CreepsMcPasta Creepypasta Radio - "Do not disturb the rats in the middle of their worship" Creepypasta
Episode Date: June 27, 2021CREEPYPASTA STORY►byhttps://www.reddit.com/r/nosleep/comm...Creepypastas are the campfire tales of the internet. Horror stories spread through Reddit r/nosleep, forums and blogs, rather than word of... mouth. Whether you believe these scary stories to be true or not is left to your own discretion and imagination. LISTEN TO CREEPYPASTAS ON THE GO-SPOTIFY► https://open.spotify.com/show/7l0iRPd...iTUNES► https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast...CREEPY THUMBNAIL ART BY►huleeb: https://www.artstation.com/artwork/18...SUGGESTED CREEPYPASTA PLAYLISTS-►"Good Places to Start"- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g7YCb...►"Personal Favourites"- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AEa2R...►"Written by me"- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gX6RA...►"Long Stories"- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...FOLLOW ME ON-►Twitter: https://twitter.com/Creeps_McPasta►Instagram: https://instagram.com/creepsmcpasta/►Twitch: http://www.twitch.tv/creepsmcpasta►Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CreepsMcPastaCREEPYPASTA MUSIC/ SFX- ►http://bit.ly/Audionic ♪►http://bit.ly/Myuusic ♪►http://bit.ly/incompt ♪►http://bit.ly/EpidemicM ♪-This creepypasta is for entertainment purposes only-
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Oh, leung, that I'm in three days.
I'm a moor as I'm more on think.
Oh, that to seeer that morning off must.
I'm all mooh as I'm not on think.
Oh, this is all moor, oh, I'm all moor as I'm on thinking.
Have you it mollick, on upgueshurt to come?
Give you self then a boost with biocure maxhot liquid.
Three op-puppendant plants.
Magnesium, Izer.
An energy booster, on right again to can clallon.
Bio-cure, Max-Shot Liquid.
Foodings Supplement, forcryg by the apotheker.
Why are you looking at my girlfriend?
I'm fixing your sink, I replied.
This guy had a familiar look about him that made me nervous.
He was twitchy and always scratching his skinny little arms,
his eyes darsing to every corner of the room.
I tried to stay neutral with my head, tucked away under the kitchen counter.
The sooner I fixed this problem of theirs, the sooner I'd be out.
I hear about guys like you.
You got keys to everyone's room and like to go sneaking around,
installing cameras in the toilet and shower.
I saw photos of one hidden camera in a screw.
I ain't stupid.
I know what you guys get up to.
Can you go get me a drink, baby?
Please.
Something from the vending machine, maybe.
This baby's making me so damn tired.
It was his girlfriend who spoke.
She'd been slouched on the sofa the entire time I was there.
She looked sad mostly, but also a little afraid.
She must have known a man pretty well,
because I could see the guy's head,
working overtime after she spoke.
He was torn between wanting to chew me out
and looking after his pregnant girlfriend.
The whole time I stayed down under that sink,
twisting pipes free and pulling ranted black filth
into the bucket below.
It was hard to stay focused,
but I knew things could escalate quickly.
A few long seconds passed before the door slum shut.
Sorry about him, the girl said,
groaning as you sat upright.
Can you fix it before he gets back?
I shoved my fingers deep into the final clog and began to pull it loose.
I think this is the last of it.
Ah, damn!
Something sharp had slipped right past the rubber glove and into the soft flesh of my thumb
while I've been trying to scrape the blockage free.
I whipped my hand out of the pipe and immediately tore the glow off,
squeezing the tiny flesh until a tiny bead of red blood appeared in my skin.
Are you okay?
she asked.
Something sharp in the pipe, I said, before sucking the blood clean.
With my good hand, I grabbed a screwdriver and used it to pull the final clump of food and hair free.
It plopped into the bucket with the rest of the blockage,
a single silver-shaped glistening amidst the filth.
Do you have any kids?
I asked, pulling the strange objects free.
It was an old paperclip, or maybe a hairpin, bent and twisted into a funny shirt.
shape that was overlapping circles, almost like a broken key ring.
