We're Not Safe Here (2025) Movie Script
1
It's okay, Mommy.
Neeta.
Everything All right?
I'm ready for winter break.
Yeah, me too.
- You ever hear from Rachel?
- No.
You get ahold of her,
you tell her to call the school
and, I don't know,
give an update or something.
Yeah, sure.
Hey.
Want a drink?
What?
You look like
you're about to fall asleep.
Yeah, I stayed up all night,
just working.
Trying to start a piece.
How's it going?
Well, I hold the brush,
I look at the piece.
Try to focus and I don't see it.
You're just blocked.
This is more than blocked,
I'm anxious.
I...
I just don't know
if I should do this anymore.
You are the most
together person I know.
Don't doubt yourself
or your art.
I gotta go.
I am meeting someone for dinner
and I don't want to be late.
Sorry for...for whining.
You're not whining,
you're venting.
And you know you can talk to me
about anything.
Anytime.
Rachel.
- Hey, Neeta.
- I've been calling, what's--
You okay?
Yeah.
What's going on?
Your students, everyone's
been asking about you.
I'm sorry.
I'm really sorry.
No, we're just worried
about you.
I've been wanting
to talk to you,
I just--I'm dealing
with some stuff.
What stuff?
Can I come over?
I know it's late, um,
but I really want
to talk to you.
Of course.
We're all around you.
- Hi.
- Hi.
This is it?
Oh, it's nice.
Is all of this your art?
Yep, I was just upstairs
working on a piece.
Oh, I love this.
This one.
I framed it,
but I don't think
it's finished yet.
You know,
it looks like something,
like a--like a hand.
Hey.
We don't have to talk
about this right now.
I'll be here when you're ready.
I'm just a little worried
how you're going to take it.
No. No, don't worry
about me. I'm okay.
It's a lot.
We have all night.
Where do I even start?
Start wherever feels right.
Um...
I'm sorry, um,
I just haven't been--
I haven't been sleeping
much lately.
I keep--
I keep having this dream.
There are people,
shadows all around me.
Watching me.
I know they're moving closer.
I see hands reaching out for me.
It feels so real, you know?
It's terrifying.
And during the day,
I've been--I've been having
these, like blackouts?
I'll be in bed, or on my sofa,
and it--and it just happens,
you know,
I get this feeling of dread,
like my body knows
it's about to happen.
And then I feel nauseous
and my muscles tense up
and then I wake up.
And all this time has passed.
When I come out of it,
it's like waking up
from a dream.
Like I'm not sure if I'm--
if I'm awake or not.
Like I might still
be in the dream.
My heart is racing
and I'm just--
I don't know, I'm disoriented.
How long have you been
having these blackouts?
A really long time, actually.
Since I was little.
Something happened
when I was little.
So, growing up,
my best friend Lilly,
she lived next door to me.
She was like my sister.
During summer
we had the same routine.
Every day, she would--
she would wake me up
by throwing little pebbles
against my bedroom window.
And then I would run downstairs,
and grab my bike,
and we would just pedal
to the park
and play for hours.
Though this one day.
Same routine.
I grab my bike,
and head outside,
and I can see right away.
She seems...shaken up.
So I ask her what's wrong,
and she won't tell me.
Which is weird because we always
told each other everything.
She's really agitated
and she says I don't know
if I'm supposed to tell you.
I'm not supposed to tell anyone.
But I can't stop
thinking about it
and I just don't know
if I can keep it inside me
any longer.
So I'm trying to make
her feel comfortable
and I say to her,
"Look, whatever this is,
it's okay, you can tell me.
You know, you're my best friend
and I want to help you."
I'm telling her all of this,
but at the same time
I was also--
I was also really curious,
you know?
Like I wanted to know
what could put her
into such a state.
And this is what she told me.
More or less.
So this happened near
where I grew up,
but a long time ago.
Like 50 or 60 years ago.
Maybe longer.
This little girl, very sweet.
Very well behaved.
One night, she wakes up,
gets out of bed,
and stabs her mom
while she's sleeping.
Young single mom,
it was just the two of them.
Grabs a knife out of the kitchen
and just stabs her mom.
Over and over.
And then she strips off
her mom's clothes,
and ties like a pillowcase...
...over her head.
So her mom doesn't have to see
what's going to happen to her.
Then she drags her mom
across the house.
No one's sure exactly
how she did that.
She's, you know, tiny.
And her mom is badly hurt,
but she's still alive
and she's much bigger.
Somehow she does all of that
and she stuffs her mom
into a closet.
She attacks her mom,
and then stuffs her in a closet.
- Yes.
- Why?
Her friend in the closet
told her to do it.
That's what she said.
He was lonely,
and he wanted to meet her mom.
