CreepsMcPasta Creepypasta Radio - "I work in a hospice for the dying. This patient will forever haunt my dreams" Creepypasta
Episode Date: June 13, 2021AUTHOR'S SITE► https://organic-prozac.blog/ CREEPYPASTA STORY►by OrganicProzac: https://www.reddit.com/r/nosleep/comm...Creepypastas are the campfire tales of the internet. Horror stories spread t...hrough 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►Doug Williams: https://www.artstation.com/artwork/Xn...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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Most people who have ever worked a night shift will tell you it's creepy work.
You walk up and down the corridors of wherever you are, your instincts working over time, setting your mind on edge.
We're hardwired to fear the night, a time of helplessness, a time in which we slide down the food chain, our bodies craving rest, our senses ill-equipped to cope with the dark.
For me, it's never been an issue.
To be honest, I kind of like it.
The dark
When I do my rounds
I don't feel that fear
I just feel peace
When I walk the halls at night
I don't have to deal with people
rushing around or jabbering nonsense
No extra responsibilities or requests
No small talk
No empty pleasantries
Just the echoing of my own feet
In the linoonium
bouncing off the walls
The soft sounds of patience breathing
As I pass their rooms
Sure every now and then
one of them wakes up in a panic.
Pretty rare, but it happens now and then.
All I got to do is call the on-duty nurse,
and whoever it is takes care of it.
I glide on, finish my rounds,
back to the front desk, back to my books.
Some of the chatterer nurses complain
as I passed a station about being stuck on the night shift.
They asked me how I can possibly stand it.
Don't I get bored?
Don't it get sick of being tired throughout the day?
I tell them it doesn't bother me.
I like the quiet.
What I don't tell them is that it's the daytime that feels pointless to me.
I don't have friends the required daylight to spend time with.
I don't have a girlfriend who needs attention.
My mom died when I was little.
Dad has his new family.
Just leaves me.
And I don't mind.
You don't miss what you never had.
I guess I'm what you might call a loner.
I think a nurse is pitiful.
up on it. They don't often try to speak to me. The nice ones flashed me a smile when they
see me. The assholes ignore me. All the same to me to be honest. I always figured they
probably wouldn't think much of me if they got to know me anyway. All in all, it's not a bad
place to work. Easy money. No much security required watching over a bunch of old folks in the
way out. There's nothing here really worth stealing. No drugs, no expensive equipment.
The patients aren't in a state to get out of bed, let alone cause any trouble worth talking about.
At least, that's what I thought.
The first time in 15 years of work I'd ever felt afraid of the hospice was when they wheeled in Isaiah Muldoon.
Now, before I saw Muldoon, I'd seen some disturbing stuff.
Dementia patients talking to the walls, old men with cancer riddle brains moaning like ghouls,
elderly ladies so emaciated
you could shine a flashlight through their stomach
and see the spine on the other side.
None of them had the effect to me
that motionless man on his gurney had.
He was so still.
Only way I could tell he was breathing
was the machine whirring beside him.
But the eyes,
wide open, staring out into oblivion and horror
as if they had seen the end of it all.
Pretty rare I saw the patients coming in.
And I guess the nurse thought I was the sensitive type.
She caught me, staring at him.
So she leaned over and told me he had locked in syndrome.
I asked her what there was, all the while compelled to stare at the man pinned to the bed.
She said he'd been in a routine operation and they got a dosage on his meds wrong, poisoned him.
His brain stem and the lower part of his brain was severely damaged, the upper part untouched.
essentially Muldoon was in a waking coma
As she told me this
His eyes began darting around the room like ping-pong walls
Locked onto mine as they looked past him
I tried to avert my gaze
But I couldn't break his glare
It was like he was staring straight into me
To places no one had ever seen
They got him into the bay and drew the curtain
I snapped out of it
Took me a moment to get my things
thoughts back together.
Just imagine that for a moment.
One day you're healthy and happy,
living your life as if nothing can ever go wrong.
Then someone flips a switch and you find yourself trapped inside your own body.
Minds still sharp as it is right now.
Only you're unable to move,
unable to speak.
So damaged,
even your lungs need help to work.
But still,
completely aware of everything going on around you.
No hope of ever being free.
waiting to die.
Despite my fear, I couldn't help feeling for the guy.
It's one thing to have your mind eaten away by the confusion of dementia.
It's another to watch your body decay around you
or you still feel like you're still together.
I asked about Muldoon, his family, friends.
The nurses told me his wife had died earlier in the year.
No kids.