This is our first, she said, while patting a belly.
I found this down there, I said, while holding it up.
But she only shrugged.
I didn't put it down there, she replied.
But if it's all fixed, I'd finish up and clear out before Jason gets back.
He's, uh, he's not well.
I nodded, slid the strange thing into my pocket,
and began to collect my tools.
Everyone hated the basement.
Most residents didn't even use it,
but it was always full of old junk.
A few elderly people who'd stuck around with the main corporates.
They often arrived with a horde of old possessions in tow
and only gathered more as time went on.
Looking around, I saw more than a few old urns down there,
and I knew from experience, not all of them were empty.
People held under things.
sometimes without much reason.
In the back.
Mrs. Harps was calling from the top of the stairs,
a round little body blocking most of the light.
Taking a deep breath, I click my torch on
and began to walk deeper into the mire of mouldy boxes
and crumbling furniture stacked ceiling high.
I saw it, Mr. Thomas. I swear on my life. I saw it down there.
I'm sure you did, Mrs. Harps, I cried back.
I'm not making it off.
shoe beaded.
I saw him down there, the furry bugger,
big as hell in chewing up my old clothes.
Buried deep in the back,
close to the old boiler,
was a stack of wet cardboard boxes
that had property of A. Harps
scrolled across it.
The very bottom box
had a hole chewed right through one corner
and a dozen little raisinside droppings
was scattered near the entrance.
Yep, there it is, I cried out.
You're right, Mrs. Harps.
I'll be sure the lace and truble.
traps this afternoon.
She shouted Samantha, but my attention was pulled elsewhere when I heard a scratching coming
from a shadowy cluster of overturned boxes just ahead.
Down there, in the dark, the light of day seemed far away, and I felt the need to be
anywhere else to go clambering back of the stairs to feed Mrs. Harps some lame excuse.
The basement was a Warren of Shadows, and I couldn't help a picture what might be hiding
just out of sight.
Of course, deep down
I knew what was out there,
persistently scratching away.
What else could it be?
I gripped my torch tight
and walked onwards,
turning the corner just in time
to see a black-haired body
squeeze itself through a tiny gap
in the wall.
Bugger, I groaned,
shuffling closer to the gap
that had been gnawed right through
Victorian brick.
Something had been scratched,
into the floor, worn down over and over with what seemed like thousands of permeations.
It laid right in front of the hole like some kind of signpost, no larger than my palm,
and its shape was eerily familiar.
On a whim, I took the thin piece of metal out of my pocket and held it up, gazing at the
impossible resemblance it bore to the shape on the floor.
Six or seven overlapping circles, bound closely together like a loop.
of rope. The two shapes were identical coppers of each other, just rendered in different mediums.
I told myself it was kids who must have done it, a random act of vandalism.
But when I show my light into the hole, a pair of beady red eyes glared back at me,
and I couldn't shake the feeling. It had been watching me appraised its work.
There are, simply put, a lot of restrictions on the use of poison this close to a park.
Oh, look at it.
I leaned forward and pull the child-sized bed away from the wall,
revealing a thousand little black droppings in the space behind it.
Tell me this is okay.
Look, he put his hands up.
You don't need to do this.
I'm with you.
No, I said, firmly.
See this?
This is where she keeps her toys.
I pass at the top of a small toy trunk before grabbing either side and pulling it away.
The skirting board that ran along the floor,
had been chewed through entirely, until there was a foot-wide hole.
There are rats literally coming out to the damn walls, Al.
Help me out here. Why can't we do anything about this?
You're new here, Al replied.
I just can't approve any of the purchase requests you've made him lately.
This is government housing, for Christ's sake.
What happens if one of these little brats ends up having an allergic reaction to the stuff you spray?
Do you have any idea how much red tape we have to jump through to fix this?
So we just let this carry on, do we?
All parts of a better Britain, yeah?
Don't be like that, he cried.
I'm not saying you're on your own.
Far from it.
You must do some work online, right?
Do you Google stuff and you've got to fix something.
Yeah?
Well then, why should your property get worn out doing government work?
