Lighthouse Horror Podcast - I stayed at a HAUNTED Hotel. There's something wrong with Room 412 | Scary Stories
Episode Date: June 8, 2024This hotel might be keeping a dark secret... Story from NewAgeSolution Make sure to check out more of their work at u/NewAgeSolution Cover Art from Calvin Williams Original Post: Voices of Hotel ...Grossing : r/nosleep Original YouTube link: I stayed at a HAUNTED Hotel. There's something wrong with Room 412 Merch: lighthousehorror.com For more stories like this one, check out my YouTube channel: Lighthouse Horror | YouTube Patreon: Lighthouse Horror | Patreon Sound Effects: Freesound Zapsplat Music: Lucas King - YouTube Myuu - YouTube Incompetech Thank you for listening to this scary story! If you enjoyed this new creepypasta story, please check out some of my other horror stories. We'll be uploading new episodes every week, featuring ghost stories, haunted encounters, mysteries, true stories, creepypasta, and anything supernatural and paranormal. Don't miss out on the thrill and suspense that await you in each episode!
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There's a historic establishment in upstate New York known as Hotel Grossing, built more
than a century ago.
It's wasted troubling times that have given it some macabre distinction.
The hotel served as an infirmary during the 1919 pandemic.
It suffered a deadly fire that claimed multiple lives.
There have also been over a dozen suicides, murders, accidental deaths, and disappearances
on the grounds. So, needless to say, the place has a haunting reputation that's largely
flown under the radar. Information on the actual paranormal phenomena was scarce, but what
little I collected were accounts ranging from moving objects and disembodied voices to full-bodied
apparitions and physical attacks.
I was always fascinated by the unknown. I've read dozens of the same.
of books, explored several mysterious places, and am even part of a research team.
This infatuation even influences my travel plans.
I always looked up haunted spots to visit or stay, when on trips, which is how I learned
about hotel grossing.
It happened to be right outside the town of a conference I was attending, so I booked
a one-night stay.
The building was a towering pale yellow structure.
valiantly withstanding the test of time while preserving its old-world charm.
The front desk workers clearly weren't used to much foot traffic this time of year.
They were two goofy twenty-somethings with squinny bloodshot eyes, who giggled and bantered back and
forth for a full minute before being aware of my presence.
Ah, it's okay, I said, with a smirk while they scrambled to try and play off their obliviousness.
Really can't say I blame you guys.
When they eased up after my lax remarks, I asked them what they knew about the hotel's
haunts and if either had any experiences.
The taller, messier-looking one, whose name tag read Joe said he's been here for a few
years and claimed to have only had minor occurrences like strange voices or moving shadows,
but nothing too extraordinary.
It seems everyone's experiences are different."
Mike, the more well-kept and presentable-looking of the pair, said,
If you talk to ten different people who had something happened here, you'll get ten different
stories.
When I told them about my involvement with paranormal research and asked if I could explore
the hotel, they said the current owner was vehemently against acknowledging its haunted
side and actively concealed any stories or accounts from the public eye.
Now it made sense why information about this place's ghostly aura was so scarce.
Isn't she related to someone who died here or something?
Joe asked about the owner, to which Mike shrugged, saying it was a rumor.
Maybe I'll ask her about it on my last day, if I ever leave, Mike said, as he handed
me my room key.
But for now, I sort of like having a job."
Since she wasn't there that night, they said I could check the place out if I was discreet
and considerate of other guests.
They even put me in an especially haunted room, 902, claiming previous guests have experienced
strong smoky odors, spells of sweltering heat, along with hearing scratches, bangs,
and muffled screams coming from the floor.
Before sending me off, Mike and Joe told me some stories they heard from other co-workers,
including a few about guests getting so spooked, they departed in the middle of the night.
One person literally left all their bags and shit here, Mike said, causing him and Joe
to break out in hiss-like chuckles, never came back for any of it.
While their stories were compelling, I initially wasn't sure that I wasn't sure that they were
sure how much I bought into everything they told me about hotel grossing. Them being inebriated
made it hard to gauge their sincerity, leaving me to wonder if their anecdotes were genuine,
or just ramblings, of two bored stoners who found amusement at the expense of their guests' gullibility.
To my disappointment, nothing unusual occurred over the three hours I spent snooping around hotel
grossing. Despite being armed with a digital recorder, Spirit Box, EMF meter, and GoPro. My equipment
didn't catch the slightest whiff of anything paranormal. I even spent a full hour in the stairwell
outside the eighth floor, supposedly the hotel's most haunted, which has been closed off to the
public for a few years and only heard the sounds of my own breathing. Mike and Joe weren't surprised. I said
my night was uneventful when I saw them while heading back to my room. They did offer some
encouraging words, saying the hotel's permanent occupants didn't come out every night,
and it gave me reason to return in the future. Again, it was hard to read these two giggly,
clumsy oafs, but their comments and jesting attitudes further dissuaded me from believing
there was anything mysterious about this place. I put most of my equipment away,
and got ready for bed.