So, the next day
the police go to the house
and they find this little girl
sitting in the closet.
Brushing her mom's
bloody matted hair.
Just talking away
with this friend.
Her mom is stuffed
into the back corner.
Barely alive and bleeding out.
She died on the way
to the hospital.
So I ask her,
"Who told you this?"
And she says,
and I'll never forget this.
"My grandmother told me.
She told me last night.
She made me promise
not to tell anyone."
I was shocked.
Lilly's grandmother was dead.
She'd been dead
for at least a year.
I knew that.
I went to the funeral.
You don't think
that maybe she was making it up?
No. No,
Lilly would never lie to me.
She might have been
trying to scare you.
She wasn't trying
to scare me, okay?
But I was definitely scared.
I remember, in that moment,
hearing all of that.
It was like something
inside me changed.
Like every cell in my body
was suddenly alert, and afraid.
You know, I looked around
and it was like the trees
were closing in on us.
I told Lilly I wanted to go home
so we just grabbed our bikes
and we got out of there.
We're taking
our usual route home.
And the whole time
my head is just spinning.
Like I can't stop thinking
about what Lilly told me.
It's like I'm hearing it
over and over in my head
on this endless loop.
And what finally
snaps me out of it is,
I see Lilly up ahead.
She takes this sharp turn
and she starts going
a completely different
direction.
So I'm yelling at her, "Stop.
Like, what are you doing?
Where are you going?"
But she's not listening.
She's just pedaling
faster and faster,
and I'm struggling
to keep up with her.
Until she finally
just skids to a stop
right in front of a house.
So she hops off her bike
and she's just--
she's just staring at this house
for a while.
I say to Lilly,
"Come on, it's getting late.
We need to go home."
And she doesn't take her eyes
off this house
but she says something.
And it sounds off,
the way she says it.
She says, "We are home."
And I'm staring at this house,
this creepy abandoned house.
And I realize,
this is the house.
The one she was just
telling me about.
Have you heard of this house?
No, I don't think so.
You know how every neighborhood
has that one house?
Little kids dare each other
to take a step inside?
Mmm-hmm.
This is that house.
And Lilly was staring at it
so intensely.
She wouldn't take her eyes
off of it.
By now, like, I'm starting
to get a little scared
so I'm saying,
"Come on, let's go."
But Lilly doesn't listen.
She just starts walking
across the lawn.
Like she's been there before.
She walks around, and...
What's wrong?
I keep hearing something.
You still hear it?
No.
Come on.
Um, so I make it
into the back yard,
and Lilly is at the back door.
It's just hanging wide open,
like someone had broken in.
But Lilly doesn't stop.
She doesn't even slow down.
She just walks right in,
like it's her own house.
And I'm following her
as she's moving
through the rooms.
We just keep pushing deeper
and deeper into this house
until we're in
the living room.
Rachel. Rachel.
No, I keep--
I keep hearing something
-moving around in here.
-There's nothing in here.
You don't hear it?
Look. Nothing.
Rachel.
What are you doing?
There's nothing here.
Rachel.
Who is that?
I don't know.
Rachel?
Rachel.
So Lilly and I are looking
around the living room.
And I notice
this framed photograph
on the wall.
It's really old
and covered in dust,
so I reach up and I wipe it off,
and I just froze.
The photograph looked old.
It was all cracked and faded
and yellow from the sun.
But it couldn't
have been old at all.
It was a photograph
of me and Lilly,
on our bikes,
riding up to the house.
Like it could have
only been taken minutes ago.
We were wearing
the same clothes.
Everything was the same.
Everything,
except for Lilly's face.
I couldn't see it. She had
something pulled over her head.
It looked like a pillowcase.
And I was just frozen,
looking at this photograph
on the wall.
This photograph
that should not be there.
And it hit me all at once.
We are in danger.
We need to get out
of this house,
-right now.
-Rachel. We don't have
- to talk about this.
- Please.
I really want to tell you.
So I turn around to tell Lilly,
and she's already looking at me.
Her eyes are as wide as saucers.
And she doesn't say anything.
She just mouths
the word, "Listen."
So I'm standing there,
and I'm listening.
But I don't hear anything.
It's like so quiet, it's loud,
if that makes sense?
Mmm-hmm.
So Lilly starts pointing
at this closet
that's just outside
the living room,
like this, over and over again.
Like whatever she's hearing
is coming from that closet.
And that's when I hear it.
This scratching sound.
Real soft. It's not long,
but it's long enough
for me to know,
it is definitely coming
from that closet.
I had to go
and see what was inside.
It was like there was a magnet
pulling me closer and closer.
I'm moving real slow
and I'm trying to listen
but I'm not hearing
anything now.
Except for my heart.