He'd moved to the area recently and didn't have an emergency contact.
The only reason he had enough of the room was his insurance, which was paid for by some organisation.
Looking back, I guess my first mistake was feeling some kind of kinship with him.
He didn't have anyone, just like I didn't have anyone.
Plus, with him being in his state, I knew I wouldn't have to make small talk with him or listen to any yammering.
So, I figured, what could it hurt if I went to his room and talked to him when I was passing?
It felt kind of strange talking to anyone like that, opening a conversation.
I wasn't used to it.
At first, I spoke about the weather, sports, the news,
instantly despising myself each time I felt myself drifting into petty conversation,
aborting and cursing myself as I continued my rounds.
But every time I passed, he was there, waiting, a captive audience, if you will.
I started talking to him about the book I was really.
reading. I'm a big Murakami fan, so I told him that, described the plot of the novel I was reading
by the author, told him what I thought of it and what I thought was going to happen. I'd keep him
up to date each night I passed, and soon got on to more personal topics. I told Muldoon about my
family, how my dad was distant and my mom was dead, and no one really liked me, but that I didn't
mind. I told him about my life and my dream to one day write a novel, how I sleep alone and
ate alone, how I really had no one. All the while during these conversations, Muldoon would
fix me with his stare. It was hypnotic. I felt like I was pouring myself into him, a trickle
opening into a torrent until he would release me, and I could go back to my rounds.
Those conversations, if you can really call them that,
always left me feeling so tired, dazed,
like I had just woken from a deep sleep partway through.
Each time I told myself that was the last time.
Yet the next night, when I was passing that room,
I couldn't help but go inside,
drain some more of myself away.
The night Muldoon spoke.
It was the last night.
I felt peace.
I was doing the mid-shift rounds at about.
at 3 a.m. as usual. I remember how quiet the building was as I walked. Thinking back,
I don't even recall my shoes making a sound as they hit the floor. If I looked at the forest
when everything goes utterly silent, how only in the absence of that sound are you aware
it was there at all? I drifted in Muldoon's moonlit room and inside he was sitting up in his
bed. Bolt upright, his eyes fixed on mine. So why they could have to be. He could have been in his bed. So why they
could have popped from his skull, brilliant white against the darkness around him.
He was skinny by then, and as I went forward, he reached out as skeletal hands, besieging me
closer.
It felt wrong, but I was not afraid.
I felt like a child being carried to bed in a fever, tumbling away from myself and towards
the blackness.
His jaw unhinged and creaked open.
With each pump of the ventilator, he rasped out a language that the same thing.
sounded like death gasps. I lowered my head to him like cattle, and he clamped onto it with
an unknown power. I felt his claws dig into the skin, my skull shuddering as he forced
his way inside. The nurse slats me across the face, and I came round to a petrified eyes
searching me. I was standing in the doorway of Muldoon's room, rooted to the spot.
With a wavering voice, the nurse asked me what was wrong.
She told me.
I'd been screaming.
Terror erupted through me like a gazer.
I blurted out Muldoon's name, repeated it again and again and again.
I gassed, I pointed into the darkened room to where my attacker was surely scuttling.
The nurse flipped on the light switch.
And there he was, asleep in his bed, the ventilator gently clicking by his side.
I said I didn't understand.
He had attacked me.
his hands.
The nurse checked the machinery
surrounding the withered old man.
Told me it all looked normal.
Nothing had changed.
I didn't believe it,
but I couldn't bring myself to enter the room.
I told her we had to check the CCTV footage.
Each room was fitted with a camera.
Some of the other patients were stirring.
A couple had made their way into the hall,
no doubt disturbed by my apparent scream.
The nurse said you needed to tend to them
and set about a duty.
I made for the security desk.
The bank of monitors glowed before me
like mystic windows to the past.
I squinted at them,
trying to focus my blurred vision.
My thought still felt groggy
as if I'd woken up still drunk from the night before.
Not that I drink much,
that's just how it felt.
I managed to align my vision for long enough
to keen the correct camera.
My heart lurched
as the sleeping old man manifested on the
screen. I rewound the footage until I saw myself and the nurse in the doorway. I kept going.
As the timestamp sped backwards, a static version of me remained pinned to the spot on the
doorway, staring into the room like some kind of jittery creep. By the time I saw myself reverse
array from the room, 12 minutes of video had elapsed. Twelve. The attack had felt over in a flash.
