CreepsMcPasta Creepypasta Radio - "I’m a Wildlife Biologist Tagging Polar Bears. One of Them Has a Collar From the 1800s" Creepypasta

Episode Date: October 5, 2025

CREEPYPASTA STORY►by CreepsMcPastaCreepypastas are the campfire tales of the internet. Horror stories spread through Reddit r/nosleep, forums and blogs, rather than word of mouth. Whether you believ...e 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...SUGGESTED CREEPYPASTA PLAYLISTS-►"Good Places to Start"-    • "I wasn't careful enough on the deep web" ...  ►"Personal Favourites"-    • "I sold my soul for a used dishwasher, and...  ►"Written by me"-    • "I've been Blind my Whole Life" Creepypasta  ►"Long Stories"-    • Long Stories  FOLLOW ME ON-►Twitter:   / creeps_mcpasta  ►Instagram:   / creepsmcpasta  ►Twitch:   / creepsmcpasta  ►Facebook:   / creepsmcpasta  CREEPYPASTA 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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Starting point is 00:00:01 The first dart sank clean into the bear's shoulder. We'd gotten lucky. The wind had dropped, the snow crust was firm, and the animal had wandered close enough to the coast for us to approach without risking thin ice. Five months into the season, we'd all developed the same quiet rhythm of professionals who'd done this too many times to get nervous.
Starting point is 00:00:25 Dart, dose, weight, move in, measure, collar, release. Routine Only this one wasn't routine The bear swayed shuddered once Then lay down without a sound Its bulk flattened the snow Steam rising faintly from its fur I gave the signal
Starting point is 00:00:49 And we crunched forward on snow shoes Our breath loud in the still air Up close It was a healthy male Big paws, clean coat Thick with fat for the winter textbook specimen. I'd already
Starting point is 00:01:05 pulled the kit bag open when Amara crouched by his neck and frowned. Uh, guys? At first I thought she was pointing at scar tissue, maybe a healed wound. Then I saw the band of metal half buried in fur.
Starting point is 00:01:26 The bear already had a collar. And it wasn't one of ours. This was old. brass gone green with corrosion, pitted and scarred, as if it had been on there a long time. The edges weren't machined, they'd been hammered into shape by hand, uneven but strong, riveted shut in a way that looked impossible to remove without breaking the animal's neck. And there, etched into the metal, was a date. 1847.
Starting point is 00:02:01 Beneath it, scratched deep enough to cut through tarnish, was a spiral. Not the kind you draw on a bored afternoon, but a shape that made your eye want to look away. The lines overlapped in ways that shouldn't have worked, turning back into themselves, forming a loop that wasn't closed, yet had no beginning. I stared too long and felt motion sick. God damn, one of the others whispered, this has to be a prank, right? some trappers joke. Yeah, Amara said, forcing a laugh, because Inuit hunters in the 1800s
Starting point is 00:02:40 were hammering out brass in their free time. I didn't laugh. None of us did. We finished the examination in silence. We scanned its teeth, checked blood samples and noted vitals. Everything was normal, except the drugs. They should have knocked it out for at least an hour. After 15 minutes, the bear's eyes flicked open, slow, deliberate. I froze, dark guns still hanging limp in my hand, still needing to be reloaded, a process that would take too long if the
Starting point is 00:03:19 bear just stood up. The animal should have staggered, fighting the sedatives. Instead, beyond reason, It just stood Not even a stumble Just up on its feet Watching us with that deep Unblinking Black gaze We backed off Hands raised
Starting point is 00:03:40 No sudden movements The bear didn't follow But it didn't leave either It simply stood there Massive and silent As we retreated to the skidoo And drove away Amara broke the
Starting point is 00:03:57 silence on the ride back to camp. Maybe it led us to it, she said. It sounded ridiculous, but we also couldn't refute it. That night, after gear was stowed and data uploaded, I dug through the digital archives of expeditions north of Ellesmere Island. I scrolled past whalers, Royal Navy logs, early Soviet surveys, every scrap I could find. The coastline was a lot of the coastline was.