Coffee machines, orthopedic chairs, laptops, tablets.
Hell, one guy down in Southampton had an emotional support ferret in his cubicle.
We've just got to be creative, that's all.
Some purchase orders will slip wrong.
right through the government machine.
Poison isn't one of them.
I'll see what I can do and get back to you.
You just get me a list of what you need.
Mind you, he added,
nudging a pile of damp mouldy laundry with one of his tan leather shoes.
It's not like they're exactly helping themselves here, is it?
Did you catch him?
We both turned to see a little girl staring at us
from behind the bedroom door,
her fingers clutching the jam nervously.
He was under the bed, she whispered.
I'll leave this to you, Chris.
Al said, before giving me a little mock salute.
He smiled widely at the little girl as he sailed past and hurried away.
Just get me that list, he cried out before the front door shut.
I found where it's coming from, I told the little girl,
and I'm going to fix it so he can't get through anymore.
His whispers are scary, she replied.
she beside, she besie eyes fixed on the door.
Well, pretty soon, that won't be a problem.
He lives down there, she pointed at the floor.
He told me, do you think he'll be mad if you can't come over anymore?
No, I could.
And even if he does, I won't let him come back and do anything bad.
He says he'll find me anyway, she replied,
her eyes glancing up to the hole behind me.
Something in it must have held a gaze,
something that seemed to grab a hold of her
and keep her staring with an almost dreamlike expression.
I suddenly became aware of that little gap in the wall,
feeling its presence in my back like it was an arging black hole.
I hadn't felt afraid of it at first,
but now the hairs of my neck rose
and a chill ran across my shoulders.
I clicked my torch and turn around to find two red eyes
glaring back at me from the darkness.
They lingered for no more than a second
before receding into the dark,
their disappearance accompanied by Kurt Chitter.
He doesn't like you,
the girl cried in a lilting, sing-song voice,
before suddenly bursting into laughter and running away.
I went to my knees and began to hammer a plank of wood
across the hall with nervous urgency.
The old man was apoplectic,
all purple in the face and spitting everywhere.
He howled with rage at the direction of his neighbour's door,
unaware she wasn't even in.
That damn cat gives leaving bloody rats in my home, he cried.
You weren't allowed no animals in here.
I told her so.
I told her over and over, this is exactly why.
His unsanitary is what it is.
It's disgusting is what it is.
He seemed oblivious to my discomfort as I stood there awkwardly.
Well, Mr. James, whatever is happening,
I'll be sure it stops right here and right now, I told him, does that sound fair to you?
I made sure to catch his gaze and hold it when I asked the question.
He paused his shouting for a few seconds, and when he replied, his tone was a little more even.
Right now?
He asked, not in three weeks or six months, or in some distant damn future where the council finally decides to affect repairs.
Right now, I said, I have my tools.
I have materials.
It won't be pretty, but I'll make sure it holds.
I won't leave until you're happy with it.
He chewed the air for a few moments as he thought this over.
All right then, it's through here.
He took me into a squat little living room,
the bedroom visible through an open door.
The scene in there wasn't pretty,
but it was the spare room he pointed me to,
and I was thankful I wouldn't have to kick his old underwear around
while looking for rats.
Still, his spare room was so.
filled with old junk, he had to push the door open with his shoulder.
There was a bed in there somewhere, but you'd be hard pressed to find it under the lifetime's worth of books, photos, documents, and bags of old clothes.
I had to eke my way in one foot at a time, being careful where I stepped, so as they not go tumbling over.
No need to stay standing up, I said as he hovered by the door.
I'll come get you when it's done.
if there's anything you're not happy with, I'll make sure to fix it for you.
Right, he grumbled.
Fine, I'll be out here in my chair.
I returned to the job and began to whittle my way through the mountain of crap.
I happened to know that the lady next door really did have a cat,
but I couldn't bring myself to turn her in.
Not when I thought the building could use another 30 cats just to keep the rat population down.
I doubt you did this anyway, I said to myself, as I mused around the house.
as I mused around the windowless room.
No attic access, no air conditioning.
