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This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Random_User_499 on 2024-11-26 07:23:45+00:00.


I took the job at the fire lookout station because I needed the solitude. The quiet isolation of the woods promised a reprieve from the chaos of the outside world. It was supposed to be just me and my coworker, Brad, alternating shifts while watching for signs of wildfires. The forest was a cathedral of endless green, and the station, perched atop its tower, felt like a sanctuary.

But now, as I write this, I wonder if solitude was what the woods had planned for me all along.

The first three weeks were uneventful. Brad and I barely spoke beyond exchanging pleasantries during shift changes. He was the seasoned veteran; I was the newbie. His confidence in the job bordered on arrogance, but I didn’t mind. I liked the silence.

One night, during his shift, I woke to the sound of the door slamming. When I stepped out of my bunk, Brad was already gone. His radio sat on the desk, the red light blinking softly. That wasn’t like him; protocol was to keep it on at all times. I tried calling for him, but only static replied.

The hours dragged. Morning came and went, but Brad didn’t return. By evening, I climbed down the tower to look for him, even though every instinct screamed against it.

The woods felt wrong. The birdsong was absent. The wind moved through the trees without sound, as if it didn’t dare disturb the silence. I called Brad’s name until my throat hurt. When I finally turned back toward the tower, I found myself relieved to leave the forest behind.

That night, the knocking started.

It was faint at first, a soft tap-tap-tap on the wooden door. I assumed it was a branch swaying in the wind, but when I opened the door, nothing was there. Just the forest, dark and unyielding.

The knocking came again. Louder. More insistent.

I stayed inside.


The following night, I woke to screaming. A raw, guttural wail that echoed through the forest. It was Brad’s voice. He was begging for help.

I grabbed the radio. “Brad? Where are you? Are you okay?”

Static.

Then his voice again, faint and wet, as though he was speaking through a mouthful of blood. “Help me... please...”

I froze. His voice wasn’t coming from the radio. It was outside. Just below the tower.

I looked out the window. The forest was empty, bathed in the cold silver of the moonlight. Then I saw it: shadows moving between the trees, unnaturally fast, darting from trunk to trunk.

One of them stopped at the edge of the clearing. It was tall and humanoid, but wrong. Its limbs were too long, its head cocked at an impossible angle. It seemed to watch me, its form quivering like heatwaves on a summer road.

I turned off the lights and didn’t move until dawn.

The following day, I woke to find the forest ablaze.

Flames roared through the treetops, orange and yellow, licking the sky. Smoke rose in a thick column, blotting out the sun. I reached for the radio, my hands trembling, and called for help. But as I spoke, the fire disappeared.

One moment, it was there, a hellish inferno. The next, the forest was still and dark, as if the fire had been a mirage.

Then Brad came back.

I spotted him at dusk, walking up the trail toward the tower. Relief hit me like a wave, but something about his gait was off. His steps were stiff, jerky, like a marionette on tangled strings.

“Brad?” I called out, my voice breaking.

He didn’t answer.

When he reached the base of the tower, he stopped. His head tilted up slowly, unnaturally, and for the first time, I saw his face. Or what was left of it. His skin hung in tatters, his eyes were gone, and his mouth twisted into a grin too wide for any human face.

“Come down,” he said. His voice was a mockery of Brad’s. “I need your help.”

I stayed inside.

He knocked on the tower’s door. His knuckles scraped against the wood, slow and deliberate. Then he started screaming. Begging. Crying.

I pressed my hands to my ears and prayed for morning.

The tower is no longer safe.

Whatever was outside grew bolder. Shadows darted closer, circling the base of the tower. The knocking turned into pounding. Screams filled the night, echoing from all directions. Sometimes they were Brad’s. Sometimes they were my mother’s, or my ex-girlfriend’s, or voices I didn’t recognize.

The door held. Until it didn’t.

I woke up in a hospital bed, my arms restrained. A nurse stood over me, her smile too kind, her eyes too pitying.

“You had an episode,” she said. “You’ve been here for weeks.”

“No,” I whispered. “I was in the tower. Brad—”

“There is no Brad,” she said gently. “You were working alone.”

I stared at her, my mind reeling. Was it all in my head? The shadows, the fire, the knocking?

But then I saw it. Across the room, on the window’s glass, a faint handprint. Too large to be human. Too high to have come from outside.

And behind the nurse, the shadows were moving.

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This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/windslept on 2024-11-26 01:13:41+00:00.


Many years ago, I was walking home from school after basketball practice. I finished late, so it was almost midnight by the time I headed home. It was one of those eerie, quiet nights when everything felt off, and I couldn’t shake the feeling that something was wrong.

Then, I saw it—a clown. But not a normal clown, like the ones at birthday parties or circuses. This one was bloody.

I froze. The clown didn’t move at first; it just stood there, grinning at me, as if waiting for me to make a move. Then, it opened its mouth wide, far too wide for any human jaw, as if it were about to devour me whole. It looked incredibly hungry, and I completely freaked out.

I ran as fast as I could, like my life depended on it—because, at that moment, it sort of did. When I finally made it home, I was shaking so badly that I could barely fit my key in the door. I slammed it shut behind me, and when I looked out the window, the clown was gone.

I immediately told my parents what happened, but they brushed it off. “You were probably just tired,” my mom said. “You’ve been practicing basketball for hours; maybe you were just seeing things.”

But I knew what I saw. I wasn’t imagining it. That clown was real. However, as time passed, I convinced myself that maybe I had just imagined it too.

Years went by, and I eventually moved away for college. Life continued—until two weeks ago.

I was driving home late from work one night, a little after midnight again, when I saw him: that same damn clown. It was standing by a storm drain in a parking lot, blood dripping from its hands and mouth.

I froze, staring at the clown. It did the same thing it had all those years ago: opened its mouth wide, that same hungry, terrifying grin spreading across its face.

I don’t know how I managed it, but I forced myself to turn away and get into my car. My hands shook as I started the engine and sped back to my apartment. I locked every door, double-checked every window, and spent the night terrified that I would wake up to find that clown in my bedroom. But nothing happened.

The next morning, I thought I’d overreacted, that it was just some weird coincidence or a figment of my imagination. But then things started to get stranger.

That evening, when I returned from work, I noticed something alarming: my living room window was shattered, the glass scattered across the floor. I checked the rest of the apartment—nothing was missing, no signs of a break-in. I called the police, but they didn’t find any evidence of an intruder—no fingerprints, no footprints. Just a broken window.

In the weeks that followed, things worsened. I moved back in with my parents, thinking it would be safer. At first, everything seemed normal. I nearly convinced myself that I had imagined the clown; maybe it had been some kind of stress-induced hallucination. But then the weird occurrences started happening again.

It began small—little things, like hearing strange noises from the cellar at night when everything was quiet. I told my parents about it, but they just stared at me, as if they didn’t understand what I was saying. That’s when I started to feel like I was losing my grip on reality.

Four days ago, I woke up to find every single window in the house wide open. I was sure I had locked them all the night before—I know I did. When I asked my parents about it, they just stared at me with vacant expressions. Neither of them would admit to opening the windows. The look in their eyes was… wrong. Empty. It was as if they weren’t really there.

That same day, I found our family cat dead.

Then yesterday, I came home after visiting a childhood friend and saw my mother sitting at the kitchen table, eating raw chicken. The way she looked at me when I screamed at her to stop was just… wrong. She didn’t even react. She didn’t move.

Right now, I’m locked in the attic. I’ve been up here for 26 hours with no food, no water. I hear my family downstairs, knocking on the door and calling my name. They keep saying they’re worried about me and that I need to come out. But I’m not sure I can trust them anymore.

Please, if anyone reads this, tell me I’m not losing my mind. Please tell me that I’m not the only one who can see it.

3
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/new-tube on 2024-11-26 00:04:23+00:00.


I stared blankly at my laptop screen, the glow illuminating my small studio apartment.

It was a typical Wednesday evening, and I was scrolling through my emails, deleting spam and responding to inquiries about freelance work. That’s when I saw it – an email from Pixar Recruitment.

My heart skipped a beat. Pixar. The studio behind Toy Story, Finding Nemo, and countless childhood memories. I had grown up idolizing their work, dreaming of joining their ranks.

"Dear Lucy,

We're thrilled to offer you an exclusive animation project. Your portfolio impressed our team, and we believe your style aligns perfectly with our upcoming production.

Advance payment: $10,000

Project duration: 6 months

Creative freedom: Yours

Reply to discuss details.

Best regards,

Emily (Pixar Recruitment)"

I re-read the email, pinching myself. Was this real? Scams were common in the industry, but this email seemed legitimate. The Pixar logo, watermarks – everything looked authentic. I checked the email address, ensuring it was genuine.

My mind raced with possibilities. Working with Pixar would launch my career, open doors to new opportunities, and validate years of hard work. I imagined myself walking through Pixar's halls, collaborating with legendary animators, and contributing to a project that would captivate audiences worldwide.

After minutes of hesitation, I typed out a response:

"Dear Emily,

I'm thrilled! Please share project details.

Best regards,

Lucy"

I hit send and waited anxiously for a response, my eyes fixed on the screen. The minutes ticked by, each one feeling like an eternity.

Within hours, Emily replied:

"Project 'Eclipse' requires 20 animated shorts. Deadline: 6 months. Equipment and software will be provided. Advance payment will be wired upon signing the attached contract."

I downloaded the contract, scanning each page carefully. Everything seemed legit – contract terms, confidentiality agreements, and payment details. I printed, signed, and scanned the contract, emailing it back to Emily.

The next day, I received a notification from my bank. The $10,000 advance payment had hit my account.

A mix of excitement and skepticism swirled within me. Too good to be true? I pushed the doubts aside, focusing on the possibilities. Little did I know, my dream project would soon become a nightmare.

I waited eagerly for project details, my mind racing with possibilities. Emily’s response arrived promptly.

"Project 'Eclipse' requires 20 animated shorts," she wrote. "Deadline: 6 months. Equipment and software will be provided. Advance payment will be wired upon signing the attached contract."

I scrutinized the contract, searching for red flags. Everything seemed legitimate – contract terms, confidentiality agreements, and payment details. I printed, signed, and scanned the contract, emailing it back to Emily.

Days passed, and I received outdated equipment and corrupted software installation files. I contacted Emily, concerned.

"Technical issues," she replied. "Use your own software. Bill us." My gut screamed warning.

Emily requested additional payments for "consultant fees" and "project insurance."

" $2,000 to secure your position," she wrote.

I hesitated, sensing something amiss.

Why was Pixar outsourcing to an individual? Why couldn’t Emily provide clear project guidelines? I pushed aside my doubts, focusing on potential benefits.

Emily's responses became cryptic: "Trust your vision, Lucy. Eclipse demands innovation." "Software updates forthcoming. Keep working." Her messages fueled anxiety.

With dwindling finances and looming deadlines, I worked tirelessly. Doubts lingered. Was I blinded by ambition?

Emily’s emails ceased. Panic set in. I tried calling, emailing, but she vanished.

I contacted Pixar directly, only to discover Emily wasn’t affiliated with the studio. The advance payment was a loan shark's trap. My bank account was drained. Credit cards maxed.

Horror gripped me. What had I gotten myself into?

I felt like I'd been punched in the gut. My dream project, a scam. My finances, in shambles. My reputation, tarnished.

Panic turned to despair as I scrolled through my bank statements. The advance payment, gone. Credit card debt, staggering. I faced financial ruin.

I contacted the authorities, filed reports, and joined online forums for scam victims. The police were skeptical, citing lack of evidence. Fellow victims shared similar stories, offering solidarity but little hope.

Determined to expose Emily, I dug deeper. Her email accounts, deleted. Social media profiles, fake. But one cryptic message remained:

"Lucy, you should've stayed creative."

My phone buzzed with a disturbing animation. Twisted, distorted creatures danced on screen. My artwork, manipulated into grotesque parodies. Emily's calling card.

Months passed, and I struggled to rebuild. Freelance work trickled in, barely covering expenses. My passion for animation waned, replaced by caution.

One day, I received an anonymous email:

"Lucy, sorry. You weren't the first. Won't be the last. Keep creating."

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This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/iifinch on 2024-11-25 17:31:21+00:00.


Can people change? Make sure you have the right answer because this is a life-or-death situation. Think about it as you hear how we met a creature named Omertà. She might still be out there, so if you meet her here and she decides you're an enemy, here's my advice:

Avoid Water. Do Not Go Outside When It Rains. Do Not Bathe. Do Not Shower. Do Not Even Drink Bottled Water.

Do not be persuaded by the safety other people have. Once Omertà hates you or someone you love understand she’ll want to kill you all—one by one.

Benni's dad, Mr. Alan, didn't believe me. Mr. Alan would be alive if he had. 

Finding ten different cases of water in his attic sent my head spinning, but my body went fear-driven still. It took a minute for me to recompose myself and my hands busied themselves to get rid of the danger, the danger being the cases of water. 

We warned him. His daughter warned him. Fine, don't believe me, but trust your daughter, man.

The first hours of our arrival at his home were spent warning him, calming him, searching his house, and detailing why. That same day, we tossed cups away, recycled bottles, and only used drips of faucet water to put on a washcloth to bathe.

And we lived! They all were alive when they listened to me! 

That evening to keep us all from an early grave, I got to work burying the packs of water bottles. There was no need to be angry with Mr. Alan; the request did sound insane. There was a need to panic though. Mr. Alan's legendary temper wouldn't stand for a guest in his house burying his newly bought water in his backyard. 

His daughter and I weren’t a couple or anything, just friends, who needed a place where we could avoid most forms of water. Mr. Alan’s home was the last option left.

Mr. Alan and Benni would be back soon. If I dug fast enough, potentially I could bury the bottles and fill the hole back without him even noticing. My arms ached at the thought—shoveling is grueling work. I considered Benni and her graciousness in convincing her dad to let me stay here. Yeah, I could do it.  

Shoveling through a patch of dirt proved to be harder than you'd think. Dirt stained my clothes. My hands tore. My shoulders burned and groaned with the task, and my biceps begged for a break. It felt like the shovel itself was gaining weight. Ignoring all of this, I let the calluses form and pain persist because I really, really, really did not want to cause any more problems for Mr. Alan and Benni. The dark clouds were my only comfort in that hour—shade through the pain, I thought—but in actuality, they were heralds readying misery's reign.

It was an hour straight of grueling work to make a hole large enough to fit all ten cases inside of it. Obviously, they couldn't be poured out and risk making a God-forsaken puddle.

The sound of the door opening behind me shook me from the rhythm of my task. Mr. Alan and Benni were home. My friends describe me as shy, and they're right. So, Mr. Alan launching every four-letter word and variation of 'idiot' at me would have stopped me in the past. But the necessity of the situation made me resist this time. I never turned to face him. I just kept prepping.

"Oh, dear," Benni said. No need to look at her either. The cases needed to be buried. I hefted the first case, anxious to avoid a tear and anxious to avoid Mr. Alan.

"This is your friend, Benni. Your friend! You fix it." Benni's dad said, and he slammed the door.

I hefted another box into the hole and talked to Benni.

"Sorry about that, Benni," I said. "I know your dad can be a handful at times. I know you're scared he bought this water too."

"Nooo, Jay," she said. "He's not the handful."

"Well, I know I'm no angel, but you know what I'm doing is for our safety, y'know." I hefted a second case into its grave.

"Jay-Jay," she said. "My dad's getting real close to kicking us both out. I don't want to be homeless. Please, come inside. I'm begging you."

"Not yet."

"Now."

"No."

"Jay..." Benni's words came out slow and soft, like she was babying a child. "Omertà was our friend. I don't think she'd really hurt us."

That stopped me.

"People change," I said.

"Not that much."

"I think you'd be surprised. And anyway, anyway," it was hard to speak; exhaustion kicked in. The words got caught in my teeth. "There's a decent chance she might have always been like this."

"That wasn't what our friendship was like with Omertà, and you know it."

"Do I?"

She didn't answer.

"Jay-Jay," she said. "There's a hurricane coming. I bought those cases because we could not have access to water if this gets bad."

"Thanks to Omertà, if a hurricane gets bad enough, we're dead anyway."

Circling us, black clouds haunted the skies like vultures on a corpse.

Mr. Alan rushed outside, sidestepping his daughter, rushing to me, facing me, and swinging a large purple metallic cup in front of his face. The cup overflowed with water.

"Yes, I have water in a cup," Mr. Alan mocked. "Ooooh, scary." He took a swig. "And yes, it's a Stanley."

Guess what? He smiled. So, I smiled. I guess he was safe, and that made me happy. He frowned in surprise at me. What? Did he think I wanted to spend a day burying water bottles? I shrugged. If we were fine, I'd need to put the water bottles back in the house and start to board things up again. But first, if we were safe, I would take the warmest bath possible.

A white hand popped out of the Stanley and grabbed Mr. Alan's throat. It squeezed. Benni's dad looked at me, eyes big, scared, and wanting... I don't know.

The pale hand flicked its wrist, and Benni's dad's neck cracked. He fell with an unceremonious thud. 

Dead.

His unbelieving eyes stayed open and the red, angry, pulsing, handprint on his neck looked to be the only part of him that was still alive. 

But he also knocked over the Stanley Cup. The water spilled on the floor as did the hand. I leaped back to avoid it and fell into the hole and onto the bottles of water.

CRACK

CRACK

CRACK

The water bottles cracking might as well have been gunshots into my chest. Panic. My hands and feet slammed into water bottles, cracking more open. Omertà’s many hands materialized from the water, defying the logic of men, daring the brain to break into laughing and insanity at the horrifying impossibility of the matter. Scratching through our reality, one hand squeezed mine at first, not unpleasant because the calloused feminine hand breathed familiarity despite its lack of mouth. The hand clutched mine. 

That hand helped me up mountains, that hand had pulled me from a stream and saved me from drowning, that hand walked with me through life when I needed a friend; a week ago, it was us against the world. 

Like the saying goes: "All this hate was once love."

The hands went squeezing and scratching into me; my own ankle went cracking. Bones broke. By reflex, I reeled, destroying more water bottles, birthing more calloused, petite, and strong hands wanting to break me so that place may be my burial.

The hands blossomed from the wet dirt like flowers and demanded my death like herbicides. Longing for my death through suffocation, one worked on my neck with great success, two groped in my mouth and one kept my mouth open, while their companions dug in the earth, tossing dirt, worms, rocks, and sticks inside. 

The other hands clapped for themselves as joyous as I was drooling. There was so much mass, mass, never-ending mass, only limited by their tiny hands and my assailants' need to gloat.

My eyes swelled as my past with Omertà shrunk until only this moment mattered.

Tears fell as my body was lifted, lifted as the hands that had once protected me searched under my body for more ways to torture me.

Four hands punched into my spine, hoping to break it. Powerful thumps slammed into me in a straight line up my back, weakening it with every blow. My spine giving way. My last moments would be that of a paraplegic, and that was petrifying. How long would she make me live, only able to blink? 

The whirl of a chainsaw brought me from oblivion. Like a horror movie villain, Benni stood above me, and with fury she never showed before, she sliced at hands as they rose from the ground. Omertà's silver blood dripped and then poured from the hands as Benni hacked away. I sputtered and spit out all the nonsense they put in my mouth. Benni pulled me up; silver blood covered us both.

