Camp Monsters - Creature at Owl Creek
Episode Date: September 16, 2020You've probably heard the fairy tale about the troll under the bridge, but have you heard of the creature at Owl Creek? This monster is rumored to haunt an abandoned train track in the Kentucky wilder...ness. Series sponsor:YetiArtwork by Tyler Grobowsky.Â
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Pope Lick Creek.
That's a funny name for a creek.
Well, not much of a creek, either.
It only runs for a few miles, south of Louisville, Kentucky.
And just before the little creek empties into Floyd's Fork, it's crossed by an old, high, single-track railroad trestle. People call it the Pope
Lick Trestle. Funny name for a trestle. But than the name there's nothing funny about it
there's something deadly up on the Pope Lick trestle it has a call that will
shake you to your core and if you're on the trestle when you see it it's already
too late to run this isn't a a legend, though, and it has nothing
to do with the supernatural. The Pope-licked trestle is a deadly place, because visitors
don't realize that it still carries a busy freight line. The stories people tell about
some kind of goat-man creature haunting the bridge will be the least of your worries.
When a fully loaded freight train is barreling down at you on a high trestle just barely wide enough for the track,
its headlight blinding you and the sound of its desperate horn reverberating in your chest.
At least once every few years somebody gets
caught by a train on that trestle and killed out there looking for the Pope
Lick monster. But there is no monster at Pope Lick. There never was. That story
originated somewhere entirely different. A much more remote place,
about 80 miles to the east. We're going to tell the original story. A story that starts
on a little railroad bridge that really is abandoned. It's a lonely little bridge and I hope I hope once you hear this
story that you'll leave it lonely there's nothing that you'd want to see
there no earthly reason to go and nothing good has ever come of the place
we'll tell this tale as a warning, then. A warning about the rare sort of spot
that can fill even a bright, hot, sunny day
with the chill of something old and dark
and evil.
This is the Camp Monsters Podcast.
The wild places of this country are haunted by mysterious creatures.
Creatures you might only have heard whispers of.
Every week we'll amplify those whispers, tell old tales, relate recent encounters,
and share all the strange stories that you ought to know about the wilderness you love to visit.
These are just stories, of course.
They are based on things people claim to have seen and heard and felt, but then witnesses can be mistaken.
Listen to these stories and decide for yourself.
They couldn't be true, could they?
I know one thing that is true.
Kentucky is the prettiest place you probably never planned to visit.
Aren't you glad we did?
Just look at the night we found here.
Bright stars smiling down.
Familiar faces around the campfire.
The feel of the big Kentucky River down there through the trees. It's almost too warm for this little fire. Fall is still just a rumor you might only feel in a
breeze right before dawn. I'll bet tomorrow is gonna be another bright, hot,
lazy day. There's a story they tell around here that begins and ends on a bright hot day
with the heat of a late summer noon running right through it.
Well maybe the story would be more frightening if it happened at night but I don't think so.
There are places that have a sort of darkness built into them.
Such places are rare and rarely found where you'd expect.
But when you stumble on one,
in some lonely spot in the middle of an otherwise pleasant day,
you know it.
You feel it.
And you leave that place as quickly as you can.
If you can.
There's a railroad bridge just south of here.
They call it the Owl Creek Bridge, although it doesn't cross Owl Creek.
It crosses the Kentucky River, just upstream from where Owl Creek empties into it.
It's an old, old bridge with a tunnel at one end, abandoned for nobody remembers how long.
It's one of those places, one of those places that always seemed to have shadows around it
In fact, the shadows around Owl Creek were cast long before the bridge was ever built
Back before the dams raised the river level
There was a ford on the river there
The easiest place to cross for miles around
But for some reason people preferred to go out of their
way to Clay's Ferry or risk the high water at Moonsboro. There was something about the
thick undergrowth that grew around that Owl Creek ford. Seemed to be something lurking
in the greenish light that filtered through the leaves. Some people said it was
an old hermit who had sold his soul to the devil and become half-devil himself. In the
1840s, a young doctor, with some education, taking the lonely ford as a shortcut between
house calls, wrote that he was convinced the place was haunted by
a satyr, a nasty old goat man nature spirit out of Greek myth. Other folks insisted it
was just an ornery old billy goat whose bleat happened to sound like an old man's laugh,
but those same people would admit they'd never really seen the goat plainly, and that they didn't
like to use that for themselves.
Never alone.
When the railroad came in 1907, they didn't listen to any local stories about a snickering
goat man lurking in the underbrush.
They just saw an easy river crossing on the map.
They cleared the brush, blasted a tunnel through the far bank, and built a bridge across the
river there, right where the ford was.
There were so many problems building that bridge, and so many accidents and derailments
once it opened.
Within a few years, the railroad went to the trouble and expense
of blasting another tunnel and building another bridge just a bit further south.