I can--I can hear
my heart pounding in my chest.
I'm standing at the closet door.
I grab the doorknob,
I take a deep breath,
and I pull the door open.
I feel this rush of air.
And maybe it was me
just pulling
the door open so fast,
but I don't know.
I'm looking inside this closet,
and it is just so, so dark
and...
Whoa, that's weird.
I'm sorry. Can I...
can I use the bathroom?
Um, it's the second door
to your left.
Okay.
I'm just gonna wash up.
It's next to the record player.
Are you okay?
Please stop. Please stop.
Please, please leave me alone.
I don't want this.
Please leave me alone.
Please.
Go away.
Rachel?
Rachel.
Um, I was just listening
to the music.
This is nice.
I wonder...
I wonder whose it was,
like originally.
Uh, I don't know.
It was old and broken, so...
It isn't broken.
What do you mean?
These things last forever.
It was so dark in that closet.
Just pitch black.
And I didn't know what to do.
I was too afraid
to reach inside and feel around.
But I was just as scared
to run away.
So I was just frozen.
Until I heard Lilly gasp.
I turned around,
and her mouth was hanging open
and she wasn't quite looking
at me.
It was more like
she was looking through me.
At something else.
I knew she saw something,
and I knew whatever it was,
it was right behind me.
And that's when I heard it.
This whisper.
It was too soft
to make out any words,
but I definitely heard it.
And I looked at Lilly
and I could tell
she heard it too.
We both screamed
and ran out of there,
got our bikes,
and just rode all over town
until we were exhausted.
We finally stopped at a
convenience store just to rest.
And I remember
asking Lilly over and over,
"What did you see?"
But she wouldn't tell me.
She was really shaken up.
All I could do
was get her to promise
she would tell me tomorrow.
So we went home.
Couldn't sleep that night.
I think I just stared
at my ceiling until morning.
I waited to hear those pebbles
hitting my bedroom window.
I waited and waited and waited
until I heard the sirens.
Lilly was gone.
The doors to her house
were wide open,
not a thing was out of place.
But she was gone,
her mom was gone.
They just vanished.
Did you ever tell anyone
about what happened?
I told the police
that we biked to the house
and looked around
and then we biked home.
But I didn't tell them any
of what I'm telling you
right now.
You should have told them.
I was too afraid
to say anything.
Even to my parents.
I thought
they would get mad at me
or they would accuse me
of making it up.
- Rachel--
- Shh. Shh.
Just listen. Please listen.
Do you hear it?
You really didn't hear that?
It feels--it feels close.
Like it's always
right behind me.
I don't hear any--
Oh. I'm sorry.
This just keeps happening,
it keeps sliding down.
Who is she?
My mother.
She died a couple years ago.
I'm sorry.
I didn't--I didn't know that.
I miss her.
I could tell her anything.
Hold on.
Um...
I brought you something.
So, I couldn't talk
to people about this stuff.
So I started taking notes.
Like writing things down.
What I was seeing,
when I was seeing it.
I thought maybe if I did that,
I could--I could figure out
what was happening and why.
-Can I see it?
-Yeah. Please.
How long
have you been doing this?
A long time.
Years.
- Did it help?
- I don't know.
I mean, I've written
a lot of things down.
But I've never been able
to pull it all together
into answers.
I only end up more confused.
I get that.
The confusion.
The not knowing what's real.
I keep having this nightmare.
I'm lying on this sloping hill.
And it's covered
in this green lush grass.
And I'm looking up at the sky.
The only sounds I hear
are the birds chirping
and my own breathing.
But then I hear something else.
It's faint at first.
This siren.
An old one.
It's far away,
but it gets my attention.
So I gently lift my head
and I see something
in the horizon.
Just at the edge.
These dark clouds.
They're low.
They're black.
And they're rolling
across the sky.
Really slow.
Until the whole sky is black.
It's like this chorus of sirens,
shrieking at me.
And it's loud.
The hill,
it just starts to tremble.
I look down,
this huge black pit appears.
It gets steeper,
and I start falling into it.
I'm screaming.
And then everything
just goes dark.
The air, it's, like, alive
with the sound of these sirens.
And then I wake up.
But you know what's funny?
I don't feel
like I just woke up in my bed.
I feel like I fell
through that pit
and landed in my bed.
By the time
I finished high school,
I couldn't take it anymore.
I left town,
I enrolled in college,
I found an apartment,
found a job.
And then it stopped.
That's it? Just like that?
I stopped feeling
the eyes on me.
I stopped feeling scared
all the time.
For a long time, everything
was really calm and quiet.
Until it wasn't.
Rachel?
When did it start up again?
I was at a bar
with some friends.
Rachel?
Sorry, um...