Limping together, we made it inside, but her dad's dead body did not. Instead, that great white hand of Omertà was slowly dragging it into a puddle with her.

Unfortunately, Benni went back out to save the body. A valiant effort from a good daughter. But of course, it was all a setup.

"Wait, wait, wait," I mumbled, still attempting to get control of my mouth back. Benni still didn't get it. She didn't understand the limitlessness of Omertà's cruelty.

Omertà had no use for a dead body. Benni dived for the body. Omertà tossed it away and with a vice grip grabbed Benni's diving hand and pulled. I knew Omertà was yearning to kill Benni, to drag Benni inch by inch into the puddle and into Omertà’s realm and once Benni was there she would end her life.

Benni kicked hoping for impossibility, to anchor on air. Leaping, then falling, then crawling, I reached for Benni. Her dad’s dead eyes yelled at me to save his daughter. His empty mouth hung as if anticipating another failure on my part.

Benni piece by piece disappeared in the puddle, alive and screaming loud enough to travel acros...


Content cut off. Read original on https://old.reddit.com/r/nosleep/comments/1gzohhr/do_not_talk_to_voices_in_the_rain_pt1/

5
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Theeaglestrikes on 2024-11-26 04:28:01+00:00.


Last week, she came home.

On Tuesday evening, when Tia Greenwood and Matt Walker went missing, the final strands of our threadbare town unravelled. Of course, we’d been coming undone for two decades — ever since Helen Cavendish ran away at the age of ten. But it wasn’t her fault. Wasn’t even simply her classmates’ fault, truth be told. All the townsfolk were culpable, in one way or another.

And all of us will pay.

I tried to get out once. In 2014, I earned my Journalism degree from Cambridge. However, by 2020, London had chewed me up. It tried to work me through its steel-lined stomach, but had to spew me out. An oddball from the north country, no matter how dazzling his credentials, doesn’t really belong there. I hardly belonged in Spitheap. That was what my friends and I used to call this place. I have Mr Fischer, my old German teacher, to thank for that.

“Why did you even move here, Rehn?” Mrs Caldwell asked her colleague in the school corridor.

He grumbled and shrugged his shoulders. “Heaven knows, Ash. This place is a shitheap.”

“Don’t you mean a scheiße heap?” I loudly chirped behind the chattering teachers, sparking a round of laughter from my friends.

The flustered Mr Fischer, realising that we had been eavesdropping, then told a blatant lie. “That’s not appropriate, Jesse Black. And, for your information, I said… ‘Spitheap’.”

The teacher then rewarded me with a demerit and a detention.

Things changed last Tuesday. And when they changed, they changed all at once; not dominoes falling one by one, but a house of cards buckling and collapsing. When three more townsfolk went missing on Wednesday, people started accusing one another of foul play — accusing neighbours and co-workers they’d never liked much. Spitheap’s Facebook group became a dumpster fire of baseless claims as nobody knew what was happening.

Even the mayor fled to his apartment in the city, sealing Spitheap’s dysfunctional state of operations. Hysteria and lies spread; the authorities did nothing to stop that. We’re far from civilisation out here. Far from rules and accountability. Besides, gossip and police officers are synonymous in a small town; they both meander and deal in half-truths.

By Friday evening, I’d started to put together an article; not just for the Spitheap paper, but for my blog. I knew I had a limited amount of time before the story became national news, so I wasn’t wasting a second of it. I typed as I walked along country lanes from the newspaper’s one-room office to my parents’ house — also my house, once again — on the outskirts of town.

Dusk was passing; its orange heart swallowed by the sky’s black overbite. The snow-capped tops of the alder trees, in Spitheap’s woodland, bled under the glow of the setting sun. For once, I saw not beauty, but a hellscape. There was no comfort from the blistering weather.

Instead, I cast my eyes back to my phone and typed with fast-moving digits; skin red and numb from that sub-zero evening. There were pockets of missing information in my draft, of course, so it was far too shallow to go to print. But I’d done my best to fill the gaps. Constable Jordan Merton had a loose tongue, and he let something slip to Alin, a friend of mine, on Friday afternoon. Something that probably should’ve been kept under wraps.

“Merton will kill me when you publish this,” Alin pointed out.

“Even if he were trying, he wouldn’t be able to hurt a fly,” I said, and my friend chuckled. “Come on. Tell me what he told you.”

Alin nodded. “He told me that they found something strange in Matt Walker’s house. Rope painted white; filthy, thin, cobweb-coated rope.”

I frowned. “What?”

“I don’t know, Jesse,” he whispered. “But I think we should get out of town for a bit, you know? Until all of this blows over. Five people have vanished in two days. This killer doesn’t seem to be—”

“Killer?” I loudly interrupted. “We don’t know that, Alin.”

“Do you want to hear what else Constable Merton told me?” my friend weakly asked.

My skin felt a little clammy as I started to dread what my friend might tell me next. I nodded, nonetheless.

“You know Matt lives with his sister, Blair, right?” he asked. “Well, in her interview, she said that she saw something on her drive home — minutes before she found her brother’s blood in the house. Something in the road. An animal, but not one she recognised. Not a dog. Not a wild fox. Nothing that would make sense in these parts. In any parts.

“Blair said the thing skittered in stiff, janky movements across the lane; moved so slowly that she had to swerve. In fact, she said…”

My friend wore a thousand-yard stare for several seconds, then I hoarsely whispered, “What?”

“She said the thing looked at her, and its face almost seemed… human,” Alin said.

I thought about Blair’s version of events as I walked up the darkening tarmac to my parents’ home. Jotted down notes of her story, that I planned to verify from her own mouth. But I was impatient. I had to write then and there; the prose flowed from my giddy fingers, crushing anything else I’d ever written because this story was my magnum opus.

The road beneath my feet wasn’t the only thing I ignored. Eventually, however, the smell of burning wood drew my eyes up my phone, and I jolted in panic. Over the trees, about a quarter-mile up the road, rose a billowing, fattening plume of smoke. It was coming from Farmer Ryan Gleason’s property, which sat only another quarter-mile from my parents’ house. I was surprised not to hear sirens, until I remembered that I didn’t live in the city anymore.

Thinking of my elderly parents just up the road, I pelted forwards; dashing at a pace that hurt my legs and lungs; the smoke didn’t help, of course. But I kept pushing until the blaze came into view. Gasped when I saw that the house, barn, and all other structures on the property were ablaze.

It wasn’t the crumbling infrastructure that frightened me. Not even the smoke, full of particles that scorched my lungs’ lining. It was the driveway painted with streaks of blood that encircled Farmer Gleason’s pickup truck. A truck which, given its open doors, had clearly been abandoned.

At this point, there finally sounded distant sirens, so I stopped dialling 999. I imagined, even in such an isolated location, that dozens of people must’ve seen the smoke cloud.

Anyhow, I followed the trail of blood to the trees surrounding Gleason Farm. I wasn’t sure why the slender trunks stung my teary pupils, but I knew smoke had nothing to do with it. Knew that before the cluster of alders, unhealthily narrow, suddenly shifted sideways.

Illuminated by the raging flames, there lurked a nude, muddy, fleshy thing with bent appendages; four long and four short. Though its face was hard to discern through the shade and smoke, the thing undoubtedly watched me. Was undoubtedly, in some sense, human.

Blair Walker hadn’t been entirely insane.

When the creature started to scuttle speedily to the right, disappearing into the forest, I ran up the road in pursuit of it. And a mere half-minute of running later, there came smashes, thuds, and screams from a few hundred yards up the road. But by the time I had reached the driveway of my parents’ house, the storm had already passed; had punctured the living room window, leaving jagged shards of glass in the vacant window frame, like uneven teeth. The lounge’s overhead light shone brightly, revealing blood stains across the sofa and the carpet. My parents were gone.

I wailed inconsolably as I spun to survey my surroundings, and I immediately noted the disturbed shrubbery beside the driveway. Immediately reminded myself that I’d seen this particular bush in a trampled and forlorn state before. I’d just blamed a wild animal.

I wasn’t entirely wrong.

Lighting the way with my phone’s torch beam, I stepped over the flattened threshold into the woodland. And a hundred-yard trail of mushed, circular footprints led me to a hovel in the mud. When I shakily shone my light inside, it revealed a curved tunnel that had been burrowed by something far too large to be a badger. Far too large to be anything that came to mind.

An animal, but not one she recognised. Not a dog. Not a wild fox. Nothing that would make sense in these parts. In any parts.

Alin’s words ran through my head as I dropped into the near-vertical entrance. And once I’d slipped down the curve, I found myself crouching in a level passageway, slightly wider than the entrance. It needed to be wider to make way for something that made me heave.

Propped against the side of the tunnel in a sitting position was a skeleton. It wore faded, denim jeans and a rucked, stripy top sinking into the gaps between rib bones. The skull’s jaw hung loosely, as if the woman had died screaming. I only really knew for sure that it was a woman because a wooden plank shot from the dirt beside her corpse; words had been etched into the grooves of the makeshift gravestone.

Dr Beatrice Long

1975-2020

Thank you for making me, but nobody will unmake me.

Shuddering uncontrollably, I pressed onwards, and my tightly shut lips finally opened to release a scream. At the end of the tunnel, only twenty yards ahead, was that deformed, eight-limbed thing from the trees.

Up close, I saw that its short legs, each a foot in length, weren’t legs at all. They were stringy pieces of immovable flesh that seemed only to serve an aesthetic purpose. As for the four lo...


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6
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/horrorfan_9 on 2024-11-26 03:35:09+00:00.


After the divorce and a long, grueling custody battle, I thought I’d finally found a place where my daughter and I could start over. The house wasn’t much—a small, two-story cabin near the woods, miles away from the nearest neighbor. It wasn’t luxurious, but it was quiet, isolated, and affordable, thanks to a modest pension from my years in the military and a body too broken to work a demanding job. For an introvert like me, it was perfect. For my daughter, Emily, it was an adventure.

At first, life here was as peaceful as I’d hoped. The mornings were filled with the soft sounds of birds and the rustling of leaves, the evenings with the crackling of a wood fire. But, as idyllic as it seemed, the town had its quirks.

The first odd encounter came at the grocery store. An old man with a wiry frame and piercing blue eyes kept watching me as I moved from aisle to aisle. I tried to ignore him, but eventually, he approached me and Emily, tipping his hat in greeting.

“Y’all are the new folk up at the old house, aren’t ya?” he asked, his voice rough and gravelly.

I chuckled nervously. “Are we that out of place?”

“Not at all. This is just a small town. Everybody knows everybody is all.” He smiled, but there was something in his expression—a flicker of unease that didn’t sit right.

After introducing myself and Emily, the old man, Rick, invited us over to his place for a “proper town welcome.” He mentioned wanting to “discuss a few rules,” which struck me as strange, but I chalked it up to small-town eccentricity and agreed.

That evening, Rick and his wife hosted us in their cozy, overstuffed living room. While his wife entertained Emily with cookies and stories, Rick and I sat out on the porch, sipping whiskey as the sun dipped below the horizon. After some small talk, Rick’s expression grew serious.

“We’ve got a few rules around here,” he said, swirling his glass. “You don’t have to believe in ’em, but you do have to follow ’em. This is old land, son. And they’ve been here long before we were.”

“They?” I asked, frowning.

“The Forest Folk.” His voice dropped to a near whisper. “We’ve got an understanding with them. You live near the woods, you’re practically roommates with ’em, even if you don’t realize it. There’s rules: don’t whistle in the woods, don’t follow voices calling your name, and most important of all—leave an offering. It doesn’t have to be much. A loaf of bread, a dead squirrel. But leave something.”

“And if I don’t?” I asked, my tone half skeptical, half curious.

Rick’s eyes flicked to the window, where Emily sat laughing with his wife. His face darkened. “Then they’ll decide what to take.”

I didn’t know what to make of it, but Rick’s sincerity was unsettling. For weeks, I shrugged it off as superstition. Then, one cold November afternoon, Emily vanished.

I’d been working on the house, patching up a drafty window in preparation for the coming snow, when I realized the house was eerily quiet. I called her name, first casually, then with rising panic. My search of the house turned up nothing, and I bolted outside, screaming for her. Relief and terror surged when I saw her standing at the edge of the property, right before the woods.

“Emily!” I ran to her, grabbing her arm. She looked up at me, surprised by my panic.

“Hi, Daddy. I was just playing with my new friend.”

My blood ran cold. “What friend?” I asked, scanning the tree line. She pointed into the shadows, but there was nothing there—just the faint smell of damp earth and decay. I told her to never, ever play near the woods again and marched her back to the house. Later, I went to where she’d been standing and found tracks in the soil—her small footprints alongside larger ones, inhuman ones. They weren’t like any animal I’d ever seen.

After that, I took Rick’s advice seriously. Each night, I left something on the porch—a piece of bread, a strip of jerky—and each morning, it was gone. For a while, the unease subsided. Then the snow came.

That December evening, I was bone-tired. Cutting wood in the freezing cold had taken its toll, and I’d fallen asleep without setting out an offering. I woke to the sound of Emily standing by my bed.

“Daddy,” she whispered, her voice trembling with excitement. “Santa Claus is on the roof.”

I blinked, disoriented. “Honey, Santa’s not—”

The sound cut me off. Heavy footsteps. Something was moving on the roof. My breath caught as the weight shifted directly above us, followed by a long, deliberate sniffing sound, like a predator scenting its prey.

Panic took over. I slid silently out of bed, grabbing my hunting rifle from beneath it. Covering Emily’s mouth to keep her silent, I pointed the gun at the ceiling, my hands shaking. The footsteps grew louder, closer. I fired. The deafening shot echoed through the house, and whatever was up there scrambled, letting out a guttural, animalistic growl before leaping off the roof.

I told Emily to hide under the bed and not to come out unless I told her to. Heart pounding, I grabbed my flashlight and rushed outside. The snow on the roof was disturbed where my shot had landed, and below, near the front door, the snow was trampled and stained with blood. The tracks led into the woods.

I shouted threats, firing a few more shots into the trees. The only response was silence—and eyes. Dozens of glowing eyes stared back from the shadows, unblinking and unmoving.

By the time the first light broke through the trees, the car was packed to bursting. Emily sat in the passenger seat, clutching her favorite stuffed animal, her face pale and tired but trusting. I strapped the last bag into the trunk and took one last look at the house. The porch light flickered weakly against the morning fog, and for a moment, I thought I saw movement in the woods—just a shadow slipping between the trees.

“Are we ever coming back, Daddy?” Emily asked quietly.

I hesitated, my fingers tightening on the car door. “No, sweetheart. We’re not.”

As we pulled out of the driveway, I couldn’t help but glance in the rearview mirror. The cabin grew smaller, swallowed by the woods, until it was gone completely. For hours, we drove in silence. The sun rose higher, but the weight in my chest didn’t lift. The further we got from the house, the more I began to feel like we weren’t really leaving. That whatever lived in those woods wasn’t bound by property lines or miles of road.

“Daddy?” Emily’s voice broke the silence, small and hesitant. “My friend said goodbye to me this morning.”

I gripped the wheel tighter, my knuckles turning white. “What do you mean, Emily?”

She looked at me with wide, innocent eyes. “When I woke up, he was at my window. He said he’d miss me, but he’d always know where to find us.”

I didn’t respond. There was nothing to say.

The open road stretched ahead, empty and endless, but no distance felt safe enough. Behind us, the woods waited, and somewhere, deep within, something watched.

We kept driving.

And we didn’t stop.

7
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This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/CalaveraBlues on 2024-11-25 13:24:49+00:00.


It was 1995, and the decade so far had not been kind. I would sit at home, wallow in my own self-pity, self-loathing, self... well, everything. The only person I ever really interacted with was Mother. And the many customers that my night job forced upon me. I would deliver pizzas from a place not far from me, a real shithole called Augustino's. A real authentic Italian experience. Hell, even the rats loved the pizza. Tips were poor, hours were anti-social (not that it really mattered), and the bonus free pizza was inedible. Even at my lowest, I would not touch that pizza. The clientele of Augustino's were less discerning - you don't order a pizza at 4am and expect a culinary Pierre White experience after all.

It was 2am, on some rancid December night. Mariah was dribbling out of the car radio, as my hands froze behind the wheel. The heater had broken months before. One of life's little luxuries you don't think about until there is literal ice on the inside of your car windscreen. I turned right under the bridge, and that familiar shudder came over me. It was not the weather. That bridge was the great sentinel between shit and shitter. This part of the city was not where you want to be. Not in the day. Not right now, in the icy night. I passed some boarded up shops and hit the little town dead centre. I parked up. Even over the radio (Last Christmas now, the staticky remix that only my speakers would allow), I could hear it. Techno, trance, house - whatever it was. It blasted out of the customer's house, covering most of the street. I grabbed the pizza. It was cold, but I didn't think these pill popping teens would care, so I didn't even prepare the apology. The hand off was smooth. A teen, pre-puberty moustache, pupils the size of dinner plates, thrust some notes at me, grabbed the pizza, hollared something incomprehensible to whoever was inside, and shut the door. Enjoy the pizza ya little shit.

My phone had rung on the way home. I answered. It was Augustino himself (well, Ramesh, but he owned the place and that name didn't quite have the same all-Italian ring to it). After a long rant, of which I understand around half, he put down the phone. I was fired. The little drug den residents had found a hair in the pizza. I had worn my hair long in those days. I fancied myself an Alice in Chains, Pearl Jam, Nirvana kind of loner. No one else working at the pizza place had long hair. Just me. And that's exactly what they had described. A long, brown hair, wrapped around pepperoni and sausage. I pulled up at the side of the road, and wept into my steering wheel.

It had been a few weeks later when Mother had suggested the job. It was during our nightly routine. I was brushing Mother's hair, lamenting my stupidity at not being able to find a job. She sat and listened, as all good mothers do, until, through tears, I told her I was useless at everything I tried. She had grabbed my wrist, and held it, hard. You keep me beautiful, she said. Look at me. Look at my hair. This is because of you.

The barbershop came only weeks later. It was steady. I had cut Mother's hair since I was a child. I had never really used clippers, but it was easy enough. The other lads in the shop didn't really speak, but the work was constant and kept my mind focused. It was almost relaxing. I had noticed though, that the less favourable clients always ended up in my chair. People that, if my life was an old Looney Toons cartoon, would have stink lines emanating from them. One man literally fouled himself right in front of me. It took an hour to clean the smell out of the chair. So it was no surprise, that when she walked in, she was pointed in my direction.

To this day, her face is still a blur. It's as though a mannequin, blank faced and devoid of any kind of humanity, walked across the room that day, and sat down before me. It was only when she was right next to me, that it finally became apparent. Her hair, the only way I can explain it, was... rotting. What I supposed was naturally grey hair had large black spots, the size of 50 pence pieces, littered all over her scalp. One patch of hair simply broke off as I attempted to rake the brush through it. I hadn't quite mastered the small talk aspect of the job yet, but what was anyone in this position supposed to say? She certainly didn't mind. She didn't speak a single word throughout the entire ordeal. The water ran black as I tilted her head back. Globs of filth and broken hair repeatedly blocked the plug. I held back my gag reflex, sometimes unsuccessfully. Several extremely large handfuls of shampoo later, it finally ran clean. Not actually having told me what style she wanted, I trimmed the ends of her hair, split like tree roots, and blow dried her hair. I remember thinking that the blow dryer was probably the one thing I wouldn't have to throw away after this.

