The Woman in the Window Across

The Woman in the Window Across

🕯️ Introduction

It was just a woman across the street.
She always appeared in the window around 11 p.m., standing behind pale curtains, sometimes waving, sometimes just staring. I live on the 6th floor of a residential block in Pune, and her building faces mine, only a few meters away.

At first, I thought she was just a night owl like me. But after two weeks of nightly waves — never missing a day — I began to feel something was… off.

Because no one else ever seemed to see her.


🪞 She Never Blinked

I started noticing that she never moved much. Her head would tilt slightly, her hand would wave, and then… nothing.
She would stand there, frozen, for minutes — sometimes an hour — as if paused in time.

One night I waved back.
She tilted her head further and smiled.

A small, stretched, unblinking smile.


🕳️ The Building Manager’s Answer

Curious (and admittedly spooked), I went to the building across to ask about her. The security guard was confused when I described the flat.

“Sir, that flat has been locked for almost a year now. No one inside.”

I insisted I saw someone every night. He allowed me to check the records — the flat had been vacant since the death of the previous tenant: an elderly woman named Mrs. D’Souza, who had lived there alone for decades.

She died in that very room.


🩸 I Took a Photo

The next night, I waited with my phone.
11:04 p.m. — she appeared again. Just as always. Pale curtains. Long hair. Staring.

I took a photo.

The moment the flash blinked — she disappeared.

Gone in an instant. Curtains still fluttering like someone had just moved behind them. But no one was there.

When I looked at the photo, she wasn’t in it. But my window reflection was — and behind me, in my own apartment…
a faint shape was standing.


🕷️ Conclusion: She Still Watches

Since that night, I’ve kept my curtains closed.
I haven’t looked across the street in weeks. But sometimes — when I forget — I catch something in my peripheral vision.

The same still figure. Same smile.
And now, I don’t know which side of the window she’s on anymore.

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