Immediately after an investigation, I usually run any recordings taken
through a few different programs and apps on my laptop in case I missed something initially.
Despite beginning that process, I was so demotivated it drained my desire to do anything
more paranormal related that night.
I set my recorder in laptop next to the nightstand's clock radio, whose glowing red
number showed a time of 138 a.m. and drifted off without much issue.
Waking from this particular slumber felt like exiting the deepest, longest sleep of my life.
Expecting it to be morning, it was surprisingly only 408 a.m. There's no way, I muttered,
checking my phone to confirm the time was in fact correct. Still very groggy. I floggy. I
I left my pillow while turning on my side.
I was about to put my head down, but noticed another glowing red light on the nightstand
that wasn't part of the alarm clock.
It was my digital recorder.
Was it recording?
I grabbed the device confirming that that was the case.
The peculiar part was it hadn't been taping since I went to bed like I feared, but only
for the last two minutes.
the recorder, I stared at it in mystification while rewinding the audio. After finding no additional
recordings, I replayed those two minutes it captured prior to my awakening. I heard nothing
unordinary, until the very end. A sibilant whisper that was uttered in under a second,
squinting in confusion, I turned on the lamp, got out of bed, and retrieved a pair of headphones from my
Pug. Putting them on, I played back the recording and listened for that same sound, which sent
a sharp chill down my spine after hearing it more clearly. It was faint, but a voice distinctly
murmured, a number...
Four twelve...
Trembling, I replayed the recording another handful of times to make sure this was actually
what I heard, and not what I wanted to hear.
The phonetics, in my opinion, were pretty apparent, and it sounded like a young woman's voice.
I was reinvigorated by a wave of giddiness before regaining my composure and ponder what that
number meant, deciding it must be a room here since it was pronounced 412.
Breathing deeply.
I began recording,
All right.
I'll bite, I said softly after a few seconds.
Am I supposed to go there?
If there's something here, and that's what you want me to do, go to room 412, make a thump.
When nothing happened after a few minutes, I stopped and rewound the recorder.
Putting my headphones back on, I started listening.
I didn't anticipate receiving a response that required.
required the recorder to hear, which appeared to be the case until the audio's final three
seconds.
Thumb.
A deep, gravely voice distantly hissed in a menacing tone.
Gasping, I jumbled the recorder in my hands after what I just heard, reacting like someone
physically whispered it in my ear.
This EVP not only sounded different than the first one, but
but was much closer to the mic.
I tried reminding myself this is what I came here for, but the giddiness and excitement was
getting replaced with a looming sense of edginess and apprehension.
I struggled the process, the reality of what I just heard, leaning heavily towards staying
in my room or even leaving this place.
While contemplating my next move, as I gazed at the recorder's LED screen,
however, the decision was made for me. Looking up from the device, I froze, immediately
noticing something was amiss. I wasn't in my room anymore, but in the outside hallway?
What the hell? Was all I could say, was trying to rationalize how I wound up outside my room,
in the seeming blink of an eye. Trying to suppress an oncoming surge of panic.
I slowly pivoted to face the doorway I stood in front of, confirming it was room 902.
I tried opening the door, which to my dismay was locked and found myself beginning to whimper
while frantically sifting through my pockets.
While doing this, a cold, heavy hand fell on my shoulder, causing me to shriek and spin
180 degrees. Pinning my backside against the door, I paned excitedly and wildly scanned the
empty hallway. I must have stayed in that spot for 10 minutes, waiting for my limbs to stop
ferociously trembling before making any attempts at moving. I dropped my recorder, which didn't
appear to sustain any damage other than the headphone wires getting tangled. While unnotting them,
I looked at the floor again and was initially filled with relief upon spotting one of those
card-sized folders that held room keys.
Thinking it must have slipped out of my pocket, I snatched a little folder, which did contain
a key card.
It was when I read the room number written inside, 412, my elation instantly vanished.
All right?
I said softly, taking a pair of the room number.
taking a pair of steps away from my room door.
I'm just going to go along with it, since I need to get a new key from the lobby anyway.
Before stepping away from my room door, I finished untangling the headphone wires
and took a 30-second recording.
Despite not hearing anything, I shakily proceeded forward,
keeping the recorder running until I reached the elevators,
one of which was already open.