Thoughts fogging over again
I pressed play
and watch myself stroll up to the doorway
and pull up to look inside
Then I just stood there
Barely moving a muscle
But not looking especially strange
Just standing there
Taking note of the old man on the bed
At the 11 minute and 34 second mark
The man on the screen burst into life
Nearly shocked me off my chair
He just started screaming
face contorted unlike I'd ever seen myself before.
The nurse came into view and I paused the tape.
It had felt so real.
But it was impossible.
Had I had an aneurysm?
Was there a tumour the size of a golf ball in my brain
fixing to send me into one of these beds
I've been walking past for these years?
Norgia crept to my throat and I closed my eyes tight.
I should probably get one of the ducks
that take a look at me tomorrow, I figured.
As the acid receded back down my esophagus and the urge to vomit passed, my head began to clear.
I decided to check the other camera, the one looking into the room.
I flipped over to the correct channel and the old man in the bed appeared on the screen.
I rewound at the time I'd arrived in his room, hit play.
Instantly, it hit me.
The eyes, glowing in the night, fixed.
wide on the doorway where I stood out of shot.
A shiver crept down my spine as I watched Muldoon, unmoving in that blackness.
His eyes never blinking.
The timestamp showed I'd started screaming.
The eyes flickered closed.
I spent the rest of my shift sitting at the security desk.
My thoughts felt cloudy, distant.
All I wanted was to go home and sleep.
The first light of dawn came.
my shift ended without further incident.
I made the automatic commute back to my apartment,
climbed the stairs,
collapsed into bed and shut my eyes in the hope
that good rest was all I needed to shake off the strangeness of last night.
As I drifted off,
it all felt like a half-remembered dream,
or like something that had happened to someone else at some of the time.
Ten jaws reached out from the depths and dragged me into sleep.
My eyes flicked open.
I was laying in a bed which was not.
my own in a strange room. I felt uncomfortable, but somehow numb. I glanced around,
trying to get my bearings. There was the rhythmic sound of machinery beside my head. The place
was utterly still, grey, thin cobwebs hanging about the place. A layer of filth covered everything,
making the modern utilitarian furniture look ancient. I attempted to sit up to get a better look,
but my muscles were not obey
I willed movement
with all my might
but nothing
not even a twitch
I was pinned under some great weight
unable to muster so much as a wiggle of my toe
I realized where I was
it was his bed
Muldoons
but why was I here
I had only finished my shift
I had left
I was asleep at home
Relief washed over me and my revelation
I was asleep
Just a bizarre dream
I lay in the dusty hospice bed
Confined to myself I would wake up at any moment in my home
I had never had a lucid dream before
Had no idea a dream could feel so real
But why had I not woken up
Usually when a dreamer notices his inner dream
His brain shorts out and he wakes
I was still there
in what felt like real time.
Something was in the hall.
My body filled with dread.
In the absence of all other sensation, it became my world.
I lay with my eyes fixed to the closed door.
It was out there moving towards me.
It made no sound, but I could feel it.
The pressure in the room increased as it approached,
like the room had slipped off the side of the marionette trench,
drifting down into the blackest parts of the ocean.
My eyes felt as though they would burst from my head.
I closed them tight to squeeze them back into my skull.
It was at the door, waiting.
My heart pounded in my chest, shaking my whole body.
I knew if whatever it was came in and looked into my eyes, it would ruin me.
The door opened.
I gasped and threw myself off the bed.
I kept my eyes closed tight
and raised my hands to protect my head from the being
No attack came
Slowly I opened my eyes and looked around
It was my apartment
No cobwebs, no machinery
No presence creeping up the hall
Before I could quite register
The nausea I threw up onto the floor
I rose to get a towel to clean up the mess
But my legs went to mush and I collapsed
My entire body felt stiff
Like I'd just run a marathon
I must have come down with a pretty nasty illness
Flew probably
I wrenched myself from the floor
And staggered into the living room
Where I'd left my phone
It struck me as strange that I was naked
I usually sleep in pajamas
But that was the least of my worries
It was 6pm
One hour before my shift was to begin
I was starting to feel better
but decided I should probably take the night off.
The hospice is pretty strict about coming to work
if you have something like the flu.
Too many high-risk patients.
My boss was understanding,
told me to see a doctor if my symptoms persisted.
I told her I would and hung up, slumped onto the couch.
A knock at the door stopped me from drifting off.
I groaned.
No one ever visited me,
so it couldn't be anything important.
The person knocked again, polite and cheery.
I made my way to the peephole and looked out.
It was my neighbour, Mrs Patton.
We had never said so much as a hello in the hallway before.
