The Babysitter in the Hallway

When I was little, I stayed at my babysitter’s trailer. Around 3AM I woke up to pee and looked down the hallway.

My babysitter was leaning against the wall like a “cool guy” in a movie. I made eye contact, and my blood ran cold, because she was smiling—but her eyes weren’t. It wasn’t the warm kind of smile she gave me when she let me have one more cookie before bed. This one was too wide, too stiff, like someone told her to pretend to smile and she didn’t know how.

I froze, standing in the dim light of the hallway. The nightlight in the outlet behind me cast just enough glow to see her face but not much more. Her body was still, her arms crossed like she was just chilling, but something was off. It felt like I had interrupted something I was never meant to see.

“Go back to bed,” she whispered, without moving her lips.

I didn’t move. I didn’t breathe. I was six years old, but I remember the way my stomach dropped like I’d just missed a step going downstairs. I thought maybe I was dreaming, but I pinched my own arm and felt it.

“Go. Back,” she said again. Still not blinking. Still not moving her mouth. Her voice was soft but sharp, like it had claws.

I darted back to the guest bedroom and slammed the door. I crawled under the covers and stayed there until the sun came up. When I finally got up the nerve to leave the room, I found her in the kitchen making eggs. Her hair was a mess, she was barefoot, and she smiled the usual way this time—soft and sleepy, like always.

“Morning, kiddo,” she said. “Sleep okay?”

I nodded, but I kept watching her, wondering if I’d imagined it all. Maybe I had. Kids dream weird things, right?

Except when my mom picked me up later that day, she looked rattled. I overheard her whispering to my dad that the babysitter’s place “smelled like metal” and she didn’t want me going back. I didn’t ask questions. I was too scared of the answers.

Years went by. I barely thought about it, honestly. Life moved on. We moved to another state. I grew up, got a job, had a normal adult life. But then, at twenty-eight, while scrolling Facebook, I saw her.

Her name was mentioned in a news article someone had shared: “Local Woman Arrested After Remains Found on Property.”

I felt cold again, like I was six years old in that hallway.

I clicked on the article. It was her. Same long auburn hair, same freckled face. But older. Her name was Donna, and she had been arrested after authorities found bones—human bones—in her backyard.

They belonged to a young woman who had gone missing in the early 2000s. Apparently, a neighbor tipped off the police after Donna tried to sell them a freezer “with weird stains” for twenty bucks.

Suddenly, all the weird things made sense. The too-wide smile. The smell my mom noticed. The way she spoke without moving her mouth.

I couldn’t believe I had stayed under the same roof as her. That I’d fallen asleep on her couch while she watched TV. That she made me grilled cheese with the same hands that… God knows what else she did.

I didn’t tell anyone at first. I kept the story to myself. But it started creeping into my dreams. I’d wake up drenched in sweat, hearing her whisper, “Go back.”

So, I decided to talk to my mom. She was folding laundry in the living room when I brought it up.

“Hey,” I said casually. “Do you remember Donna? That babysitter from back when we lived in Tennessee?”

She stopped folding. Her eyes slowly lifted to meet mine.

“You remember her?” she asked.

I nodded. “I saw something online. She got arrested for… something really awful.”

My mom sat down. “I never wanted to scare you back then, but yes. I had a bad feeling. That last night, when I picked you up, the trailer smelled like bleach and rust. And she had this… weird look in her eye. Like she’d been up all night.”

I shuddered. “She was standing in the hallway at 3AM. Watching me. Smiling.”

My mom’s face went pale. “You never told me that.”

“I didn’t know what it meant,” I said. “I still don’t.”

We sat in silence for a bit. Then she whispered, “We were lucky.”

But luck didn’t explain everything. A few days later, I couldn’t resist doing more digging. I found a forum thread discussing the case. People were speculating wildly—some said she was part of a cult, others that she had multiple victims.

One person mentioned a rumor: that Donna would keep photos of the kids she babysat. Like trophies.

I felt sick. And terrified. I never wanted to know, but now I had to.