Starting point is 00:04:28 mapped in 1818, but it wasn't explored until 1852. Not one expedition had ever reached this far in 1847. The thing about Arctic field stations is that you have plenty of downtime once the day's data is logged. Most people stream whatever satellite internet can handle. Amara digs. She has a thing for records for turning footnotes into rabbit holes. That night, while the rest of us played cards in the mess, she was still hunched over a laptop, scrolling through grainy PDFs of scanned expedition logs. If no one was here in 1847, she muttered,
Starting point is 00:05:16 then why the hell does the collar say otherwise? At first, she came up empty. I was half convinced the whole thing was a fluke, maybe some eccentric trapper had engraved the date for a laugh. But then she pulled up something strong. strange. Not a published survey, nothing official. A letter, archived in the basement of some Royal Society library, digitized only because an intern scanned the wrong folder. It was barely legible, the ink smudged, the script leaning between copper plate and panic. Attached was a folded
Starting point is 00:05:54 map, hand-sketched, the paper crumpled and stained with oil. The author identified himself as Dr. Thaddeus Knox, Royal Arctic Surveyor, 1847. Except, there was no Knox in any expedition roster, no mention in whaling logs, naval commission, nothing. The man didn't exist in official records. Yet, here he was, sketching out coastlines that shouldn't have been charted until decades later. And right in the center of the month,
Starting point is 00:06:32 map amid sigils, inked in careful spirals and crosshatched patterns, was a mark. Umbra Transitio, shadow crossing. Beneath it, Knox had scrawled a note. The gradient holds, the white king endures. None of us knew what that meant. Did we even want to? But when Amara overlaid the coordinates onto modern charts, The result was chillingly precise.
Starting point is 00:07:07 It matched this stretch of flatsy ice we'd flown over a dozen times. Featureless, empty, nothing but wind-scoured snow and pressure ridges. I asked the obvious question. If this place is just ice, why mark it at all? Amara didn't look up from a laptop. Maybe he wanted someone to come back. The next morning we packed light, just emergency gear, food rations and a couple of sled-mounted drones. The plan was simple.
Starting point is 00:07:46 Quick flight out, confirm the site, and if it was a bust, we'd have wasted nothing but fuel. The mood was sharper than usual, though. No one said it out loud, but we all felt it. That sense you get before a storm when the air hangs heavy. Every time I glanced up from my pack, I caught Amara watching me as if she were gauging whether I'd back out. When I stepped outside to secure the equipment cases, I froze. On the horizon, half a mile out, a dark shape sat on the snow. Massive, motionless.
Starting point is 00:08:31 The same bear, the collar gleamed faintly in the dawn light. It didn't move as we loaded gear, nor when we hauled the sleds to the strip. But as the propellers roared to life and the plane nosed upward, I looked down one last time. The bear was still there, unmoving, its head tilted back, eyes fixed on the sky. The coordinates from Nox's map dropped us into what should have been nothing, just flat sea ice stretching to the right, white on white until sky and ground blurred. From the air, it looked like we were chasing a ghost. But as the plane dipped lower, Amara leaned against the window and swore.
Starting point is 00:09:21 There, look at the shadows. I didn't see it at first. Then the sun hit at just the right angle, and the surface betrayed itself. The ice folded inward in long, concentric ridges, each step curling in on itself like the grooves of a shell. From above, the pattern was invisible, a trick of geometry smooth as a billiard table. But if you looked hard enough, the spiral was undeniable.
Starting point is 00:09:57 We circled twice to be sure, then found a stretch of flat ice half a kilometer away and brought the plane down on its skis. The engines roar faded into silence, leaving only the groan of wind across the fuselage. We unloaded sleds and gear, then set out on foot across the snow, the spiral drawing us in step by step. The spiral was not a natural formation.
Starting point is 00:10:27 The depression sloped gently downward, circling around a centre point perhaps 50 metres across, and at that heart, reaching through the ice, as though the earth itself had grown tired of hiding it, lay a block of stone. Nothing natural to the area. Something stranger. Black green like oxidized copper, but polished smooth, almost oily.
