A Night That Still Haunts Us
Every investigator has that one story that lingers – the one that surfaces every time you’re asked about your most unexplainable experience. For us, this was that night.
I can’t say where it took place, but it was a building steeped in history, the kind of place where silence feels heavy and every shadow seems to have memory. Out the back were three old holding cells, built in 1851, their stone walls cold, solid and unyeilding.
Two of our team and myself, locked ourselves in seperate cells. The doors closed, sealing us into total darkness. The walls were thick enough that we couldn’t see each other, only faint echoes if anyone spoke. It was silent, suffocatingly still. That’s when it happened.
The Footsteps on the Floorboards
The remaining two members of the team had gone into the main building. We heard the back door close and lock behind them, the sound echoing faintly through the structure.
Moments later, from just outside the cells, came the distinct sound of heavy boots on old wooden floorboards.
The footsteps moved at a steady, normal pace -firm and deliberate – crossing the small wooden external courtyard. It wasn’t a shuffle, and it wasn’t random creaking. It was the sound of someone walking, in heavy boots.
Then, just as suddenly as it began, the steps stopped.
A split second later, there was a violent, explosive slam.
The very same door we’d heard close moments earlier flew open and then crashed shut with such force that the entire building could be felt shaking. You could feel the vibration through the stone walls.
Each of us frozen in our own cell, unable to see one another, surrounded by pitch black darkness, and completely certain we were not alobe.
The Camera That Wouldn’t Stay On
Right after all of that, the two members who had remained inside, came back out into the courtyard to unlock the cells the other three of us had been locked into. Once regrouped we checked the X-cam we had set up to record the courtyard outside the cells. But when we went to review it, the screen was black.
The camera had shut off right before the footsteps and the slam occured.
No drained battery, no system error. Just… off.
We restarted it, confirmed the battery was full and set it recording again in the same spot on the same tripod. But only minutes later, as we were standing there discussing what had just happened, I saw the small red recording light suddenly turn off.
The camera had powered off a second time. Once again, battery still full and no technical errors.
It’s never done this before this moment. And it’s never done it since.
Something Didn’t Want to be Seen
There was something purposeful about the whole thing – the sequence of events, the timing of the camera, the silence that followed. It didn’t feel like coincidence. It felt like an intelligent spirit.
As if whatever had made those footsteps, and slammed that door, was fully aware of what we were doing – and made sure to stop the one thing that could have captured it.
Even recalling it now, I can still feel that charged heaviness in the air – the pressure that builds right before something happens. The kind of atmosphere where you know, instinctively, that you’re being watched.
Searching for an Explanation
Skeptics might call it a draft, a building settling or a camera glitch. But those cells were solid stone. The doors were heavy and old and the air was still that night. There was no wind that night, and no explanation for the sound of boots crossing old timber.
Many investigators believe that spirits can manipulate electrical energy to manifest – draining cameras or shutting off devices to draw power. Maybe that’s what happened here. Or maybe, whatever was there simply didn’t want us recording it.
Still One of the First Stories We Tell
To this day, this night remains one of the first stories we tell when people ask about our investigations.
It wasn’t the loudest or strongest experiences – but it was one of the most unnerving. Locked in separate 1851 cells, unable to see each other, hearing those footsteps followed by that violent slam.
That kind of thing stays with you.
It was a night that proved to us the paranormal doesn’t always linger quietly in the dark. Sometimes, it makes sure you know it’s there.
Author’s Reflection
I’ve always held a deep respect for old locations and the history they carry – it’s a requirement in this field. But that night was a reminder that no matter how many investigations you’ve done, the unknown will always find a way to surprise you.
It wasn’t just an encounter, it was a moment that reminded me how quickly calm can turn to chaos, and how the past sometimes refuses to stay silent.

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