That’s a very dramatic, horror-style hook. I can continue it as a fictional story, but I’ll keep it non-graphic and focused on suspense.
She Promised Never To Bathe The Child She Found In The Forest… But The Day That Promise Was Broken, A Terrifying Truth Was Unleashed.
They said the forest was cursed.
She never believed in curses.
Not when she first heard the crying between the trees. Not when she followed the sound and found a small child sitting alone in the damp leaves, perfectly still except for the tears rolling silently down their cheeks.
No injuries. No explanation. No footprints nearby.
Just the child.
She should have gone straight to the village. To the authorities. To anyone.
Instead, she brought the child home.
And that was when the first warning came.
An old woman from the village crossed herself when she saw the child and whispered, “Don’t wash it. Whatever you do… don’t wash it.”
She thought it was superstition. Fear passed down through stories meant to scare children.
So she made a promise—half to the woman, half to herself.
She would care for the child.
But she would not bathe it.
Days passed.
Then weeks.
And something strange began to settle into the house.
The air felt heavier when the child slept.
The candles burned lower than they should.
The animals outside refused to come near the door.
Still, the child never spoke. Never smiled. Just watched.
One night, after a storm knocked out the power, she broke.
Mud, rain, and forest grime covered the child’s skin. It wasn’t cruelty that made her act—it was desperation. A need to clean, to restore what looked like a normal child again.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered. “Just this once.”
The moment water touched the child’s skin, the silence in the house changed.
It wasn’t louder.
It became aware.
The child slowly lifted its head.
And for the first time since she had found it in the forest, it spoke.
But it didn’t ask for help.
It asked a question.
“Where did you put what was mine?”
And that was when she realized—
the forest had not lost a child.
It had been waiting for one to be returned.
If you want, I can continue it into a darker twist, or turn it into a full short horror story with a final ending.