Starting point is 00:10:54 Its surface shed the snow as if it rejected it. Every other patch of ice within sight was frosted over, yet the platform remained bare. A seamless plug set perfectly in the spiral center. We approached cautiously, dragging sleds behind us. The closer we got, the more wrong it felt. The ice didn't crunch underfoot. It whispered, thin layers shifting, reluctant to carry our weight. The air itself felt heavier, though the instrument showed nothing unusual.
Starting point is 00:11:33 Stone like this doesn't exist up here, muttered Lars, our geologist. He knelt, gloved hand brushing the edge where ice met block. This isn't glacial drift. This was brought here, none of us replied. The idea of placement of someone hauling this slab here so long ago was too large to say out loud. We made camp at the edge of the depression, tense set against the wind. I tried to write notes that night, but found myself staring at the point. platform to the fabric of my tent.
Starting point is 00:12:14 It looked smaller by day. At night, beneath a shifting green wash of the aurora, it seemed immense, like the spiral wasn't carved around it, but rather out from it. That was when Amara called softly from outside. The bear was back. It stood on the far side of the depression,
Starting point is 00:12:41 higher up on the spiral ridge, Still, as a statue, watching us, its brass color caught the aurora's light, gleaming faintly green. I felt my stomach lurch. We had flown nearly 40 miles from the tagging site. Bears often wonder the icy plains, hunting or resting. For it to be here meant it followed us directly, no rests or stops. It's obvious to say that isn't the normal behavior of a... polar bear.
Starting point is 00:13:15 It's the same one, Amara whispered. Her breath steamed the cold air. It didn't just find us. It came here on purpose. No one argued. We all felt it. The bear didn't move or charge. It simply watched, patient as the ice.
Starting point is 00:13:38 Then, a second shape joined it on the ridge. Another massive silhouette. broad-shouldered, breath misting. Then a third. Silent. Watching. At camp, the first problem came immediately. Batteries drain faster than they should have.
Starting point is 00:14:03 The drone controller lost signal twice, even before we launched. Compass needles jittered like they'd been set on spinning plates. Lars cursed over the instruments, insisting the magnetic anomalies didn't make sense. But none of that scared me, like what Amara spotted just before dusk. Another one, she said, pointing at the ridge. Another bear stood watching us. This one was larger, his fur mottled with age, muzzle scarred. It didn't even twitch in ear.
Starting point is 00:14:40 It just watched. And then, 20 minutes later, came another. That was when unease turned into something sharper. Polar bears are solitary hunters. Two together is unusual. But that many, sitting at a distance like centuries, silent and patient. Wrong. It went against all our collective knowledge of a species we were experts on.
Starting point is 00:15:11 They're surrounding us, muttered Daniels, voice low like it was afraid the animals might hear. Geez, they're actually surrounding us. I caught myself running numbers in my head. Distance to the plane, distance to the rifles we'd laid by the sleds, the average sprint speed of a polar bear. Every calculation ended badly. If they wanted a charge, we wouldn't have a chance. But they didn't.
Starting point is 00:15:43 They held their ground. Their presence weighed heavily on us. Every time one of us looked up from a task There would be a white shape at the edge of vision Unmoving, patient It didn't feel like hunger It was like we were being herded To distract ourselves
Starting point is 00:16:04 We pushed ahead with the drone Using what power it had left We found a narrow phoeia at the spiral's edge A crack that led downward into blackness The machine dipped inside its camera casting a cone of light. For a moment, we saw impossible things. Angles folding into themselves, stones shaped but melted,
Starting point is 00:16:27 structures that seemed to have been carved or grown. Layers of hexagons fused together in a lattice that looked disturbingly like bone. Then, the feed stuttered. The last frame froze on something curved, ribbed, too organic for architecture. and the drone went dead. Daniel snapped. He swore, grabbed at the rifles, and declared we needed to leave right then and there.
