Wednesday marked the 97th anniversary of the Titanic sinking to the bottom of the North Atlantic.
More than 1,500 people died in the frigid waters that night, but about 700 survived.
At the Titanic exhibit at the Luxor one of those survivors still lurks in the shadows.
Just walking on the first class promenade deck feels the same as it would have 97 years ago, the night Titanic sank.
It is cold, dark and eerie and you almost feel like someone's watching you and according to Noveal Hicks someone is.
"His spirit still feels guilty. He wants to keep everyone in this room safe," said Noveal.
The guilt ridden ghost is Fredrick Fleet. He was the lookout who missed the enormous iceberg that took down the unsinkable ship, but somehow he survived. Fredrick spent the rest of his life feeling guilty about it. Finally in 1965 at the age of 78, Fredrick took his own life.
Noveal has worked at the Titanic exhibit for many years. He says visitors and employees tell him they've felt someone touching them on the shoulder here on the promenade deck and heard alarms go off for no reason.
Noveal himself swears Fredrick would even swing this door open when no one else was around.
"It used to scare the heck out of me. So I didn't know what to do. I started speaking to him. I said good morning Fredrick it wasn't your fault, go in peace. And after three months that door wouldn't open anymore," said Fredrick.