She sat alone in the corner, nibbling toast and staring at nothing. “Aren’t you going to eat with us?” I asked. She shook her head. “He’s already sitting there,” she whispered. “Who is?” I said, glancing at the empty chair. She looked up, dead serious, and said, “The man with the red hands. He comes when you’re not home and…”
At first, I laughed it off, thinking it was just another strange thing she’d come up with. My sister, Nora, had always been a little different, prone to long silences and odd remarks. But there was something about the way she said it that morning—the way her voice shook, the way her eyes darted toward the chair as if she truly saw someone—that unsettled me.
“What do you mean?” I asked softly, trying not to sound alarmed.
She clutched her toast tighter and muttered, “He just sits there. Watching me. His hands… they’re red, like he dipped them in paint. Or blood. I don’t know.”
I forced a smile, trying to lighten the mood. “Maybe you dreamed it.”
But she shook her head firmly. “No. He’s real. And he doesn’t like you.”
The words stuck in my chest. I didn’t know how to respond, so I poured myself more coffee and tried to brush it aside. Still, the image of a man with red hands lingering in our kitchen wouldn’t leave me.
Over the next week, I noticed subtle changes in Nora. She grew quieter, avoided certain rooms, and startled easily at sudden noises. One evening when I came home late from work, I found her curled up on the couch with all the lights on, her eyes wide and glassy.
“He was here,” she whispered before I could even take off my coat.
I sat beside her. “Who, Nora?”
“The man with the red hands. He was sitting at the table again. Just… waiting.”
I wanted to tell her she was imagining things, but the fear in her eyes stopped me. Whether or not it was real didn’t matter—she believed it.
The next morning, I decided to test something. Before leaving for work, I quietly set up an old camera facing the kitchen table. I didn’t tell Nora, because I didn’t want to feed into her fear, but I figured if I could show her the footage later, maybe it would calm her down.
That night, after she’d gone to bed, I reviewed the recording. Most of it was uneventful—just an empty kitchen bathed in daylight, then shadows creeping in as evening fell. But around 3:17 in the afternoon, I noticed something. Nora walked into the kitchen, placed a plate on the table, and then froze. She stared at the empty chair for several minutes, trembling slightly. She even spoke, though the camera didn’t capture sound. Then, she backed out of the room, never turning her back on the chair.
I leaned closer to the screen, trying to catch any flicker of movement. Nothing. Just the chair, sitting empty and still.
When I showed her the footage the next day, she barely glanced at it. “He doesn’t let cameras see him,” she said simply.
I sighed in frustration. “Nora, you can’t live like this. If you’re seeing things, maybe we need to—”
“I’m not crazy!” she snapped, her voice breaking. “I know what I see.”
I let it go for the moment, but her words stuck with me.
A few nights later, I woke to the sound of footsteps. Soft, deliberate, crossing the kitchen floor. I lay frozen in bed, straining my ears. Then came the creak of a chair being pulled back.
I sat up, heart pounding. It must be Nora, I thought. But when I checked her room, she was sound asleep, her chest rising and falling peacefully.
Swallowing hard, I crept toward the kitchen. The lights were off, but moonlight spilled in through the window, casting pale shadows across the floor. The chair—the one Nora always claimed he sat in—was slightly out of place, pulled away from the table.
My breath caught in my throat.
I shoved it back under the table and told myself I was being ridiculous. Chairs move. Floors creak. But deep down, I felt something shift that night.
The following week, things escalated. Nora refused to be left alone at all. She started locking herself in her room when I went to shower. Once, I came home to find her sitting on the porch steps, shivering in the cold. “He was inside,” she said. “I couldn’t stay.”
I knew then I had to do something. I called a friend of ours, a psychologist named Daniel, and asked him to come talk to her. Maybe if she heard from a professional that none of this was real, she’d believe it.
But when Daniel arrived and sat down with her, she wouldn’t even look at him. She just kept staring past his shoulder toward the kitchen.
“He’s here right now,” she whispered.
Daniel glanced back, clearly uncomfortable, but of course saw nothing. He gave me a look as if to say, “She needs more help than I can give.”
That night, I couldn’t sleep. I kept replaying her words in my mind, kept seeing that chair out of place. Finally, sometime past midnight, I went downstairs for water. As I passed the kitchen, I froze.
There, in the dim glow from the streetlight outside, sat the chair. Pulled out again.
And on the surface of the table, faint smudges—two palm prints. Red.
My stomach lurched. I stumbled back, nearly dropping the glass in my hand. The prints looked fresh, almost wet, though when I reached out, my fingers came away dry.