Starting point is 00:16:57 This is insane. So many goddamn polar bears watching us like prison guards. Equipment dying, drones going to hell. I'm not dying out here for some stupid map. Amara didn't flinch. She just looked at him, her voice calm. They're not stopping us. If they wanted us gone, we'd be gone already.
Starting point is 00:17:20 Don't you see? They're leading us somewhere. No one argued. We couldn't. However, their true intentions were still unclear. That night, none of the bears approached, none charged. They stayed exactly where they were, each on their ridge outlined against the aurora. But in the morning, when we were,
Starting point is 00:17:48 The snow told a different story. Their tracks circled. The camp. It happened fast. One second, Lars was edging along the spiral's rim to get a core sample. Next, the ground gave way with a sound like the world tearing open. The snow sagged, then dropped. Two figures vanished into the white spray, Lars and Daniels.
Starting point is 00:18:21 The rest of us lunged for the edge. but it was too late. The crack widened under our weight, forcing us back. Rope, get the ropes! Amara shouted, already on her knees, notting on line to the sled anchor. We peered into the split. It wasn't bottomless, just steep,
Starting point is 00:18:43 a funnel sloping down maybe 20 metres, unnervingly smooth, like it had been carved by something other than water or weather. The kind of surface, no cruelly. crampen would bite into. Daniels was already scrambling to his feet, cursing, his parker torn at the shoulder. Lars lay half buried in drift to the base, clutching his ankle. Not broken, he gasped when we reached him, but it's bad.
Starting point is 00:19:13 His face was pale, jaw tight. A sprain may be worse. He could hobble, but if we needed to move fast, he'd be left behind. The shaft walls reflected our headlamps strangely, light bouncing too far, as if the ice was deeper, thicker than it had any right to be. We rigged a ballet line and descended one by one. The silence deepened as we went down. By the time my boots hit the floor beside Lars, I realized I could no longer hear the wind. No creek of ice, no groan of shifting snow. The world above us was gone, sealed by silence.
Starting point is 00:19:58 It was like stepping into a vacuum. Amara glanced upward. Sound should carry down. Why can't we hear anything above? No one answered. We drag Lars to a hollow in the ice, a natural alcove just wide enough for four of us to huddle, a concave wall curving like the inside of a rib.
Starting point is 00:20:21 The air was stale, colder than the shaft itself. It would do for shelter, just enough time to rest, then we'd haul Lars back up in the morning. Daniels sat apart from the rest, staring up at the shaft. He was watching, he whispered. I turned. What? He looked at me like he regretted speaking, but the words kept spilling. When you guys descended, before the snow closed, I looked up.
Starting point is 00:20:58 One of them was at the rim, the collared one. He didn't move, just stood there, looking down. And then, I asked, Daniel swallowed. Then, it walked away. No one spoke after that. We lit the stove, made tea, tried to ignore the way the The alcove walls glittered with frost. The glow of the flame cast strange shadows, stretching them into angles that didn't belong.
Starting point is 00:21:32 Lars grown quietly, ankle packed in snow to keep the swelling down. Sleep became thin and uneasy. When I woke in the dim light of my headlamp, I noticed it first. The alcove wasn't the same shape. The black wall had shifted. A jagged crack split down its centre, just wide enough to fit a hand. And through it, blackness yawned, a tunnel. The crack widened as we chipped at it with axes, each blow echoing dull inside the alcove.
Starting point is 00:22:14 The ice fractured reluctantly, shearing in long vertical strips until, with a final snap, part of the wall gave way. A hollow space opened beyond, dark as a throat. None of us spoke. We simply looked at each other, then clipped headlamps to our huts, and went in. The tunnel was narrow enough that we brushed both walls with our shoulders. Its surface wasn't natural ice. At first, I thought it had been carved, but the grooves weren't the marks of tools. They ran smooth, symmetrical, curling in a little.