I was at a bar
with some friends.
Not good friends.
More like acquaintances.
We'd been there a while,
and it was late.
And I was a little tipsy.
The bar was packed
full of people.
You couldn't really
even see much,
aside from those
right in front of you.
But at some point
I looked around and,
there she was.
Like she appeared
out of nowhere.
This woman, off in the corner,
standing by herself.
She waved me over
and when I got to her,
she leaned in close
and whispered something to me.
"He likes you.
Aren't you curious?"
She wrote something down
on a napkin, and then she left.
Once she was gone,
I opened it up.
She'd written an address.
On Essex Road.
And right then,
I realized something.
The woman, she looked familiar.
I hadn't seen Lilly in years,
but she had the same
bright red hair.
I ran outside to find her,
but she was already gone.
It was like she disappeared.
I saw this old woman
just standing there
on the sidewalk
staring at me,
like she was waiting for me.
I asked if she saw someone
come out of the bar
but she just smiled and said,
"keep praying."
I looked around, and...
Hey.
Hey!
Rachel!
- What was that?
- I'm sorry.
I, um, I told you,
I have--I have blackouts.
That was not a blackout,
I don't know what that was.
But it was like an episode.
Um, it's a--
No, I'm fine.
I want to keep going.
-I need to finish this.
-No, no, no. We're done.
Listen, we are done, okay?
I'm not letting you
drive home tonight.
Okay. All right.
Okay.
Hey, I couldn't sleep.
I think I'd like to keep going.
After I saw the old woman
outside the bar,
I was so shaken up.
I didn't even
say goodbye to my friends,
I just got in my car and left.
It was late, and dark.
There were no cars on the roads.
I was sitting at a stoplight,
just... thinking.
Trying to sort out
all these emotions. And...
suddenly I felt
this wave of nausea.
Then all at once,
my muscles tensed up
and I blacked out.
I don't know
how much time passed.
But when I came to,
my car was parked
and I wasn't at my apartment.
I was looking at the house.
I can't explain it.
It felt exactly
like all those years ago.
Like I wasn't in control
of my body.
Like something was pulling me
through the backyard
into the house,
all the way to the living room.
And ever since that night,
I realized I can't avoid this.
I can't make it stop.
That's why I came here.
I need help.
I need to talk to someone.
To tell someone.
I'm glad I chose you.
So, how do you feel?
I don't know.
How do you feel?
I--I'm still processing it.
I have a lot of questions--
You have questions.
So you're curious.
Who are you?
Shh. Listen.
Shh.
Listen.
Do you hear it?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
I'm right behind you.
Always right behind you.
I'm not afraid of you.
Rachel!
Help! Help!
No. No. Please.
Please stop.
Please,
I can't take this anymore.
Please stop it.
Please stop it. Please!
I can't take this anymore.
I'm here.
I'm right next to you.
I'm everywhere.
No, no, no, no, no. No!
Please. Please.
This is going to hurt.
But it's not going to be
as bad as you think.
It's okay to be afraid.
Your eyes.
They look just like my mother's.
So beautiful.
Fear is the path to grace.
It's what brought you here.
Led you to us.
Right here.
There's so many of us.
Look. Look outside.
See them?
Yes.
It's okay.
He's going to show you so much.
He's going to show you
the truth.
Shh, listen.
Shh.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Never stop.
Keep praying.
He's coming.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Rachel?
Rachel?
You went inside.
You went inside the house.
How do you know?
Did you check the closet?
Did you check the closet?
I found this.
I've seen this.
On your desk at school.
It's yours, right?
I don't--I don't know.
It is yours.
Why did you put it there.
Shh.
Why did you put it there?
I don't understand.
You went to the house,
you were in the house.
- What?
- No, you should--
you should have--
you should have seen something!
You should have heard something!
Oh, my God.
This is--this is wrong.
I have to go. I have to go.
-Where are you going?
-No, I shouldn't--
I shouldn't have--
I shouldn't have told you this.
I told you everything
and you didn't understand it.
I thought--I thought
you would take this seriously.
You need to take this seriously.
What?
What?
What? What is it?
You don't see it?
What?
What? What is it?
Oh, my God.
I'm sorry, Neeta.
Why are you doing this to me?
I tried so hard to fight it.
I knew you would hear him
in the story.
Calling to you.
Like he called to me.
This is your demon now.
Hey, I have been calling you.
What's going on?
I--I'm sorry, I'm sorry
I showed up like this.
And if it's a bad time,
I can go.
No, it's fine. What's happening?
I'm sorry, I just--I feel like
I really need to talk to someone
and something happened,
but I don't...
But what?
I just--I needed--
I need to talk to you.
I really need to talk to you.
Is that okay?
