Val repeated, louder: “I said—where is the ghost?”
Silence. Then—a sound like wet paper tearing. The thermal cameras spiked in the northeast corner: a human-shaped cold spot, then hot, then cold again. Leo laughed nervously. “Sensor glitch.”
Then Val screamed—not in fear, but in recognition . The feed ended.
Val: “Where is the ghost? Where? I asked first—” -Y Donde Esta El Fantasma 2
But the girl in the nightgown? She’s already inside your device.
They set up at midnight. The orphanage was worse than the footage suggested. Hallways bled rust. A wind chime of broken rosaries hung in the chapel. In the main dormitory—where the original trio had stood—Leo mounted six cameras, each with infrared and thermal sensors.
Sofia: “Val, don’t look in her eyes—” Val repeated, louder: “I said—where is the ghost
Check your camera roll.
Now, a true-crime podcast called Ecos del Más Allá decided to exploit the mystery. Their host, a sharp-tongued Mexican-American named Val Rios, mocked the original tragedy as “a hoax that got out of hand.” For their season finale, she proposed a live event: return to the orphanage, ask the same question aloud, and prove nothing supernatural existed.
And leading them was a small girl in a nightgown. The same girl from the 2016 footage—the one the hunters had joked was “just a mannequin.” She walked on her hands and feet, joints reversed. Her smile had too many teeth. Leo laughed nervously
The orphanage groaned. Not wind. The building groaned, like a rib cage being bent.
Val stood center frame, phone in hand, live stream already hitting ten thousand viewers. “Ladies and gentlemen, ten years ago, three people asked a question and vanished. Tonight, we ask again—but this time, we’ll actually find the answer.”
To this day, the original question trends every Halloween. But those who dig deeper find a second thread—a whispered hashtag: #YDondeEstaElFantasma2.