Camp Monsters - The Top Bunk
Episode Date: August 10, 2022You arrive late to camp and get placed in a room with a single bunkbed all by yourself. The idea of having your own space sounds nice, until you realize you’re not alone... and someone or something ...is occupying the top bunk…Welcome to Camp Monsters Summer Camp. Over the past few seasons of the show, we’ve gotten tons of suggestions on the monsters we should cover. We noticed that a lot of these take place at a summer camp. So we’ve collected the best of the stories you’ve sent — and researched a few of our own — to create our first series of legendary summer camp creatures. Hopefully you can take these episodes with you to summer camp, or let them take you back to when you were a camper, scared of what might be lurking outside of your cabin.This year’s sponsor is YETI. Check out all of their amazing gear in store or at REI.com. Pack it up - Shop YETI Camp CoolersDrink it in - Shop YETI Drinkware
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This is an REI Co-op Studios production.
You gasp awake.
It's hot and stuffy, and for a moment you can't remember where you are.
Oh yes, the lower bunk at camp.
Dim light from the window throws shadows and outlines around.
Your roommate shifts and groans in their sleep in the bunk above you.
You wonder what time it is, what could have wakened you, And then you stop. Hold your breath.
And listen.
Listen as intently as you can.
And you hear it.
Just audible above the pounding of your heart.
Gentle breathing from the bunk above. Your mouth goes dry and there's
a chill in your limbs in spite of the heat because you know, you're certain that you're
alone in this room. You were alone when you locked the noisy bolt on the heavy door. You
were alone when you climbed into your bunk and went to sleep. No one could have come in without waking
you. You're sure of it. So who or what is breathing in the top bunk. Then something moves up there.
And keeps moving.
Like it's sitting up.
Like it's...
Like it's climbing down.
This is the Camp Monsters Podcast.
Welcome to our last campfire of the summer.
But this isn't goodbye.
We'll be back in early September with another eight weekly episodes.
Eight more stories of mysterious creatures from around the country.
There's the lizard man that haunts a Carolina swamp.
The smelly ape loose along the Gulf Coast.
There's a giant ghost hog in Arkansas.
And a whole gang of strange apparitions on a narrow forest road in Connecticut.
I hope you'll subscribe, if you haven't already, and join us for these and more great stories.
But tonight, tonight we're here around the fire at summer camp, one more time.
The last day of camp is always a tough one.
It's hard to say goodbye to the friends you've made.
But it's also nice to look back and reminisce about a summer well spent.
Relive a few of the funny adventures you got into and maybe maybe wonder about
some of those camp experiences that
aren't quite as easy to explain.
Like your very first night in camp.
The night your roommate disappeared.
Well, I guess
I guess...
I guess disappeared isn't quite the right word, but...
You were late.
Getting to camp. Very late.
It was night by the time you arrived.
Everyone else was in bed.
The sleepy-faced counselor on duty managed to find your welcome packet,
then walked you halfway across the campus of the small college that hosted this summer camp,
and pointed out the ugly concrete dormitory where you were supposed to sleep.
Supposed to.
Room 318.
You'll never forget that number now.
You'll never be able to.
But when you arrived outside it that first night,
you had to double-check your packet to make sure that door was yours.
It was identical to all the others on that long, drab, echoing hallway,
aside from the number stenciled on it.
318.
It was yours.
In the brief fan of light as you opened the door, you saw a narrow little dorm room like any other.
A pair of bunks on one wall, with the top of a tousled head peeking toward you from the sheets in the top bunk, a pair of desks on the other wall, and the narrow gap between beds and desks
ended in the room's only window. You entered, and eased the door behind you closed as softly as you could, which turned out to be almost as quiet
as a car crash.
You whispered an apology in response to the low moan and shifting that came from the top
bunk.
You fumbled around, getting ready for bed in the dark, managing not to elicit any more
sounds from your roommate.
Before you climbed into the lower bunk, you opened the window as far as any dorm window managing not to elicit any more sounds from your roommate.
Before you climbed into the lower bunk, you opened the window as far as any dorm window
will go, which isn't far, because the room seemed a little stuffy.