Come on in.
It's okay, Mommy.
Neeta.
Everything All right?
I'm ready for winter break.
Yeah, me too.
- You ever hear from Rachel?
- No.
You get ahold of her,
you tell her to call the school
and, I don't know,
give an update or something.
Yeah, sure.
Hey.
Want a drink?
What?
You look like
you're about to fall asleep.
Yeah, I stayed up all night,
just working.
Trying to start a piece.
How's it going?
Well, I hold the brush,
I look at the piece.
Try to focus and I don't see it.
You're just blocked.
This is more than blocked,
I'm anxious.
I...
I just don't know
if I should do this anymore.
You are the most
together person I know.
Don't doubt yourself
or your art.
I gotta go.
I am meeting someone for dinner
and I don't want to be late.
Sorry for...for whining.
You're not whining,
you're venting.
And you know you can talk to me
about anything.
Anytime.
Rachel.
- Hey, Neeta.
- I've been calling, what's--
You okay?
Yeah.
What's going on?
Your students, everyone's
been asking about you.
I'm sorry.
I'm really sorry.
No, we're just worried
about you.
I've been wanting
to talk to you,
I just--I'm dealing
with some stuff.
What stuff?
Can I come over?
I know it's late, um,
but I really want
to talk to you.
Of course.
We're all around you.
- Hi.
- Hi.
This is it?
Oh, it's nice.
Is all of this your art?
Yep, I was just upstairs
working on a piece.
Oh, I love this.
This one.
I framed it,
but I don't think
it's finished yet.
You know,
it looks like something,
like a--like a hand.
Hey.
We don't have to talk
about this right now.
I'll be here when you're ready.
I'm just a little worried
how you're going to take it.
No. No, don't worry
about me. I'm okay.
It's a lot.
We have all night.
Where do I even start?
Start wherever feels right.
Um...
I'm sorry, um,
I just haven't been--
I haven't been sleeping
much lately.
I keep--
I keep having this dream.
There are people,
shadows all around me.
Watching me.
I know they're moving closer.
I see hands reaching out for me.
It feels so real, you know?
It's terrifying.
And during the day,
I've been--I've been having
these, like blackouts?
I'll be in bed, or on my sofa,
and it--and it just happens,
you know,
I get this feeling of dread,
like my body knows
it's about to happen.
And then I feel nauseous
and my muscles tense up
and then I wake up.
And all this time has passed.
When I come out of it,
it's like waking up
from a dream.
Like I'm not sure if I'm--
if I'm awake or not.
Like I might still
be in the dream.
My heart is racing
and I'm just--
I don't know, I'm disoriented.
How long have you been
having these blackouts?
A really long time, actually.
Since I was little.
Something happened
when I was little.
So, growing up,
my best friend Lilly,
she lived next door to me.
She was like my sister.
During summer
we had the same routine.
Every day, she would--
she would wake me up
by throwing little pebbles
against my bedroom window.
And then I would run downstairs,
and grab my bike,
and we would just pedal
to the park
and play for hours.
Though this one day.
Same routine.
I grab my bike,
and head outside,
and I can see right away.
She seems...shaken up.
So I ask her what's wrong,
and she won't tell me.
Which is weird because we always
told each other everything.
She's really agitated
and she says I don't know
if I'm supposed to tell you.
I'm not supposed to tell anyone.
But I can't stop
thinking about it
and I just don't know
if I can keep it inside me
any longer.
So I'm trying to make
her feel comfortable
and I say to her,
"Look, whatever this is,
it's okay, you can tell me.
You know, you're my best friend
and I want to help you."
I'm telling her all of this,
but at the same time
I was also--
I was also really curious,
you know?
Like I wanted to know
what could put her
into such a state.
And this is what she told me.
More or less.
So this happened near
where I grew up,
but a long time ago.
Like 50 or 60 years ago.
Maybe longer.
This little girl, very sweet.
Very well behaved.
One night, she wakes up,
gets out of bed,
and stabs her mom
while she's sleeping.
Young single mom,
it was just the two of them.
Grabs a knife out of the kitchen
and just stabs her mom.
Over and over.
And then she strips off
her mom's clothes,
and ties like a pillowcase...
...over her head.
So her mom doesn't have to see
what's going to happen to her.
Then she drags her mom
across the house.
No one's sure exactly
how she did that.
She's, you know, tiny.
And her mom is badly hurt,
but she's still alive
and she's much bigger.
Somehow she does all of that
and she stuffs her mom
into a closet.
She attacks her mom,
and then stuffs her in a closet.
- Yes.
- Why?
Her friend in the closet
told her to do it.
That's what she said.
He was lonely,
and he wanted to meet her mom.
