The Man In The Woods Waved Again

We’d just settled into our dream cabin—fresh air, no neighbors, plenty of space for the dog and the kids. That morning, while my husband unpacked and I snapped a porch photo, our daughter tugged my hand and said, “The man in the woods waved again.” I laughed it off, until the dog suddenly stood and GROWLED at the trees.

It wasn’t like Duke to growl. He was the kind of old lab who barely raised an eyebrow at squirrels. But his ears were pinned back, and his fur bristled as he stood by the railing and locked eyes with the dense woods.

I bent down to look where he was staring. The trees were still. Nothing but the wind rustling through the leaves. I figured maybe a deer had passed through or some raccoons. But my daughter, Rosie, clutched my leg and whispered, “He does it every morning, Mum.”

She was only six. Her imagination ran wild most days. She still talked to her stuffed elephant like it was her teacher. I rubbed her back and told her, “There’s no man in the woods, sweetheart. Just shadows and trees.”

She didn’t answer. Just kept staring at the same spot in the trees while Duke sat beside her like a statue. I shivered a little, maybe from the breeze, maybe not.

My husband, Malcolm, came out with a box labeled “Kitchen,” oblivious to the moment. “Where do you want this?” he asked.

“In the kitchen,” I said with a weak smile. “Rosie thinks she saw someone in the woods.”

“Probably just a hiker,” he said. “We’re right by a trail, remember?”

That was true. The real estate agent had pointed it out as a plus. Still, something about the way Rosie was staring made my stomach feel off.

By lunchtime, the incident had faded. The kids were playing tag around the yard, Malcolm was working on the satellite dish, and I was unpacking dishes. Duke, however, hadn’t left the porch. His eyes stayed locked on the trees.

That night, after we got the kids to sleep, I asked Malcolm if we should report seeing someone.

“Report what?” he said. “A man maybe waving from the woods? You know how many people come through these parts on walks? If anything, we should wave back.”

He had a point. But something about it didn’t sit right with me. The next morning, Rosie didn’t say anything, but when I looked out the window at around 7:30, I saw her on the porch, barefoot, waving into the trees.

I rushed outside. “Rosie! It’s cold, come inside!”

She didn’t move. Just kept waving. I followed her gaze, but again, I saw nothing. I knelt down. “What are you doing, love?”

“He waved first,” she said. “Every day since we got here. He smiles.”

That sent a cold shiver up my spine. We’d only been here three days. Had she really seen someone all three mornings?

I gently guided her back inside. I didn’t want to scare her, but I also didn’t like that she thought some stranger was out there, waving at her every day.

That afternoon, I decided to walk the trail by myself. Duke came with me, tail wagging, though he occasionally stopped and sniffed the air, tense. I didn’t tell Malcolm; he’d just roll his eyes.

About ten minutes into the woods, I noticed something strange—an old thermos hanging from a tree branch. It was battered, but still there, dangling like someone left it on purpose.

Further down, I saw a crude wooden bench, moss-covered, but clearly man-made. On it lay an old flannel jacket. I looked around but saw no one. Something about it all felt… watched.

That night, I told Malcolm what I’d found. He shrugged. “Probably some old hiker’s rest spot. People leave stuff like that in woods all the time.”

I wasn’t so sure. Especially not when Rosie started drawing pictures.

The next morning, over toast, she slid a page across the table. It showed a tall, thin man in a hat. He stood by the trees, waving. His face had no eyes, just a line for a mouth.

“This is him,” she said cheerfully.

Malcolm raised an eyebrow. “That’s cheerful.”

Rosie nodded. “He’s nice. He doesn’t talk. But he listens.”

I tried to play it off, but something gnawed at me. Rosie had always drawn rainbows and cats. Never people. And certainly never strange, faceless ones.

By the fifth day, I couldn’t ignore the feeling anymore. I went to the small town library to see if anyone had ever talked about this place being… haunted. I didn’t believe in ghosts, but I needed something—anything—to explain what was happening.

I spoke to a woman named Edna, who’d lived there all her life. When I told her the general area of our cabin, her face changed.

“That’d be near Millerswood, wouldn’t it?” she asked.

“Just east of it,” I said.

She gave a slow nod. “Years ago, there was a man—Samuel Carver. Lived alone in those woods. Folks thought he was odd. He’d wave at kids walking by. Never said much. But he was kind. Saved a child once from drowning in the creek.”

“What happened to him?” I asked.

“Froze to death one winter. Found him right near the trail. Sitting upright, like he’d just nodded off. Poor soul.”

I felt a chill. “Does anyone ever see him… now?”

Edna shrugged. “Some say their kids do. They say he only waves at the ones who are sad or need someone.”

When I got home, I sat Rosie down. “Sweetheart… why do you wave at the man in the woods?”

She looked at me, serious as a storm. “Because he looks lonely. And I think he misses someone.”

That night, I lay awake, thinking about what Edna had said. Maybe Rosie really had seen something. Maybe not a ghost, but… a memory, a feeling. Kids sometimes pick up on things we don’t.

The next morning, I stood on the porch with Rosie at sunrise. Sure enough, she lifted her hand and waved. Duke sat beside us, calm this time. I followed her gaze. And for the first time, I saw him.

A man, faint like morning fog, by the trees. He lifted his hand, and though I couldn’t see his face, I swear I felt a warmth.

I didn’t feel scared. I felt… peaceful. Like someone was watching over us.

After that, Rosie stopped mentioning him. But she still waved every morning. And Duke never growled again.

Months passed. We settled into the cabin life. Malcolm built a little garden, and I started painting again. One afternoon, while cleaning out the attic, I found a faded photograph wedged behind a beam. It was a man in a flannel coat, standing beside what looked like a younger Edna.

I took it into town and showed her.

“Oh, that’s Samuel,” she said, holding the photo gently. “Haven’t seen this in years.”

I asked if she wanted to keep it, but she shook her head. “No, love. You hold onto it. Seems like he’s watching over your little one.”

That night, I put the photo in Rosie’s room. She looked at it and smiled.

“That’s him,” she said softly. “He looks less sad now.”

I never mentioned it to anyone else. It felt too sacred.

Years later, after we’d moved back into the city for schooling and work, Rosie—now a teen—told me something that made me tear up.

“Mum,” she said, “I think he was my friend. Back when I didn’t know how to say I felt lonely. After we moved and left all my old friends. He just stood there, and it made me feel less alone.”

I hugged her tightly. “Maybe that’s why he waved.”

Sometimes, people leave behind more than stories. They leave behind kindness, memories, and quiet comfort. Not everything needs to be scary. Some things just are. Gentle, patient presences in the background of our lives.

And I think sometimes, the world listens to children more than it does to us adults. Maybe that’s why they see the things we forget how to look for.

So, if you ever see a child waving at something you can’t see—don’t rush to explain it away. Maybe, just maybe, someone is waving back.

If this story touched you, don’t forget to like and share it with someone who believes in the quiet magic of the world.