Starting point is 00:22:52 arcs that defied any mason's hand. The whole passage curved slowly downward, every angle just a degree off drew. It made my head swim if I stared too long, like walking inside the geometry that wanted to slip out of comprehension. We hadn't gone ten metres before Daniels bent and picked a boot sole from the frost. Its leather had gone stiff with age, the nails at its heel hand-forged, A little farther on, we found the rest of it, collapsed into powder at his touch. Soon there were more.
Starting point is 00:23:32 Rusted chisels, a split pickaxe with a handle wrapped in strips of hide, a scattering of cloth fragments that might once have been bare pelts. None of it seemed dumped or discarded. It was arranged along the walls in a deliberate, curated order, as if left intentionally. Knox, Amara murmured. Her voice was flat, as if naming him, explained, and condemned the scene all at once. The passage opened into the first chamber. I had to stop in the threshold and catch my breath.
Starting point is 00:24:08 The space wasn't large, but it was dense, stacked in precise rows with slabs of the same black-green stone we'd seen in the spiral above. Each was the size of a coffin lid The surface is smooth, polished No carving off words or images But arranged One leaned against another at a subtle tilt Another rotated a degree off centre A third propped diagonally across them both
Starting point is 00:24:37 It was deliberate architectural thoughts expressed without language Lars ran a hand over one muttering about mineral composites but I barely heard him. The arrangement gave the impression of meaning, like someone had been trying to think in stone, to hold onto an idea too large for words.
Starting point is 00:25:01 We moved on, unsettled. The next chamber was worse. It appeared to have been hollowed directly from a single mass of glacier ice, a dome that gleamed like glass beneath our headlamps. But the light didn't behave properly, instead of scattering evenly. It bent, warped and converged to points
Starting point is 00:25:25 as if the walls were prisms, beams curved along arcs, overlapping in ways that created after images in the eye. When I blinked, I still saw the room glowing. Daniels muttered. Feels like we're walking inside a lens. We pressed deeper. The air grew colder with each step,
Starting point is 00:25:48 unlike the kind of cold we knew. This was layered, dense, a cold that filled the lungs until every breath dragged heavy. My eyelashes frosted, our clothes stiffened with rhyme. The silence deepened until I could hear the throb of my own pulse in my ears. The tunnel curved one final time and widened into a chamber so vast my headlamp beam vanished into the dark before I could find the far wall. The air was different here.
Starting point is 00:26:25 Stiller, denser. Every breath crystallized in my throat. It felt less like we had descended into a cave than into a vault. A pocket sealed away for a millennia by the shifting bones of the earth. A natural cryosink locked by tectonics and pressure
Starting point is 00:26:44 untouched until now. and at its heart, pressed against the front edge of the ice wall, was a hand. Not human. It dwarfed us, larger than a scadu. Each finger longer as a body, each nail a curved ridge of horn worn smooth by unimaginable time. The skin was pale, leached of color, ridged with pressure cracks that splintered through the ice. The edges of the hand blurred back into shone, shadow, swallowed by depth, as though the rest of whatever owned it stretched far beyond the walls
Starting point is 00:27:25 we could see. We never saw the hole, only the hand. That was enough. The ice around it was different from the rest, solid, no bubbles or pockets of air, wet, veined with trickles that gleamed under our lights, drops ran slowly down the fissures, beading on the chamber the floor. The glacier was holding, but only just. Daniel swore softly. His voice broke the hush like glass dropped in a church. The closer we stepped, the clearer had became that people had been here before. The floor was littered with remnants, splintered scaffolding, half-en-cased in rhyme, the bent frames of lanterns, the skeleton of an old tripod drill. Some of the gear was modern, Corroated aluminium, battery housings warped with cold, but others were older, chisels, timber braces, and a cracked oil lamp with a crest of the Royal Society.
Starting point is 00:28:32 Amara crouched by a rusted brace, running her glove across the corroded metal. Different expeditions, she said quietly. Different sentries. Near the base of the ice wall, half buried in frost, was a bridge. brass plate, green with corrosion. We scraped it clear enough to read. The letters have been punched deep, uneven but still legible. It is not dead. It is cold. The earth must not thaw. I stared at the words until my eyes blurred, until the cold sank into my bones. My mind kept circling the same thought. What kind of thing needs to be kept cold? And said, not.