Then you lay down and let sleep smother the end of your long, busy day.
Which, as it turned out,
wasn't quite over yet.
Because some time later,
you had no idea how long you were awoken by an incredible sound.
So loud it seemed like the whole building must be collapsing.
In fact, you felt the bunk bed lurch as you struggled back to sudden consciousness.
But with that cool awareness sometimes maintained in sleep,
your waking mind knew exactly what had happened.
Your roommate had fallen, or, well,
had thrown himself out of the top bunk with so much force
that he'd slammed into one of the desks across the way.
You were only beginning to process this information
when more kept pouring in through the limited senses that the darkness afforded.
You heard the retching, gasping sound of someone with a wind knocked out of them,
strangely underlain by the scrambling patter of bare feet running across the tile floor.
Then the heavy front door was thrown open with such force that it rebounded off the wall with a sound like a cannon.
And the footsteps again.
Running.
Sprinting at a killing pace, receding down the hall until another door slammed open somewhere and then closed,
and quiet returned.
You were sweating.
Not from fear, though.
That would come later.
No, it was just that the room was stifling, sickly hot.
You slid out from under your damp sheets and stood up,
glancing as you did into the top bunk and the light that poured in from the door your roommate had left wide open.
Either your roommate had been sweating even more heavily than you, or...
For once, you were glad of these thick, rubberized dorm mattresses.
No wonder he was in such a hurry.
It looked like he'd been late for the bathroom.
Why would someone with that situation pick the top bunk?
Panting in the sweltering air, you stepped to the window.
Hard to imagine why your roommate would have closed it in this heat, but it was shut tight.
You threw it open again.
And only after a sweet lungful of the cool night air did you become aware of the smell in the room.
Faint. Faint, but sharp. Unpleasant. A smell you
remembered, but another whiff and it was gone. Faded into the background or washed away entirely
by the breeze that trickled in through the window. Tentative heads cast
shadows in the light from the doorway. After a few more breaths of night air, you plunged
back through the hot box of your room and into the surprisingly cooler hall. The slamming
doors had woken a few people. You apologized and made excuses for the roommate you'd never met,
smiled and tried to shrug the whole thing off.
Then, enjoying the cool, you strolled down to the communal bathroom.
Not the ideal place to make introductions,
but you thought you ought to make sure your roommate was all right.
But whether he was or not, he wasn't in the bathroom.
You walked the length of the long hall, looking for another place he might have gone.
The stairs were the only other option.
Maybe he'd... Well, who knew?
So...
You wandered back to 318 again. Maybe he'd... Well, who knew?
You wandered back to 318 again.
Even the door handle was hot.
You threw it open and switched on the light.
Your roommate hadn't snuck back in while you were looking for him.
Maybe he was so embarrassed about his wet bed that he'd never show his face again Except
Except you must have been mistaken
The top bunk didn't look wet at all now with the light on
You touched the sheets with a cautious hand
Dry
And the open window must have cooled things off in a hurry
because the temperature in the room was almost back to normal.
You waited around with the light on for a little while longer,
but when there was no sign of your roommate returning,
you switched it off and lay in the dark.
And after another long time had passed,
something like sleep must have come.
It couldn't have stayed for too long, though, because dawn was still young in the sky when
there was a knock on your door. Had you locked it? Probably. And of course your roommate hadn't taken his key when he ran out you put your best
ah no problem forget about it smile on your face and open the door and found three people you
didn't know none of whom turned out to be your errant roommate one was the head camp administrator, and the other two were counselors.
They came to tell you that your roommate was fine, but had had a shock, and had decided to go home from camp.
Well, okay.
Too bad about that.
You asked what kind of shock he'd had, but they didn't seem to want to tell you that.
Instead, they asked about what had happened the night before.
They asked, and kept asking.
It became obvious that the administrator suspected you of playing some kind of mean-spirited prank,
some practical joke gone too far.
Maybe you got a little defensive.
Maybe your answers were a bit short and surly.
But it wasn't any fun having things insinuated by people who didn't know you.