It had begun to grow dark outside. How long had I been at this? I looked up and around me for what seemed like the first time in hours. The others were completing their closing routine. I looked back at her. I almost gasped. She looked... good. It hung just below her shoulders, jet black and shiny. A sense of familiarity came over me as I stepped back, almost in shock. Did she pay? I can't remember. So much from that day was like a vague dream. Under the circumstances, I understand why.

Mother died the next day. It was sudden and unexpected. She had had the cruelness of someone past their years, but her energy was undying. I remember feeling lost, rather than upset. Especially when it came to packing her things. I bagged up her clothes to drop off at the nearest charity shop. The table of her vanity mirror was still packed with her make up. I grabbed a box and started to throw her things into it, palettes of blush and little tubes of mascara, when I yanked my hand back. A drop of blood dripped onto the dresser. It took me a few seconds to realise what had happened, when I looked down. Mother's hairbrush lay there, a few shiny droplets visible on the clump of black hair still within its bristles.

It was a few days later, and the house felt empty. It dawned on me just how big of a presence Mother had on the house, and just how little I owned. I had begun repurposing Mother's room into something more suitable, and was rocking the large dresser and mirror side to side, trying to get it through the door, when I felt a sharp sting in my fingertips. The cut from earlier in the week had opened, but it wasn't the only source of pain. The four fingers on my right hand burned. I raised them up and went cold. Splinters protruded from each one. The mirror was made of wood but, they couldn't have been from that. They were hair splinters. I had heard the staff at the shop mention them, and I thought they were some kind of cautionary tale about paying attention with the clippers. But here they were. The skin around them was blotchy and irritated. How long had they been there? They were jet black. Surely I would have noticed them? The chill came back as I imagined the rotten hair of that woman piercing my skin like a syringe, and festering there for days. I ran to one of the boxes in the room, and rummaged through for Mother's tweezers I had packed away days earlier. I found them, and plucked at hair hanging out of my fingers like spider legs. I tugged at each one. Some were half an inch long or even more. It was impossible that I hadn't noticed. After around ten minutes, each of my fingers bore jagged holes in their tips, which I plastered up, with hopes to forget the whole ordeal. But from that day, it only got worse.

Around a week later, I still hadn't been to work. The thought of going back made me want to throw up, so I told the owner I was still grieving. He reluctantly understood. It was around this time that the dreams had started. I would be in bed, and I would awake in my dream, coughing endlessly. I wouldn't be able to breathe, and I would start to panic. I would feel a scratching in my throat, and shove my fingers in my mouth, desperately trying to breathe. It was there I would begin to pull, and thick black locks of hair would make their way up my throat. No matter how much I pulled out, I still wouldn't be able to breathe. I would be surrounded by it, lying on piles of hair, and yet more would come.

I only wish they had stayed dreams. Almost exactly a month to the day that Mother had died, my left eye began to itch. It was when my vision began to get blurry that I became worried. I had checked for an errant eyelash for what seemed like hours in the mirror, when I finally saw it. I grabbed the tweezers and took a deep breath to try and stop my hand from shaking. I had to use my left hand. I hadn't dared to remove the plasters on my right. After a few attempts, I managed to grip the eyelash. I carefully tried to remove it, pulling it slowly towards the mirror. At first, I thought I had dropped it, as I felt no relief. If anything, the irritation had turned into pain. I positioned myself differently in the mirror, psyching myself up to grab it again, when I realised the hair was in the grip tweezers still. It wasn't an eyelash. It draped around three inches away from my eye, but was still embedded in the fleshy mass under my eyeball. I dropped the tweezers and the hair hung limply across my cheek. I grabbed it with my fingers and pulled. My eye began to water from the pain and the tears as I began to see the full extent of what was happening...


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8
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Fractured-North on 2024-11-26 00:21:09+00:00.


Foreword: This letter was found on the bed of inmate Riley Hanson by an unknown correctional officer in Seattle Washington on November 16th, 1983. 

 I am sorry to whoever finds this letter. I didn’t mean for everything to happen the way it did. This is the only thing I can think to do before I go, so you know why. This is my final story, my last confession. 

It all started shortly after Brian & I moved to Seattle. He had just graduated medical school, and we moved to the big city to start our new lives. We house hunted for a few months before we finally found our dream home. It was a beautiful two story house on the outskirts of the city. The moment we entered, we both fell in love with it. We signed the papers that week, which our parents didn’t approve of. That is, until they toured the home themselves a few weeks later. 

A month after moving in, Brian was hired at the local hospital, and our new life was off to a wonderful start. I had a job at one of the local bookstores for a few months, until I found out I was pregnant. When I told Brian, his face lit up and we spent the night getting ice cream and walking around Seattle talking about different names. 

The first incident happened when I was 7 months pregnant. I had left my job at the bookstore a few weeks prior, in order to get the house ready for our baby. I was painting the spare bedroom a light blue color, as we had found out we’d be having a boy. I turned to discover an empty can. I was about to stop painting altogether when I remembered we had several cans of paint in the basement from when we first moved in. I made my way out of the soon to be nursery, and walked halfway down the main hall to the basement door. 

I stood at the top of the stairs to the basement, peering into the darkness below. For a moment I hesitated, wondering if I should just wait an hour for Brian to be home. I’d been down into the basement countless times in the year and a half we’d lived in the house, but the air felt different now. I tried to shrug off the feeling I was walking into the lion’s den as I descended the wooden steps into the dark void below. 

A cloud of dust rolled up as my feet hit the dirt floor. I waved my hand to dispel it as I flipped the light switch and made my way across the room. I stopped in front of a shelf that held various tools and other house-keeping items. I skimmed through it with no luck. I turned and made my way to a workbench littered with wood chips and carvings. Before my pregnancy, I’d taken to using the bench for my wood carving hobby, but stopped a few months ago. Doing my best to remain steady, I bent down and opened a shelf underneath the bench. Inside it were several paint cans. I grabbed one out to examine it, only to find it wasn’t the right color. I sighed and put it back, then repeated the process three more times. None of the cans matched the one upstairs. Defeated, I put the last can back and closed the door, then proceeded to make my way back upstairs. 

My left foot was on the first stair when I heard a crash. I leaned back and saw a paint can had fallen from the shelf underneath the bench. I sighed and started for the bench when the ground began to shake. I steadied myself against the shelf, but the shaking intensified. Various cans and tools began to fall off the shelf. I jumped back as a gardening tool slapped against my arm. There was barely any time to react when I noticed the shelf next to me was falling towards me. It crashed to the ground with a deafening sound as I scrambled up the stairs as best I could with my limited mobility. I collapsed at the top of the stairs, and didn’t move until Brian found me still there. 

After making sure I was ok, besides a small cut on my arm, Brian went down into the basement to assess the damage. He returned 15 minutes later, drenched in sweat. Nothing had broken apart from a can of paint. We both decided it had been a localized earthquake, despite not seeing any mention of one in the next day’s paper. 

Two months later, I delivered the most beautiful baby boy, Everett. He completed our small family, and lit up our lives. About a year after he was born, we were surprised to find out he’d be getting a brother. My second pregnancy flew by and before we knew it, our trio had become a quartet. We named our second boy Riley. When Brian suggested it, I initially thought my son wouldn’t want to share his name with his mom, but I warmed up to it. Throughout this time, the small earthquakes persisted, but they were common where we lived, so we dismissed them. 

When Everett was 5, him and Riley began begging us for a dog. I refused due to an incident in my childhood, but we made a compromise. That Christmas, the boys were gifted a hamster. Initially disappointed, they grew to love Mr. Dorito with all their heart. 

A year later is when things took a turn for the worse. That summer, Mr. Dorito had disappeared when the boys were playing with him. It really took a toll on them, and we weren’t sure what to do. One night, I got up to get a glass of water, and I found Riley kneeling in front of the basement door. We developed the habit of locking the basement door after Everett began walking. He jumped when I asked what he was doing, but then told me he heard a dog downstairs. I told him he dreamed it up, and sent him back to bed. 

The next day, I was working on some projects down in the basement. I let the boys play with their toys in the dirt down there when J worked. They had made a decently sized hole when I told them it was time for dinner. They fussed but relented when I threatened to take away their construction toys. 

That night, Brian and I were awoken by a loud crashing sound. We rushed out of bed into the hallway, and found Riley crying at the top of the stairs. Brian’s keys hung from the basement door. I held Riley as Brian ran down the stairs, returning moments later cradling Everett in his arms. Everett’s arm lay broken in his lap. We rushed to the hospital, and Brian took Everett inside as Riley and I sat in the waiting room. After I got him a juice box from the vending machine, he spoke for the first time since we found him. I could barely hear it, but he said, “We just wanted to pet the doggy.”

We returned home in the late morning. Everett was lucky and had only broken his arm. The boys were back to normal at the end of the day, with Everett bragging about how everyone in his class would think his cast was cool. 

Brian and I decided we would hide the key to the basement in a place only we would reach. That all changed a few weeks later. Brian and the boys were outside while I was in the basement. I had just finished up when I saw movement in the dirt next to me. The ground began sinking into itself, then it began to shift upwards, as if something was emerging. I screamed for Brian as I ran up the stairs. There was growling from beneath me as I reached the top and flung the door shut. For a moment, I thought everything was fine, then the door began to shake. I held myself against it while shouting for help, as something on the other side banged against the door. 

Brian arrived to witness the ordeal. We both held ourselves close to the door until the banging stopped. I stayed by the door as Brian retrieved a chair and wedged it in. He proceeded to call the police while the boys and I retreated to our driveway. Within a few minutes, the police arrived and made their way into the basement. The only thing they found was a paint can tipped over and a large indentation in the ground. They left soon after and Brian and I discussed what we’d do. We decided it wasn’t safe to go down there anymore, so we boarded up the door. 

For about 6 months following that encounter, we regularly heard banging and growls from the basement. Brian had told some of his coworkers about the events, and they suggested a priest should come and bless the house. I was hesitant to involve religion, but I relented. A week later a catholic priest visited our house. He told us our experiences were telltale signs of demonic activity. Brian asked that he bless our house, so he said some prayers and sprinkled holy water in every room of our house. The priest requested access to the basement, as that was the source of our grief. We broke out some tools and opened up the door to the basement. The priest and Brian descended below, and returned a few moments later. After the priest left, we immediately boarded the door up again. When I put the tools away, I didn’t notice a hammer was missing. I’ll never forgive myself for that. 

Two nights later, a scream ripped me from my sleep. I instinctively felt for Brian, but he wasn’t in bed. I leapt from bed and dashed into the hallway, and froze. The basement door was opened, a wooden plank still hanging by a single nail from it. The hammer lay next to it on the ground, along with the other planks. I inched my way to the top of the stairs, only to be met with flickering lights below. A scream from below broke me from my trance, and I raced down the stairs. 

I will not recount the exact details of what I found at the foot of the stairs, as that burden is mine to bear until I leave this life. My boys were dead. Their tattered dinosaur pajamas the only identifying feature. I didn’t have time to process the sight before me when another scream took my attention away. Brian was standing in the far corner, brandishing a kitchen knife. In front of him, is someth...


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9
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/therealdocturner on 2024-11-25 23:35:57+00:00.


I’m finally in the process of writing a book about my grandfather who passed away twenty years ago. I set up a recorder and visited him several times and I just let him go. I’d get lost in that deep timber behind his Georgia drawl. So much tape. I wanted to share my favorite story that he told because I’m not going to include it in the book. My editor is putting his foot down. He says it’s too far off the beaten trail. I just wanted it out there somewhere. I just transcribed the recording. I figured his words spoke for themselves.

When I was just out of medical school, I got my first job in a small town just north of Portland. I’d been there…six years when four men were mauled to death in the fall of 1954. Their bodies had been dragged off into the woods, and there wasn’t much left of ‘em after they were found. At first, folks had thought it might be a mountain lion or a pack of coyotes, but after the third man was killed, most folks, myself included, had thought it was Kitchner Brown’s junkyard dogs. Kitchner was an unfortunate outcast, and his dogs seemed like they fit the bill.

Kitchner had come home from the War in Europe, a changed man. A German grenade had gone off right next to him, which gave him a bum leg and a broken brain. He was a real nice man, but most folks in town didn’t want much to do with him when he got back. I guess before he left, he was sharp as a tack and quick with a joke. Everybody loved him then. The war ended just after he’d come home and I think everybody was happy to bask in victory and not too keen on staring at what that victory cost.

All Kitchner had was Becky, his young wife. Wonderful girl. They’d been sweethearts since they could walk. Becky didn’t care that he was a little slow, she was just happy to have him home. 

They wouldn’t hire him down at the mill, so he went and turned his property into a junkyard. It didn’t bring in much, but it was enough for him and Becky. Becky had tried to argue on behalf of her husband to his old friends, but it was no use. He was dead to them as far’s they were concerned.

One time in church, Becky stood up in the middle of the sermon. 

“That grenade didn’t take away nothin’ that made my husband the best man God ever made. Shame on all of you!”

She walked out the door and never came back. Way it goes in small towns, I guess.

 A little over a year after Kitchner came back home, Becky got pregnant, but she died giving birth to their little girl, Sarah. Kitchner was left to raise their little girl on his own. He didn’t have much time to mourn. He buried her on the nicest part of his property, with a view of the mill pond in the distance. He even made a bench. When his daughter was sleepin’, he’d always sit on it and watch the stars and talk to his wife.  

He made that little girl his life. In spite of their feelings for him, people in town had to admit that there wasn’t a better father than Kitchner Brown. If you ran into Kitchner in town, he would talk your damn ear off about every little thing his daughter did.

He even went down to Portland and came back with three puppies so his daughter would have more company growing up than just him. Those dogs were very protective of that little girl. Anybody that come anywhere near her was given the side eye from those surly mongrels.

Years went by, and then the dyin’ started. Four men, all killed at night.

I gave my two cents as a doctor. Looked like a dog attack to me. Had I known what was going to happen, I’d… heck I don’t know what I woulda done. I didn’t know they were gonna do what they did. I thought something else should’ve been done.

After people had come to an agreement on the responsible party, a bunch of men took it upon themselves and went to the junkyard and shot Kitchner’s dogs right in front of his daughter without even a word. Kitchner was mad as hell, but his daughter always came first. He went and buried those dogs next to his wife and told his little girl that she would see them again someday.

“I know it’s sad for you baby, but they’re havin’ a gay old time right now with your Momma.” He told me he said that to her. Like I said, he’d tell anybody within earshot everything about that little girl.

Everybody thought the problem was solved, until that next night.

Sarah had snuck outta the house after dark. She was crying over the graves of her dogs when she was attacked by somethin’. Kitchner woke up to the screams of his baby girl. He had been able to scare off whatever it was with his gun. He snatched her up and brought her down to my place.

She was all tore up. Runnin’ a fever. I remember when I was cleanin’ her wounds, this awful sound came from outside. I thought it was a wounded coyote at first… but…it just um.. I’ve had nightmares for fifty years about that damn noise. Kept gettin’ closer and closer to my place in the dark. Kitchener still had his gun. I think he was as scared as I was. I kid you not, I never want to hear that sound again.

Scared me so bad, I wouldn’t leave my place after dark. Anyway…

The next day, a pack of coyotes was tracked and gunned down while Kitchner was still by his daughter’s side. For the next three weeks, nothing happened. No more attacks. No more wild cries from hell in the middle of the night. Sarah had gone into a kind of coma, fighting for her life. I thought about taking her down to Portland, but I was scared if we moved her that we might make it worse.

Life returned to normal for everyone except Kitchner. I gotta be honest, I don’t know what was wrong with her, so I won’t even bother to go down the checklist of everything I crossed off. Kitchner told me that he knew what it was, and that he knew what he had to do. But he never bothered to say more. I thought maybe he’d just gone off his nut. Who wouldn’t with his whole world dyin’ right there in front of him?

He spent three weeks talking to everyone in town like he was Sherlock Holmes or something. Asking questions. 

Where were they that night?

People caught him goin’ through their properties and homes, like he was looking for somethin’. He was even thrown in the sheriff's cell for one night. He was warned to stop what he was doin’. 

One day he went down to Portland. He had his truck loaded up with every nice thing in his home. When he come back three days later, all that stuff was gone. All he had in the truck with him was a couple boxes of bullets.

Come October, there was a town picnic by the mill pond after church. Everybody was there. I stayed with Sarah. I wasn’t gonna leave that little girl’s side for nothing.

Well, Kitchner made a scene down at the picnic.

Stood up on a big stump and started to shout.

“My little girl is gonna die tonight, I’m certain,” he says. “When that moon comes up tonight, her life’s over. There’s only one way that ain’t gonna happen. I narrowed it down to thirteen. I talked to y’all. I can’t narrow it any further. One of you is to blame for all this misery. I know what happened to you ain’t your fault, but you’ve gotta pay for what you’ve done. You gotta be man enough to let me end it. If there’s any part of you that’s sorry for what you did, I’m begging you to come forward now. Save my daughter. Please.”

Everyone was silent. No one knew what to say. Kitchner started to tear up. He started to look a little wild.

“Whoever you are, please don’t make me do this! Nobody else has to die! I’m begging you.”

After another awkward moment, some men from the mill dragged him away from the picnic. Kitchner was screaming the whole time. Swearing there was a monster in their midst.

Half an hour later, Kitchner came back with a couple of guns. 

Kitchner Brown murdered thirteen men at the church picnic that day and got a belly full of bullets himself for the trouble. Those bullets didn’t seem to bother him though. He was a bloody mess goin’ about his business. When he was done, he went back to his truck and drove down to my place.

He pointed his gun at me and I about loaded my drawers. He looked like hell and he was certainly not afraid to raise it.

I thought it was over right there.

“I know it ain’t you, Doc. I don’t want to hurt you. Don’t do anything stupid, and I won’t.”

He made me sit with him by his daughter’s side. 

A group of men had went and got their guns and camped outside my house, but none would come in because Kitchner was holding me at gunpoint. It went on like that for a few hours until nightfall.

As the full moon of October rose in the sky, Sarah’s fever finally broke and she opened her eyes. Kitchner was thankin’ God and smiling. He was almost bled out at that point; white as a ghost.

I can still hear their voices. I will never forget the words they said to each other, and the words he said to me after.

“Daddy?” she says.

“You’re gonna be alright, baby.” he whispered.

“I saw Momma, and my dogs. Momma said it was time to go home.”

“That’s good, baby.”

“I wish you coulda seen her, Daddy.”

“I hope I will, baby. You get some rest.”

Sarah smiled and nodded back off, and Kitchner turned to me. He smiled. He was holdin’ back tears. 

“I don’t know if I’m gonna get to see either one of ‘em again, Doc. I killed thirteen men today, and twelve of ‘em were innocent. I don’t think there’s any forgiveness here or in heaven for what I done. But my baby girl's life was worth it.” Kitchner smiled and died right there as his daughter slept.

The town damned Kitchner to hell with every breath they had to spare,...


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10
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/HughEhhoule on 2024-11-25 21:50:04+00:00.


For anyone that missed things a few days ago.

“So how do we know when this guy is causing the distraction?” I text.

JP laughs, it’s genuine, but dark all the same.

“The one thing I can promise you, is that when this lunatic does his thing, you’ll know.” Is his answer.