After hearing nothing when I replayed the audio, I reluctantly stepped into the open carriage
whose doors closed as soon as I entered. Without pressing any buttons, the elevator began to
descend. Unsure where was going, a twisting queasiness formed in my stomach as I considered my current
situation, confined inside the moving elevator of an allegedly haunted hotel that seemed
to be operating independently. The elevator didn't move for too long and came to an abrupt
halt that slightly jolted the carriage. I backed against the wall dreading the possibility of actually
being stuck. A few moments passed before the doors cracked open two or three inches just enough
to peer out into the hall. Before moving, I noticed something glowing alongside the elevator doors.
Among the buttons indicating each floor, the number eight was illuminated.
I gasped while staring at the glowing eight button before returning my gaze to the slightly
parted elevator doors.
I could barely make out anything from what I saw of the darkened corridor through the narrow
opening.
When I felt a giraffe coming from the hall that filled my nostrils with a dry, musky aroma,
It prompted me to start a new recording.
Looking back up, I was about to ask aloud for some kind of sign, but screamed and jumped away
from the doors after seeing what stood on the other side.
A bald, blotchy-skinned man with a few drooping strands of white hair hanging from his
skeletal misshapen head, had his face pressed against the small,
opening and stared at me maniacally with unnaturally large, bulging eyes.
He had a pointy chin and beak-like nose, along with a wide, deranged smile that flashed his stained,
jagged teeth.
It looked like he hadn't been in sunlight for months, and the tattered, grimy rags he wore
made me think this might be a squatter or junkie.
I stayed against the wall, using the handrail to support my weak shaking legs when the
man's lips began moving.
He made no sound but continually mouse something for about ten seconds before pulling his face
away and disappearing into the pitch darkness.
Before I could even react, the elevator doors shut and the carriage resumed moving, after
which I noticed the panels served.
circular four button was now lit. When the elevator arrived at the fourth floor, I remained
inside rewinding the newly captured audio. Putting my headphones on, I replayed the recording,
noting the sounds of my screams indicated when my encounter with that crazed man begins.
At first, all I heard were my frenetic breaths, until another voice
began repeating the same phrase.
You're the key, you're the key, you're the key, you're the key, you're the key, you're the key,
you're the key, you're the key, you're the key, you're the key, you're the key.
The voice spoke abnormally fast in a raspy high-pitched tone, sounding desperate,
and intent. It took a few replays to pin down exactly what the EVP said,
and I was further unnerved after acknowledging how precisely the audio coincided with that crazed,
with that crazed man's lip movements. How couldn't I hear him with my own ears, but the recorder
did without issue? The elevator lights started flickering, which was enough to get me out of the
carriage. A sign showing how the floor's room numbers were directionally divided, indicated I had to
go towards rooms 400 to 439. The fourth floor's elevators led to a hundred to a hundred to a
hallway lined with windows on my left and rooms on my right. I started a new recording as I
counted the number on each door and zeroed in on four one, two. I approached a turn in the hall,
where a pair of vending machines were tucked in a corner formed by two intersecting corridors.
A noticeably tall woman stood in front of a vending machines, looking like she was
deciding what to purchase. Although she had her back to me, I noticed something was off about
this person. She looked very ratty, with dark, knotty, frazzled hair, soggy-looking skin,
and wore baggy clothes, cargo pants, a hooded sweatshirt, long overcoat that were different
shades of brown, black, and gray. The most peculiar detail about this one was, the one was
woman was the sickly yellowish tint that seemed to coat her skin, hair, and even clothes.
She probably wasn't even staying at the hotel I thought and must have managed to slip
in unnoticed. Given the apparent ineptitude of those two front desk workers, this wouldn't
come as a surprise. I glanced at my recorder, but paused when I saw it wasn't taping. Although
I remember pressing the record button moments ago. It stopped after just five seconds.
Persing my lips in frustration, I rewound and replayed the recording while rounding the hall's turn.
Two words were spoken by a gargled, muffled voice that made my stomach sink.
Turn around.
I wish I hadn't, but I did out of instinct.
The woman now faced me, but was bent backwards in a disturbingly unnatural posture.
Her arched body resembling an upside-down you. Her mouth hung open, like she was frozen mid-screen.
And although I only saw her for a split second, it was her eyes that paralyzed me with terror.
She didn't have actual eyes, but two small mouths that looked to have been stitched over
her sockets.
The hallway lights went out for a brief moment, temporarily shrouding my surroundings in darkness.
I scurried back from the vending machines in response to the eerie sight as the lights
came back on, revealing the woman had vanished.
I nervously mumbled to myself while being in the airy sight as the lights came back on, revealing the woman had vanished.
I nervously mumbled to myself, while
backing away, reiterating this is what I came here for, not pivoting, until I put a good distance
between myself and that corner. Despite constantly looking over my shoulder, I focused on trying
to find room 412, going up and down the intersecting hallway before returning to the vending
machines. I wondered if I was missing something, or even counting properly. The rooms in this stretch of
hallway were 413 to 439. From the elevators to the corner, they went from 400 to 411.
