Every night, a little girl wakes up screaming and crying, repeating words like, ‘No, it hurts!’ Her father decides to investigate what is behind the nightmares and is horrified to discover…


Every night in the quiet neighborhood of Ravensport, the silence of the Donovan house was pierced by the same chilling cries. Nine-year-old Isabelle Donovan jolted awake, her body trembling, her face streaked with sweat, her voice rising in panicked shrieks. “Stop it, please! No, it hurts!” Her father, Marcus Donovan, rushed from his room again and again, finding her curled against the headboard as though trying to escape an unseen threat.

At first Marcus convinced himself these were nothing more than bad dreams. He told himself that children her age sometimes suffered from night terrors, maybe after hearing a frightening story at school. Sitting beside her bed, he would whisper, “It’s alright, Izzy. You’re safe. I’m right here.” She clung to him desperately until her sobs quieted, but by morning she always insisted she remembered nothing. Her only complaint was how tired she felt.

Marcus was thirty-seven, a widowed electrician doing his best to raise Isabelle on his own. He considered himself a practical man, not easily rattled. Yet the consistency of his daughter’s screams unsettled him. Each night she repeated almost the same words, the same tone of terror. “Please don’t touch me. It hurts so much.”

The thought Marcus had tried to push away finally forced itself into his mind. What if Isabelle wasn’t simply dreaming? What if she was remembering something?

One morning, after another sleepless night, Marcus sat her at the kitchen table. Isabelle stirred her oatmeal with downcast eyes. “Sweetheart,” he said carefully, “when you have those dreams, do you see someone in them?”

She froze, the spoon clattering against the bowl. Her shoulders stiffened. “They’re only dreams,” she whispered, her voice almost rehearsed. She slid off the chair and hurried from the room before he could ask more.

Marcus sat motionless, dread tightening his chest. That reaction had not been ordinary fear. It had been something deeper, something hidden. He decided that night he would listen more closely.

When the screams returned, he stayed silent in the shadows, straining to catch her words. Isabelle writhed, her voice breaking into sobs: “No, Uncle Stephen, please don’t!” The sound sliced through Marcus like a blade. His brother Stephen, who often volunteered to watch Isabelle when Marcus worked late, the same brother Marcus had trusted for years—her terror had a name.

The following day Marcus forced himself to act as if nothing had changed. He packed her lunch, walked her to school, and smiled at the teacher. As soon as she was gone, he began connecting dots he had ignored. Old messages from Stephen offering to pick Isabelle up, to take her to the park, to spend time with her “so you can rest.” Kindness that now seemed like camouflage.

He phoned the school counselor, cautiously asking whether Isabelle had shown troubling behavior. The counselor admitted she had noticed the girl withdrawing from classmates, avoiding physical contact, flinching at sudden gestures. She had considered calling Marcus but Isabelle always denied any problems.

That evening Marcus asked softly, “Do you like when Stephen visits?” Isabelle’s lips tightened. She whispered, “He’s nice,” too quickly, without conviction, her gaze locked on the floor. Her fingers twisted the hem of her shirt until her knuckles turned white.

The rage in Marcus’s chest nearly erupted, but he swallowed it down. If he erupted now, she might never open up. He needed undeniable proof.

He installed discreet cameras in the living room and hallway. Then he let Stephen believe Marcus was taking late jobs again. Predictably, his brother offered to watch Isabelle.

That night, parked just down the street, Marcus watched the feed on his phone. At first Stephen behaved casually, joking, bringing her snacks. But over time, his proximity grew uncomfortable, his hand lingering too long on her arm. Isabelle stiffened, her face a portrait of dread.

When she whispered, “Please don’t,” Marcus could no longer sit still. He bolted into the house, storming through the door. Stephen leapt back, eyes wide, guilt written across his face. Isabelle’s tears spilled freely as she ran into her father’s arms. Marcus shouted with a fury that shook the walls, ordering Stephen out.

The night ended with Isabelle trembling against Marcus’s chest. He rocked her gently, whispering, “You’re safe now. He’ll never hurt you again.”

But Marcus knew it wasn’t enough. The following morning he brought the footage to the police. Detective Alvarez explained that the video, combined with a forensic interview with Isabelle, could lead to charges. Marcus hated the idea of his daughter reliving the trauma, but he understood it was the only way to protect her permanently.

Over the next weeks, Isabelle began sessions with a child psychologist. At first her words came in fragments, but slowly she began to describe what Stephen had done. The nightmares still came, though less often, and she learned she could speak her fear instead of burying it.

Eventually Stephen was arrested and brought to trial. The process was grueling, but Marcus stood beside his daughter every step. To ease her fear, he adopted a golden-brown puppy she named Oliver. The little dog never left her side, and Marcus noticed how much calmer she became when she had him near.

Months later, as they stepped out of the courthouse after the sentencing, Isabelle slipped her small hand into her father’s. She looked up and whispered, “I don’t feel scared anymore, Dad.”

Tears blurred Marcus’s vision. For the first time in months, they were not tears of despair but of relief. He knew the road ahead would still hold shadows, yet together they had taken back the light.