They transferred the main line down there.
The old Owl Creek Bridge was left to stain the rain with its rust
and collect strange stories.
Places that collect strange stories have an attraction to some people.
It was in late summer some years ago when two kids went out to the bridge.
If you're young, or if you've ever been young, you remember what late summer is like.
The days so long and hot when you've done all the good, fun things twelve times already.
Some kids just sigh and try the good, fun things for a thirteenth time, but other kids look for fun that isn't quite so good.
DJ and Reggie were good kids gone bored.
They'd never been out to Owl Creek Bridge,
and it had seemed like an exciting way to spend an afternoon,
or at least kill some of the summer monotony.
But now that they were here,
standing at the mouth of the old tunnel,
DJ cracked an uneasy smile.
A breath of cool damp from the darkness chilled the sweat on his arms.
A steady stream of talk that Reggie had kept up as they pushed through the bushes died away, and here at the entrance to the tunnel they both
waited for the other to start forward.
It isn't a long tunnel.
They could see the sunny green of leaves on the other side, but between here and there
was blackness with no bottom.
It was such a bright day it seemed the sun should shine a little further along
the tunnel than it did, but it didn't. The little they could see of the floor was lumped
with debris from small cave-ins of the fragile limestone roof and walls. Not a safe place
to be.
Wasn't that the point? After all, they were going to an abandoned railroad bridge in search of a monster.
DJ looked at Reggie and tried to widen his smile,
and stepped off into the darkness.
The tunnel echoed footsteps and breathing.
Water was trickling somewhere. For three quarters of
the way through the darkness, things were all right. They tripped and slid on the uneven
floor and bumped into each other, stifled nervous laughter and tried not to touch the
walls for fear of bringing down more rocks. But just as DJ quickened his pace
to reach the first light from the other side, he heard a voice close at his ear.
Shh! He looked over and thought he saw Reggie standing there, but the blackness was so complete that as his eyes moved, the silhouette that he thought he saw beside him moved as well.
He reached out where he expected Reggie to be and found nothing.
Then again he heard a voice like Reggie's.
What was that?
DJ wasted his most uneasy smile yet on the darkness.
He wasn't going to fall for some spooky kid trick.
He squinted at where he thought Reggie must be and said,
Nah, come on.
Shh, the voice said again.
DJ waited for Reggie to go on,
to start telling the tale of the creature at Owl Creek Bridge or something.
But as his eyes swirled with shapes in the darkness,
his ears heard only that faint trickle of water
and the sound of breathing that must be the echoes of their own.
He felt his skin start to crawl, his mouth start to dry.
Fear started to creep through his defenses.
Before I could reach his voice, he scoffed and said,
whatever, and stumbled toward the light fully prepared
for Reggie to jump on him out of the darkness DJ heard running footsteps
approaching from behind echoing he braced himself for the impact for the
scare but it never came.
Reggie sprinted past him in silence,
not even looking at him,
running as fast as he could run over the uneven floor,
faster than seemed possible without tripping and sprawling on the sharp limestone.
It was the most frightening thing Reggie could have done.
And now, in the echoes of the tunnel, there seemed to sound another
set of footsteps, racing up on DJ from out of the blackness behind him, and without thinking
or uttering a sound, he found himself sprinting to catch up with Reggie, sprinting faster
than he thought he could go without tripping, and as DJ flew through the air and scraped to a stop through the dust and jagged rocks outside the tunnel,
he turned his body to face the echoes of the footsteps that were chasing him.
He swung his eyes up to see...
nothing.
Darkness.
Darkness down the length of the tunnel to the green light where they'd come from.
Silence. None of the echo of the tunnel to the green light where they'd come from. Silence.
None of the echo of his own footsteps had faded.
He sat and stared down that tunnel for a long time,
craning his neck this way and that to sweep the light from the far end
across the shadows that filled the
tunnel straining his ears for any sound other than that faint drip of water he rubbed his knees and
elbows and the side of his chin where the rocks had skinned him when he fell once the fear had
subsided enough for him to look away from the tunnel, he glanced around to see where Reggie was.
Reggie was nowhere.
The brush on this side of the tunnel was thick.
Bushes growing on the old rail grade up to the mouth of the tunnel and little trees crowding in on either side.
The light through the leaves was green and the air was tremendously hot and still.
The insects sang out of sight.
Reg! DJ called. No answer. No movement.
Some of the closest insects quieted for a moment then started their songs again.
Reg! Nothing.
It's terrible to be stuck on the wrong side of a prank. If DJ went back into the tunnel
Reg would scare him in there again, plus tell everyone he'd turned and run away from the bridge.
If he started out onto the bridge alone
well, that was obviously what Reggie
wanted him to do. But if this was the game Reggie wanted to play, DJ was forming a plan
of his own to play it. There was a little trail, probably made by animals, that slipped
down the slope of Ballast, the little rocks that made up the rail bed,
right where the bridge met the hillside.