So, the next day
the police go to the house
and they find this little girl
sitting in the closet.
Brushing her mom's
bloody matted hair.
Just talking away
with this friend.
Her mom is stuffed
into the back corner.
Barely alive and bleeding out.
She died on the way
to the hospital.
So I ask her,
"Who told you this?"
And she says,
and I'll never forget this.
"My grandmother told me.
She told me last night.
She made me promise
not to tell anyone."
I was shocked.
Lilly's grandmother was dead.
She'd been dead
for at least a year.
I knew that.
I went to the funeral.
You don't think
that maybe she was making it up?
No. No,
Lilly would never lie to me.
She might have been
trying to scare you.
She wasn't trying
to scare me, okay?
But I was definitely scared.
I remember, in that moment,
hearing all of that.
It was like something
inside me changed.
Like every cell in my body
was suddenly alert, and afraid.
You know, I looked around
and it was like the trees
were closing in on us.
I told Lilly I wanted to go home
so we just grabbed our bikes
and we got out of there.
We're taking
our usual route home.
And the whole time
my head is just spinning.
Like I can't stop thinking
about what Lilly told me.
It's like I'm hearing it
over and over in my head
on this endless loop.
And what finally
snaps me out of it is,
I see Lilly up ahead.
She takes this sharp turn
and she starts going
a completely different
direction.
So I'm yelling at her, "Stop.
Like, what are you doing?
Where are you going?"
But she's not listening.
She's just pedaling
faster and faster,
and I'm struggling
to keep up with her.
Until she finally
just skids to a stop
right in front of a house.
So she hops off her bike
and she's just--
she's just staring at this house
for a while.
I say to Lilly,
"Come on, it's getting late.
We need to go home."
And she doesn't take her eyes
off this house
but she says something.
And it sounds off,
the way she says it.
She says, "We are home."
And I'm staring at this house,
this creepy abandoned house.
And I realize,
this is the house.
The one she was just
telling me about.
Have you heard of this house?
No, I don't think so.
You know how every neighborhood
has that one house?
Little kids dare each other
to take a step inside?
Mmm-hmm.
This is that house.
And Lilly was staring at it
so intensely.
She wouldn't take her eyes
off of it.
By now, like, I'm starting
to get a little scared
so I'm saying,
"Come on, let's go."
But Lilly doesn't listen.
She just starts walking
across the lawn.
Like she's been there before.
She walks around, and...
What's wrong?
I keep hearing something.
You still hear it?
No.
Come on.
Um, so I make it
into the back yard,
and Lilly is at the back door.
It's just hanging wide open,
like someone had broken in.
But Lilly doesn't stop.
She doesn't even slow down.
She just walks right in,
like it's her own house.
And I'm following her
as she's moving
through the rooms.
We just keep pushing deeper
and deeper into this house
until we're in
the living room.
Rachel. Rachel.
No, I keep--
I keep hearing something
-moving around in here.
-There's nothing in here.
You don't hear it?
Look. Nothing.
Rachel.
What are you doing?
There's nothing here.
Rachel.
Who is that?
I don't know.
Rachel?
Rachel.
So Lilly and I are looking
around the living room.
And I notice
this framed photograph
on the wall.
It's really old
and covered in dust,
so I reach up and I wipe it off,
and I just froze.
The photograph looked old.
It was all cracked and faded
and yellow from the sun.
But it couldn't
have been old at all.
It was a photograph
of me and Lilly,
on our bikes,
riding up to the house.
Like it could have
only been taken minutes ago.
We were wearing
the same clothes.
Everything was the same.
Everything,
except for Lilly's face.
I couldn't see it. She had
something pulled over her head.
It looked like a pillowcase.
And I was just frozen,
looking at this photograph
on the wall.
This photograph
that should not be there.
And it hit me all at once.
We are in danger.
We need to get out
of this house,
-right now.
-Rachel. We don't have
- to talk about this.
- Please.
I really want to tell you.
So I turn around to tell Lilly,
and she's already looking at me.
Her eyes are as wide as saucers.
And she doesn't say anything.
She just mouths
the word, "Listen."
So I'm standing there,
and I'm listening.
But I don't hear anything.
It's like so quiet, it's loud,
if that makes sense?
Mmm-hmm.
So Lilly starts pointing
at this closet
that's just outside
the living room,
like this, over and over again.
Like whatever she's hearing
is coming from that closet.
And that's when I hear it.
This scratching sound.
Real soft. It's not long,
but it's long enough
for me to know,
it is definitely coming
from that closet.
I had to go
and see what was inside.
It was like there was a magnet
pulling me closer and closer.
I'm moving real slow
and I'm trying to listen
but I'm not hearing
anything now.
Except for my heart.
I can--I can hear
my heart pounding in my chest.