How did the cat get in here? I wondered.
I figured there had to be a heating vent somewhere,
so I started kicking all clothes away
until I found it tucked away in the back of the room.
Big enough for a rat, I muttered when I saw it,
not much else.
A closer look revealed that the vent had been pushed free of its screws.
God knows how,
and it popped out with a little.
a gentle pull of my fingers.
The stench coming from the hole was haunting,
and I took a deep breath before putting my face anywhere near it.
I nearly screamed when I saw something right out of a nightmare staring back at me.
Wretched and animalistic, his expression was twisted into a desperate hell of anguish.
Oh no, I hissed as my eyes took in more of the scene.
This thing was clearly dead.
its skull could barely fit in the hole
and all manner of bones must have been broken
so that he could squeeze down there
it looked a little like a monkey
but his teeth were too sharp
and his face was too pointed
somehow my curiosity built up
just enough for me to overcome that initial pang of terror
and I gingerly reached in
to pull the monster free
it came out with a sickening sound of suction
its fur matted and dripping thick blood
that fell onto the floor in clumps.
Free of the vent, the skeleton of the creature unfurled like a rotten flower
and its ears finally unstuck from the back of its head.
It was a cat.
Jesus Christ, it was the cat, the one from next door.
His paws had been bound with what looked like human hair
and its eyes ritually torn out.
The broken jaw kept flapping around as I held it out at arm's reach
and something fell out from under its tongue and under the floor.
It looked almost like an earthworm, but it just stayed there, all called up and perfectly still.
I leaned in and saw that it was a couple of rat tails.
Several of them all wound together in a strange, overlapping circles, and pinned tight with ribbons of muddy brown hair.
The kids were to go down into the basement, or so I was told.
I knew that teenagers liked to go down there in smoke, but the call I received.
see from Mr. Andes mentioned little kids playing with toys, which just didn't seem right.
Maybe it was because that place scared the hell out of me.
But I couldn't quite picture little kids pundling down there like it was some secret playground.
The old man hadn't said exactly where the kids were playing down there, and the basement was
larger than it appeared at first sight.
But I found myself straying straight towards the old hole I filled up a few days before.
I'd thrown a fair amount of poison down there
and fill the gap with rubber cement and insulating foam
before hammering in one hell of a piece of wood
I told myself that meant the place was free of rats
but I felt very little surprise
when I found the barrier torn to shreds
and the foam and cement ripped free
but that wasn't all
the scratchings had multiplied
until dozens of those repeating frayed circles
cover the floor and wall
for a meter in every direction.
And I guess Mr. Anders had been right,
because an old children's toy had been laid out and plugged into an unfurled extension cord.
It was a little play mat with different words and colourful shapes arranged in a neat grid.
I'd seen them before when my niece was just a toddler.
Her mother had used it to teach her to read.
You could press any one of the soft pads,
and a pleasant voice would read the corresponding word
and accompanying image.
Why the hell anyone had dragged it down there, I couldn't say.
But it creeped the hell out of me to see it laid out the way it was in front of that hole.
I traced the extension cord to a socket on the opposite wall and went to turn it off.
When a robotic female voice came from behind.
Present, present, give, present.
I swung around and to run a number.
enormous rat glaring at me, its black fur glistening in my light.
The damn thing was huge, easily the size of a possum, with its hindquarters hidden out of sight
in the encroaching shadow.
I'm not normally scared of rats, with the thought of that thing lunging at me with his
scissors-sharp teeth, left me feeling like I was glaring down a mountain lion.
Present.
Give.
It thwacked the pads like an impatient child.
And I would have laughed if I wasn't paralyzed with fear.
I could feel it rising away,
this manic need to either start pulling my eyes out
or cackling hysterically.
Instead, I swallowed both the madness and fear
and went to unplug the cord with shaking hands.
Ouch, you,
Ouch, ouch, you.
I took the plug from the socket
and looked back towards the mat.
The rat.
I was gone.
Did you see this guy?
The words poured me from my thoughts of looping circles and ragged teeth.