It all ended with some sharp words and a definite threat from the administrator
that you were walking on thin ice.
She and one of the counselors left.
The other counselor lingered behind. He had caught his first name, but he went by his last one anyway, which was Kildare. He had the habit of staring hard directly at you
for a few moments before saying anything, and the things he said didn't all seem to be
related until you thought about them later. All in all, he was off-putting.
After the others had left, he started by staring at you, then asking abruptly if last night really
happened the way you said it had. You said yeah. He stared some more,
then told you that the college never put anyone in this room during the school year. Didn't
use it at all. Left it empty. You asked why, but he didn't answer that. After another hard stare, he asked you if you knew that the old medical school used to be here.
Right here where the dorm was now.
You said you hadn't heard that and added that you didn't care.
That gave him a little smile for some reason. And out of the blue, he asked if you'd like to take the empty bunk in his room,
rather than stay in 318 alone.
You didn't think you could stand another 30 seconds of his staring,
much less being his roommate.
But you didn't say that.
You just said thanks, but no thanks.
You kind of liked having a room to yourself.
He smiled a little wider and nodded.
And as he left, told you to remember that it was a standing offer, in case you changed your mind.
You had fun that day at camp, but you were tired, tired all day long. When it was finally time to head back to 318,
you didn't take long getting ready for bed, and the last thing that you did before you turned
out the light and fell asleep was use a book to prop open the window. And the first thing you heard when you woke up in the middle of the night
was the sound of that book hitting the floor
it took a few seconds for your sleep addled mind
to realize what the sound had been
your brain wasn't as sharp as it had been the night before. This time you were
hearing and seeing things, long moments before you could analyze them. That metal on metal
whisper, on the hasp of the window sliding shut. Moving darkness, limbs, someone walking around at the foot of the bed,
silhouette by the window,
climbing up into the top bunk.
Roommate, it must be.
I hope it didn't get too hot,
but hot like last night.
Oh, already was. Already was pretty warm. Oughta say something.
Say something to your roommate shifting around up there. Ought to... Say...
You're a roommate.
In a single breath, you were fully awake.
In a single breath, you were sweating.
The room was hot. Already sweltering, worse than the night before, but this time the sweat had nothing to do with that. You pulled your
sheets up higher as you listened. Listened to someone or listened to movement in the top bunk above you.
Your mind was racing now.
You'd locked the door.
That big, heavy, noisy door.
You'd locked it from the inside, bolted it.
Even if someone had a key, you'd have heard them come in. You'd have woken up.
No one could have come in without waking you. You were short. And the window, three floors up,
sheer concrete walls. It didn't open wide enough for anyone to get in anyway, so what had...
Who could possibly be in the top bunk?
Where your feet would have been if you hadn't drawn them in toward the rest of your contracted body.
Down at the foot of the bed, something reached.
No.
No, it was just a corner of the sheet,
fallen down from above,
moving, jerkily, as...
as whoever it was shifted.
You were sat up in a ball in the middle of the bunk,
against the wall, with your eyes
wide trying to peer in every direction at once.
The sounds of shifting movement were growing more restless, more violent.
The edge of the mattress above trembled with it.
The room was an oven.
Sweat slid down you unnoticed.
And the smell.
That faint, sharp smell.
Chemical.
Growing stronger.
You wanted to bolt.
You wanted to run. But the thought of what awaited you.
Beyond the edge of that top bunk.
If you ran, you'd have to slide out into the open.
Out within easy reach of whatever it was up there.
The noise of movement above you stopped.
There was a stillness, unbroken by your tightly held breath.
Spots and rods and flecks of color danced in your straining eyes,
and it took you a moment before you recognized, in one corner of them,
by the head of the bed, toward the door.
It was a moment before you recognized the black outline of a human head peering down at you between the ladder rungs from the bunk above.
If you screamed, you don't remember it. You wanted to, anyway.
And you shot out of the bunk faster than you'd ever thought you could move, So violently, you slammed into the desk across the aisle with such force that
for a moment you thought you were going to lose consciousness.
And the wish to scream grew so loud within you that you couldn't hear anything else.