I only know name from the mail that sometimes mistakenly ended up in my box.
What could she possibly want?
She looked well enough.
I decided against the interaction I was turning to go back to the couch
and something slid through the door.
A note.
If she had some kind of problem, she could get lost.
Now was not the time.
I opened the folded paper anyway.
Dear Thomas, thank you so much for helping me today.
It's heartening to know I have such a lovely young man for a neighbour.
I fake some cookies as thanks.
You'll find them on your doorstep.
If you ever need anything, you feel free to pop over the hallway and knock on my door.
Thanks again, and God bless.
Pamela.
Great, I thought.
not only is the woman across the hall losing her marbles,
but now I'm involved with the delusions.
Should steer clear of her as best I can.
That kind of crazy has a way of sucking people in.
I screwed up the note and tossed in the direction of the trash.
Missed.
I spent the rest of the day feeling totally worn out.
Though, to be honest, it didn't change how I spent the day
compared to most of my other days off.
I lounged around the apartment, too tired for video,
games, watching the same series on Netflix I had already seen countless times before.
I tried to force myself to write a little of my latest novel idea, but as usual, I couldn't
find the willpower and just went to the fridge instead. Frozen pizza for dinner again.
Spaced out, I barely even noticed as my conscience started the drift, walled off gently by the chatter
of fake lovers on the TV. I closed my eyes just for a moment.
I battered my eyes open, must have dozed off.
The room was dark around me, but smelled dank, rotten.
Gradually, my vision adjusted to the gloom.
My heart sank.
I was back in the hospice bed, pinned to it by my own body.
The room had changed.
Black mould covered everything, seething out from behind the furniture and up the walls.
Air thick with spores was pumped into my feeble lungs
with each click of the machine beside me.
I wanted to cough, to clear my throat,
but even that was impossible.
I tried to wrench myself from the dream,
to wheel myself out of it.
Futile.
The machine's clicks intensified,
my heart pounded with a quickening rhythm.
It was coming.
The spores in the air whirled around me
with each step outside in the hall.
I could hear it now.
Each step a thump of some great mass slamming onto the ground
The pressure in the room was unbearable
Enough to buckle the door in its frame
Its curdling breath billowed to the cracks in the door
I winced my eyes tight
Heard the door scream open on its bent hinges
The thing was in the room
Willing me to look at it
It was moving closer
I could smell it now
An ancient thing
Rotten mass and dirt
I felt it
reach out for me. I rolled off the couch and under the floor screaming. I could feel the
filth from the room clinging to my skin. I made a blind dash for the door, but tripped and was sprawled
under the carpet. Laying, panting, I was home, back in my own home. I was Thomas, me. This was no
ordinary illness. Something was severely wrong. Orange lights streamed through the window.
My anal-clock was no help
5am or p.m.
I checked my phone.
P.m.
I had slept for almost 10 hours
and yet still felt as though
I'd been awake for days.
I needed a doctor.
Medical help.
Maybe the nurses of the hospice
could offer me some advice.
I unlocked my phone to call.
An odd red message popped onto the screen.
I opened it.
Hey, great meeting you last night.
I don't usually do that kind of thing.
I'm a nice girl, really.
Call me whenever.
X.
No telltale link to some seedy side at the end of the message.
No request for money or to follow on some social media page.
Even the number looked legit below the saved contact.
Amber.
I decided to ignore it and called the number for the hospice.
The head nurse picked up.
I told her who it was.
But, before I had the chance to ask her advice,
she was already thinking me for enthusiastically stopping by with the donuts for the staff.
That was really sweet, she said.
I was dumbfounded.
She said she was happy.
I was feeling so much better.
She'd never seen me so perky.
She asked how my plans were going for the trip.
Trip?
The one I'd used my favour to book the time off for short notice.
I asked her when I'd booked this time off.
She told me three days ago.
But wasn't that Sunday?
No, she said.
Today is Saturday.
I dropped the phone.
This meant three days had passed since I'd fallen asleep in the couch.
I'd been asleep for three whole days.
It couldn't be.
And how had I booked the time off in my sleep?
I could hear her asking for me from the floor.
I picked up the phone, made an excuse and hung up.
My head was swimming, or rather sinking.
My body felt totally used up.
I could have fallen back asleep right then and there.
The only thing keeping my eyes open was the dread pulsing around my body with each heartbeat.
I had to find answers.
There had to be some kind of clue, some linked to what was happening.
I remember the message to my phone.
I called Amber.
Hey you, the soldier voice on the other line said.