My dreams had taken a dark turn over the last few days,
and not just because of the infestation.
A few days before, the same little girl I'd helped to the rats in a room
had gone missing and left a mother in a state of grief-stricken distress.
In fact, it had left most of us who knew her a little shaken up.
Sorry?
Miss Rothers mentioned a strange man in the lobby last week.
I was speaking to a policewoman who wore plain clothes,
and I knew from TV that meant she dealt with heavy stuff like dead people and stolen children.
She looked like every teacher I'd ever had, only with not nearly as much patience.
Uh, yeah, I said.
He came in screaming about his dog,
said he'd been sleeping around back in the alley when something took his dog through one of the vents that led into a building.
I actually tried to help him, tried talking to him,
but he was just beside himself and wouldn't listen to reason.
He only left after Al, as my boss threatened to call the police.
Can you describe this man?
I did, going into great detail about his face and clothes,
and I even managed to get some security footage to send over just in case.
I was doing my very best to be helpful,
but I think she could tell something was playing in my mind.
Maybe she figured it was nothing, or maybe she could just read people well, because she never asked me directly.
But I found myself stopping her on the way out of my door, just so I could spill the beans.
Um, look, this might be nothing, but...
Uh, last week, I called you guys up about a dead cat.
I'm sure there must be a report somewhere, but you should know the cat was...
I mean, someone had killed it.
They pulled its eyes out,
broken its jaw, and
something was stuffed in its mouth.
Her eyebrows rose.
In its mouth?
What do you mean?
I reached into my drawer
and pulled out the little bundle of rat tails out,
along with a bent piece of metal,
just in case.
Side by side, their identical structure
was even more pronounced,
and it became apparent
just how careful the construction must have been.
I found this in a true,
train, I said, and the same shape was made out of rat tails in the cat's mouth. And you reported
this? I did, I said. It's tied with human hair, just like the cat's feet were. It's the weirdest
damn thing, but it almost feels ritualistic. I don't know. I suddenly felt stupid, but just saying
the words out loud. I just thought that if there is some sick freak hanging around, maybe he killed this cat
first or something.
It's not stupid, she said.
It's good you mentioned it.
There's nowhere the original report would have made its way to me.
And you're right.
This does feel ritualistic, doesn't it?
My name is DCI Miles, by the way.
DCI Miles reached into a pocket and took out a card that she handed to me.
If you see anything else like that, any other dead animals,
or anything that makes you wonder about who exactly might be living here,
let me know.
We need all the help.
we can get.
Mr. Anders, I said, banging the door.
Open up, we need to speak with you.
DCR Miles was beside me, along with two stern-looking, uniformed officers.
You know, I really don't think this is right, I said, looking back at them.
Mr. Anders is a miserable bugger, but he isn't, not that.
You said it yourself.
The cat was in his apartment, she replied.
And we trace some internet searches to this flat.
that would make you seriously reconsider your opinion of the man, Mr. Graham.
Do you have the key we asked for?
Of course, I said, holding the master key up before inserting it into the lock.
It turned with a latched click,
and I found myself suddenly pushed out of the way
as the three police officers marched ahead to make their arrest.
This is the police, Stephen and a...
Jesus!
I rushed in, slowing momentarily to take in the horrific stench
were paring through anyway.
I nearly ran right into the back of the two large officers,
where DCI Miles stood a little ahead of them,
mouth open and eyes wide.
They, they, they...
A dozen black rats poured out of the room and swarmed around our feet,
the greasy fur streaking our clothes and smearing our shoes with filth.
One of the officers began to kick and scream,
and he nearly went down,
except his friend managed to reach out and stay,
steady him. The thoughts of him falling into that river of gnashing claws and writhing muscular
vermin terrified me, and I had to resist the urge to panic.
Stay calm, I said. They're just fleeing. Just, just let them go. When they finally passed,
I was surprised to see DCI Miles still standing in the same place, having not moved an inch,
even as dozens of nasty little vermin had clambered over her ankles. They,
They? They?
She looked catatonic, and that alone left my stomach lurching towards my feet.