But you could still feel.
And when something cold and stiff brushed against the back of your neck, like an icy clawed hand clutching at you, no pain or lack of breath could stop you.
You were at the door before you realized you'd moved at all, and from behind you heard something like wet footsteps approaching, coming after you.
You ripped at the door without throwing the deadbolt,
then twisted the latch with panicked fingers and tried again,
and crushed your two small toes with the corner of the door as you clawed it open with all your weight and strength.
Something cold and strong clutched at your waist as you slipped
painfully through the door. And you ran. You ran, fast, like you were floating down the cold tile
hall, poor broken toes ignored, through the door onto the stairs and down them, with your feet
only touching two steps per flight, slamming through the crash bar on the door into the stairs and down them with your feet only touching two steps per flight,
slamming through the crash bar on the door into the lobby, knocking Kildare sprawling across the lobby floor.
He hung on, though.
He caught one of your dashing legs and hung on, and if he hadn't, you'd probably still be running.
He hung on as you struggled and bellowed and flailed and cried, your burning eyes wide on the door to the stairs, watching for the horror that was about to emerge and swallow you both.
But nothing came.
Nothing came but
slowly
Kildare's
quiet words
quiet words in
easing repetition
that it was alright.
It was alright now.
It was going to be alright now.
It would never, it would never be alright again, but slowly you started to feel better.
You calmed a bit.
Nothing came down the stairs.
Eventually Kildare left you long enough to open the door and look
and hold it wide so that you could see the empty gray concrete steps within.
Then, as counselor on duty that night, he got out the first aid kit
and helped do what little can be done for broken toes.
He listened to your story while it was fresh. Every terrifying detail.
He didn't act skeptical, and he didn't act surprised. In fact, he said the same thing
had happened to the two people placed in 318 the session before.
Maybe now the administrator would listen to him, and leave the cursed place empty as it should be.
Then Kildare asked you if you wanted to go home, as the others had done.
And when you said no, he fell to staring at you, as he was apt to do.
Then he tried to give you the key to his own room,
and told you that the lower bunk in there was yours for the rest of camp.
But when you waved it away and said no,
and you stared back at him just as hard as he was staring at you,
well, then that little smile crept back onto the corner of his face, and he grabbed
two flashlights from behind the lobby desk. The heat had mostly gone out of room 318 when
Kildare opened the door. Aside from the sheets looking slept in on the top bunk, and one
of the desks being knocked slightly askew with the drawer partly open,
everything looked the same as when you'd gone to sleep.
But there was a feeling.
There was still a feeling in the place.
You asked Kildare if you felt anything funny about the room,
and he looked at you, but didn't say anything.
He just opened the window again.
He had to really haul in the latch in order to shift it.
And then he sat on one of the desks, facing the bunks.
You pulled one of the desk chairs over in front of the door,
so there could be no question of anyone sneaking in that way,
even if the huge, noisy doors had allowed sneaking. After a while, Kildare softly said that
he didn't figure anything would happen with the light on, and if you were okay with it, would you...
Your heart started to beat a little faster,
but you reached up and switched the lights off.
You breathed quietly at first,
straining your ears against the dark,
but the night stayed soft, and the only sounds were the occasional bump from Kildare
as he shifted positions on the uncomfortable desks.
You remembered the night before and started to doubt that anything more would happen.
You thought of saying something like that to Kildare, but after all, you didn't mind the vigil.
And the chair was pretty comfortable.
For a desk chair.
Earlier that night you would have sworn that you'd never sleep again,
but it was a doze at least that you emerged from when Kildare whispered his short phrase.
The window, he said, and your chin came off your chest
and you stared at something that seemed like it must be a dream.
A nightmare.
In the steady beam of Kildare's flashlight, the window was closing itself.
Slowly, smoothly, like hands with even pressure were pushing it too.
And when it closed, you watched the latch slowly turn until the window was locked tightly. Kildare was transfixed,
staring at the window with his mouth
hanging open like he'd never seen one before,
like he'd never see one again.
You were transfixed too,
but from across the room you had a wider perspective.