I'm standing at the closet door.
I grab the doorknob,
I take a deep breath,
and I pull the door open.
I feel this rush of air.
And maybe it was me
just pulling
the door open so fast,
but I don't know.
I'm looking inside this closet,
and it is just so, so dark
and...
Whoa, that's weird.
I'm sorry. Can I...
can I use the bathroom?
Um, it's the second door
to your left.
Okay.
I'm just gonna wash up.
It's next to the record player.
Are you okay?
Please stop. Please stop.
Please, please leave me alone.
I don't want this.
Please leave me alone.
Please.
Go away.
Rachel?
Rachel.
Um, I was just listening
to the music.
This is nice.
I wonder...
I wonder whose it was,
like originally.
Uh, I don't know.
It was old and broken, so...
It isn't broken.
What do you mean?
These things last forever.
It was so dark in that closet.
Just pitch black.
And I didn't know what to do.
I was too afraid
to reach inside and feel around.
But I was just as scared
to run away.
So I was just frozen.
Until I heard Lilly gasp.
I turned around,
and her mouth was hanging open
and she wasn't quite looking
at me.
It was more like
she was looking through me.
At something else.
I knew she saw something,
and I knew whatever it was,
it was right behind me.
And that's when I heard it.
This whisper.
It was too soft
to make out any words,
but I definitely heard it.
And I looked at Lilly
and I could tell
she heard it too.
We both screamed
and ran out of there,
got our bikes,
and just rode all over town
until we were exhausted.
We finally stopped at a
convenience store just to rest.
And I remember
asking Lilly over and over,
"What did you see?"
But she wouldn't tell me.
She was really shaken up.
All I could do
was get her to promise
she would tell me tomorrow.
So we went home.
Couldn't sleep that night.
I think I just stared
at my ceiling until morning.
I waited to hear those pebbles
hitting my bedroom window.
I waited and waited and waited
until I heard the sirens.
Lilly was gone.
The doors to her house
were wide open,
not a thing was out of place.
But she was gone,
her mom was gone.
They just vanished.
Did you ever tell anyone
about what happened?
I told the police
that we biked to the house
and looked around
and then we biked home.
But I didn't tell them any
of what I'm telling you
right now.
You should have told them.
I was too afraid
to say anything.
Even to my parents.
I thought
they would get mad at me
or they would accuse me
of making it up.
- Rachel--
- Shh. Shh.
Just listen. Please listen.
Do you hear it?
You really didn't hear that?
It feels--it feels close.
Like it's always
right behind me.
I don't hear any--
Oh. I'm sorry.
This just keeps happening,
it keeps sliding down.
Who is she?
My mother.
She died a couple years ago.
I'm sorry.
I didn't--I didn't know that.
I miss her.
I could tell her anything.
Hold on.
Um...
I brought you something.
So, I couldn't talk
to people about this stuff.
So I started taking notes.
Like writing things down.
What I was seeing,
when I was seeing it.
I thought maybe if I did that,
I could--I could figure out
what was happening and why.
-Can I see it?
-Yeah. Please.
How long
have you been doing this?
A long time.
Years.
- Did it help?
- I don't know.
I mean, I've written
a lot of things down.
But I've never been able
to pull it all together
into answers.
I only end up more confused.
I get that.
The confusion.
The not knowing what's real.
I keep having this nightmare.
I'm lying on this sloping hill.
And it's covered
in this green lush grass.
And I'm looking up at the sky.
The only sounds I hear
are the birds chirping
and my own breathing.
But then I hear something else.
It's faint at first.
This siren.
An old one.
It's far away,
but it gets my attention.
So I gently lift my head
and I see something
in the horizon.
Just at the edge.
These dark clouds.
They're low.
They're black.
And they're rolling
across the sky.
Really slow.
Until the whole sky is black.
It's like this chorus of sirens,
shrieking at me.
And it's loud.
The hill,
it just starts to tremble.
I look down,
this huge black pit appears.
It gets steeper,
and I start falling into it.
I'm screaming.
And then everything
just goes dark.
The air, it's, like, alive
with the sound of these sirens.
And then I wake up.
But you know what's funny?
I don't feel
like I just woke up in my bed.
I feel like I fell
through that pit
and landed in my bed.
By the time
I finished high school,
I couldn't take it anymore.
I left town,
I enrolled in college,
I found an apartment,
found a job.
And then it stopped.
That's it? Just like that?
I stopped feeling
the eyes on me.
I stopped feeling scared
all the time.
For a long time, everything
was really calm and quiet.
Until it wasn't.
Rachel?
When did it start up again?
I was at a bar
with some friends.
Rachel?
Sorry, um...
I was at a bar
with some friends.