I didn’t tell Nora what I saw. I didn’t want to feed into her fear. But from that night on, I couldn’t shake the feeling that maybe, just maybe, she wasn’t imagining it.
Over the next month, more strange things happened. The smell of iron in the air, sharp and metallic. The sound of a chair scraping across the floor when no one was near it. Once, I found a piece of toast half-eaten on a plate, though I knew I hadn’t made it and Nora swore she hadn’t either.
The breaking point came one Saturday morning. I walked into the kitchen to find Nora standing there, pale and shaking. On the wall, written in smeared red streaks, were the words: “HE’S MINE.”
I grabbed her and pulled her into the living room, my own hands trembling. She sobbed into my chest, repeating, “I told you, I told you.”
That was when I knew this had gone beyond anything I could handle alone. I called Laura, our aunt who had raised us for a time when we were kids. She lived a few towns over and had always been the steady presence in our lives. When I explained what was happening, she was silent for a long moment, then said, “I’m coming.”
When she arrived that afternoon, she didn’t look surprised. She sat with Nora, stroked her hair, and finally said, “I was hoping this wouldn’t happen to you too.”
My blood ran cold. “What do you mean?”
She sighed, her face heavy with old sorrow. “Your mother used to see him too. The man with the red hands. She never talked about it much, but sometimes I’d find her crying in the kitchen, staring at that same empty chair. She swore he followed her.”
I felt my knees weaken. “Why didn’t you ever tell us?”
“Because I thought it would die with her,” Laura said softly. “I thought if I never spoke of it, maybe it wouldn’t find you.”
For days afterward, I couldn’t think straight. Was this some family curse? A shared delusion? Or was there really something—someone—haunting us?
One night, after Nora had finally fallen asleep, I sat alone in the kitchen. I placed an empty plate at the table, just to see what would happen.
Hours passed in silence. Then, just as I was about to give up, the air grew heavy. The smell of iron filled my nose. And slowly, almost casually, the chair pulled back.
I couldn’t see him. But I felt him.
“Why are you here?” I whispered, my throat dry.
No answer—only the faint impression of hands pressing onto the table, smearing those red stains across the surface.
I ran.
The next day, I made a decision. We couldn’t live like this anymore. I packed our things and told Nora we were leaving. But before we could go, Laura stopped me.
“If you run,” she said quietly, “he’ll follow. He always does.”
“Then what do we do?” I asked, desperate.
She handed me an old notebook, worn and yellowed. “Your mother’s journal. She wrote about him. Maybe the answer is in here.”
That night, after Nora was asleep, I sat down with the journal. Page after page described the same figure—always silent, always watching, always with those terrible red hands. My mother had tried everything: prayers, rituals, even moving houses. Nothing worked. But on the final pages, she wrote something different.
“He does not come for everyone. He comes for the lonely. The forgotten. The ones who sit at empty tables. If you fill the chair with love, he cannot stay.”
I stared at those words for a long time. Could it really be that simple?
The next morning, I tried something new. Instead of avoiding the kitchen, I invited Nora to sit with me. We ate breakfast together, laughing, talking, filling the silence with our voices. When I glanced at the chair, it remained empty. Truly empty.
Day after day, we kept at it. Meals together, music playing, friends visiting. Slowly, Nora grew brighter, stronger. The fear faded from her eyes.
And the man with the red hands never came back.
It’s been years now, and though sometimes I still wake in the night, half-expecting to hear that chair scrape across the floor, it stays silent. I keep my mother’s journal close as a reminder. Not of fear, but of the truth she discovered too late.
The man with the red hands was never just a ghost. He was loneliness, isolation, the quiet that eats away at you when no one sits beside you. He preyed on the emptiness we carried.
But emptiness can be replaced—with love, with connection, with laughter that fills the spaces where silence once ruled.
Nora lives a full life now. She still remembers him, but she doesn’t see him anymore. Because we’ve made sure that chair is never left for him again.
If there’s a lesson in all this, it’s this: the shadows in our lives grow strongest when we sit alone. But when we choose to share our table, when we choose to fill the silence with kindness and love, those shadows lose their power.
So eat with someone. Sit with someone. Listen, talk, laugh. Don’t leave the chair empty.
Because sometimes, the scariest ghosts are the ones born from our loneliness.
And the surest way to defeat them is to never let them sit down.
If this story resonated with you, share it with someone who might need reminding that they are not alone—and that even the smallest act of connection can keep the darkness away.