So it was you who saw it first, and managed to croak
through terror-frozen jaws. The bed. The bed. The trap-punk.
In your brief sleep, the flashlight had fallen from your hand. You swept your lap in search of it, knocking it onto and across the floor.
You dove after the skittering sound, just as another sound rose from over by the bunk.
It was a shout, and something like a hiss, and a tremendous struggle. The entire bunk bed was pulled over,
and only the angle of the wall kept it from crashing down on the combatants.
Kildare's light spun crazily around the floor,
giving you glimpses of his back as he was pressed toward you by...
by whatever he was fighting with.
At the last moment, you tried to crawl out of the way, but there was nowhere to go.
Kildare tripped over your hands and knees' form and fell back against the door,
toppling the desk chair behind you with a crash.
The only thing you could see of his assailant was the outline of legs standing in front of you,
which you gamely threw yourself at, trying to buy Kildare time to regain his feet.
And the legs, as you clutched at them, felt thin and wet and cold, terribly cold.
As they shifted in your desperate grip, it felt like the slimy skin that covered them was tearing and twisting, sloughing wetly off under your hands.
And the smell that you'd smelled so faintly before, now it was overpowering.
Overpowering and unmistakable.
Formaldehyde.
That smell that filled the science classroom.
Just before a dissection.
You gagged so violently that your whole body heaved,
and at that moment something took hold of the door and flung it open with so much force that the chair and you and Kildare were thrown half clear and half crushed behind the opening door
as something ran out into the hall.
You scrambled on your hands and knees after it, and you just
managed to catch a glimpse of
of a shadow,
maybe.
Something like a faint
shadow, passing
over the floor and walls of the long
hall at an incredible pace,
and then
disappearing.
You still don't know what it was in room 318.
All Kildare could remember was that it was cold and strong.
And in the one brief glimpse he'd got before it came for him,
it looked like something that... well, that had been human.
After that, you took Kildare up on his offer of the lower bunk in his room.
He was nursing a broken arm for the rest of the summer, which made him restless at night.
But there was nothing more comforting to you than lying there,
listening to the noise,
and knowing exactly who was up there.
As for room 318,
on the last you heard, the summer camp had permanently stopped using it,
just as the college does through the rest of the year.
So it sits,
closed and locked and empty. Empty except for a couple of dusty old desks and a bunk bed.
And whatever it is, in the top bunk.
Well, one last time this summer we've talked the fire down to ashes.
Guess it's time to head back to the dorms.
Dibs on the... bottom bunk.
Yeah.
Dibs on the bottom bunk this time.
If you liked these summer camp stories and you want to help us do them again next year,
please write a review and say so.
Or, if you've already left a review and your app won't let you leave another,
write an email to podcasts at rei.com.
The folks who read those reviews and emails are the same ones who decide
how many camp monsters there will be next year. Thanks for listening, and thanks for your help.
Camp Monsters is part of the REI Podcast Network,
and legend has it that it's haunted by the spirits of our executive producers,
Paolo, the friendly ghost, Modula,
and Joe, the even friendlier ghost, Crosby.
Those bare footsteps that you heard running down the hall
belong to our engineer nick patry
who likes to be comfortable with his shoes off while he's editing and who just heard that the
vending machine at the end of the hall is now stocking wisconsin cheese and that same vending
machine will soon be haunted by the ghost of yours truly, writer and host Weston Davis.
As soon as Nick finds out, I made up that part about the cheese.
Staring in terror at the window closing by itself is our associate producer, Jenny Barber.
And invisibly closing that window with her awesome mind power is our senior producer, Chelsea Davis.
Because she's just trying to maintain the AC and keep the energy bills down in here, okay?
As always, the stories we tell here are just that, stories.
Some of them are based on things that people claim to have seen and experienced,
but it's up to you to decide what you believe, and how to explain away what you don't.
Thanks for listening, sharing, writing reviews, and spreading the word.
You're the reason Camp Monsters keeps recording, and the reason we'll be back again this September
with a whole new set of episodes.
Thanks and see you around the campfire.