She didn't seem like the sort of person who could be terrified so easily.
Then again, I realized maybe it hadn't come easy at all.
The room behind her was dark, the curtains pulled.
I could see what was in there.
While the other two officers saw to each other, I slid past and peeked inside with my torch.
I didn't even know what I was looking at, at least not at first.
The shoes on his feet let me know it was Mr. Anders lying on the floor,
but the podger man was otherwise unrecognizable.
His living room had been cleared out,
and his mutilated body had been laid out by some kind of display.
His limbs and entrails encircling his dismembered torso in several overlapping loops,
all routed up in thick clumps of soggy human hair.
All around him were hundreds of small, scratchy circles
they'd been engraved in the floor with pockets of rat droppings contained in each one.
Praying, D.C.R. Miles had spoken, and I practically jumped down to my skin.
They were praying, she said.
Scratchy little voices, scratchy little voices all whispering.
I heard them. I heard what they said.
they were all laid out like, like a service all around him.
I looked back at the scene and felt my gorge rise.
Moving the torch a little further ahead, I finally found Mr. Under's head, or at least
I figured it was his, given that it had been picked clean to the bone.
It was an ivory school gleaming harshly in my light, placed at the head of the circle,
although a little farther back.
He's preaching.
Good God, he's preaching. I can hear him.
DCI. Miles spoke, but I did not look back.
The school was occupied.
Something stood over it, wringled pink paws, clutching at his brow, and leaning forward,
like a priest given a sermon.
It must have been the same rat from the basement, for it was huge,
holding the man's head between both paws like he was getting ready to pass a basketball.
For a moment,
It stared us both down, bearing those wretched fangs in the light,
each one as long as a human finger.
Before it chittered and flared into the darkened corners of the living room.
Oh, God, Miles screamed, collapsing to the floor and seizing all of my attention.
Oh, God, it nests, it nests below.
I suddenly found myself feeling very afraid, and my terror grew white-hot
when I heard two voices cry from the hallway behind us.
I had almost forgotten about the other officers until they shouted back.
But, far from her help, the robotic cries only made me feel like I was spiraling deeper into madness.
Hit nests below, they screamed in unison, answering the woman's call like a religious prayer.
You shouldn't be out here, I said, as he turned back to face the young boy.
He'd been sat out in the hallway, scrolling pictures when I first passed, and even though I had far bigger problems with my hands, I couldn't quite leave him out there.
It's, uh, you should have a grown up with you. It's not safe.
Mum's in the flat, he said.
I knew his mother, and she wasn't going to win any parent of the year awards.
Still, I felt like I should try anyway.
Are you sure you don't want to go back in with her?
He looked at me like I was an idiot.
Is she...
Is she not feeling well again?
Like last year.
Last time I had to call an ambulance for her.
The needles were still stuck in her arms.
You could say that, he replied.
His eyes fixed on the paper, laid on the floor.
He was holding a black pencil in his fist like it was a dagger,
dragging it across the page so hard,
I wondered if he might mark the floor.
"'Will the police come back?' he asked.
"'Probably,' I said.
"'I think the detective just needs a break.
"'They say it happens from time to time with police officers.
"'They work so hard to keep us safe,
"'and sometimes they just need a rest.
"'Did your mother ask you to ask?'
"'He shrugged his little shoulders.
"'Something compel me to walk back the way I'd just come
"'and sit next to him.
"'I'm not the most paternal of people,
but something about the last few days
had me feeling like I should try
a little harder to look after these people.
Let's get you back to your mom,
I said, while reaching over to put an arm over his shoulder,
only to freeze partway.
When I saw what he'd been drawing,
it was a ragged black circle
repeating over and over
as he scored the pencil into the page so hard
it had torn parts of it away.
When he spoke,
It was in a whisper
Anything can pray
He told me
Smiling like it was a secret
Repeating the same few sounds
Over and over
We prayed before we even talked
Or even walked
We prayed to be safe
We prayed to be dry
We prayed to be strong
Our first prayers were to leave the trees
To escape the snakes and birds
Who snatched babies
We prayed over and over
And over and over
When you need to pray that badly
you invent words to fill the aching needs.