Starting point is 00:29:27 The noise snapped to me back, a soft crackle, wet and sharp. The ice beneath the hand had fissured further, a black seam running like a wound. From it leaks something darker than water, thick frost spreading upward, staining the chamber wall in jagged black veins. It's moving, Daniels whispered. It isn't, Amara shut back, but a voice wavered. I took a step closer against all instinct. I couldn't see movement, but I could feel it, a heaviness radiating from the thing beyond the ice,
Starting point is 00:30:08 no vibration or sound, just presence. Amara had gone silent, she was kneeling by the side wall, rushing frost away with a mitt. When I joined her, I saw what she uncovered. More collars. The same brass collars we had seen on the bear. Row after row of them embedded deliberately in the ice,
Starting point is 00:30:34 stacked like bricks in a wall. Each one etched with spirals, each frozen into place as if hammered into the glacier itself. It was Amara who found the satchel. Half-rotted leather wedged between a fallen scaffold, brittle straps fused with ice. She cut it free and, started searching for answers on top of the piling questions.
Starting point is 00:31:01 Inside were notebooks, their pages warped and blurred by centuries of frost. Alongside them, a spool of microfilm cartridges sealed in wax, the kind used in the early 20th century for long-term archives. We passed them carefully between us, reading by headlamp glow. The words were fractured, sentences lost the smears of mould, but the fragments that remained were enough. Not a god, but inversion. The hand of reversal, the undoing of order. It must not warm, it must not wake.
Starting point is 00:31:42 Each journal circled the same truth. The thing locked in the glacier wasn't alive in any sense we understood. It was a force given shape, a presence that gnawed of the fabric of structure itself. It wasn't creation nor destruction, reaction, reversal, and always the bears. They weren't predators or accidents of nature, but guardians that defied nature. The collars were brands binding them to the task, a duty impressed upon them, passed
Starting point is 00:32:18 down in ways no science could explain. They've been here since Knox, Amara whispered, holding one of the journals close to the glow the headlamp, maybe longer. Daniel shook his head. That's not possible. Bears don't live a century. They do, Amara said. Though her voice shook, these do. It's why they don't attack. It's why they wait. They've outlasted every expedition, every storm, every year since this place was sealed. They're still keeping watch. The thought chilled me more than the end. ever could. The same colored sentinel we'd tranquilized, alive when Knox carved his notes in 1847, alive now, leading us here. I thought of the collard bear we tagged, how it hadn't resisted,
Starting point is 00:33:16 how it seemed almost expectant. Was it even sedated when we tried to tag it, or was it just pretending? The spiral depression too was explained, not in clear language, but in implication. It wasn't a law, no, is it some mystical sigil meant to invite discovery? It was a warning mark, carved into the ice
Starting point is 00:33:41 to be seen only from the ground. A sign that said, here lies a lock, tend to it. The bears could guard, they could lead, but they couldn't repair. For that,
Starting point is 00:33:56 hands were needed, human hands. I felt the weight of that realization settled in my chest. We weren't trespasses here, nor did we discover something. We'd been summoned to a duty, long abandoned. They brought us, I whispered, before I even realized I'd spoken. The others looked at me, uncertain. They could have killed us a dozen times over, I went on, but they didn't.
Starting point is 00:34:28 They drove us here. every time they pushed us closer because they can't do it themselves. But someone has to. The silence that followed was heavier than the cold. Each of us looked back toward the wall with a colossal hand pressed against the thinning ice. Its blurred outline stretching into blackness. The frost beneath it cracked again, a bead of water running down like sweat. No one needed to say what we all felt.
Starting point is 00:35:02 that this place had been tended once and then abandoned, that the guardians had endured without their stewards, that duty had lapsed. Amara closed the notebook, her gloves trembling. If this fails, she said, if the ice goes, it isn't just us that dies. No one disagreed. We had seen enough.
