Monjas, Hospitales Y Fantasmas | Relatos Del Lado Oscuro Official

The old General Hospital was a labyrinth of cold tiles and echoing hallways. For Elena, a young nurse on the graveyard shift, the silence of the maternity ward was never truly silent. It hummed with the rhythmic beep of monitors and the distant, unexplained shuffling of feet.

Elena felt a chill. The hospital hadn't employed religious sisters since the late 1970s. Monjas, hospitales y fantasmas | Relatos del lado oscuro

Elena froze as the figure stopped in front of Room 402. The nun didn’t turn; she simply drifted through the heavy oak door. When Elena finally found the courage to burst into the room, it was empty of any living person. The patient was gone—transferred to ICU an hour earlier—but the ceramic cup was now full of water, cold as ice, and the faint scent of old incense lingered in the air. The old General Hospital was a labyrinth of

That night, Elena watched the monitors from the station. At exactly 3:33 AM, the lights in the north corridor flickered and dimmed. A soft, rhythmic sound reached her ears—the distinct click-clack of heavy wooden beads against fabric. From the shadows of the old wing emerged a figure draped in a vintage nursing habit, her face obscured by the stiff white wimple. Elena felt a chill

Legend tells of a "Monja del Vaso" (Nun of the Glass), a spectral figure common in Mexican folklore who wanders hospitals to offer water to the dying —a task she supposedly neglected in life.

The patient smiled weakly. "The sister. The one in the heavy blue habit. She was so kind; she stayed with me when the pain was worst, praying softly until I fell asleep."

As Elena backed away, she heard a whisper from the corner of the room, a voice like dry leaves: "She is rested now. Are you?"