DJ followed it down the side of the bridge,
then ducked under the big steel plate and paused,
letting his eyes adjust to the shadows under the bridge.
The space was perfect for the plan he had in mind.
He moved a little further in, to where he could see up through the ties and reach to grab a leg when Reggie got tired of waiting,
wandered out onto the bridge himself.
DJ stood there,
his nose filled with the smell of hot creosote from the old rail ties baking in the sun. He kept brushing his hands against his arms to combat that tickle of imaginary cobwebs that you get in dusty, still places.
He glanced down the hill behind him, half expecting to see Reggie slip under the bridge, too.
These glances grew more and more frequent as that feeling crept up on him.
That feeling you get when you sense someone sneaking toward you.
You're never sure what it is that tips you off, what triggers that primeval warning,
but have you ever noticed how often that feeling is right?
All at once, DJ knew where that feeling was coming from.
He hadn't noticed it at first, but as his eyes adjusted to the dimness,
he saw that there was another, deeper darkness further under the bridge,
beyond where the ties that the light through from above the
earth leveled out and continued back into where the bridge met the hillside
creating a dark little chamber and DJ knew just knew that Reggie was in there
hiding waiting to hear DJ start walking across the bridge above so he could sneak out and scare him.
Well, well.
Shh, silently now.
DJ eased slowly against one of the bridge piers that framed the blackness within the chamber.
His heart was pounding like he was the one about to be scared,
rather than the one who
was going to do the scaring.
He tensed his body, leaning against the pillar at the side of the opening, and for a moment
he had the crazy feeling that Reggie or something was going to jump out right now, just before
he jumped in.
DJ jumped into the dark gap and staggered forward, reaching out, ready to throw his
arms around the shouting Reggie and yell and laugh and push him over and feel the tension
go.
But Reggie wasn't there. And the dark little space was not quite empty.
There was a smell.
Something was in there, or something had been there,
had been crouching in that darkness, living there,
in its own dark thick smell there were sticks brush little branches that dj stumbled on
not fresh but not old crushed slept on it was a den of some kind some animal some creature
and he couldn't see the walls he couldn't see how far back it went or what was in there with him until they sensed movement.
He turned to run, blindly, but then, then, right in front of his face was another face.
A hideous, twisted face snuck up on him, pressing forward, pushing him back into the dark den.
The face was screwed up into an unnatural smile, and just as the shock wore off enough for DJ to realize that the face belonged to Reggie,
the mouth split open and uttered a loud laugh that didn't sound like Reggie at all.
Ha! a loud laugh that didn't sound like Reggie at all.
Ha!
And then Reggie pushed DJ back into the darkness.
DJ tripped on the sticks and brush and fell into the middle of them.
That thick, sour animal smell rose up from the nest as he landed on it. He could feel little things scurry and scuttle away beneath him as he rolled and struggled, trying to scramble to his feet.
The sticks and brush felt slimy under him at first, but as he rose and pulled his hands away,
strands of slick hair came up with him and he recognized the den wasn't covered in slime but
matted and greasy wispy long pale gray hairs he shouted and recoiled crawled and ran out of the
place reggie was nowhere to be seen as dj scrambled out from under the bridge and ran back up onto the rail bed, shaking his hands and trembling in his whole body.
He trembled in fear and rage, but when he saw Reggie running out across the old bridge, rage got the upper hand.
He followed, as fast as all the adrenaline in his body could hurl him.
It would have been very wise for Reggie to keep running.
DJ was expecting that.
He couldn't wait to catch him, to grab Reggie by his collar from behind, pull him back and down and feel him twist and tumble, then pay him back good.
So when Reggie stopped,
right in the middle of the bridge,
and stepped calmly over to the edge,
looking out over the river below,
DJ wasn't quite sure what to do.
It'd be cowardly to shove him off.
He wanted to fight him,
but not out here in the middle of this bridge.
DJ stopped and shouted, Hey! And waited for Reggie to turn around. And then Reggie did turn around. But when he did, DJ didn't want to fight him anymore.
That smile was still on Reggie's face.
That smile so big and tight that it looked painful, almost hiding eyes that didn't seem
to hold any Reggie in them at all.
Something was wrong. For the first time, DJ felt not startled as he had in the tunnel,
or scared and disgusted like under the bridge, but a deep, creeping, insensible fear. The
need to leave, to be gone, to disappear from this place at any cost.
To get away not from his friend Reggie, but from whatever had happened to Reggie.
To get away before it happened to him, too.
