A boy screamed at his mother’s grave, claiming she was still alive — people didn’t believe him until the police showed up 😱😱
People began noticing the boy in the cemetery at the beginning of May. He looked around ten years old, no more. Every day, he came to the same grave. He would sit on the ground, pressed against the cold headstone, and shout to the sky:
“She’s alive! She’s not here!”
Visitors watched him with pity. Everyone thought the same thing: grief. He just couldn’t accept the loss. Eventually, he would understand that his mother was gone.
But a week passed. Then another. The boy kept coming, rain or shine.
The cemetery groundskeeper was growing more and more irritated by the boy’s cries. One day, he finally called the police.
A young officer arrived. He approached the boy gently.
“Hey there,” he said softly.
The boy flinched and looked up at him. His face was tear-streaked and pale, but his eyes held a maturity far beyond his years.
“Do you know how to tell if someone is breathing underground?” the boy asked.
The officer blinked, stunned.
“No… that’s not something a child should be thinking about.”
“They said my mom fell asleep at the wheel. But she never got tired. Never!” the boy whispered. “And they didn’t let me say goodbye…”
The officer looked at the grave. The soil… it wasn’t settled. It looked freshly turned. Nearby, there was a shovel.
In early May, regular visitors to Rosehill Cemetery started to notice a boy around ten years old. He always came alone. Day after day, he sat at the same grave. He’d plant himself on the ground, lean against the gravestone, and shout to the sky:
“She’s not here! My mom’s not here! She’s alive, do you hear me? She’s alive!”
People pitied him. “Poor kid,” they whispered. “He just can’t accept his mom’s death.” Some walked around him. Others left him snacks or water. But everyone assumed it was just grief. No one imagined the boy might actually know more than he let on.
Two weeks went by. Whether it rained or the sun scorched the sky, the boy showed up and repeated the same words. His cries became a nuisance — especially for the cemetery’s caretaker, a man in his fifties who’d lost all patience for tragic stories.
One morning, after the boy broke down again in tears and screams, the caretaker grabbed his phone and called the police.