You don't play games.
I like that.
I asked her who she was.
There was a pause on the other side.
She asked me what I meant.
I demanded to know how we met.
Amber told me I was being weird.
I ignored her, demanded again.
She called me a creep, said she guessed she had been wrong about me, hung up.
I never was much good with women.
I looked around my apartment.
Everything was so tidy.
No dirty plate took cutler at a house.
No empty takeaway boxes on the floor.
Even my magazines and video games have been neatly put away in the shelf in alphabetical order.
What sick person had alphabetized my stuff?
I checked the trash.
Vegetable wrappers from the supermarket.
All organic.
I dashed to the fridge.
Stocked with fruit.
More organic vegetables.
Some kind of rice with canoa written on the side.
Apricots.
Meat from a local butcher.
Where was my mustard?
Where are my pickles?
my hot dogs.
A white hot needle shot behind my eye.
So painful I nearly collapsed.
Worst migraine of my life.
Wincing, I checked my phone.
Checked the history in the browser.
I scored past a number of charity websites
I'd apparently visited over the last three days.
First time for everything, I suppose.
There had to be something I was missing.
I checked the files.
There was one recording.
Play me.mp3.
I opened it.
My blood froze as my own voice rang through the tinny speaker.
It was me, and yet not.
The same pitch and accent, yet somehow more languid, calm.
Hello, Thomas, don't be startled.
I know this all must be very distressing for you.
For that, I apologise.
It is not my attention to frighten you,
but vessels rarely offer as much resistance as you have.
You should be proud.
I'll admit you're not a prime candidate, but needs must.
My current vessel is damaged beyond repair, and I must transition soon.
Unfortunately for you, amongst the staff in the hospice, your existence is least worthy.
You have squandered your chance of finding meaning on this earth, and if you look within yourself, you know this will never change.
That is not my doing, it is your own.
Sadly, this is a state of most vessels, doomed to be used up and shriveled away without finding any purpose at all.
A drop in the ocean, as they say.
I want to make the world a better place, Thomas.
I want to make something of your vessel.
Give it to me.
Give in.
Rest.
Make it easy in yourself, as you always have, and know that you will be loved, adored by all.
They will build statues of you and praise your name.
Give yourself to me, Thomas.
Sleep.
At that, a guitaral chanting began emanating from the speaker.
Instinctively, I held the phone into the wall, shattering it into silence.
I stood for a moment, exhaustion pulling my eyelids down, adrenaline holding them open.
Something was coming up the stairs.
A smell, decay, ancient dirt, thudding down the hall.
Cobwebs began to form around.
me. I shook my head and they dissipated. They began to gather again. The thudding reached the door,
filling the room with a stench, the apartment itself twisting around me. I ran to the sink
and splashed my face of the water. The reek wafted away and back in with each cold splash. I was
fading. In desperation, I went to the toaster, set it, and took a deep breath. I jammed my
fingers into the glowing filament. The toaster exploded. I flew back and onto the ground,
more awake than I'd ever been in my life. I lay in the floor, panting, looking around.
Everything was normal. The only smell now was burnt hair, fragrant compared to what it had
replaced. I had to stay awake, just long enough for that thing to die. I rummaged through my drawers,
found the truck of pills I'd bought when I started the job.
It was still in date.
I borrowed the kettle,
washed down thrice to recommended dose of the pills with black coffee.
It's been 32 hours since I heard myself on the recording.
My heart is beating like a jackhammer.
I'm so wired I didn't even recognize my own face in the mirror earlier.
I look old.
Every time my head drops,
I hear that thing outside, getting closer,
beating the door and groaning.
It wants to be let in
It wants to see me
I think it may be death itself
Maybe is whatever Muldoon really is
I don't know
Right now
I'm doing anything I can to stay awake
To stop myself drifting off
That's why I'm writing this all out
Not even sure if anyone will believe me if they read it
What else can I do?
Call the cops
Yeah right
I've got to
consider going to the hospice and killing Muldoo myself.
But even when that thing in the hall is keeping quiet,
I know it's out there.
I can feel it.
It wants me to go to it.
By the time anyone reads this,
I'll either be me,
or I'll be gone.
Not sure how much longer I can hold out.
The cobwebs are covering everything now.
When the thing outside groans,
it sounds fierce,
angry.
At least I can still move
my arms and legs.
I think I'll watch some more TV.
Take the last of my trucker pills.
Maybe another cold shower.
I wish I'd written that novel.
Heck, it might have been pretty good.
