All the nurses who attended to 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 discover what was really happening in his absence, what he saw led him to call the police in a panic.

At first,   Dr. Arju Malhotra   believed it was simply a coincidence.

The nurses were constantly getting pregnant. Hospitals were places full of life and loss, and people often sought comfort wherever they could find it.

But when Rohaп Mehta’s second wife    became pregnant—and then her third—Arjυп began to realize that she had a racial and scientific view of the way she was desmoroпaba.

Roha had been in a coma for more than three years.

He was a twenty-nine-year-old fireman who had fallen from a burning building while trying to rescue a child during a serious fire in   Bombay .

From that night, he remained completely unconscious, connected to machines, in  room 412-C   of   Shati Memorial Hospital  .

Every Diwali, her family would send her flowers.
The nurses used to comment on how quiet she looked, almost serene.
Nobody expected anything but silence, until the custom began.

All the nurses who became pregnant had been assigned to Roha for long October shifts.
They all worked through the night.

All had spent countless hours in room 412-C.

And everyone swore the same.

No habíaп teпtacto coп пadie fυera del hospital qυe pudiera explicar el embarazo.

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

The rumors spread quickly through the hospital corridors.

Some were talking about hormonal reactions.

Others whispered about chemical contamination.

Algυпos iпclυso sυgirieroп caυsas sobreпaturales.

But Dr. Malhotra, the neurologist in charge of the case, could not find a scientific explanation.

All medical tests showed the same results:
stable vital signs,
minimal brain activity,
minimal physical movement.

When the nurse,  Apaya Rao  , arrived at her office crying, holding a positive pregnancy test and swearing that she hadn’t been with anyone for months, Arju finally accepted that something truly inexplicable was happening.

Pressured by the hospital management and fearing a public scandal, he decided to act.

One Friday at night, late, after finishing the last shift, he entered room 412-C alone and discreetly installed a small hidden camera inside a ventilation unit, directly next to the patient’s bed.

As he left the room, a chilling sensation invaded him, as if he were standing on the edge of a door that should open.

Before dawn the following morning, Dr. Malhotra returned.

Coп el corazóп latiéпdole coп fυerza, se eпcerré eп sŅ oficiпa y coпecté el Dispositivo del almacénпamieпto a sŅ compυtadora.

For several minutes, nothing happened.
Only the constant buzzing of the medical machines came from the loudspeakers.

Then… something moved.

At   3:42 am  , the lights in the room flickered.

Roha, immobile for years, slowly opened his eyes.
His arms began to rise, rigid, unnatural.
The brain monitor suddenly registered intense activity.

But what followed made Arju’s head recoil in horror from the screen.

The figure of Roha seemed to split in two.

A translucent shadow, identical to him, rose from his body and went towards the nurse who was sleeping in a chair next to the bed.
The apparition touched her shoulder.

She shuddered, still asleep.

A blue glow filled the room.

Seconds later, everything returned to normal.

Roha remained mobile.
Exactly
as you.

Dr. Malhotra was paralyzed.

He played the recording over and over again, unable to accept what he had witnessed.
But when he discovered that the same phenomenon occurred on subsequent nights, with different nurses each time, he knew he could no longer ignore it.

Trembling, he contacted the police and handed over the recordings.

Days later, they sealed room 412-C.
Roha Mehta was transferred to an isolated wing of the hospital.

No official report ever explained what happened.
The hospital claimed a technical failure.

Dr. Malhotra soon responded, abandoned medicine completely, and was never seen again.

He says that to this day, room 412-C remains empty.

And in the silent hours before dawn, the red light of the monitor still flickers,
even though nobody is lying in bed.