Everything is still happening so fast, the karmic quicksand that is our situation is dragging us down faster with every passing second.

Kaz is still looking rough. He’s a living example of how being able to withstand violence isn’t necessarily a good thing.

“What is this guy? Besides the obvious. “ I text.

“He’s on a lot of radars, but to the best of anyone’s knowledge, he’s just some asshole. You’d think the headline would be that he has a scrap of the ripper in his skull, but it isn’t.

No one can find anything on him before about 4 years ago. And even then, it’s spotty.

This might not sound like a big deal, but I’ve never seen someone that the collective efforts of the nosiest pricks on either side of the void can’t figure out.

Regardless, this guy can do 2 things you need, spill blood and cause shit. “ JP assures me.

“Do we need to worry about him?” I question.

“Yes, of course. What part of anything I said was unclear?

Unstable, unknown, unfriendly. Christ, how much brain did you get left with?

I’m texting you a location. If you get out, I’ll be there. Then we can see what we can do for Leo. “ JP says, dropping the call.

I hide the phone, but realize it’s been a while since I’ve seen one of the guards or twisted medical personnel walk by.

The sounds of other entities, caged and tortured , ring through the grim hallway.

“Kaz, how are things coming along?” I ask, fear and panic rising.

“It’s going to be a while still. “ Kaz says, punctuating the sentence with a pained scream of his own.

I’m going to spoil things, just a bit, what happens next, feels like the end of the world.

And contrary to popular belief, the end of the world doesn’t start with a whimper, or a bang, but a song.

Two guards walk into the hallway, human, or close enough.

Doesn’t make them any less intimidating though. Heavily armed, and in tactical gear that’d be at home in a warzone, they patrol the cells.

“Subject 248 has escaped, repeat , subject 248 has escaped. Non-lethal force only has been authorized. We must retrieve the asset. “ A voice barks through a military grade walkie-talkie system.

The taller of the two, a man with a caustic looking facial scar, presses a button on a mounted speaker, “ Roger.” He says, looking to his companion and nodding.

They both draw stout, arcing batons from hip holsters.

The sound of broken glass, a doorway at the end of the hall is plunged into darkness.

“Hello darkness my old friend. I’ve come to talk to you again. “ A thin, sinister voice half-sings.

The guards exchange glances, standing firm, almost amused.

Another lightbulb bursts, barely audible footsteps.

“Because a vision softly creeping.

Left it’s seeds while I was sleeping.” The voice gains volume, taking on an eager, almost wavering tone.

“There’s only one way down the hallway, this dickhead is just trying to shake us up. “ the shorter guard, a man with red hair and ghost white skin, says.

Two more lightbulbs give way, there’s fifteen feet or so of visibility, the rest of the hallway is black as pitch.

“And the vision that was planted in my brain, still remains. “The voice is no longer singing, the ancient song’s lyrics sound like a threat.

The shorter guard stumbles to the side, hitting the bars of our cell. His companion is confused, and to be honest, so am I.

But as the man starts to fall to his knees, I see it.

A piece of jagged steel protrudes from the side of his skull. Blood falls in sheets as the man starts to gibber nonsense, clawing at the metal futilely.

“Within the sound, of silence.” The voice croons.

The taller guard attempts to grab his speaker, to radio for backup.

There’s a moment, where you can tell this man, who willingly chose this evil job realizes how much of a mistake it was. A look of shock as a rough, brutal length of metal, nothing more than a sharpened piece of debris spins end over end, first severing his hand, then the cord of the Walkie-talkie and finally buries itself in his shoulder.

The part of my brain that loves watching pain and brutality, is being absolutely outshined by fear.

Now, this may seem dramatic, even confusing. But you need to understand something. The difference between terror and horror.

Terror, is the fear of the unknown. Horror is the revulsion once it’s revealed.

Horror, I’ve been modified to love, terror, sadly, I can very much feel.

From the darkness, walks a figure as confusing as the fact my creator didn’t snip out the fear centres of my brain.

It’s the man from before, of course. He’s wearing torn, bloodstained pants, shirtless, and carrying a military style duffel bag.

His hands and forearms are covered in so much blood and gore it looks like he’s wearing gloves. The man’s left hand holds something but I can’t tell what it is. The shirtless psycho’s body is a detailed map of wounds that tell a story of torture, escape and revenge.

The man’s body language is half way between apex predator and drunken schizophrenic. His stroll to the two mortally wounded men is casual but eager, as if he’s savoring every moment.

“In restless dreams, I’ve walked alone, narrow streets of cobblestone.” The pale figure comments in a wondering tone.

In an instant he slams the object in his hand into the taller guard’s head. The quarter brick cracks the guard’s skull, and he falls backward, legs flailing like a dying spider as he tries to keep his footing.

The lunatic drops to all fours searching for something on the ground. I get a good look at him, and see that he’s flensed the tattooed jester’s makeup from his face. Accurately enough to keep the sharp, angled patterns. His lips are ripped and torn from the oversized ball-gag, completing the clown from hell look.

“ ‘Neath the halo of a streetlamp, I turned my collar to the cold and damp. “ The mysterious killer mumbles to himself, then his face brightens, as he finds what he’s looking for, a wicked grin causing blood to ooze from his torn lips, “ When my eyes were stabbed by the flash of a neon light!” He screams.

Neither guard is in a state to defend themselves. The clown blinds them with a shard of shattered lightbulb.

He finishes his grim task, slowly turning toward Kaz and myself. His smile is full of shattered, almost fang-like teeth, his voice though hoarse seems normal.

“You two the puppet and the ‘Candyman’ ?” he asks.

“ Yes. “ Kaz says, trying and failing to rise.

I nod.

“ I’m Mike. “ The tall stranger says, taking a keycard from one of the dying guards and opening the cell door.

He throws the duffel on the cement floor, and unzips it.

“So, You look like ten pounds of shit in a five pound bag, Slenderman. How long is it going to be before you can walk?” Mike asks.

“ I don’t know, maybe five minutes if I’m lucky. But I’ll be in no state to fight. Who, are you? “ Kaz replies.

Mike laughs.

“No fucking clue my guy” He says, rapping his bare skull with one hand, “ There’s a lot of loose nuts and bolts up here, and separating those from all the paranormal horseshit, that’s a task I gave up on a while ago.

What I do, is kill people. Believe it or not, It gets kind of boring. I’ve always wanted to kill monsters. “

Mike lets the comment hang, bringing out a long purple jacket from the bag.

“Jesus Christ no. “ He says tossing the garment aside.

Kaz’s eyes go wide.

“That fabric is indestructible. “ He comments, wincing in pain as ribs begin to fuse.

“You wear it then, I’m not walking around here looking like the god-damned joker.

Actually, let’s trade. “ Mike says taking Kaz’s jacket and shirt. They hang absurdly off of the man.

The supposedly indestructible garment sits on the ground clearly too small for Kaz.

“So, here’s my dilemma. Your friend says the shit in this bag has enough chutzpah to let my punch my M-card. And all I have to do to keep it , is cause enough of a distraction to let you two get out of here.

Now, five minutes fighting whatever the hell Pi’s A-team is, that’s going to be risky as hell. “ Mike says, pulling a walking stick topped with what I can feel is a lead plated infant’s skull from the duffel.

It radiates an energy that makes me walk backward.

“But sending you two on your way, that’d put a notch in my belt and let me get out of here before the shit really hits the fan. “ He stalks toward Kaz.

My friend tries to move backward, but succeeds in nothing more than making himself scream.

Mike taps Kaz’s shoulder with the head of the walking stick, the flesh peels back like wax under a welder’s torch.

“So, tall, warped and handsome, I’m going to ask you a question, and keep in mind I know the answer.

When you were talking to Pi, you said you were buddies with the god damn cancer I’ve got stuck in my brain.

Were you?” Mike asks.

Every sense I have tells me this person in front of me is just that, a person. But the look he gives Kaz, is as terrifying as anything I’ve seen yet.

“We could be found in the same circles for a time. “ Kaz replies, ashamed.

“God-damn it. “ Mike sighs, moving the walking stick, “ Guess you’re walking out of here then.

But someday...


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11
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Due_Pin_9161 on 2024-11-25 18:08:19+00:00.


Hi all,

Carol here. Well, I don’t have much preamble in me today. I’ve had a few requests to hear the story of the deer incident of 2001. Despite my hesitation to share this, if y’all are so curious, here it is. You can’t say I didn’t warn you. Read at your own discretion.

The day began like any other. We had a kid, a little girl, who broke her arm messing around on the toe rope lift. I had to scold the instructor who even let her on it, she was much too young, too small, and obviously terrified. An overzealous dad had shoved her onto a snowboard without any thought to her abilities. I had just finished up there, preparing to write an incident report, when I got the radio call from my coworker, Brixton, up the hill. His voice was shaking, something I’d never heard from him before. He’d been here longer than I had, seen much worse, so I knew whatever was up there waiting for me, it wasn’t anything good.

I took the lift up to the Gottlos run, a blue run down the far side of the mountain. What awaited me towards the top of the slope was a horror.

A woman, blonde hair, skin pale as a porcelain doll, lay sprawled out in the snow. Her chest cavity had been torn open, thick, dark blood soaking the snow around her. Muscle, fat, organs and blood gleamed in the sunlight, a sharp contrast to the pristine white all around us. I swallowed thickly and looked back to the growing crowd of my coworkers.

She looked like an oyster, ribs wrenched apart like the shell, exposing the delicate flesh. The remainder of her innards resembled ground beef more than any discernible structures. She had been gored, but not in a way I had ever seen before. This was…violent. It wasn’t a creature who was frightened, or threatened, this was total annihilation of the human form.

As I stood there, transfixed by the fight of the mutilated woman, the head ski patrol appeared from the top of the slope. Gardner, a man easily into his sixties, seemingly floated down the run, a grace in his movements I had never seen in any other member of our ranks. I will likely never see someone ski like that again. He unclipped his skis, trudging over to us in the snow. He had his fists tightly clenched in his gloves, a slight tremor evident in his left hand.

He stood over her in silence for a moment, bowing his head before murmuring what I think was a prayer. He inhaled sharply, his head snapping upright. He was military in some bygone era of his life, don’t know what branch, what he did, where he’d been. Gardner didn’t talk about personal matters, not that anyone was grabbing a beer with him. He had an air of impenetrable solitude about him, and no one cared to make the effort.

“Damn deers,” he muttered, his deep voice biting against the quiet winter air, “We’ll shut down the run for the day, get county over here to collect her, figure out how to keep the deer off the slopes. Send some bait out there, appease ‘em or something.”

Everyone nodded, but our eyes betrayed us. We glanced at each other, a silent question hovering in our shared gazes.

Appease them?

Before we had time to question further, he curtly nodded again, fumbling with his front pocket like he was seeking a cigarette. His hand trembled more aggressively for a moment, before he cleared his throat and nodded to the rest of us.

“Let’s get started then. I’ll see y’all at the bottom, keep your eyes peeled for any other possible DB’s or stragglers on the run. Gotta get this place cleared out before Teagen gets out here with the boys.”

Teagen was our current contact on the force in Blowing Rock. He was around Gardner’s age, and it seemed the two had history with these mountains. A torrid history they didn’t seem keen to share. Based on his flat affect at the gory scene before us, I’d say they’d seen this kind of bad before, perhaps many times.

We left her up there, posting signs at the lifts and bottom of the slope warning off any skiers who might chance a closed run. We said it was icy, snow was patchy, essentially that the terrain wasn’t safe for skiing. Before we completed the run, an image came to be unbidden. The woman’s wrists…they had been bruised. Almost as if she’d been tied up.

I just couldn’t shake the scene from my head. I mean, I’d seen a goring before, but never like that. Deer didn’t do that. She wasn’t in ski gear, or, what was left of her clothing didn’t resemble it. All I could think of were the woods that the mountain backs up to, and what in them might’ve torn that woman to shreds.

The next night, as the resort was closing down, myself and two other newer ski patrols, Brixton and Waters, decided to go up and investigate ourselves. In hindsight, that was one of the worst mistakes we could’ve made, but as it often does, youth and arrogance begets tragedy.

When we got to the top of the run, we popped off our skis and traded them out for snow boots we had stashed in our backpacks. We told the lift controller at the base of the run we just wanted a final go at Gottless for the night, and he allowed it despite the warnings we’d posted the day before. He knew they weren’t accurate, and we were the pros. We had two flashlights, three radios, and one pistol between the three of us. I advised Waters to bring her gun since there could be some violent wildlife up here, especially after dark. We started our path into the woods, unsure what exactly to look for, but oh, we found it.

After fifteen minutes of walking in the heavily wooded forest, I had a realization. It was silent. Quieter than a crypt. I couldn’t even hear our footfalls in the snow. Even my breath seemed silent, as did my heart. I looked to Brixton and Waters and they seemed to have the same realization I had. We all stopped, looking at one another and wondering what in the hell could be causing this. As we stood there, eyeing each other with a fix of confusion and fear, we saw the first light.

A single candle flickered among the trees, then more, drifting in a way I can only describe as dreamlike. We ducked down, creeping closer to the path the candles were taking, and saw the bearers of the flames. A group cloaked figures, all in black, with a sort of crown on their heads. Each differed in size, color and shape, but all bore some form of antlers, shaved down and reformed. The figure at the head of the parade wore full antlers like a stag, held together by twine or string of some kind, placed upon his head like the crown of thorns I’d once seen on a statue of Christ. My body felt cold, and when I placed a hand over my mouth to hold in the rush of shock the sight gave me, I felt frigid, salty tears stinging my face. I had begun to cry, unconsciously, I was no longer in control of my body in this onslaught of horror.

At the back of the parade was a woman, bound tightly on a gurney of twigs. She was blindfolded, thorny brambles twisted around her like some kind of barbed wire. She twisted and wailed, trying in vain to break free of her captors. I broke out of my trance, turning to my coworkers to see the same kind of primal fear etched into their faces as I knew was reflected in my own. We had no choice but to follow the dark river of candles and cloaks.

They ended their march at a small clearing, framed by tall withered beaches and thick foliage. The snow on the ground was thin there, trampled by many feet over the past few nights. There was a singed spot on the ground that was replenished with tinder and set alight with the flames of their candles. A bonfire. They gathered around it while a single cloaked figure separated from the group. I watched him as he knelt beside a large rock on the ground, and slowly pushed it back. The entire flock froze, save for the terrified woman who’s sobbing continued despite the silence. Eventually, even she grew quiet, trembling like a leaf. Beneath the rock was a hole, like a well.

The smell hit us like a wall. It was a smell of rot, decay, death, sorrow and deep malice. Like a body left to rot and be feasted on by crows. The smell of rage and murderous intent. Whatever was in that hole, it was not of this world, nor should it have ever been found. The group began to chant and sing, a deep rhythmic pulse to their collective voices. It was Gregorian, though the language was something I’d never heard before, nor do I wish to ever again. Among their chants came another voice, perforating the air in a way that was godlike. It was deep, so deep it felt like the voice came from below the earth itself. Below hell, beyond time, beyond comprehension.

The woman began to wail again, her cries becoming frantic shrieks. We stayed frozen in our hiding spots, unsure what to make of what we saw, our bodies powerless to move us into this scene, to help her in any way. Then, it began in earnest.

The cloak with the full crown of antlers knelt beside the hole, as if paying reverence to whatever being was residing within, before removing the crown from his head. He stood after a moment of prayer, and raised his hands up, bellowing out what sounded like a revelation.

The crowd of cloaks rejoiced. The woman screamed. I wept.

The man stood before the woman, crown in his hands, the antlers pointed towards the exposed skin of her abdomen. As if it were nothing, he plunged the points of the antlers into her flesh. The woman’s cries became a guttural howl, blood bursting forth from her mouth like shaken soda from a bottle. The members each removed their crowns,...


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12
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Dopabeane on 2024-11-25 20:13:35+00:00.


I can’t even write this girl’s history up right now. I literally can't.

I don’t know how my boss thought it would be a good idea for me to talk to her, or why he’d think anything she said would make me feel better about anything or anyone.

The rest of her file will come later. Or maybe it won’t. I don't know.

And right now I don’t care.

* * *

Interview Subject: The Cleanup Crew

Classification String:  Cooperative / Destructible / Khthonic / Constant / Moderate / Apeili

Interviewer: Rachele B.

Date: 11/25/2024

On the day I died, I was 5’5” and I weighed 80 pounds.

That was the worst thing ever because just a week prior, I had only weighed 79 pounds.

It can’t be, I assured myself, ignoring the panic gnawing the boundary of my consciousness. It’s wrong. It isn’t possible. You logged every gram of food, like you’re supposed to. You accounted for every fraction of a calorie, like you’re supposed to. You did everything, like you’re supposed to. You were in control. You are in control.

I stepped off the scale, then stepped back on.

This time, the number was even worse: 80.2.

A panic attack roared in. I was a failure. A weak, idiotic, disgusting failure with no self control. I stared at myself in the mirror, loathing every line and contour of my body and despising everything inside it until I burst into tears. I cried so hard it made me dizzy. Too dizzy to stand. Too dizzy to even sit. I lay down as sobs wracked my body, curling up on the bath mat as darkness shredded the edges of my vision. My chest felt so heavy, like someone had stacked a hundred bricks and plopped down on top of it. Nausea roiled in, slick and all-consuming.

I blacked out, then juddered back into consciousness on the living room floor, screaming as a paramedic slammed my sternum down again and again, crushing my heart, my lungs, my spine. The pain was so overwhelming I couldn’t move, couldn’t see, couldn’t even think. I could only feel pain exquisite in its profoundness, and a mindless, primal panic because I just knew that each compression was cracking my bones and rupturing my organs. 

I tried to shove him off, but I was too weak to even twitch. Pressure in my chest surged, flattening my lungs, and pain swallowed me again.

I woke up in a hospital.   

I remember the words my doctor used. Anemia. Critically low blood pressure. Bone loss. Kidney damage. Heart failure. 

The heart failure was why I’d gained weight— all the fluid built up because my own heart was too weak, too damaged, to cycle its own blood. 

“Can you cure it?” I asked.

“No. It’s treatable but irreversible.” He looked at me sadly. “I told you, Courtney. If you don’t eat, you’ll die. And you died.”

By the time they drained all the excess fluid, I weighed 72 pounds.

When I was finally discharged a month later, I weighed 89 pounds and had racked up a ninety-thousand dollar bill.

In my defense, I didn’t expect things to end that way.

Then again, there are a lot of things you don’t expect about eating disorders.

For one thing, you don’t expect the exhaustion. How your mind slows down, how even a full year into recovery you still trail off mid-conversation because your brain can’t pounce on the right words.

 

No one tells you how every waking moment (and most of your sleeping moments too) are consumed. How the only thing that makes you feel pride, the only thing that makes you feel hopeful, the only thing that makes you feel good, is meeting your restriction goals. 

No one tells you how good it feels when people lavish you with compliments, or how confusing and devastating it is when those compliments dry up. No one tells you that most people eventually stop talking to you. You definitely don’t believe the desperate friends who tell you that you’re not fat, you’re dying, and you only think you’re fat because your brain is so fucked it can’t see reality anymore.   

You don’t expect the stench, either. The ketone miasma smells like a cocktail of nail polish remover and blood, with a tantalizing note of cat piss.