Reggie stepped forward menacingly, and DJ took a quick step back and tripped over one of the old rail spikes
he stumbled back a few steps and fell
smacking his head hard against a steel girder
at the other edge of the bridge
there was a tremendous flash of light
and a sound like a bell exploding
when the world slowly came back into focus
DJ was staring up at the
sky. Steel trusses were holding the sky up and they were rusty. DJ was worried the whole
thing might collapse. The sun was in full eclipse. No. No, now he remembered. He was
on a bridge. On the old Owl Creek bridge. And there was
something here he had to get away from. Why was he lying down? And what was that blocking
the sun? Not one of the rusty steel trusses, but sticking out. Like the head of someone
standing on the old structure above them looking down.
A shaggy head with long gray hairs haloing the sun.
Just then the head moved and the face snapped into DJ's focus.
A leering, twisted, grinning face with square yellow teeth too large for a man's. The face seemed to be laughing maliciously at him, but DJ couldn't hear the sound. And then there was another face in
front of that hideous one. It was Reggie's face, twisted into an empty grinning mask
mirroring the face above. DJ's mind wasn't clear.
His neck was wedged up against a rusted beam awkwardly, vulnerably.
Reggie's foot came up and hovered for a moment over DJ's face.
DJ looked into Reggie's vacant eyes and knew Reggie wasn't in control of what he was about to do.
DJ was helpless. The only thing he could think of was point up at the face on top of the truss behind Reggie's shoulder and shout,
Look!
Reggie stopped, and there was a flicker behind the slits of his eyes.
Then he slowly turned and looked.
And when his eyes met those of the creature,
DJ heard two sounds,
suddenly and incredibly loud.
Screams of his friend,
Reggie, and the vicious
laughter of the creature above.
In the next
instant, Reggie leapt,
clear over DJ and off the bridge,
and the creature's
laughter became so loud in DJ's head that he pulled himself onto his knees and clutched
his hands over his ears.
But this did nothing.
If anything, the laughter became louder.
So DJ threw himself sideways and tumbled off the bridge himself.
It's a long fall off the Owl Creek Bridge into the Kentucky River below.
Long enough to make your whole body burn where it smacks the surface of the water.
Long enough to send you deep enough that you wonder if you'll ever come up again.
But then you do, and you're floating, and you're all right. Now the boys lost their shoes to the river and let themselves go away downstream a while before they swam to the far shore. They pulled themselves out
onto the bank and sat there, wet, panting in the sun, looking at each other then Reggie said what
happened he didn't remember anything after the tunnel and DJ just shook his
head once they dried out a bit the two climbed through the woods and made their
way back to town Reggie started rattling on,
chatting just like he always did, talking about the heat stroke that he figured he must have got
on the way to the bridge and bugging DJ about how they ended up in the river with their clothes on.
Once they made it to the road and started walking along with the cars whizzing by and the sun streaming down,
everything that had happened at the bridge began to seem more and more unreal.
Incredible.
DJ was beginning to wonder if he'd been the one with the heat stroke.
Maybe he dreamed the whole thing when Reggie reached over and plucked at the back of DJ's shirt.
Whoa, who have you been hanging out with?
Reggie leered, holding up a couple strands of long, pale gray, greasy looking hair.
Maybe tomorrow we'll rent some kayaks and go out on the river.
It's a beautiful stretch along here.
We'll see birds and snapping turtles.
If we want to paddle upstream a bit
past the old power station,
we'll go under a rusted old railroad bridge
right there by Owl Creek.
You can't see the mouth of the tunnel from the river.
It's all overgrown, but I
wouldn't recommend getting out to explore. Kentucky may be the prettiest place you've
never planned to visit, but now that we're here, there are still a few spots that you
shouldn't want to go to. There are places under the trees that stay pretty dark.
Even on the brightest summer day.
Well, here's a bucket.
We better put the last of these coals out.
Would you mind heading down to the river?
Hmm?
Oh, sure. Sure. Well, I'll go if you go.
Camp Monsters is part of the REI Podcast Network. And if you've been warmed by our campfire,
please take a second to rate, review, comment, and share.
It really is you spreading the word that keeps us recording.
Thank you.
Next week, we'll pull to the side of a midnight highway in Arizona,
along the rim of the Mugion Plateau,
where the nights get so dark the stars cast shadows.
We'll stop to look at those stars, though we should have been watching the shadows.
Camp Monsters is recorded around a digital campfire in the overcast room of Cloud Studios in Seattle, Washington.
Find them at cloudstudiosseattle.com.
The campfire was lit and is guarded by our very own legendary creature, our producer, Chelsea Davis.
All the sparks of audio magic are stirred up by our engineer, Nick Patry. Thank you. Thanks for coming. See you next week.
This season of Camp Monsters is brought to you by Yeti.
In addition to their incredibly strong coolers,
Yeti also makes a line of versatile, durable, fully submersible dry bags.
It's a handy thing to have when you're rafting or fishing or, you know, when an evil
goatman chases you into a raging river.