It doesn't matter what you do,
just like you do it again and again
until you make a groove in the world using your mind.
His fist was still circling that page,
and I felt my eyes follow the pencil,
going round and round,
until my head grew dizzy,
and a whining bus filled my ears.
Something about his voice had warmed its way into my head,
and I became fairly aware
of a warmth trickling down my eyes.
ears. We scavenged before we hunted, he said, I need for safety made prayers, made worship,
made songs and music and chants and words and language, and eventually our prayers made us think.
But he came first, before it all, before we were strong or smart, and we just forgot him
like he never even mattered when he was the one who made us this way.
He came first, the boy added, as he handed me his drawing.
Something had gripped my mind so tight I couldn't even think of a reply.
He came first, he repeated the words a little more sternly, without realizing how or why it was even possible.
I found myself answering them.
It nests below, the boy smiled as he ran a finger in circles on my forehead, blessing me,
silently.
The strangest thing was,
I almost felt thankful to him.
I need your help,
he said.
Follow me.
The rats were chasing their own tails.
Dozens of them cover the floor,
wearing grooves deep into the ancient
khaki carpet.
They all looked like they were going mad,
trapped in place, while going round and round and
round.
All except one.
He stared at me from where
it was perched atop the boy's mother.
She had been stripped, bound, and then, presumably, killed.
How fast it had been, or how painful, I couldn't say.
By the time I saw her, the thick ropes of braided hair were the only thing stopping her limbs
being scattered by the furious currents of swirling rats.
And now, their leader was using her open ribcage like some kind of pulpit or stage,
staring down on the masses below him.
Even worse, the rats were not alone.
There were children in there, down on all fours,
going round and round like the vermin by their feet.
I might have expected them to trample some of the furry little monsters,
but they never did.
The rats always parted just in time.
In fact, none of the hundreds of occupants
ever bumped into each other or even came close to it.
There was no order to their movements, but it wasn't quite chaos either.
And if I looked at them too long, I felt the first flickers of the aura of a migraine start to fade in from the corners of my vision.
The boy took my hand and led me to the dog-sized rat.
He doesn't like you, the boy said.
And this time it wasn't a threat or even a tease.
He was just saying it.
You don't need heat or comfort or food to fill a starving belly
You want
All of your grown-ups want so much
But your bones don't ache with the need like ours do
The rat chittered and as one
Every single thing in that room looked up and answered him
The Georgian cried
It nests below
And the rats squeat inanely
Just as quickly the frantic circling resists
and I realized with growing horror that I had answered the cry as well.
But compromising for the sake of a need is a sacred act, the boy continued,
and he is willing to give you a chance to take part in this right.
He reached out and blessed my head once more, his groby finger tracing circles on my brow.
It nests below, I whimpered, feeling tears at the corner of my eyes at the realization that I know
longer controlled my own mouth.
He does, the boy hissed, leaning forward until all I could see was the rot setting in his
teeth.
But the nest is small and cold and wet.
It needs so much, and just as he once answered our calls, you must now answer his.
Bloody hell, he did a good job with the rats, Al said, staring at a sack of rotten meat
I'd just thrown into a dumpster.
How many are in that?
Too many to count, I replied.
Well, I'm glad to see that poison I got you worked out.
Must have been serious stuff.
I did you use it.
The basement, mostly, I answered.
It's all clean, though.
All of it.
Spick and span.
Ready for the new residence.
I'm glad to see you've got your eye on the bigger picture, he cried.
Most people don't think like that.
But yes, already.
First one's coming in next week.
from what I hear.
Look, I don't want to throw a wrench in anything, I said,
but I'm pretty sure I found where the rats were coming from,
and I could use some help sorting it out.
Hang on now, Chris, I'm not a bloody handy, man, a management.
I just need someone to hold the torch, as all, I said.
I mean, do you really want to risk the new contracts?
I asked, leaning in and speaking quietly.