Starting point is 00:35:31 None of us said it, but the silence between us carried the deceit. Lars could barely put weight on his ankle, Daniels wouldn't stop shaking, and I felt a sickness in my bones that went deeper than cold. We had to leave. We packed the journals, the satchel, and a handful of collars chipped from the wall. But then came the sound. A crack, sharp, splitting, echoing through the vault like thunder under ice.
Starting point is 00:36:04 I turned. The phoegia beneath the enormous hand had widened further, where skin pressed against thinning of frost, a patch had broken fully free. For the first time, a fraction of the flesh of the thing was exposed. It wasn't dead flesh like we'd hoped. The pale skin shimmered with a slick translucence, veins pulsing faintly like trapped rivers. Steam rose in slow curls, from that tiny breach, the chamber began to change. Black Frost raised up the chamber wall, crawling across scaffolds, shattering metal into flakes. One of the journals curled in on itself, pages crumbling to powder as if centuries had passed in seconds. We panicked, scrambling ropes, dragging Lars, shouting over each other, until Amara stopped us.
Starting point is 00:37:01 Wait, she held one of the notebooks open, her breath fogging the page. Look, scroll diagrams filled the margins, sketches of ice rigs, annotations in Knox's sharp script. Layers, barriers, freeze, retreat, repeat. Words blurred, but the meaning was plain enough. They had fought this same fight before. They didn't just leave. Amara said, they sealed it again and again. We can too.
Starting point is 00:37:41 We tore through the remnants, gathering anything that could help. Rusted drills, fractured piping, frozen tanks of long-spent chemicals. Useless. But beneath the scaffolding, we found something stranger. A cluster of iron cylinders, thick-walled, capped with brass fittings. Ice-hauling tanks. primitive refrigeration gear, the kind expeditions once used a store harvested ice. The seals were warped but intact.
Starting point is 00:38:15 When Amara pried one open, a draft of air hissed out so sharp it crystallized on a glove. Even after all this time, the old technology still bit with cold. It wasn't much, but with what we had left in our packs, fuel, coolant, a working pump, It was enough. The plan was insane. We threaded the hose across the fissure, primed the pump, and fed our last reserves of fuel into the engine. Melted snow sloshed through the line, spraying in a thin sheet across the crack.
Starting point is 00:38:52 Immediately we opened the antique tanks, forcing their breath of ancient frost over the surface. The effect was violent. seized the brittle ice almost on contact, a skin spreading jaggedly across the wound to force a new layer of cold. All the while, I saw the colors of life returning to the once dead exposed flesh, the behemoth straining to grasp onto what little freedom it was allowed. I could see moisture beading on its ridges, drops pattering against the floor like falling stones. where they struck, the ice sagged and bled black. We worked until our gloves stiffened,
Starting point is 00:39:38 until our lashes frozen shut, until Lars collapsed against the wall, whimpering through clenched teeth. And slowly, unbelievably, a new layer formed, thin, brittle, translucent as glass, but a layer all the same. The chamber,
Starting point is 00:40:00 quieted, the black frost halted, trapped beneath the skin we had forced into place. The hand loomed, blurred once more behind a veil of ice. None of us spoke. We knew it wouldn't last. Hours, days, a season at most. But not forever. That was when we saw that the way back was blocked. At the mouth of the shaft, bear stood shoulder to shoulder, silent and unmoving, their collars gleaming with frost, a living wall of white. Daniels raised his rifle, hands shaking.
Starting point is 00:40:45 We're not getting out of here, he whispered. But they didn't advance. Their posture was docile. They simply waited. It was an aggression. It was in expectation. Amara's breath hitched. They want one of us to stay.
Starting point is 00:41:09 The words landed like stones. We all felt the truth of them. This place had been abandoned. This human stewards had vanished. Their duty broken. The bears had guided us here not to witness, but to decide. Lars tried to stand. His bed ankle gave way.
