Stories The Mystery of Room 312-B

Every nurse who cared for a man in a coma for more than three years began to get pregnant—one after another—leaving the supervising doctor completely baffled.
But when he secretly installed a hidden camera in the patient’s room to uncover what was really happening in his absence, what he saw made him call the police in sheer panic…


Beginning: The Unexplainable Pregnancies

The first time it happened, Dr. Alejandro Reyes believed it was just a coincidence.

Nurses became pregnant all the time. Hospitals were places of life and death, grief and hope, and people sought comfort wherever they could find it.

But when the second nurse assigned to Miguel Santos announced her pregnancy—and then the third—Dr. Reyes began to feel his rational world slowly unravel.

Miguel had been in a coma for over three years.

He was a 29-year-old firefighter who had fallen from a burning apartment building while rescuing a child in Quezon City. Since that night, he had remained completely still, connected to machines in Room 312-B of San Gabriel Medical Center.

Every Christmas, his family sent flowers.
The nurses often remarked on how peaceful he looked—almost serene.

No one expected anything beyond silence… until the pattern began.


Development: Fear and Discovery

Every nurse who became pregnant shared the same details:

  • She had been assigned to Miguel for long night shifts

  • She worked exclusively on night duty

  • She cared for him in Room 312-B

  • All of them swore the same thing.

    They had no relationship outside the hospital that could explain their pregnancy.

    Some were married.
    Others were single.
    All were confused, ashamed, and terrified.

    Rumors spread quickly through the hospital corridors.
    Some whispered about hormonal reactions, others about chemical exposure—some even spoke of supernatural forces.

    But Dr. Reyes, the neurologist in charge, found no scientific explanation.

    Miguel’s medical tests never changed:

  • stable vital signs

  • minimal brain activity

  • no physical movement

  • When the fifth nurse, Lorna Cruz, arrived at his office in tears—holding a positive pregnancy test and swearing she hadn’t been with anyone for months—Dr. Reyes knew something deeply unnatural was happening.

    Under pressure from hospital management and fearing a public scandal, he decided to act.

    Late on a Friday night, after the final shift ended, he entered Room 312-B alone and discreetly installed a small hidden camera inside a ventilation fan, aimed directly at the patient’s bed.

    As he left the room, a cold dread settled in his chest—as if he had just opened a door that should never be opened.


    Ending: The Recording and the Panic

    Before dawn the next morning, Dr. Reyes returned.

    With his heart racing, he locked himself in his office and connected the camera’s memory card.

    For several minutes, nothing happened—only the steady hum of machines.

    Then… something moved.

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

    Miguel—motionless for years—slowly opened his eyes.

    His arms began to rise, stiff and unnatural.

    The brain monitor showed a sudden spike in activity.

    But what happened next made Dr. Reyes recoil in horror.

    Miguel’s figure appeared to split in two.

    A translucent shadow—identical to him—rose from his body and drifted toward the nurse who was asleep in a chair beside the bed.

    The apparition touched her shoulder.

    She trembled in her sleep.

    A bluish glow filled the room.

    Then, within seconds, everything returned to normal.

    Miguel lay still once more—unconscious.

    Dr. Reyes sat frozen.

    He replayed the footage again and again, unable to accept what he was seeing.

    When he discovered the same phenomenon occurring on previous nights—with different nurses each time—he knew he could not keep this to himself.

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

    Days later, Room 312-B was permanently sealed.

    Miguel Santos was transferred to an isolated wing.

    No official report ever explained what happened.

    The hospital cited a “technical malfunction.”

    Dr. Reyes resigned soon after, abandoned medicine, and was never seen again.

    They say that to this day, Room 312-B remains empty.

    And in the quiet hours before dawn, the red light of the heart monitor still blinks—

    Even though no one is lying in the bed.

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