Not good friends.
More like acquaintances.
We'd been there a while,
and it was late.
And I was a little tipsy.
The bar was packed
full of people.
You couldn't really
even see much,
aside from those
right in front of you.
But at some point
I looked around and,
there she was.
Like she appeared
out of nowhere.
This woman, off in the corner,
standing by herself.
She waved me over
and when I got to her,
she leaned in close
and whispered something to me.
"He likes you.
Aren't you curious?"
She wrote something down
on a napkin, and then she left.
Once she was gone,
I opened it up.
She'd written an address.
On Essex Road.
And right then,
I realized something.
The woman, she looked familiar.
I hadn't seen Lilly in years,
but she had the same
bright red hair.
I ran outside to find her,
but she was already gone.
It was like she disappeared.
I saw this old woman
just standing there
on the sidewalk
staring at me,
like she was waiting for me.
I asked if she saw someone
come out of the bar
but she just smiled and said,
"keep praying."
I looked around, and...
Hey.
Hey!
Rachel!
- What was that?
- I'm sorry.
I, um, I told you,
I have--I have blackouts.
That was not a blackout,
I don't know what that was.
But it was like an episode.
Um, it's a--
No, I'm fine.
I want to keep going.
-I need to finish this.
-No, no, no. We're done.
Listen, we are done, okay?
I'm not letting you
drive home tonight.
Okay. All right.
Okay.
Hey, I couldn't sleep.
I think I'd like to keep going.
After I saw the old woman
outside the bar,
I was so shaken up.
I didn't even
say goodbye to my friends,
I just got in my car and left.
It was late, and dark.
There were no cars on the roads.
I was sitting at a stoplight,
just... thinking.
Trying to sort out
all these emotions. And...
suddenly I felt
this wave of nausea.
Then all at once,
my muscles tensed up
and I blacked out.
I don't know
how much time passed.
But when I came to,
my car was parked
and I wasn't at my apartment.
I was looking at the house.
I can't explain it.
It felt exactly
like all those years ago.
Like I wasn't in control
of my body.
Like something was pulling me
through the backyard
into the house,
all the way to the living room.
And ever since that night,
I realized I can't avoid this.
I can't make it stop.
That's why I came here.
I need help.
I need to talk to someone.
To tell someone.
I'm glad I chose you.
So, how do you feel?
I don't know.
How do you feel?
I--I'm still processing it.
I have a lot of questions--
You have questions.
So you're curious.
Who are you?
Shh. Listen.
Shh.
Listen.
Do you hear it?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
What do you want?
I'm right behind you.
Always right behind you.
I'm not afraid of you.
Rachel!
Help! Help!
No. No. Please.
Please stop.
Please,
I can't take this anymore.
Please stop it.
Please stop it. Please!
I can't take this anymore.
I'm here.
I'm right next to you.
I'm everywhere.
No, no, no, no, no. No!
Please. Please.
This is going to hurt.
But it's not going to be
as bad as you think.
It's okay to be afraid.
Your eyes.
They look just like my mother's.
So beautiful.
Fear is the path to grace.
It's what brought you here.
Led you to us.
Right here.
There's so many of us.
Look. Look outside.
See them?
Yes.
It's okay.
He's going to show you so much.
He's going to show you
the truth.
Shh, listen.
Shh.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Never stop.
Keep praying.
He's coming.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Keep praying.
Rachel?
Rachel?
You went inside.
You went inside the house.
How do you know?
Did you check the closet?
Did you check the closet?
I found this.
I've seen this.
On your desk at school.
It's yours, right?
I don't--I don't know.
It is yours.
Why did you put it there.
Shh.
Why did you put it there?
I don't understand.
You went to the house,
you were in the house.
- What?
- No, you should--
you should have--
you should have seen something!
You should have heard something!
Oh, my God.
This is--this is wrong.
I have to go. I have to go.
-Where are you going?
-No, I shouldn't--
I shouldn't have--
I shouldn't have told you this.
I told you everything
and you didn't understand it.
I thought--I thought
you would take this seriously.
You need to take this seriously.
What?
What?
What? What is it?
You don't see it?
What?
What? What is it?
Oh, my God.
I'm sorry, Neeta.
Why are you doing this to me?
I tried so hard to fight it.
I knew you would hear him
in the story.
Calling to you.
Like he called to me.
This is your demon now.
Hey, I have been calling you.
What's going on?
I--I'm sorry, I'm sorry
I showed up like this.
And if it's a bad time,
I can go.
No, it's fine. What's happening?
I'm sorry, I just--I feel like
I really need to talk to someone
and something happened,
but I don't...
But what?
I just--I needed--
I need to talk to you.
I really need to talk to you.
Is that okay?
Come on in.