Silence. Then—a sound like wet paper tearing. The thermal cameras spiked in the northeast corner: a human-shaped cold spot, then hot, then cold again. Leo laughed nervously. “Sensor glitch.”
The thermal cameras showed them. Not one heat signature. Dozens. Crawling out of the walls, the floor, the ceiling. They moved like spiders with human spines. The original three ghost hunters were among them—their bodies hollow, their mouths stitched shut with old rosary wire, their eyes replaced with polished black buttons.
Val: “Where is the ghost? Where? I asked first—” -Y Donde Esta El Fantasma 2
Then Val screamed—not in fear, but in recognition . The feed ended.
She cleared her throat. The chat exploded with ghost emojis. Silence
Sofia: “Val, don’t look in her eyes—”
On the footage: ten hours of a dark room. Then, at 3:33 AM, a single frame of Val’s face—her mouth stretched open wider than humanly possible, and from her throat, dozens of small, button-bright eyes looking out. Leo laughed nervously
Ten years had passed since the original ¿Y Dónde Está El Fantasma? became a viral nightmare. For those who forgot: in 2016, a live-streamed seance in the abandoned Valle del Silencio orphanage captured a single question— “¿Y dónde está el fantasma?” —followed by seventeen minutes of screaming, then silence. The three amateur ghost hunters were never found. Only the camera remained, its lens cracked like a spiderweb.