You don’t expect what happens your teeth, how you’re lucky if it’s only your back molars that crumble. 

You don’t expect the scarring that impedes your ability to swallow solid food. No one tells you that your stomach might never stop hurting, even after you get better. No one tells you that you'll sometimes get panic attacks when you take your acid reducer because the berry-flavored coating is sweet.

No one tells you how an eating disorder will turn you into an addict with everything addiction entails — the lying, the manipulation, the obsession, the ugliness, the destruction - only instead of alcohol or opioids or meth or fentanyl, deprivation is your drug. And no one tell you how people around you are okay with it up until the very end, because for some reason we all think self-deprivation is a virtue. I still think that sometimes.

No one tells you about heart failure. What it’s like to feel crushing pressure on your chest, to have lungs so impeded by fluid that they can’t expand enough to draw half a breath, or what it’s like when your heart stops, or how it feels to have a frantic EMT crush your sternum and crack your ribs to restart your dead heart.

And no one tells you about the time you lose.

I was sick for four years. Years that somehow feel like a fever dream and realer than real at the same time.  Years that mired me in place while everyone and everything I cared about left me behind.

But all of these things I didn’t expect happened in the middle of this story. The middle is the least important part. Now I’m going to tell you the beginning.

My big sister Carissa was the best person in the world.

She adopted two ancient mutts and sang lullabies to them every night. She made friends with the crows who lived in the courtyard behind our apartment and taught them to say my name. She donated money to food banks and animal shelters, and cried at TV commercials, and volunteered at Big Brothers Big Sisters until they found out what she did for a living. Even after they banned her, the girls she worked with came to her on their own. When our mom kicked me out, she drove over before I’d even made it down the street and took me to live with her. Didn’t charge me a dime. Didn’t even ask me to buy groceries or pay the water bill. 

I was jealous of her. Desperately jealous. I hated myself for it. I still do. I was a short, fat little wallflower who couldn’t get a second glance from anyone. No one talks about that, either. They talk about unrequited crushes, and the beauty industrial complex, and how pretty women get better jobs and make more money. But they don’t ever talk about how it feels. They don’t talk about that wild, sinking pit that comes with the realization that no one sees you. The despair when you understand you might as well not exist. 

Carissa had none of those problems. And I was glad. I didn’t want anyone to feel like me, least of all her. 

But I was still jealous.

One night after dinner, I realized I was way too full. And I didn’t like the way that felt. I looked across the table and saw my sister, looking beautiful. So beautiful that I felt jealous. I didn’t like the way that felt, either.

That was the night it started. From there, I launched headlong into my diet.

Carissa was my biggest supporter. She supported me in everything I did. Why would a diet be any different? She was my foundation. My accountability partner. My guiding light. That was what Carissa was at her core: Light. She didn’t brighten every room she walked into. She was too wild for that. So bright and so wild that whenever she walked into a room she burned it down. 

Men loved that about her, at least at first. Nick did for sure. 

Nick owned her club. He wasn’t her boss — too high up for that — but he had the final say in everything, especially the girls. 

That brings me to the last, least important thing about my sister:

She was a stripper.

I know that’s a shitty word. I know there are better descriptors. Exotic dancer, or just dancer. But Carissa chose and claimed the title of Stripper (specifically, the Best Damn Stripper in the Armpit of California) for herself, so that is what I’ll call her.

To me, Nick started off as some distant, vaguely threatening background character in Carissa’s rants about work. But it didn’t take long for that to change. For Nick to notice how bright she shone. How everything burned in her wake. 

I knew they were dating before she told me. What I didn’t know was that dating Nick came with expectations. Bad expectations. Expectations that terrified her. So she broke it off.

He killed her for it, and he got away with it.

I was at work the night it happened. She called me at the end of my shift, screaming. Don’t come home. Courtney! Whatever you do, do not come home! And then I heard a crash in the background, and her dogs barking, and voices. And laughter.

And then she ended the call.

I didn’t listen. I went home immediately.

By the time I turned onto our street, firetrucks were there and the parking lot was barricaded. Our apartment window faced the road. It was wide open, and full of fire. An upside down waterfall of flame rippling up into the night.

She managed, somehow, to get her dogs out of the apartment. Our neighbor found them on the landing, howling and wailing at the door. I kept those dogs until they died. I sang them lullabies every night, just like she did. 

The...


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13
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/313deezy on 2024-11-25 08:26:54+00:00.


The phone call came at 2:17 a.m. It jolted me awake in the dark, the vibrating buzz shattering the silence like a gunshot. I rubbed my eyes and squinted at the screen—Mom. My heart sank. Mom never called this late unless something was wrong.

“Hello?” I croaked, my voice heavy with sleep.

There was no response at first, just the faint sound of heavy breathing. Then a whisper. “Help me.”

The line went dead.

I sat frozen for a moment, the fog of sleep evaporating as panic set in. Something was very wrong. I threw on a hoodie and shoes, grabbed my keys, and raced to her apartment, speeding through the empty streets.

Mom had struggled with addiction for years, a battle she kept losing despite promises and fleeting periods of sobriety. Pills. Painkillers. Then something harder. I had always feared this night would come, but I wasn’t ready.

When I reached her building, the air felt colder than it should, the kind of cold that seeps into your bones. The hallway leading to her door seemed endless, each step weighed down by dread. I reached her door and found it slightly ajar.

“Mom?” I called softly, stepping inside.

The apartment was dim, lit only by the glow of the TV playing static. The air was thick, carrying a nauseating mix of sweat, stale cigarettes, and something chemical.

“Mom!” I shouted, my voice cracking.

I found her slumped on the couch, her head lolling to one side, a bottle of pills spilled across the coffee table. Her face was pale, almost translucent, and her lips had a faint bluish tinge. She wasn’t breathing.

“No, no, no,” I muttered, dropping to my knees beside her. My hands shook as I checked for a pulse. It was faint, erratic. A surge of adrenaline shot through me, and I fumbled for my phone to call 911.

As I waited for the dispatcher, I noticed something odd. The shadows in the room didn’t seem to behave normally. They stretched and shifted, writhing like they were alive, creeping toward us. The air grew heavier, and a low whispering sound filled the room, though I couldn’t make out any words.

“Stay with me, Mom,” I begged, shaking her gently.

The dispatcher’s voice crackled in my ear, but it felt distant, like I was underwater. “An ambulance is on the way. Stay on the line and perform CPR if needed.”

I started chest compressions, counting aloud to steady myself. “One, two, three…”

The whispering grew louder, more distinct. I glanced over my shoulder and froze. The shadows had coalesced into a shape—a figure, tall and angular, its eyes glowing faintly in the darkness.

It spoke, its voice like nails on glass. “She is mine.”

“No!” I shouted, my voice trembling. “She’s not yours!”

“She invited me,” it hissed. “Every pill, every dose, a call for me. You cannot take her back.”

I didn’t know what I was dealing with, but I wasn’t about to let it win. “You can’t have her!” I screamed, continuing CPR with renewed vigor. “She’s my mom!”

The figure laughed, a chilling sound that seemed to shake the walls. “She’s already slipping. Her heart beats like a dying drum. You can save yourself the pain.”

Tears streamed down my face as I refused to stop. “Come on, Mom. Come on. Fight!”

Suddenly, her body jerked, and she coughed violently, gasping for air. Relief flooded through me, but the figure didn’t disappear. If anything, it grew darker, angrier.

“You have interfered,” it snarled, moving closer. “But her debt remains.”

I didn’t know what to do, but instinct took over. I grabbed the nearest object—a framed picture of Mom and me from when I was a kid—and held it up like a shield. “You don’t belong here!” I shouted. “She’s not yours to take!”

The figure recoiled as if burned. Its form began to waver, the whispers turning into a deafening roar. I closed my eyes, holding the picture tightly, and screamed, “Get out!”

When I opened my eyes, the room was still. The figure was gone, the shadows back to normal. Mom lay on the couch, breathing shallowly but steadily.

The sound of sirens broke the silence. Paramedics rushed in moments later, taking over as I collapsed in a heap, my hands still shaking.

They stabilized her and took her to the hospital. I stayed by her side all night, holding her hand as the doctors worked to flush the drugs from her system. She woke up hours later, groggy but alive.

“I saw something,” she whispered, her eyes filled with fear. “Something dark. It… it wanted me.”

I squeezed her hand. “It can’t have you. Not while I’m here.”

She nodded weakly, tears spilling down her cheeks. We didn’t talk about it again, but that night changed everything. She started rehab a week later, and for the first time, it felt like she really wanted to fight.

I’ll never forget that night—the night I fought for my mom against something I couldn’t fully understand. And I’ll never stop fighting for her, no matter what.

14
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Random_User_499 on 2024-11-25 07:15:47+00:00.


The first time I saw it, I thought it was nothing more than a shadow. A trick of the mind, perhaps, brought on by the sickness that plagued our village. The Black Death had taken so many from us—my father, my brother, my neighbors, one by one. It had been a relentless curse that spread through the streets like wildfire, and soon it was our turn. My mother, my sister, and I lay in the small cabin we had once shared as a family, now reduced to a stifling silence filled with only the sound of our feverish breathing.

I don’t remember the precise moment I first noticed the figure that stood at the edge of the village. It was there, though, always at the edge of my vision, a dark shape cloaked in tattered black robes. I could never make out its face, but there was a chilling presence that wrapped around it like smoke. No one else seemed to see it, but I knew it was there. I saw it every time I glanced out the window, standing at the farthest edge of the trees where the shadows grew long.

It was waiting for something.

The sickness had taken its toll on all of us. My mother’s skin was pale, her eyes vacant, and my sister had grown delirious, babbling in her sleep. And me? I wasn’t far behind. The sweat on my brow burned like fire, and my chest rattled with every cough. I feared I was on the brink of death, just like the others. Yet, there was something deeper within me—a sense of dread that had little to do with the disease, but rather with the figure I couldn’t escape.

I tried to ignore it at first. After all, who had time for shadows when your family was dying before your eyes? But the more I watched it, the more I felt its gaze. It was as if it could see right into me, watching, waiting for something.

That night, after the rest of the house had fallen silent, I heard the scraping of claws on the wooden floor outside our door. I tried to rise from my bed to investigate, but my body trembled with weakness, my legs barely holding me upright. I stumbled toward the door, leaning against the wall, desperate to see who—or what—was causing the noise.

And then I saw it.

It wasn’t a person. It wasn’t human at all. The figure that stood outside our door was tall, its body a swirling mass of shadows that shifted like smoke. Its face—if it could be called a face—was nothing but a hollow skull with empty eyes, dark as the night itself. The creature’s form seemed to writhe, as though it were made of the very darkness that had swallowed the world. Its hands were skeletal, long fingers that twitched and curled, as if it were anticipating something.

I froze, my heart thundering in my chest. There was no mistaking it now. This was no mere shadow, no trick of the mind. This was something far worse.

The creature stepped closer, and the air around me grew cold. I could feel its presence pushing into my chest, squeezing the breath from my lungs.

I wanted to run. I wanted to scream, but no words would come. My legs were rooted to the floor, my body betraying me. My mother’s faint, rasping breaths from the next room were the only sound in the house.

But then, something in my mind snapped. I couldn’t just stand here and wait to die. I had to do something, anything.

My hand groped for the iron poker by the hearth, and I gripped it tight, holding it like a weapon. I stood tall, despite the weakness in my legs, and pointed the poker at the creature.

“You stay away,” I choked out, my voice ragged. “You’re not taking anyone else. Not my family. Not my mother or my sister. Do you hear me? Stay away!”

The creature didn't respond. It simply stood there, watching me with its empty eyes. A chill ran down my spine, and I felt a wave of nausea rise in my stomach. Still, I refused to back down. I gripped the poker tighter, my knuckles white.

“I’ll fight you,” I said, though I wasn’t sure if I even believed it myself. “I won’t let you take them.”

But as I stepped forward, the creature moved with a suddenness that left me gasping. It reached out, not with hands, but with shadows that seemed to envelop the room. The temperature dropped, and I could hear the sound of my own teeth chattering in fear. I swung the poker at the figure, but it passed right through, as if it wasn’t even there.

And then, I felt it—the grip of something cold, like fingers made of ice, closing around my heart. I fell to my knees, gasping for breath, the poker slipping from my hand as I clutched my chest. The darkness surrounded me, smothering me, and I feared that it was over.

But just as suddenly as it had begun, the cold receded. The shadows seemed to pull back, dissipating like mist at dawn. The pressure on my chest lifted, and I dared to look up.

Standing before me was the figure, its skeletal face still obscured by shadows, but now there was a presence, a weight to it that filled the room. The creature wasn’t just a monster—it was something far worse, something I had no words for.

“Do not fear me,” it said, its voice like the wind howling through a graveyard. “I am not your enemy.”

I wanted to scream, to run, but my body was paralyzed with terror. I couldn’t move.

“What do you want?” I whispered, my throat dry.

“I do not want to take. I do not want to steal. I am here to offer release,” the creature answered, its voice deep and resonating with a quiet power. “Your family suffers. You suffer. And I… I can end it.”

I shook my head, confusion and fear making my thoughts muddled. “I don’t understand. You want to take them? Take them from me?”

The creature’s form seemed to soften for a moment, as if it were trying to show some kind of empathy, though I saw no emotion on its face.

“No,” it replied softly. “I do not take. I guide. I ease their suffering. It is time for them to rest. Time for them to be free.”

I looked toward the room where my mother and sister lay. They were sick, they were dying, but… were they ready to go? Were they ready to leave me behind?

But as I gazed at their still forms, I realized something. I wasn’t ready to let go of them, but they had already let go of the pain. The disease was the only thing keeping them tethered to this world. I had seen it in their eyes—there was nothing left here for them. They were waiting. Waiting for release.

“I can help them,” the creature said. “But you must let go of the fear. It is the only way.”

My chest tightened. My mother, her eyes clouded with fever; my sister, trembling with delirium… They were trapped. And I had been too blinded by my own fear to see it. The creature was not here to harm them. It was here to give them peace.

With a trembling breath, I nodded. “Take them,” I whispered. “Take them now.”

The creature stepped forward, reaching out a long, skeletal hand toward the door. A soft light flickered from the darkness as the room seemed to shift, as if the world itself was bending to the creature’s will.

And then, the cold hands of death, once so terrifying, enveloped my family, easing their pain in an instant. My mother’s face softened, the tension in her brow fading. My sister’s shivering stopped, and her features smoothed into serenity.

The creature turned to me, its empty eyes gazing into mine.

“You are not alone,” it said, its voice now warm, like a whisper in the wind. “I will guide you when your time comes. Until then, you must live. But remember, it is not the end that is to be feared, but the suffering that comes before it.”

And with that, it took my family’s souls. I watched as they faded into the light, their forms dissolving into the warmth of eternal peace.

The world around me seemed to fall away, the weight of my fear lifting from my chest. The night was still. The sickness was no longer a threat. The Reaper was gone, leaving me with nothing but the silence of the afterlife and the lingering warmth of the souls it had taken.

For the first time in what felt like years, I could breathe.

The next day, when the sickness had finally taken me as well, I did not fear the darkness. I welcomed it. For I knew, in that moment, that the Reaper was not my enemy. It had come to save us all, to bring us peace when we could no longer find it on our own.

And when my time came, it would be there again, to guide me into the next world, where suffering no longer existed.

For now, I rest in peace, knowing my family is free from pain. The Reaper did not come to steal us away, but to guide us into the light, into eternal peace.

And in the end, that is what we all seek—peace.

15
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Mammoth-Spell386 on 2024-11-25 15:25:17+00:00.


The Girl Who Knew Too Much

The first time I met Grace, she was sitting on the curb outside my house, cradling a stuffed animal with its seams coming apart. I thought she looked lonely. I was seven years old and naive enough to believe that everyone just wanted a friend.

She turned to me as I approached, her dark eyes locking onto mine like she already knew everything about me. “Want to play?” she asked, tilting her head with a grin that didn’t quite reach her eyes.

“Sure,” I said, shrugging.

We played catch at first, but it didn’t take long before she started making up rules—rules that made no sense. “You have to throw with your left hand or you’re cheating,” she said. “If you miss the ball, you owe me something.”

“What would I owe you?” I asked, confused.

Her grin widened. “I’ll tell you later.”

Over the next few months, Grace became a regular presence in my life. She lived a few streets over, and her parents were always busy, so she’d show up unannounced, ready to play. At first, I didn’t mind, but the games started to get strange. One day, she brought over a leash with no dog attached.

“Let’s play vet,” she said.

When I told her I didn’t know how, she grabbed my arm and squeezed hard enough to leave marks. “Just do what I say,” she hissed.

I didn’t like Grace much after that, but avoiding her wasn’t easy. She had a way of showing up exactly when I wanted to be left alone. My mom thought she was sweet and told me I should be nice to her because she didn’t have many friends. “You’re her favorite person,” Mom would say, as if that was supposed to make me feel better.

Then came the day Grace accused me of stealing her puppy.

I didn’t even know she had a puppy. She marched up to me during recess, her face red with anger, and shouted, “You took him! I saw you!”

“What are you talking about?” I stammered, feeling every pair of eyes on the playground turn toward me.

“You took him from my yard! You’re a thief!” She grabbed my arm and dragged me toward the teacher, shouting about how I’d broken into her house and stolen her dog.

The teacher separated us and sent us to the principal’s office, but no matter how much I denied it, Grace stuck to her story. “He even tried to hide the collar in his room,” she said, her voice trembling with fake tears.

The principal didn’t believe her, thankfully, but the damage was done. The other kids started calling me “Dog Thief” and avoiding me. My mom said I should “make peace” with Grace. When I told her I hadn’t done anything wrong, she just sighed and muttered something about me needing to learn how to get along with others.

I tried to stay away from Grace after that, but she wouldn’t leave me alone. One day, she cornered me in the alley behind our school. Her expression was cold, her hands hidden behind her back.

“You need to learn to listen,” she said before shoving me to the ground.

I didn’t see the knife until it was too late. The blade was small, more like a letter opener, but the pain was sharp and immediate. I screamed and tried to fight her off, but she was stronger than she looked. By the time she ran off, my shirt was soaked in blood, and I could barely move.

When I got home, my mom was furious—not at Grace, but at me. “What did you do to make her so angry?” she demanded as she cleaned the wound. “You’re always causing trouble.”

I wanted to tell her everything, but what was the point? No one ever believed me when it came to Grace.

Years passed, and I didn’t see Grace again until high school. By then, I had almost convinced myself that she was just a bad memory, something my mind had exaggerated to explain the scars on my arm and the pit in my stomach. But then she walked into my study hall like nothing had happened.

She smiled at me, that same unsettling grin, and sat down across the table. “Hey, remember me?”

My stomach dropped. “What do you want?”

“To be friends,” she said, like it was the most natural thing in the world.

I spent the rest of the semester avoiding her, but she seemed to be everywhere—at lunch, in the hallways, even at the convenience store where I worked weekends. It was like she was haunting me, reminding me that no matter how much time had passed, she still had control.

One day, she showed up at the register with a pack of gum and a sly smile. “You’ve gotten better at hiding,” she said, sliding the money across the counter. “But you can’t hide forever.”

I didn’t respond. I couldn’t.