First, we had all the missing kids,
then like a third of the residents just up and left without pain.
us a penny in rent. Come on, I played ball, didn't I? I dealt with the rat problem just like you
asked. Help me out here. I just need a light. All right, he grumbled. But I better not
catch anything down there. Jesus, he hissed. Chris, are you serious? What are you doing knocking
holes in the wall like this? I needed to find where they were coming from, I answered. Turns out
it was this old door that leads into the sewer on the other side. This thing is Victorian and it's
been here a while,
breaked up, but here nonetheless.
Anyway, as you can see, it's just wood,
and the rats keep going through the bottom,
and that's what I gave them access to all the walls.
Look.
I pushed the door, and it swung open,
leading right into a dripping, wet tunnel,
darker than any place I'd ever seen before.
It goes right into the sewers.
I just need some light on it while I break it up properly.
You're thorough, I'll give you that, he said.
give me that thing
he reached out and I handed him the torch
the light fell on my back
and I watched my shadow rise up ahead of me
taking a deep breath
I stayed in myself and stepped through the doorway
already the scratching my ears
felt deafening
I knew it was about to get
a lot worse
oh wow
I cried out my acting less than convincing
Elle you need to see what's through her pal
These sewers are ancient.
They must go on for miles.
I ain't stepping in no crap pipes, Chris.
Come on, use your head here.
Just do what you've got to do.
All right, I said, closing my eyes and taking another deep breath.
Is that a kid?
I cried out.
Al, there's a kid down here.
I think, I think it's one of the ones they never found.
Oh, damn, he cried out.
Well, go after him.
Go on.
The little bugger must have been hiding down here all along.
I turned back and looked at him like a slack-jawed idiot.
You caught the light, Al?
For goodness sake, he hissed, pushing past.
You should have been running already.
You might have even caught him.
Where'd he go?
That way, I pointed to the left with a tunnel branched off.
Down there and to the right.
Al stormed ahead, and I followed.
At least it's rat three, he hissed.
He must have really done one hell of a job laying that poison.
I didn't answer, resolving only to follow in silence.
Surely they could take care of it from here, I thought.
Surely I don't have to see it all again.
I was thinking the same thing over and over
when I suddenly bumped into the back of Al.
We reached the chamber far faster than I was expecting.
What the hell?
The torch fell up on the nest,
and I could see the terror paralyzing owl.
It riveted him to the spot like a
bolt of lightning.
It was horrific, but also beautiful.
A hulking mess of rotten bodies chewed and pulped like paper machet.
The nest was part roaring wasp hive and part mass grave.
Sunken faces and bleeding eyes stared back at us, mouths hanging wide open.
The missing residence hadn't even been tangled together, just actually melted into
each other's flesh, using a process I simply couldn't bear to think of.
standing in front of the nest was the rat.
It had grown, yet again, even larger,
looking like some misshap in Alsatian.
What the hell is that thing?
Al hissed.
Chris, where am I? What's going on?
He was white as a sheet, and I couldn't blame him.
Does that thing live down here?
Is that...
Is that his nest?
No.
I replied.
The rat chittered and I cried out.
It nests below.
Al looked more than confused.
He looked like the world had lost all order, all sense,
and who could blame him.
It wasn't so much the chorus of chitters that echoed from the darkness.
It probably hadn't been my own voice speaking from behind.
No.
It was the voices of the people in the nest,
the ones with missing eyes,
and pulled teeth and broken bones and exposed muscle,
their limbs intersecting with each other's torsos like some impossible puzzle,
like they've been broken down and poured into some god-awful mould.
They had answered too.
He is just their priest, I said, pointing towards the enormous rat.
What he worships lives down here.
What have you brought into this place? Al gasped.
What the hell?
have you brought into my building? It was always here, I replied. The god reached out from within
its nest, an owl was dragged screaming into the darkness, dropping the torch as he begged hysterically
for me, for anyone to help. It was finally over. I reached down and took the torch. It caught the
rat's eyes, and they shone back at me like two burning coals. For a moment, I thought it might
attack, but it only dipped its head in a rare acknowledgement.
It jittered something in its newborn language.
It nests below, I replied, before turning to leave.
