Midnight Caller from the Abandoned House Episode 01
The village of Brinefield had many secrets, but none as silently feared as the house on Moorland Road. Locals called it The Hemsley Houseâa crumbling, ivy-choked structure that had been abandoned for nearly three decades. Windows shattered. Door half-hanging. A place where even the wind seemed afraid to blow.
No one lived there.
No one went near it.
And absolutely no one called from inside it.
Which is why, when Emma Clarkeâs phone rang at 12:03 a.m., she froze.
The screen showed a number she didnât recognise.
A landline.
The last digits burned into her mind:
âŠ7214
The same number once printed on the rusted signboard outside the abandoned house.
Her breath stalled.
She let it ring outâone time, two timesâthen it stopped.
She told herself it was a prank. Teenagers messing around. But the chill down her spine refused to leave. Eventually, she fell asleep on the sofa, TV still humming faintly.
---
The Second Call
The next night, Emma stayed awake deliberately. Midnight came and went. She felt silly, paranoid even.
But exactly at 12:03 a.m., the phone rang again.
Same number.
Same landline.
Same house.
She didnât answer.
But this time, the call didnât stop.
It rang and rang, drilling into her skull until she finally picked it up, unable to bear the tension.
âHelloâŠ?â
Static answered her.
Soft crackling, the kind you hear on old radios.
Then a womanâs voiceâbroken, strained, whispering through interferenceâ
âHelp⊠meâŠâ
Emma sat bolt upright.
âWho is this?â
No answer.
Only faint breathing.
Thenâ
âDonât let himââ
The line dropped.
Emmaâs heart thrashed. Her mind raced. Who was the woman? Why that house? Why her?
She couldnât sleep the entire night.
---
The Story Behind the House
The next morning, she visited the local café where old Mrs. Dalloway, the unofficial historian of Brinefield, sat knitting by the window.
Emma hesitated before asking, âMrs. Dalloway⊠what do you know about the Hemsley House?â
The woman stiffened.
âOh, child. Leave that place alone.â
âBut what happened there?â
Mrs. Dalloway sighed deeply. Her voice lowered to a near whisper.
âThirty years ago, the Hemsley family lived thereâArthur, his wife Margaret, and their little girl, Eliza. One night, neighbours heard a terrible scream. When the police arrived, the house was empty. No bodies. No struggle. Just⊠gone. People say the house is cursed. Some say Arthur went mad. Others say something else took them.â
Emma felt her stomach twist.
âIs the landline still active?â she asked.
âNo, dear. It was disconnected decades ago.â
Emmaâs blood ran cold.
---
Night Three
She should have blocked the number.
She should have left town.
But curiosity clawed at her like a desperate animal.
So she waited.
At 12:03 a.m., the phone rang.
She answered immediately.
âWho are you? What do you want?â
Static again.
Then the womanâs trembling voice:
âHeâs coming⊠please⊠help usâŠâ
Emmaâs chest tightened.
âWhere are you?â
A soft sob.
âIn the dark⊠he wonât let us leaveâŠâ
âWho wonât?â
Then, a new soundâslow footsteps echoing over the line, approaching, getting louder.
The woman gasped.
âHe heard us⊠heâsââ
The scream that followed seemed to cleave the air. The call ended abruptly.
Emma dropped the phone.
She couldnât sit still.
She couldnât ignore it anymore.
The voice wasnât just a voice.
It was begging.
---
The House on Moorland Road
Against every instinct of survival, Emma drove to the house the next night. The sky was starless, the wind unnaturally still.
The house loomed like a broken skeleton.
Emmaâs phone buzzed.
12:03 a.m.
Incoming call.
Same number.
Her fingers shook as she answered.
âIâm here,â she whispered. âTell me what to do.â
The womanâs voice came throughâclearer than ever.
âCome inside⊠before he doesâŠâ
Emma pushed the creaking door open. A sour, damp smell invaded her lungs. Dust coated the floor like grey snow.
âWhere are you?â she whispered into the phone.
âBasementâŠâ
The line crackled violently.
ââŠhurryâŠâ
The basement door waited at the end of the corridor, half rotted. As she approached, the house groaned as if waking from sleep.
She grabbed the doorknob.
Cold. Too cold.
The stairway down was pitch black. She turned on her phone torch and descended slowly.
Each step creaked.
Each breath felt stolen.
The basement was emptier than she expectedâjust broken furniture, old boxes, cobwebs dancing like ghosts.
But then her torch froze on somethingâ
A phone.
A dusty, old-fashioned landline.
Its light blinking red.
The same number calling her every night.
Her mobile vibrated violently.
The voice whispered from both phones nowâ
âBehind youâŠâ
Emmaâs heart stopped. She spun around.
Nothing.
Then the footsteps started. Heavy. Slow. Coming down the stairs.
Step.
Step.
Step.
The womanâs voice trembled through the receiverâ
âRunâŠâ
Emma bolted. She tore up the stairs, through the hallway, out the front door.
But she didnât stop running until she reached her car.
She didnât look back.
---
The Final Call
The next morning, she went to the police. They searched the house.
Nothing.
No landline.
No blinking light.
No trace of anyone ever being there.
But that night, Emma received one last call.
12:03 a.m.
Same number.
Hands trembling, she answered.
âWhy me?â she whispered.
For the first time, the womanâs voice sounded calm. Almost relieved.
âBecause⊠you heard us.â
Emma swallowed hard.
âWhat do you want now?â
A pause.
A soft exhale.
âTo warn you.â
âWarn me about what?â
The womanâs voice dropped to a chilling whisper:
âHe left the house last night.â
Emma froze.
âHe followed you home.â
The call ended.
A floorboard creaked behind her.
She wasnât alone anymore.