That night, I dreamed of the attic in my childhood home. I hadn’t been up there since I was a kid, but in the dream, it was exactly as I remembered—cold, dark, and filled with shadows that seemed to move on their own. In the corner was a box, and when I opened it, there was the leash Grace had brought over all those years ago. Only this time, it wasn’t empty.

Inside was the collar of a puppy, its tag etched with a single word: Promise.

I woke up drenched in sweat, the sound of Grace’s laughter echoing in my ears.

She hasn’t shown up again, not yet. But sometimes, when I’m alone, I feel like someone’s watching me. And every now and then, I hear a faint tapping at my window.

16
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Icy-Anteater-1491 on 2024-11-25 08:03:10+00:00.


My uncle Danny loved telling stories. Most of them were harmless, silly things about his childhood, the kind of stuff that made you roll your eyes but secretly smile. But there was one story he only ever told once. It was different. He didn’t laugh while telling it, and he didn’t look at me when he finished.

He told me about the Donkey Man.

“It happened when I was around 16,” he started, leaning forward in his chair like he always did when he got serious. “Me and my buddy Clint were driving back from a fishing trip late at night. It was one of those long, empty Texas roads where the only light comes from your high beams. We weren’t even supposed to be out that late, but you know how kids are.”

I nodded, waiting for the punchline. But he just stared at his hands for a moment, then kept going.

“We saw him standing on the side of the road, just outside the reach of the headlights. A hitchhiker. He looked normal enough—jacket, jeans, bag slung over his shoulder. Clint slowed down, and I didn’t think much of it. This was the middle of nowhere. People needed rides sometimes.”

My uncle paused, like he wasn’t sure if he should keep talking.

“So, we pull up next to him, and Clint leans over to ask where he’s headed. The guy doesn’t answer right away. Just looks at us for a second. Then he smiles. It wasn’t a nice smile, though. It was… wrong. Like he knew something we didn’t.

“Clint asks again, and the guy finally climbs into the truck bed. He doesn’t say a word, just sits back there with his bag. I remember looking through the rear window at him and feeling… off. Like we’d made a mistake.”

“What happened next?” I asked, hooked.

“That’s when I noticed it,” he said, his voice dropping to almost a whisper. “His feet. He wasn’t wearing shoes. And where his feet should’ve been… he had hooves. Big, dark donkey hooves.”

I laughed nervously. “Come on, Uncle Danny.”

“I swear,” he said sharply, cutting me off. “Clint saw it too. We both freaked out. Clint slammed on the gas, trying to shake him off. That’s when he stood up in the bed of the truck. I swear to God, I’ll never forget the sound. He let out this horrible bray—half-human, half-donkey—and started kicking the back of the truck with those hooves.”

My uncle’s hands shook as he mimed the motion, like he could still feel the vibrations through the steering wheel.

“We didn’t stop driving until we got to Clint’s house. When we finally got out, the truck was a mess. Dents all over the tailgate, like someone had taken a sledgehammer to it. Clint’s dad was furious. Asked us what the hell we hit. We didn’t know what to say.”

“And… what happened to him? The Donkey Man?” I asked, trying to hide how uneasy I felt.

Uncle Danny shrugged. “We never saw him again. But Clint’s truck? Those dents never came out. No matter how much they tried to fix it.”

I sat there, stunned. Uncle Danny didn’t say another word about it.

He passed away a few years ago, and sometimes I think about that story. Was he messing with me? Or was it something he carried with him all those years, something he couldn’t explain?

17
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/horrorfan_9 on 2024-11-25 03:24:29+00:00.


We had a tradition, my friends and I—a kind of thrill-seeking ritual. On weekends, we’d explore abandoned places at night, documenting the crumbling remains of history. Most of the time, it was just creaking wood, flaking paint, and the occasional scare from a rat or stray cat. Nothing supernatural. Nothing we couldn’t laugh about later. But the last time we went exploring… it wasn’t like the others.

It started when Darren, the ringleader of our little group, revealed our destination that night: an old amusement park just off the beaten path. “I found it on some urbex forum,” he said, grinning. “Totally untouched. No graffiti, no security. It’s like it’s frozen in time.”

The rest of us—Kate, Benny, and I—were hesitant but intrigued. We piled into Darren’s beat-up SUV and made our way there. The park was cloaked in mist, its faded neon signs barely visible in the moonlight. The metal gates were bent open, as if something massive had forced its way in. Rusted rides loomed like skeletal monsters in the fog, their silence oppressive.

At first, it was the usual fare—snapping pictures, laughing at Benny’s attempts to climb the carousel. But then we noticed it: a shadow moving in the distance, just beyond the Ferris wheel. At first, we thought it was an animal. Then it moved again—too tall, too deliberate to be anything but a person.

“Let’s get out of here,” Kate whispered, her voice trembling. Darren scoffed, but even he looked uneasy.

We decided to hide, thinking maybe it was security or some other explorers. The employee lounge was the closest building, so we ducked inside. It was dark, the air thick with rot and mildew. Kate found a light switch, and that’s when we saw them—the bodies.

They were arranged like a grotesque art exhibit. Some were seated at a table, playing cards, their decomposed hands holding disintegrated cards. Others were propped against the walls, dressed in decayed uniforms, their faces twisted in eternal screams. The stench hit us then, and Benny vomited in the corner.

“We need to leave. Now,” I said, my voice barely a whisper. The others nodded, their faces pale.

We bolted out of the building, but that’s when it appeared. The thing. It stood in the center of the midway, illuminated by a flickering streetlamp. Its body was hunched, grotesque, its skin like cracked porcelain. Its face—or what should have been a face—was a swirling mass of darkness, like the void itself.

It let out a sound—a guttural, bone-chilling howl—that froze us in our tracks. Then it lunged.

Chaos erupted. Darren shoved me toward the car, yelling, “Go!” before the creature grabbed him, its long, clawed arms dragging him into the shadows. His screams cut off abruptly. Benny tried to fight it, swinging a piece of debris, but it swatted him aside like a toy. Kate and I ran together, but she tripped. I turned to help her, but the thing was already on her. She screamed as it dragged her away, her voice echoing in the night.

I ran. The car was in sight. I fumbled with the keys, tears streaming down my face, and finally managed to start it. As I sped away, I looked in the rearview mirror. The creature stood in the road, watching, its head tilting as if in curiosity.

The next day, I went to the police. They didn’t believe me at first, but when they checked the park, they found the bodies in the employee lounge. Darren, Kate, and Benny were nowhere to be found.

Neither was the creature.

Now, every time I close my eyes, I see it—the swirling void where its face should be. And I know, deep down, it’s still out there, waiting for its next visitors.

18
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/lightingnations on 2024-11-25 13:34:33+00:00.


I’d (28f) been with Daniel (29m) for almost three years. Things were great until this August, when he started commenting about how I always hid my phone (I didn’t) and was wearing ‘special’ perfume to work (I wasn’t).

A friend of his (Greg) worked in the same building as me, and Daniel claimed Greg said I was “very, very close” to one of my male co-workers. Ever since then, Daniel basically danced around accusing me of having regular sex at the office. He never said this DIRECTLY, but it reached the point where there was never a day when I could simply relax without worrying about a snide remark.

Then, out of nowhere, he insisted we go hiking one afternoon. We set off late and weren’t too far along the trail before the conversation circled towards how ‘busy’ I’d been lately.

“I’m not accusing anybody of anything,” he said, all defensive. “I’m just saying it’s weird is all.”

He marched along the steep path so fast I needed to jog to keep up. Above our heads, past the ceiling of trees, the light was growing thin, and on either side of us was a thick tangle of jagged nettles and hanging ivy.

“Maybe we should turn back?” I asked, squinting up at the side of the mountain. “I’m starting to feel a chill.”

“And I suppose that’s my fault as well? I said you should’ve brought a heavier jacket.”

A little tremor of fear ran through me. I continued with my head down, sidestepping the little ditches while Daniel ducked beneath the lowest branches cutting across the path. We hadn’t passed another hiker for more than twenty minutes.

He said, “It isn’t just me who thinks this by the way. Greg told me everyone makes jokes about you and your ‘office boyfriend’.”

That wasn’t true—Daniel was just fishing for intel. Part of me wanted him to lay the cards on the table, but a confrontation might’ve ended with us screaming at each other. Or worse.

I said, “I really think we should head back. At this rate it’s gonna be pitch black before we can even sniff the summit.”

In an exaggerated display, he grabbed his phone and yelled, “Oh, what’s this, the fun police AGAIN? Damn. They said they’re getting reports I’m enjoying myself for once and need to shut it down.”

Neither of us breathed a word as we walked on, and soon we only had the moonlight to see by. When my breaths started misting up and my fingertips turned blue, I said, “Listen, keep going if you like, but I’m heading back to the car. Hopefully if I get to the doctor quick enough they can save my hands from frostbite.”

“Fine,” Daniel said, the corners of his mouth curling into a mean-spirited grin. “Just watch out for Harper the Hook.”

His expression made my blood boil, despite the massive drop in temperature. Daniel’s fun personality lured me in at first, but after three years his cruel jokes had become stale and tasteless.

“Don’t even start,” I said, turning away.

“You mean you never heard about Harper? He’s a local legend.”

A gust of raw air whistled through the trees, making their limbs scrape together roughly. Shivering, I let out a little sigh and caught up with Daniel, who said, “So anyway, they call him Harper the Hook—”

“I don’t wanna hear—”

“—and he was a butcher in the old days. He built a fancy factory right here on this mountain and employed men from the nearby towns, and soon he was making mega bucks which meant he could get pussy on tap. But he fell for this one lady. Real girl next door type. They got married, and Harper thought he’d found his happy ending, but the poor bastard couldn’t have been more wrong.”

Daniel paused to see whether he had a captive audience. I folded my arms and made it clear I wasn’t listening, but since when had that stopped him?

“See what Harper didn’t know is his gal was the town bicycle. She had five boyfriends all feeding her the pipe, but he was completely clueless until he went looking for this expensive watch he’d lost. Going through the dirty washing he realized one of his wife’s blouses smelled like pig’s blood, and even he wasn’t naïve enough to explain it away, so he started following her. Eventually he caught her sneaking into the factory late at night to get nasty with one of his employees, in the abattoir of all places.”

Nearby, a tangle of bushes rustled. I shuffled closer to Daniel and said, “What was—"

“SO ANYWAY,” Daniel continued, “a fight breaks out then the worker tackled Harper onto the conveyor line, and this meat hook dangling from a chain went into his back and straight through his heart. But this is before health and safety so he got dragged into the meat grinder, along with all the pig carcasses.”

Deadwood snapped, somewhere left of the trail.

“And you wanna know the worst part? The wife and her lover didn’t say a word. They just took Harper’s fortune and vanished. Nobody knew what happened until some lady bit into a pork sausage and found an eyeball staring back at her. Now this is where the story gets really tasty.”

Facing me, he said, “Years after Harper’s death, a couple came up here one night and heard a scraping sound. The guy threw himself in front of his girl just as a hook on the end of a chain came flying out of the darkness and pierced his heart. The poor guy got dragged away before he even knew he was dead. The girl went to the police, and she had to confess the guy who vanished was engaged and she was the bit on the side. They combed the area but all they found was a shoe. Then a few months later, a lady was out with her husband for a hike when she got impaled and vanished too. Now here’s the twist: a secret boyfriend turned up at the funeral, and that’s how they realized Harper had a type. See it turned out he only killed people who—”

Something cut through the trees, reflecting the moonlight as it went. I said, “Daniel I think I just saw something.”

“Oh? Is it a homicidal ghost that stalks serial cheaters?” He expelled a low whistle. His teeth were bared now. “Because if I were you, I’d be shitting myself.”

Whatever caught my eye vanished into the gloom. But the fear had set in, and I couldn’t leave by myself. Daniel had set the trap.

Attempting to regain my composure, I looked at him and said, “I thought you didn’t believe in that supernatural crap?”

I don’t, but you do. So maybe play it safe and confess your sins? Maybe Harper will go easy on you.”

“I already let you read my messages, isn’t that enough?”

“Like that proves anything. I’d bet you’re sending nudes on snapchat.”

“Can we please just go?”

He grabbed me by the arm, tight enough that the fingers bit into my skin. “Why are you in such a hurry?”

“Because it’s freezing,” I said, struggling to break his grip with my free hand.

“I think you’re scared. But you know what? You’re gonna stay right here until I hear a confession.”

“You’re crazy.”

“Am I? Why not just come out and admit it.”

“How many times do I have to—”

“Did you think I’m stupid?” he snapped, his temper rising. Even in the darkness, I could see his face turn bright red, the anger in his eyes. “Did you think I’d never figure it out?”

“There’s nothing to fig—"

He yanked me in close, nose to nose, and said, “Just tell the truth, you filthy tramp.”

Unable to break his grip, I slapped Daniel clean across the face. He rubbed his cheek in a state of shock. I tried bolting away, but from behind he grabbed me by the hair and hurled me against the nearest tree, hard enough to knock the air out of my lungs.

“You fucking bitch, look what you made me do,” he said, as his hands clamped tight around my throat. “Why couldn’t you have just made this easy?”

As the pressure in my skull built up, everything in my window of vision blurred. Daniel had completely lost his mind. I couldn’t spit out a cry for help or pry his fingers loose. My body went limp and everything cut to black until, suddenly, I could breathe again. I was lying in a sprawled heap in the dirt, too concerned with dragging air into my lungs to care about Daniel, who advanced on the brush.

His head snapped toward a rustling hedge, just off the trail. He faced the thicket and shouted, “Who’s there?”

There came a low, carving sound of metal being raked across wood. Whatever caused it advanced on us, steadily drawing louder and closer.

Using the tree for support, I pulled myself up, still gasping. I’d barely straightened my legs before Daniel spun around and knocked me aside.

My ‘fearless protector’ tried to run but instead came to an abrupt halt. Confused, I rubbed my eyes until a majority of the brain fog cleared.

Beneath Daniel’s collarbone, right where the heart would be, the end of a curved hook burst through the skin, razor-sharp and stained dark red. It was attached to a thick, heavy, metal chain that had stretched out of the darkness and pierced his back.

Still fixed in mid-air, the chain jangled. Then, inch by inch, it began to retract. Daniel vomited a fat wad of juicy blood into the dirt and fell backwards, his body completely limp.

And then I could only watch, frozen in horror, as my boyfriend got reeled away into the darkness

19
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Hobosam21 on 2024-11-25 06:10:38+00:00.


previously

Hey everyone, sorry about the cliff hanger. There’s been a few… interesting developments.

I’m going to start off where I left things last time. Andy trench, like I said it stank and was vomit inducing.

Jordan gave me no time to react though, with an iron grip on my wrist he led me back to the call center.

He didn’t let go at the front door, we marched right through the lobby, past the phone booths and to the bathrooms.

I winced at my reflection, I looked like a cosplayer for a horror movie. Only this wasn’t a movie, it was my life.

I sat on the countertop and rested my head in my hands. I was so tired, this isn’t how I thought my night would go.

Jordan waited for the water to get warm before soaking a towel in the sink. I sat there, too numb to react as he washed Andy’s blood off of me.

He even took the time to wash it out of my hair. I wasn’t out of it enough to change my shirt with him there, I went to the lobby for that.

Then I sat on the floor. It was painful in the beginning, it was like the tears had to break their way out of me. Once the first one fell the rest came rushing after. My whole body convulsed with sobs, I cried until I couldn’t cry anymore. This job is so fucked.

I put myself back together, I brushed my hair and grabbed a snack. My clothes were clean enough, the sticky feeling of blood covered skin was gone. It was time to get back to work.

Jordan was at his desk. Perfect.

I walked up and slammed both of my hands down on the cheap wood. I tried not to flinch as the impact sent a shock up my arms. “Ok Jordan, what’s with the book of names? And who are the Andy’s you’ve been killing?”

Jordan glanced up from the western he was reading, “it is a book with the names of people living within range of the radio station. The Andy’s are clearly clones, fungi or cyborgs”.

He lifted the book again as if the conversation was over. I pulled the book down and glared at him, “what is the significance of the names?” Jordan pulled the book away from me, “they are the names, of people, within range of the radio station”.

He leaned back in his chair as if moving the book a foot farther back would deter me. As soon as he tried to resume his reading I snatched the book away.

“You can have this back when you give me some satisfactory answers”. I crossed my arms smugly. Jordan leaned down and with a key he seemingly produced from thin air he unlocked one of the drawers of his desk. Finally, some progress!

Jordan than pulled an exact copy of the book I had in my hand out of the drawer. With a hint of a smirk he leaned back and began reading again.

I stormed around to the other side of the desk and plunged my hand into the still open drawer. Jordan grabbed my bicep, “DON’T!” I shouted catching both of us by surprise, but it worked. He let go of me, Jordan waved his hand as if to say “go ahead”.

He put his nose right back into that stupid western. I pulled the leather book of names and a folder out of the drawer. I stomped over to my desk and sat.

I had looked at the book previously, while I suspected there was more to it than Jordan was letting on I was more curious about the folder.

It was an ordinary off white folder like you would find in a filing cabinet. I glanced over at Jordan, he appeared to be paying me no mind.

Inside the folder was a number of envelopes, each with a name hand written across the front.

Unlike the ones in the book the names here meant something to me, they were the names of people I knew. People like Andy, Edwin, or “Nic”, Chuck, myself, what looked to be everyone at Greenbrier FD, PD and the local politicians.

The envelope on top was still crisp, it had “Allyson” freshly scrawled across it.

I opened it. The contents were confusing, there was a page with basic information. Name: Allyson Studebaker Age: unknown Origin: unknown Assessment: She calls herself Allyson Studebaker, claims to be nineteen years old. Stands at roughly five foot eleven, estimated weight of one hundred eighty pounds. Red hair, black eyes. Observation shows a lack of familiarity with normal objects and pop culture references.

Continued observation needed to determine threat level.

I looked up from the page, the envelope also contained more than a few photos of Allyson. They seemed strangely consensual, she appeared to be posing in all of them.

I couldn’t help but notice the envelope with my name on it.

I jumped and nearly screamed when a hand grabbed my shoulder. I turned to see Jordan standing next to me, the way he could cross a room without making a sound was so creepy.

“You won’t find what you’re looking for in there” he said before pulling up a chair and sitting in it. “I wasn’t sure about you in the beginning, the way you took all the weird happenings in this place in stride was suspicious”.

“I get it though, you grew up here and weird stuff is just part of life”. He seemed to be lost in his own thoughts for a moment.

“I don’t think I can fully satisfied your curiosity but I believe you deserve to know as much as I do. Especially now that you are so deeply involved, just know that you can’t unlearn things. If you keep pursuing this path your life will change”.

It didn't sound like a threat, it sounded like a genuine warning. I had to think for a minute, if I let this go would my life calm down? Possibly, but I know myself well enough to know that I would never be ok with just hiding. I needed some closure, I needed the information Jordan had to offer.

I nodded my head, “go on, I need to know”. Jordan sighed, “I shouldn’t have hoped for anything else. Grab a coffee for each of us, it’s going to be a long night”.

Jordan’s humanlike behavior was an unexpected but welcome surprise. I was finally going to get some answers.

The coffee pot in the lobby was already full, grabbing two mugs I filled them and placed them in the microwave.

As I watched the timer count down something caught my attention. I walked closer to the sink, it sounded like air was coming up from the drain. A rank stench hit my nose.

