Heard a spooky story from a nurse I dated a few weeks back. I'll just copy and paste her text. She didn't seem like a whack job, so tend to believe her...
So before I go douse myself in whatever liquid even remotely resembles holy water in this house, say a bedtime prayer to every deity that man has ever created, and go to bed...I had to share this story with you.
I was walking down the hall during the night and saw one of my patients sitting on the side of her bed. I went in to stop her from getting up on her own and falling and she looks at me for a second, says "you're with them, aren't you?" And starts screaming about 6 inches from my face. My staff all come running to help her and she says she has to get out of the bed. She says I need to go away because I work with "her". She's still screaming and I'm worried that she's so scared that she'l throw herself into a cardiac event. I stand off in the corner of the room making sure everyone is safe and the patient calms down. She occasionally looks over at me and says "don't listen to her. I don't want to go". They get her in her wheelchair. She calms down and I go back to talk to her to see whether this is psych or if it's infection related.
She's calm as a cucumber. She asks for coffee. We sit and chat. She tells me that she had seen this night before, that everything was the same as the last time. She says that "the woman" was even here and she wasn't going to let the woman kill her. I ask her about the woman. She says she's seen her two other times before and it was never good. The woman said to her "I'm going to kill you, but not right now. I'll be back for you later". She describes her as a tall thin woman with long black hair, a white face, wearing a black dress. She apologizes to me for yelling at me but she couldn't help herself because the woman was behind me whispering in my ear.

I try to reassure her, and she says "she followed you out of the room. She wasn't looking for me". I shrug this off, make sure the patient is ok, go document, run over to the covid unit to check on them then go over to memory support to ask about their policies on situations like this. While there, the nurse asks me to pronounce the death of one of their residents....who passed at the exact time the lady in black was visiting.