I reached out to the local police department anonymously and asked if they’d found any evidence about past babysitting gigs.

A week later, I got an email back.

They had indeed found several Polaroids in a box under her bed. Most were labeled with first names and dates. Most were kids. Some were posed. Some were just sleeping. Some were looking at the camera—terrified.

They didn’t confirm whether I was in the box. But they did ask me to call a detective.

I did. His name was Mr. Trask, and his voice was calm but tired, like he’d seen too much for one lifetime.

He confirmed they had a photo labeled “Ricky – 1999.”

That was me.

He said I was lucky. That they believed she had started hurting people only after that year. That I might’ve been her “test run.”

Whatever that meant.

He asked if I’d be willing to give a statement. I said yes, even though my hands were shaking. I met with him two days later.

He showed me the photo. It was me, sleeping in the guest bedroom of the trailer. My little stuffed bear was next to me.

My stomach twisted into a knot. “How did she even take that?” I asked.

“Probably while you were asleep,” he said. “There were no signs of abuse, no illegal substances found in your system when your pediatrician last saw you. But she definitely crossed a line.”

I stared at the photo. The more I looked at it, the more I realized it wasn’t just creepy. It was possessive. Like she thought I belonged to her.

I gave my statement. It wasn’t much—just memories, mostly disjointed. But Mr. Trask said every piece helped build the picture. “Even the unsettling little things matter,” he said. “They form a pattern.”

A few weeks later, I got a call. Donna had confessed. Not out of guilt—she’d been cornered. They’d found more evidence. A box buried behind the shed. In it, journals.

Some of the pages described her feelings when babysitting. One line mentioned me.

“Ricky. Sweet. Obedient. Doesn’t ask questions. Could’ve been the first.”

That made me feel cold all over again. But it also gave me a weird sense of closure.

I wasn’t crazy.

That hallway moment—her creepy smile, the way she whispered—it wasn’t a dream. It was real. And it probably saved me. Because if I hadn’t run back to bed… who knows?

The news kept covering the story for months. She went to trial. Got life in prison. No parole.

I thought that would be the end of it. But trauma has a way of crawling into your bones and nesting there.

I started having panic attacks whenever I saw old trailers. The smell of eggs in the morning made me nauseous. I couldn’t sleep unless every door in the house was shut tight.

So, I went to therapy. It helped. Slowly.

But what really helped was when I decided to turn the experience into something useful.

I started volunteering at a local child advocacy center. Talking to kids. Being the safe adult I never really had that night. Telling them, “If something feels off, trust that feeling.”

One day, a little boy about six told me his babysitter kept her closet locked and wouldn’t let him near it. Said it was “full of secrets.”

I reported it.

The police followed up.

Turned out she had a stash of stolen jewelry and prescription pills in there. Nothing like Donna—but still dangerous.

That boy’s mom sent me a card a week later that said, “Thank you for listening. No one else took him seriously.”

That was the day I realized something. Surviving wasn’t the end of the story. Using what I went through to protect others—that’s what finally gave it meaning.

The photo Donna took of me? I burned it.

Some people keep artifacts of their trauma. I didn’t want to. I didn’t want her shadow in my house.

But I kept the teddy bear. Stitched the eye back on. It sits on my bookshelf now. A reminder that I made it. That the past doesn’t get to decide the future.

There’s evil in the world, sure. And sometimes it stands right in front of you smiling like a friend. But there’s good, too. And when you’ve looked evil in the face and walked away, you’ve got a chance to become that good for someone else.

So here’s the lesson I take with me: listen to your gut. Even when you’re small. Even when adults tell you “it’s nothing.” That instinct isn’t there by accident.

And if someone in your life—child or adult—says something feels wrong, listen. It might be the one moment that saves them.

If this story hit you in the chest like it did me writing it, give it a share. Maybe someone else out there needs to remember that being cautious isn’t paranoia—it’s survival. And healing doesn’t mean forgetting. It means choosing what to carry forward.