I recoiled just as a warm burp of disgusting air oozed out of the drain. The smell filled the lobby almost instantly. I was so busy repressing a gag I almost missed the whispering.

I gagged hard, hot vomit was trying to force it’s way out. I stubbornly held it in, the whispering grew louder. It held a viscous and feral tone. I could physically feel the hunger in the voice as it gurgled up from the drain.

“You took from us, now we will take you”. My hands shook violently, my eyes felt as if they were going to come out of my head. The whole room was thick with that putrid air, the scent was thick enough to tint the lights red.

I was on the ground, I had to get up. I had to get out, I clawed my way across the concrete floor. The coolness of the ground beneath me brought a small amount of clarity to my brain.

I found a wall and pulled myself up. Everything was spinning, I lost the battle with my stomach and spewed my lunch across the floor.

There was a bang at the door, the one leading outside. Another bang, something was trying to get in. I tried to cry out for Jordan, all I achieved was choking on the puke still in my mouth.

Despite my body feeling weak and my head spinning I managed to make a run for the door leading to the call center. I hit the steel hard, pain shot through my wrist.

The door opened and I fell through the opening. A hand grabbed the back of my shirt and lifted me away from the doorway.

Jordan was locking the doors as something on the other side was bashing against them. He managed to slip the locks into place. I breathed a sigh of relief, those new doors were quite robust.

With the air free from that horrid odor I found myself feeling a lot better almost instantly. I got to my feet and followed Jordan to his office, he turned the monitor enough for me to be able to see it.

The lobby was filled with a repulsive writhing mass of sweat covered flesh. A few looked like Andy, but most were corrupted copies of a copy. Limbs were the wrong length, some had too many fingers while others had too few.

I didn’t hesitate for a second, I pressed the S.O.S button. Jordan removed his shotgun from where it had been concealed. He placed two shells on his desk while loading the rest into the firearm.

He noticed my questioning look, “it’s just in case there’s no other escape. Some things are worse than death”. I was repulsed at the very thought but Jordan was already on the move.

“Check the bathroom, I’m going to barricade the door”. I nodded then rushed across the room. I opened the bathroom door to find the window smashed. A head protruded into the room surrounded by a dozen arms each jostling for room.

The head was lifeless, it’s eyes bulging and tongue rolling about freely. These things had crushed one of their own in an attempt to gain entry, it was clear nothing short of death would stop them.

The windows small size was our saving grace, the concrete walls were robust enough that even these ghouls couldn’t break though.

The same couldn’t be said for the main door, I jerked around as Jordan’s gun boomed. A corner of the main door had come free of the frame and was bowing in under the weight of the Andy’s.

Jordan shot again, and then again. Each time he fired there would be a brief moment where the door would nearly return to it’s place. Only to...


Content cut off. Read original on https://old.reddit.com/r/nosleep/comments/1gzcayi/im_a_911_operator_and_some_of_our_calls_are/

20
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/RoseMayden on 2024-11-25 03:56:53+00:00.


This feels so embarrassing to post about online, but here goes. I (36F) happen to own a house with no one for miles around. The only reason why I moved here to begin with was because my grandma passed away last year, and I was the only one in the family who had even visited her in the past five years, so naturally, I was the one to inherit the house. I know that I didn't have to move here, but I think there was a part of me that viewed her quaint Devonshire countryside cottage with rose tinted glasses. When I had visited, it had been around the Spring Equinox; birds chattering between the apple trees, flowerbeds and vegetable patch abuzz with bees and flourishing colours, the sun peeking through the clouds as I sat in the garden working on my thesis. Now, I'm lucky if I get even get a single fruit or vegetable, or one bright flowerbed.

I think the reason why she left the cottage to me was, in part, because she expected me to have a family upon moving there. She had never known that my then husband and I had been on and off for years, bridging between cold distanced fights whilst he was away, and fiery spats half the time he was home. My grandma was never told that I lost our son either, mostly because I didn't tell anyone, including my ex husband. I don't remember a lot of that time, but I think I was just hoping it would pass more than anything, I became passive and hoped that it wouldn't be asked about. My husband and I eventually separated that year, once the truth came out a month later.

I've grown used to the cottage the year after having moved in. The roof is leaky sometimes, and the walls creak and groan when it's windy. I am on my own, but I maintain the house fairly well, with the help of YouTube tutorials and some patience. I take on projects as a way to keep my mind active and busy. Sometimes I'll go wandering across the moors. Sometimes I'll stay in with a cup of tea. Usually depends on the weather.

My most recent project has been a second stab at getting the garden patch ready for spring. It wasn't a particularly big space, a cottage garden roughly the same size as the house itself, surrounded by thick, thorny hedges, a fence which I had repaired that summer, the apples trees at one end with the shed, the patch at the other guarded by a scarecrow. I named him Harry because of the carrot coloured woollen hair he had.

Harry wasn't bad company, at least. As crazy as it sounds, it wasn't the worst thing in the world having something to natter away to whilst I was dragging at weeds with my clippers helped. He wasn't arguing back, calling me dramatic nor saying I was exaggerating. Of course he was only straw, but it was nice still imagining that he was listening.

I talked to Harry for the entirety of October into November, until the ground grew too hard to penetrate with my shovel, and I eventually elected to leave the garden til spring. I felt that I had gotten to a stage similar to that described in the blogs I'd seen online, anyhow. At least this spring I would hopefully be starting from a better beginning. I brought out my jigsaws, my books, the blankets as the cold crept in. Spent the bitter evenings huddled up in my armchair with a cup of tea, reading whilst flicking absentmindedly between pages, not really reading, until the first snowfall.

I truly didn't mean to look outside, but I couldn't help it. I wondered a mad thought, whether Harry was doing okay in such weather. It was supposed to be a kind action, something normal and silly but once I was out there with that blanket, looking at him, I couldn't help noticing how the wind made him seem as if he was shivering.

That night, as I laid in my empty bed, I wished that Harry was alive. Maybe if there was someone out there who wanted to listen, who cared enough about me and what I had to say. I couldn't possibly conceive of any man, but Harry was different.

I awoke the following morning to a man screaming in agony. Practically leaping from my bed, I hurried to my window which overlooked the gravel path, only to see nothing. I wondered if I was hallucinating.

Next, was the garden. I quickly shoved my feet into my slippers before rushing myself down the stairs, nearly falling in the process. Upon making it to the window, I got my answer.

Harry was moving. He was moving. His cloth head thrown back in agony as his crude mouth, filled with straw, fell open, screeching to the world that he was alive, alive alive!

I hurried outside, arms outstretched, and yet he didn't seem to notice me. It was only after I threw my arms around him that he would begin to writhe, pushing me away. His eyes, two small buttons, burned into mine, as he studied my face.

I studied his right back. I wondered whether he recognised me, he had always been pitched on a pole taller than me, perhaps he didn't remember my face because I had always been bent over gardening?

His blanket laid on the ground. I reached down to pick it up and fold it, smiling a beam from ear to ear as I did.

"It's me, Harry!" I spoke with shaky words. "It's me, remember me? Don't you remember me?"

He only continued to scream. Part of my stomach dropped a bit, as I began to wonder if he really didn't recognise me. Perhaps he couldn't talk after all. Maybe that had been too much of an assumption.

Maybe I could teach him.

The thought brought me a smile as I headed back inside to find a pad of paper, shutting the door to block the screaming although it did little to muffle it.

My efforts with the paper proved fruitless in the end, since h didn't have much in the way of fingers, just straw nubs. He continued to screech the entire time too, and it was beginning to give me a headache.

It was a few days of this before I had enough, and coincidentally, that was when I began to notice the smell. It was after a particularly rainy day, a welcome event now as it blocked out the screaming even if it was just a bit. I headed out after the rain with a towel, stepping through the back door only to reel back at the smell.

It smelled as if something had died. I then noticed the silence, the sudden silence.

Harry stood where he always was, his head hung lifeless. maggots crawled from his chest, and I noticed the patches of green, blue, yellow mold upon his cloth face.

The screaming began to make sense.

Harry stays in the shed now. He's not made a peep since that day, and I'm glad of it. There's some benefits to living with no one for miles, and that is the silence. I don't think I realised just how used to that I had grown. I've never been happier.

21
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/La_knavo4 on 2024-11-25 04:41:14+00:00.


So it was a normal Sunday around 10 PM when I was chilling in my house, and I was sitting by my desk, watching videos on my phone

The browser I use has a built-in ad-blocker, but somehow YouTube updated and found a way to still place ads and REMOVE THE SKIP BUTTON, very fucking infuriating

So I was just watching videos on my phone and another goddamn unskippable ad starts playing

It was some local PSA/charity? about wildlife preservation/anti-deforestation or something and it had a woman talking

She started talking about trying to preserve a large forest near my town, I was getting annoyed at her for wasting 2 minutes of my time

I know I should feel bad since this is a charity and not a commercial but honestly? I really don't care, it's not like I would donate or anything

I start dozing off, sometimes looking around my room for something interesting to look at instead, just waiting for the PSA to end...

But then when I "dozed back in", I realize that my phone wasn't in my hand anymore, and I wasn't in my room, or my home...

I kid you not, I genuinely am not joking, but I somehow magically appeared in the same forest she was talking about

"What the?" "How did I-"

I was so baffled and confused, I genuinely didn't know how I got here

I was still sitting in my chair, somehow the chair also got here

When I realized where I was I got so confused, how the hell did I get here? Was I kidnapped or something?

And then I started panicking, I'm trapped alone in some random forest in the middle of the night without my phone and I have no idea how I got here

I stand up and start looking and wandering around (keeping a close distace to my chair not to get lost) and trying to find a way to go back home, hoping that I can somehow get out, I start panicking that I might have to sleep in the forest and wait to be recused

Luckily I find a road in the distance and start walking to it, When I got to the road I realized I recognized it and that I was not too far from my hometown

I start walking along the road, hoping that I don't get kidnapped by human traffickers or whatever my mom says when I go outside

I started wondering how the hell I got here, how the fuck did I end up in a forest with absolutely no memory of how I got there?

Did I get drugged? Was I kidnapped? Was it because of that PSA?

After some walking I finally saw my house again, and when I went back inside I saw my mom waiting and she started scolding me for going out at night, alone, without her permission when there was school tomorrow

I have no idea what to say to her, I tried explaining that I had no idea how I got to the forest

Obviously she doesn't believe that I "magically teleported" to some random forest from a goddamn YouTube ad

I ask her if she saw me go walk the door or disappear from my room or ANYTHING that could give me answers

She rebuked me and told me that I could have gone out the window, and that I was grounded for a week

Great, fuck me

I go back to my room, and I start obsessively writing down every detail I can remember of what happened in my notes app, trying to wonder how the hell that happened???

I realized that my chair was still gone, I left it in the forest and since I'm grounded I can't go back to the forest to check if it's still there

It's genuinely driving me crazy trying to figure out how the fuck I got in the forest, did I sleepwalk???

I tried looking for the PSA, I tried looking through my search history but obviously they don't store what ads were playing

I tried searching stuff online like "Philippine Wildlife PSA" or "Black Haired Woman Philippine Forest Ad" and obviously I got nothing

I even tried searching on YouTube, and got 4 results semi-related to what I searched and the rest were unrelated garbage cuz YouTube's fucking search engine is a piece of shit

I have no idea how to find the PSA/ad again, but here's some details I remember if you wanna help me find it again:

It was about a forest in the Philippines

It was a black haired woman talking

I remember her saying "in a world dominated by human activity" or something like that

It was for a charity that was called something like: The Philippine Wildlife Front or something

That's genuinely all I can remember as I only was half-paying attention

Please help me find this PSA, It's fucking driving me crazy

22
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/Lostinternally on 2024-11-25 01:03:31+00:00.


My job in tech sales brought me to Worcester Massachusetts a few weeks ago. My company put me up in a short term rental in the neighboring town of Leicester. I'm based out of Arizona and this is my first time visiting the New England area. I'm newly divorced, and the constant travel is a nice distraction. It gets me out of my head, and takes my mind off the shitshow failed marriage. Plus, I like people, and meeting new people and I'm good at my job, so work has been fairly rewarding and therapeutic. So I've just been immersing myself in it.

Massachusetts is beautiful, but cold, and the drastic lack of sun is hard to get used to. It fills me with a sense of somberness. The remaining leaves are falling rapidly, and the trees are becoming skeletons of their former selves. It's late November and it gets dark around 4pm here, which kind of compounds the dreariness.

I've been sober from alcohol for about 8 months now. I haven't had an urge to drink at all until 2 days ago when I almost talked myself into going to the bar across the street from where I'm staying. The loneliness, the weather, it almost broke me. That's when I realized I needed to do something in my down time here, or the next urge.. I might not have the willpower to deny it.

There was a big yard sale going on yesterday down the street and I saw a metal detector for sale for $40. Seemed perfect.. I can sightsee, get a little exercise, maybe find something cool. Who knows? It's better than sitting in my room with the shades drawn and thinking about whiskey. The homeowner, an older gentleman, saw me eyeing it and I struck up a conversation with him. Nice guy, his wife looked annoyed at how much time we spent talking, as she frantically handled all the potential customers on her own. I worked my sales-y charm and I got the detector for $20, and he even showed me how to use it, and threw in a backpack that had a small telescoping shovel, and miscellaneous metal detector accessories. He drew me crude maps of local spots where he said he had some luck finding things.

I got up this morning a little late about 10:30, ate a big breakfast, put a comfy sweatshirt on and thick zip up hoodie and headed out to where the old man told me to go.

The map led me to a big clearing in the woods, and my mood instantly improved. Oak trees everywhere. The fresh cold air stung my nostrils a little, but it was invigorating. I spent about an hour ambling about in the clearing with the detector, but no real hits on anything. In the distance I saw a yellow metal blockade and what looked like a path behind it. I think the old man had said something about a hiking path but I don't remember. It wasn't on the map he drew. I walked over to the path. Should I check it out or just stick with the map? I heard what sounded like water and a vague sound of wind chimes, must be a little brook or something. I thought it would be nice to just zen out by a small stream, so I crossed the yellow blockade and headed down the the path, and that's when things began to get a tad bit strange. I must have walked a mile down this path and the sound of water decreased, while the wind chime sound increased.. But the chimes were ringing at a full octave lower than what they were at the start of the path. Odd.

The sound of water eventually completely subsided, "So much for my water therapy moment." I continued walking, finally I came to something that looked.. Very old. A low stacked stone wall, with two large granite gate posts in the middle, with massive black wrought Iron gates in between them. The metal work was... Definitely unique. Two large circles with wavy lines that converged in the dead center. It looked like long creepy wild spider legs. Like a gate Stephen King would have adorning his garden. Ok, I needed to check my phone and see where the hell I was at. I got 3 bars out here.. Not bad. I pulled up google maps "Friends Quaker Cemetery" It was then I noticed all the obvious head stones through the gate. I was so captivated by the odd design of the iron that I hadn't even noticed them.

There was a sign in front of the stone wall. It read: "This is a private cemetery under the care of the Worcester Friends Meeting (Quakers) We hope that you will treat this cemetery as you would the one where your relatives and friends are buried. This cemetery is closed during the hours of darkness."

I can't go metal detecting in a fucking cemetery can I? That's not cool right? Well at least I can go look around I thought. I opened the gate and walked through.. An icy gust of wind blasted me as I set foot inside the cemetery, and now the otherworldly windchimes rang again loud as ever. I needed to find the source of these weird ass chimes. The graveyard was seriously old. Headstones from 1850, 1730, There was one from 1660! Massive oak trees peppered the landscape, with thick arm-like branches hypnotically swaying in the breeze.

I spent another hour just looking at these almost medieval age headstones. Thinking about what life must have been like in this town back in the 1660's. So many of these people died in their 30's and 40's.. That must have been considered old age back then. I was pretty far into the cemetery. Far enough that I couldn't see the border wall or the gates anymore. I found myself in this circular configuration of grave stones, the circle was about 50ft in diameter. The head stones were so old and weathered you couldn't read the inscriptions anymore. In the middle of the circle stood a giant tree, like something you would see in a children's fairytale book. The tree looked like an organic 3 pronged pitchfork. It had two thick branches on either side that arched upward into J shapes. Picture the Japanese martial arts weapon "sai" and imagine that as a gigantic tree.

Then I saw them.. Dangling menacingly from the hulking left branch. The chimes. There must be 12 of them.. 3ft long, each one tapered and came to a dagger point at the bottom. They were made from Industrial looking rusted metal and attached to the massive branch with an equally rusted metal chain. These are wind chimes you would expect to see in silent hill. The sound of them even more unnerving now. OK... I needed to research this cemetery.

I Pulled out my phone again. Two bars now.. I googled "friends cemetery" and immediately wished that I hadn't. Friends Cemetery is also known as "Spider Gates"(appropriate) Every result of the search was "Most haunted cemeteries in America, 8th gateway to hell, Satanic rituals, Hangings, dimensional portal." Not bullshitting you.. Google Spider Gates and see for yourself.

OOOkaaay.. Yeah.. I'm good with my little metal detecting adventure for today. It's quarter of three and it's going to get dark soon and I don't feel like spending anymore time in an actual urban legend.. I literally take one step away from the tree and the metal detector screeches to life.. The volume so extreme I thought it would burn out the little onboard speaker. Didn't I turn this thing off before I walked in here? I guess not.. I quickly flick the off switch and the ear piercing noise ceased. It's hard for me to describe my mindset in this moment because "I" don't even understand it. But, I HAD to see what was down there. It wasn't an option. I NEEDED to see.. A compulsion.

I get out the little shovel in the backpack and start digging as if I was going to find the cure for cancer down there. I get about 2 feet down before I hear the clank of the shovel hit something metallic. It was an ornate silver box buried vertically. Real solid actual silver. It was about 9 inches wide and 5 inches long. 4 inch depth. Heavy and thick, it felt too heavy for how small it was, felt like 20+ pounds. I managed to wrestle the thing out of the ground. The design of the box had silver flowers and trees all over it, like little sculptures. How did they make this? The top of the box had what I can only describe as something resembling a "comedy/tragedy" type mask. But the expression wasn't happy or sad it's mouth was just wide open. There was a latch on the front with no lock on it.

It was stuck shut. I couldn't open it with my hands. I looked into the back pack. Flathead screw driver, bingo! I wedge the screwdriver into a little gap in the box just barely wide enough to get the tip of the driver in, I took one of the rocks I dug up and use it like hammer on the back of the flathead. I twist the screw driver and it pops open. I couldn't fully open it all the way, but I didn't need to. The inside was completely lined with a maroon velvet. Inside it, old parchment papers rolled up like a scroll. It had a black ribbon in the center securing it. I slid the ribbon off and unrolled the papers..

What in the actual fuck am I looking at?.. Everything on it looked like it was written in blood. OLD blood.. That dark burgundy color like when you see a month old band-aid in the trash. There were symbols I have never seen in my life. English letters and numbers in it, but the words were not English. Some of it looked mathematical or related to geometry. Blood paintings of strange humanoid nightmare figures encircled by gibberish words. It was like a malevolent version of the Voynich Manuscript.

I got to the last piece of parchment. It was a sanguine illustration of the very tree I was standing in front of. A strange gibberish sentence at the bottom of the page: "Arten...


