Every nurse who cared for a man in a coma for more than three years began to become pregnant, one after another, leaving the supervising doctor utterly baffled. But when he secretly installed a hidden camera

Every nurse who cared for a man in a coma for more than three years began to become pregnant, one after another, leaving the supervising doctor utterly baffled. But when he secretly installed a hidden camera in the patient’s room to discover what was really happening in his absence, what he saw made him call the police in a panic…
At first, Dr. Arjun Mehra thought it was just a coincidence.

Nurses were getting pregnant all the time. Hospitals were places where life and death coexisted, and people sought comfort wherever they could.

But when the second nurse assigned to Rohan Deshmukh announced her pregnancy — and then the third — Arjun’s rational, scientific worldview began to crumble.

He was twenty-nine, a brave firefighter who had fallen from a burning building while trying to save a child during a massive fire in Mumbai. Since that night, he had remained completely unconscious, connected to machines, immobile in Room 412-C of Sanjeevani Memorial Hospital.

Every year, near Diwali, his family sent marigolds and incense.
The nurses commented on how peaceful he looked, almost serene.
No one expected anything more than silence… until the pattern began.

Every nurse who became pregnant had worked long night shifts with Rohan.
All of them worked in the early hours of the morning.
All had spent countless hours in Room 412-C.

And all of them said exactly the same thing:

They hadn’t been intimate with anyone outside the hospital who could explain the pregnancy.

Some were married.
Others were single.
All were equally confused, embarrassed, and terrified.

Rumors spread through the hospital corridors.
Some speculated about hormonal reactions.
Others whispered about chemical contamination.
A few even hinted at supernatural causes.

But Dr. Mehra, the neurologist responsible for the case, found no medical explanation.

All tests showed the same thing:
stable vital signs,
minimal brain activity,
no physical movement.

When the fifth nurse, Ananya Ríos, arrived at his office in tears, a positive pregnancy test in hand, swearing she hadn’t been with anyone in months, Arjun accepted that something truly inexplicable was happening.

Under pressure from the hospital board and fearing a scandal, he decided to act.

One Friday night, after the last shift ended, he entered Room 412-C alone and discreetly placed a hidden camera inside a ventilation grate, aimed directly at the patient’s bed.

As he left, he felt a deep chill, as if he had opened a door that should never have been touched.

Before dawn, Dr. Mehra returned.

With his heart racing, he locked himself in his office and connected the device to his computer.

For several minutes, nothing happened.
Only the constant hum of the machines could be heard.

Then… something moved.

At 3:42 a.m., the lights in the room flickered.

Rohan, immobile for years, slowly opened his eyes.
His arms rose stiffly, unnaturally.
The brain monitor surged with intense activity.

But what followed made Arjun recoil in horror.

Rohan’s figure split in two.

A translucent shadow, identical to him, detached from his body and floated toward the nurse sleeping in a chair by the bed.
The apparition touched her shoulder.

She shivered, still asleep.

A bluish glow filled the room.

Seconds later, everything returned to normal.

Rohan lay motionless.
Unconscious.
Exactly as before.

Dr. Mehra was frozen.

He replayed the footage over and over, unable to accept what he had seen.
But when he discovered the same phenomenon happening on previous nights with different nurses, he knew he could no longer ignore it.

Trembling, he called the police and handed over the recordings.

Days later, Room 412-C was sealed.
Rohan Deshmukh was moved to an isolated wing of the hospital.

There was never an official report.
The hospital claimed a “technical fault.”

Dr. Mehra resigned shortly after, left medicine, and was never heard from again.

It is said that even today, Room 412-C remains empty.

And in the silent hours before dawn,
the red light of the monitor still blinks…
even though no one lies in the bed.

The end.

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