I re-checked about a dozen more times, but a room 412 was nowhere to be seen.
Scratching my head, I walked up and peered out the window alongside the vending machines
that overlook the hotel parking lot, holding the supposed key for room 412 in one.
one hand and my digital recorder in the other. I shrugged and started a new recording.
Room 412, I said softly, trying to be mindful of any sleeping guest. Where the hell is it?
While standing adjacent to the vending machine as I silently held the recorder, something
about the section of a wall they were in front of caught my eye. I started making out
what looked like a vague, vertical, rectangular impression through the striped reddish-pink
wallpaper. The longer I observed this irregularity, what I was staring at became clear.
Is that a door? Yes. It was definitely a door, I thought, shaking my head affirmingly.
The wallpaper was laid over.
this doorway, with the two vending machines placed in front, clearly intended, to keep it concealed.
I stopped and rewound the recorder, ready to replay and listen for any EVPs, when a noise
coming from behind me caught my ear, giggling, turning. I spotted a pale crouching shape,
peeking out from one of the doorways, roughly twenty paces from where I stood.
The figure made deep, heaving chuckles and snickers that it swayed in conjunction to,
barely sounding like it could have been made by a human.
After seeing I noticed it, the figure slowly crept into view, whose appearance made my blood
run cold. It was that crazed man from the eighth floor. Seeing him entirely, I guessed he must
have been around my height. He had frail lanky limbs and mottled skin containing a slight reddish-green
tint. The tattered clothes he wore were covered in dark stains and littered with holes,
like they hadn't been washed in months. He stood at an awkward angle and continued rocking
erratically before charging in my direction. I instinctively put my arms out in a vain attempt to
shield myself from the oncoming maniac. Stumbling backwards, I quickly lost my footing and fell
in between the two vending machines, widening the slim space amidst them as I landed in a sea
seated upright posture. I crawled back another couple of inches until my back hit the wall,
feeling certain I was about to face a gruesome demise at the hands of this deranged fiend.
Some seconds passed, and I realized the only sounds I heard were my own terrified cries. Lowering
my arms, I was astonished to see an empty hallway before me that, after my, after
my screams finally ceased, was yet again deathly quiet. My heart pounded rapidly, and I waited
until I regained some control of my fiercely shaking limbs before trying to stand. A thunderous
bang then came from my backside, the single-knock's vibrations going right through me as I
sprung up and leapt out from between the two vending machines. I quickly noted the deafening boom
came from that door the vending machines were positioned in front of, which is when a thought
occurred while sprinting down the hall that made me stop dead in my tracks.
How could that door, I thought, have something behind it?
It was on the side of the building that overlooked the parking lot.
I dared not look back, and I raced to my room, blinded by my fear-induced
panic to realize the door was now cracked open. I hastily packed my belongings in under two minutes.
Taking the elevator again wasn't happening, so I lugged my bags down the stairwell. While speedwalking
through the lobby, I heard the two front desk workers chuckling. So, did you find what you were looking
for? Joe called out sarcastically, who I ignored, remaining intent on getting
out of this building. Everyone's experiences are different," I heard Mike say right before bursting
through the front doors. A few months passed, over which the trauma from my horrifying experience
still felt fresh. I had since distanced myself from anything paranormal, having come to terms
that I definitely got more than I bargained for at hotel grossing. I thought about that night
frequently, and for some reason wasn't overly surprised when I received a package from the hotel.
This reminded me I still had the key that supposedly went to room 412, which I held
on due by accident, and never got around to discarding. Perhaps I was too afraid.
The package contained a handwritten note in my digital recorder.
Through everything that happened, I actually forgot about losing my recorder, which I remember
dropping during my encounter with that crazed man on the fourth floor.
The letter read,
Mr. Mora, along with this note, please find your digital recorder.
It was discovered under a vending machine on the air.
eighth floor and identified as being yours by two of our employees.
It appears to still be in working condition and did not suffer any damage.
On behalf of the team here, I would like to offer our sincerest apologies for your
abrupt departure and hope you will give us another chance in the future.
Everyone's experiences are different at hotel grossing and we want to
You want your next visit at our establishment to be one you'll never forget.
We hope to see you soon."
Signed, Julie B. Ashoff, General Manager.
As the letter promised, my recorder was fully functional.
A creeping uneasiness began to enshroud me when I saw it contained a single three-second
recording. Despite everything telling me to delete it and move on, I found myself rewinding and
playing back the audio. It was a crackly, creaky clip through which I heard three words whispered
in a weak plaintive voice that truly makes me wonder what's behind that hidden door.
us out