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23
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/CryptidCelts on 2024-11-24 20:24:06+00:00.


So there was this house, back in my old hometown. Run down, caked in dirt, rust, and usual grime. An abandoned craftsman style house, supposedly part of an old ranch that sat just outside town. No one remembers the owners, or even the name of the ranch it belonged to. The house was always covered in a thicket of decoration lights, webbed across every surface of the place like wild vines. It never mattered what time of day it was, the lights were always on; and so bright you could see the lights grazing the horizon of the sky as if it was fighting against the air, defending its right to exist.

We were only ever able to see it. Anyone that tried to go out and find it rarely found Success in their efforts. People would talk about a dirt road pasture, with trees flanking either side and always seemed to get incredibly dark the further along you went. Others said they would get close enough to see a fence, rusted wire strewn around a rotted wooden post every few dozen feet or so from the next. Just never the house itself. Only the now dim glow of artificial lights left as any sign that there was anything there to begin with. Somedays it wasn't even there, like it just got up and decided to not be there anymore. An active participant deciding who was allowed to see it.

Despite how small our town was, there was a considerable amount of kids that would go missing every few years or so. Coincidentally, people would notice small changes to the house around the same time new notices would be posted; it was usually small stuff. A new window, an extended deck, or even new lights. They never looked new though, always the same well worn look complete with dirt and all.

There was one year in particular, a friend of mine from middle school went missing. He was a bit of an oddball; would take any bet possible, Sean was his name. I remember there being another kid I wasn't a huge fan of, Dylan; kid was damn near obsessed with giving Sean the worst bets possible knowing he would guaranteed take them on. One of the worst ones being an incident where Sean was dared to jump off the roof of our school building. We didn't Have a tall building or anything, it's was just one of those one story places that spanned across with maze like halls and a small concrete courtyard. One side of the building dipped downwards, maybe a solid 45 degrees down and into a small grass field where the football players and coaches practiced and did morning workouts. At first everyone thought he had jumped right onto the concrete and just died on the spot, turns out he landed on his back on the top of the hill in the back, rolled the rest of the way down right into the middle of a game of flag football. He came out with a concussion, and a custodian actually ended up getting fired for leaving out the ladders while the roof was under maintenence. Overall a pretty bad day.

Sean came back to school eventually. And was right back to taking on dares. Dylan didn't let up one bit after the jumping debacle. Which leads into one of the more known disappearances around town. Usually it was something like, a kid running away from home, or a teen going off to elope with an out of towner. In Sean's case, everyone saw him go into the behind school when Dylan dropped a crisp 50 in front of him. And no one ever saw him come out.

A few months after Sean went missing his body was discovered at the edge of the same treeline he was last seen entering. I remember the screams of the other kids to this day, it was like hundreds of boiling kettles going off at once; the tea leaving a rancid stench of copper and dried out leather in the air. Sean was mutilated nearly beyond recognition, no one even knew it was him until they got dental records. His body had been stretched out and flattened, his chest was made square and stiff. Ribs bent backwards and folded out straight to either side; his arms tucked to the side, with each rib bone poking subtly into what should have been his biceps. The forearms pointed down to the earth below, hands bent backwards with the fingers coiled backwards like tiny snail shells. He was in a sitting position, thighs out in front of him and bent at the knee, his feet were bent in semi-circles, the splintered bones poking out the skin. He was reduced to a fucking chair. Furniture, an accent piece of what should have been a person.

No one wanted to ever say it out loud, but we all blamed the house. Even though he shouldnt have even been looking in the direction of its usual spot in those woods. A person couldnt have done what was done to poor Sean, and its not like we could even pin a person to begin with. The investigation went cold years ago with no suspects even being named. The House was the only one anyone in town could turn to for blame.

It appeared on the hill outside school after his body was found. Looking down on us all with a knowing and guilty bright gaze, taunting us.

I havent lived there in years, havent even thought about the house until recently. Not until the damned thing started showing up outside my city. It knew I was starting to finally forget, it knew I was moving on, and others were too. So it sits there; grabbing at my attention with its horrible lights; a gateway to hell waiting to ensnare my mind again. And its working. Because im going to burn it to the ground, find it and make sure nothing but a memory of its ashes remain. It wont have me, not like it had Sean, not like it had everyone else. I refuse to feel guilty for an outcome I never expected, I wont let it let me continue to dwell on that single stupid fucking dare I made as a kid. Ill make it up to Sean one way or another.

24
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/ArgiopeAurantia on 2024-11-25 00:44:11+00:00.


I've always been envious of other people's childhoods. The way they describe it, the country of the past was all golden sunlight and green fields and happy families and warm, safe blankets to curl up in. A longing sigh, the memory of starlight.

I didn't have that.

I don't remember much of my childhood. Only snatches of images here and there, burnt around the edges. The twist of a long, bitter night, November wind whistling through the cracks in my bedroom window as I shivered under a pile of dirty laundry. The whispering ghosts of bruises on my upper arms, my lower back, my pudgy little legs. The teeth in the memory of laughter which was never, ever mine. The whine of mosquitos and the squelch of mud as I weaved my way through the woods, sticking to the creek bottoms where no one ever came. It was safe there, among the sticker-bushes, the tight green tunnels with room only for an escaping rabbit or a small-bodied girl hiding from the big bad world that wanted to eat her.

Those are my happy memories. Among the biting insects and stinging nettles, I was safe. At least for a while.

I remember the day I first found the Hanged Man. I don't remember what I was running from, quite. It could've been anything. The world was full of things to run from, in those days. But I broke out of the drainage ditch I'd been following for what felt like miles into a space I'd never seen before. I stopped, shocked. I'd thought I knew these woods like the back of my hand, but this place was new.

I'd emerged into a tiny botanic cathedral, a dome of green vines split by golden pillars of light that filtered down through the canopy far above. A silver filigree of spiderwebs scrolled between brambles, ornamented with glorious gold and green garden spiders like jewels, bigger than any I'd ever seen before. I was familiar with spiders. I was friends with the ones who lived in the crawl space under my house. They listened to my whispers with silent sympathy, carrying on their incomprehensible arachnid missions in reassuring peace. I'd never found them threatening. But I'd never understood how beautiful they could be, either, until I saw them in the diffuse, watery light of this new place.

The floor of the chamber of vines was the bed of a stream, several drainage ditches flowing together. At this time of year it was mostly dry, puddles of standing water swimming with larvae and water striders and crayfish, but with plenty of large, flat rocks to skip between so my sneakers didn't get even muddier. It was dim in here, under the creepers, and I poked around the edges of the chamber first, in awe of the newts and jeweled beetles that skittered in the near-darkness. Maybe that's why it took me so long, on that first day, to notice Him.

I don't know why I decided that the Hanged Man was a Him, but the moment I saw it it seemed obvious. At the very center of the dome of vines, high above my tiny head, hung a lump of wood, entangled in a nest of creepers. It didn't look at all like a man dangling upside down, but my child's mind painted the picture, and it was immediately permanent, undeniable, and irrevocably named. I had found the Grotto of the Hanged Man.

I stayed for hours, that first day, until it was too dark to make out the print of the book I'd brought with me in my flight after school. As I wormed my way out through the tunnel I thought would lead me most quickly to my house, I hoped I'd be able to find it again.

I did. Nearly every day of that long, dark September I squirmed through the mud back to my chamber of safety and stayed until the light above went out. The spiders thickened and then disappeared one by one, until, by October, the place was bejeweled only by the changing leaves, and I brought an old blanket full of holes to wrap up in. And the whole time I talked to Him, to the Hanged Man, who ruled this place as surely as I came in supplication to it.

The drainage-ditch cathedral became my temple, my confessional. I would talk to the Hanged Man about my troubles at home, the children at school who pulled my tangled hair and laughed at my dirty clothes. And he would listen, I was convinced of it. Not like the spiders under the house, now mostly neglected except for the really bad nights, who didn't object when I talked to them as they wrapped up their prey, but weren't really paying attention. No, the Hanged Man truly heard me. He stored my words up in the rotting wood of his heart, and I poured them into him like the lonely child that I was. The Hanged Man couldn't speak back, of course. But sometimes, when the wind sighed cold through the brambles, I almost heard him.

It was only two months. But when you're seven years old, two months is so much of a lifetime that it seems endless. When you're seven years old, two months is such a big slice of everything you've ever been that it might as well be the whole cake. Two months is an eternity. When you're seven years old, two months can be a lifetime.

It was a lifetime with the Hanged Man before I thought to ask him for anything. I could consider regretting at this point the fact that I ever did, but I know it was inevitable. Those in need, no matter how battered, eventually figure out that it doesn't hurt as much to ask for help as it does to keep muddling on without it.

Unless, of course, the wish is granted. And that teaches a different lesson entirely.

I was bleeding, that day. I remember that. I think it was a split lip and a burning scalp, though all these years later I can't be sure. There were many small wounds, in those days. But this time I couldn't hold back the tears. This time I couldn't escape into a fairy tale. This time, I had to make my own.

So I cried, flat out. I told the Hanged Man what had happened. I sobbed, I nearly shrieked, and I begged him for help. Save me, I must have said, or something like it. Please help me. Please don't let this happen again.

I didn't think to place limitations. I didn't think to ask the Hanged Man for some things, but not everything. Not absolutely anything He decided to do. And even now, if I could go back and change it all, I'm not sure whether I would.

I fell asleep in the grotto that night, eyes aching, breath raw. I'm not sure when I awoke, but I know only blackness met my eyes when I opened them. No moonlight, no starlight. It was the darkness of a sinkhole, of the deep places under the earth where sunlight never comes. And before I turned, shaking, and felt my way along the black passage out to the real world I'd run from, I heard the chill wind whisper, from a thousand directions, in one voice:

Yes.

I picked my way through the woods, blind, until the sun peeped above the horizon. I was utterly, utterly lost, and I don't remember much about the morning until I found a road and a man in a car found me, tattered blanket around my shoulders, all out of tears and words. He took me to a police station, and they took me to the smoking ruins of the house I'd lived in all my life. And all they found were bodies.

Later, it was assumed I'd run from the flames and injured myself in my frantic flight. Later, it was assumed that a small child couldn't have caused the fire that started when the old, neglected stove shot a spark that ignited the tilting wooden house. Later, I mourned the poor spiders in the crawl space.

That morning, as the sunlight filtered golden and watery through the windows of the police station, I knew only that the Hanged Man had listened to my plea.

It did get better, though not much better. But when you're seven years old and all you've known is pain, any little thing can be enormous, can be everything. I cried myself dry a hundred times in my new, slightly-improved, home before I managed to escape and find my old familiar grotto again.

It was spring, by then, and the water was higher. My new sneakers splashed in the cold, clear water of ice-melt as I explored the room. I was slightly bigger, it was slightly smaller. But it was the same vegetable cathedral. Twisted and brown with the quickening of the year, not flowing and green with the end of summer, but very much the same place. It was only that the Hanged Man had gone.

A few vines swung from the roof, empty. But the hunk of wood that I'd poured my soul into was simply gone. I looked around the floor of the space, but I knew I wouldn't find Him. The Hanged Man had answered me, and the Hanged Man had gone.

I've grown a life since then. It's not a very good one. Maybe it never could've been. Maybe the curse placed on me when I was young was inescapable, no matter what happened. Maybe this is the best it ever could've been.

Or maybe it could've been better. Maybe, if I were older at the time, I could've phrased my wish more consciously. Maybe the Hanged Man could've granted me something else. Maybe I'd be a princess, now, in a castle. But I doubt it.

After all these years, after all this education, I still believe that the Hanged Man was real. I still believe he heard me and did everything a lonely forest spirit could to save me. And maybe that was the only wish I'll ever get.

I touch my scars, sometimes. I trace the spaces where the bruises used to be with soft fingers, and I remember. And I'm grateful that I found that space, that dim place in the woods. And I wonder what happened to the Hanged Man. I wonder what he was, to grant the deepest wish of a lonely, battered child who had no one else to run to.

I wonder ...


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25
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/nosleep by /u/BadandyTheRed on 2024-11-25 00:31:06+00:00.


I don't know how much longer I will have the stomach for this job. Sure the pay is good, but I find myself more and more troubled by the things I have to collect and the people who I have to interact with. It seemed like a great gig at first but the more I have been at it, the more my concerns mount. I will tell you about some of the encounters I have had as a debt collector, for some, well let's just say strange things.

Oh and if Mr. Salazar asks you about this, just pretend you never saw it. Anyway the first job I took that got me thinking about my reservations for this line of work was just the other day.

I had arrived at the location and parked my car outside the house of another target. A bit further down the road to not attract too much attention. I thought he would be home at this point and I had to make sure I was ready. I looked at the collection notice and almost did a double take. It was another weird one, though I suppose they have all been weird so far. I looked at the list to double check and sure enough it read just the way I thought I saw it.

“One teardrop from a shattered dream.”

The item seems very specific and if I had not been doing this for a few weeks now I might not have known what Mr. Salazar wanted. I read more of the writ of collection on the man I was to extract the item from. I sighed when I saw it was another poor and desperate soul who had made a “Deal with the devil” and lived to regret it. I winced at my own analogy and considered how on point it really was. Something was very off about Mr. Salazar, but he always paid well and I was not going to start reexamining his motives now, not when there was a job to do.

I got out of my car and grabbed my toolkit and walked towards the house. The light was on inside and there was a glimmer of lights and motion in the living room. Likely watching TV or something, I figured. That would make this easier, it would be nice if I could catch them off guard so a fight would not be necessary. I looked left and right to make sure no one saw me lingering on his porch and I pulled out the skeleton key and inserted it into the door. It slowly opened on loud hinges and I winced at the sound. I hoped he had not heard it.

I stepped in and carefully tried to close the door behind me. I paused and thought I heard motion in the living room but it subsides. He might just be shifting in a chair or something. I walked slowly to the living room and sure enough there he was.

Scott Bergman, client of Mr. Salazar and delinquent on an outstanding debt. It never seems to have actual monetary values printed on these collection writs. Only the name, the failure to pay and the strange item that is to be collected.

I took a breath and reached into my coat pocket to produce my Beretta. It might be overkill in this situation but a lot of the people I have visited so far have had firearms of their own and I have been shot at enough in the last few weeks to not take any chances.

I stepped into the living room and my footsteps are masked by the loud volume of the TV showing some college football game. As the sound dies down after a big play on screen, I clear my throat loudly and say,

“Hello Mr. Bergman, who is winning?”

He whipped around to see who was in his house and nearly fell out of his chair. I thought he was about to reach for something when I stepped forward to ensure the sight of my pistol was fully visible. He froze and I took a step and requested that he,

“Please sit down, I am just here to talk for a bit and inquire about what is owed.” He sat back down and glared at me, unsure of what to say and knowing that he was in a bad spot.

Despite the threat I had no intention of shooting him unless he gave me a reason, I was here to collect what Mr. Salazar wanted and it would require a conversation. He finally decided to speak and nervously said,

“Okay, okay. I know what Mr. Salazar said but I just needed more time. I can’t go yet I needed to see her one more time.” I tried to determine what he meant and found myself wishing I knew a bit more about these bizarre deals that Mr. Salazar struck with these people. Though I thought about some of the things I had seen so far and reconsidered wishing to know too much. I needed to find out more about who I was dealing with.

“What sort of work are you in Mr. Bergman? Or Scott, may I call you Scott?”

He nodded his head without responding directly as if he was considering if he should really talk about his work but he looked down at the gun pointing his way and managed a weak,

“Construction, I am in construction.”

I nodded my own head and responded, while looking around his living room to see rows of old high school football trophies.

“Construction, eh? Well, that is a nice honest profession, makes me wonder how you got roped into dealing with Mr. Salazar. No wait, please, don’t tell me I really do not need to know. Though from the looks of things it was not your first career choice.” I told him, while gesturing to the football trophies.

He looked over at them and back at me and did not respond. He was being a bit tight lipped and it was making this harder than it needed to be, to get what I came for. I kept the gun trained on him and set my case down on the ground and reached for the tuner. The tuner was what I called the strange oblong crystal that Mr. Salazar gave me. I did not like to use it every time since it gave me a killer headache afterwards, but I was breaking and entering and did not want to linger here for too long in case someone saw me here and things got messy. I rolled the thing over in my hands and stared intently at the center. Then I threw the tuner to Mr. Bergman and he caught it without thinking about it.

“Good catch, you did play college ball, didn't you?” I told him as I saw the refracting light washing over his face in the hypnotic pattern it always did. Scott Bergman was dead to the outside world for the moment and as he stared dumbly into the crystal. I took it back from him and braced myself as I stared into the object and felt my spatial awareness altering. I saw training, drills, formations and calling plays. Throwing, catching, running and everything over and over again. This guy had been a quarterback.

I continued looking on and saw a pretty girl. He spoke to her at lunch, he walked her home almost every day, they shared a kiss under the high school bleachers. Her name was Clair and Scott thought that he loved her. He wanted to be with her but he had to move away. He had to go, to make his dreams of going pro come true. I felt the guilt emanating from the decision. I saw the tears, the heartfelt appeal and the breakup. Then I saw the injury, followed by depression, then academic failure. The lost hope of what he wanted most in life and I knew I had what I had come for.

I felt bad forcing this man to relive those painful moments, but I tried to steel myself against it. I knew some of his story but not all of it. I am sure if I looked deeper, I would see something less appealing and sympathetic. At least that is what I always told myself.

I covered the crystal and snapped my fingers and Scott came back to his senses. He cried out and then remembered where he was and put his hands up before getting out of his chair. He asked again,

“Please, what do you want? I have nothing left to give. Just tell Salazar I can find a way to repay him without going. Please?” I braced myself for the worst part and spoke again.

“Now Scott I want to believe you, but I know you. I know you are lying to me and to yourself. Just like you did when you said that you would let her go and find her again when you were an NFL star. That is what you told Clair, wasn't it?”

His eyes widened and I could tell he could not believe I had known that. I saw a flare of anger cross his features and I cocked the hammer on the Beretta to cool things down and keep him from making any dumb decisions. Before he could respond with the inevitable, “How did you know?” I cut him off and spoke first.

“You said it would be worth it; you told her you had to try and follow your dream. Your dream was to be a star, Her's was just to be with you. You have achieved something impressive. Most people can only shatter their own dreams but you managed to destroy two for the price of one. Every day you think to yourself, what if? What if I had just stayed? Would she still be here? Well, no one can really know the answer but you wanted to know, you wanted to see. Now there is a price to be paid.”

I saw tears welling in his eyes and the pain underneath was difficult to look at. I found myself wishing I was just here to break his legs and take his wallet. Breaking a spirit is so much worse. I stepped forward and he flinched back but I grabbed his head and put a small vial up to his right eye and collected the teardrop from the painful reminiscence of a mans shattered dream. I stepped back and the man broke down and wept openly.

He continued crying softly and apologizing to the memory of his lost love even as I turned and left the house. His tortured mind too preoccupied with the past to even regard my own departure. I closed the door and walked back to my car clutching my head in pain. That damn thing always gave me the worst headaches. I tried to focus on my own discomfort to not think about what I made that man go through. I had no idea what Mr. Salazar would do with this grim trophy but after this one I felt worse than I normally did.

I tried to banish the guilt and drove away from the house and towards my employer. At least someone would be happy today.

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