim lights.
His phone vibrated.
He didn’t jump this time. He expected it.
UNKNOWN:
She feels it too.
You think you’re protecting her.
You’re not.
His jaw tightened.
HIM:
Stop.
Three dots appeared. Disappeared. Appeared again.
UNKNOWN:
I was born the day you learned to stay silent.
I grew every time you swallowed your pain.
You named me without knowing — the evil within.
His breathing grew shallow.
This wasn’t someone watching him.
This was something that knew him.
Reality Slips
The next day, a nurse approached him.
“Sir, did you move your mother last night?”
He frowned. “No. Why?”
“She was found sitting upright at 3 a.m. She said you told her to get up.”
His stomach dropped.
“I didn’t,” he said firmly.
The nurse exchanged a glance with another staff member. “Maybe she was confused.”
But he wasn’t.
He remembered being on the terrace at 3 a.m.
He remembered his phone vibrating.
Raghav’s Warning
Raghav visited again that evening. One look at his face and Raghav stiffened.
“You’re not sleeping,” Raghav said. “Your eyes… this isn’t normal.”
“I’m fine.”
Raghav lowered his voice. “That consultant—maybe you should go back. Or someone else. This isn’t just stress anymore.”
He finally snapped.
“I said I’m fine!”
The sudden anger shocked even him.
Raghav stepped back. “That’s exactly the problem.”
They stood in silence.
Raghav spoke again, carefully. “Promise me one thing. Whatever you’re hearing… whatever you’re feeling… don’t face it alone.”
He didn’t promise.
He couldn’t.
The Whisper
Late that night, while holding his mother’s hand, he heard it.
Not a voice.
A whisper inside his head.
If she survives, you lose yourself.
If you break, I become stronger.
He squeezed his eyes shut.
This wasn’t fear anymore.
This was a battle.
And the scariest part?
The evil within didn’t want to destroy him.
It wanted to replace him.
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