Starting point is 00:41:30 and he crumpled again, cursing. Daniels pressed the rifle harder into his shoulder, teeth bared. I'm not dying here. I looked at Amara. She was already watching me, calm despite the tears freezing on her cheeks. I'll do it, she said simply. No, I started.
Starting point is 00:41:55 But the bear shifted, their massive bodies leaning just enough to block the shaft further. Their silence was deafening. The Mara touched my arm. You'll go back, you'll tell them. Maybe they'll listen. There was nothing to say. We hugged through the stiffness of our suits.
Starting point is 00:42:20 Lars clutched the hand with both of his, his lips trembling too hard for words. Daniels turned away, shoulders heaving. When we moved, the bears parted, just enough for three to pass. I looked back once, just once. Amara stood at the base of the ice wall, headlamp beam casting her shadow against the colossal hand.
Starting point is 00:42:47 She raised the collar in both hands and pressed it to the frozen surface as if completing a circle. The bears stayed with her, and we climbed. We didn't look back as we climbed out of the spiral. None of us could bear to. The silence was crushing enough. No last words.
Starting point is 00:43:12 Just the hiss of our own breathing in our masks, the creak of rope, and the endless white above. By the time we reached the surface, a storm had begun to close in. The crater blurred in drifting snow, the black-green platform already half-buried, as if the world itself wanted to erase what we had seen.
Starting point is 00:43:35 The bear still waited, the rim, a silent guard of honour. The plane took us south, Amara remained behind, sealed in that vault of ice with her impossible duty. The weight of it pressed on me more than any silence could. We completed our original mission and returned to command. The debriefing was tense, back in a windlass room that smelled of coffee and stale air. Lars gave his account, Daniels gave his. I followed, words tumbling out as if on autopilot. We said Amara had been lost in a crevasse collapse. Conditions made recovery impossible. She was MIA unrecoverable. Tragic, but not unprecedented. During the debriefing, I had the words in my throat.
Starting point is 00:44:36 I imagined standing in that sterile room and telling them everything. The hand, the vault. The the collars, Amara standing sentinel at the base of the ice wall. Her warning, if the ice goes, it isn't just us that dies here. But I didn't. Not because I was afraid they wouldn't believe me, because I was afraid they would. And they'd come back with drills and charges and cameras, and the lock would fail.
Starting point is 00:45:11 I signed my name on the dotted line, ink scratching across paper. and with that the truth was buried deeper than the white king itself. I didn't want it that way. But I was scared. It was better a single name marked lost than the whole world undone. Months passed, the routine came back. Field work, reports, assignments.
Starting point is 00:45:41 I told myself I was fine that she had chosen her path and all I could do was honour it by keeping quiet. But guilt doesn't soften with time. It hardens, sharpens, until every quiet moment cuts. I couldn't shake the memory of her last words. You'll go back, you'll tell them, maybe they'll listen. I didn't. Not yet.
Starting point is 00:46:15 Winter returned, and with it, another mission. Not the same sight, but the same latitudes, same ice, same silence, same endless sky. The Arctic doesn't change. It only waits. One night, holed up in a weather tent while the wind clawed at the canvas. I found myself staring at the shortwave set we'd brought for contact. Its dial gleamed faintly in the lamplight, the metal pitted from years of use. I hadn't touched that frequency since the day we left her, but my hands moved before I could stop them.
Starting point is 00:46:57 I tuned the dial slowly and deliberately to the numbers we'd used in our previous mission. Static roared, then thinned, then, hello? Her voice, crackling, faint, distant as if dragged across miles of frozen air. but hers. My throat locked. Amara, are you...
Starting point is 00:47:27 Are you okay? There was a long pause. The hiss of static filled the tent. The wind outside shrieking in chorus. Finally, her voice came back, thin but steady. I'm here. I pressed my hand to my forehead, dizzy with relief. How...
Starting point is 00:47:51 How are you surviving? food, heat. Another pause, longer this time. The bears provide. I stared at the radio. So many questions swam through my head. I wanted to ask what that meant, what they brought her, what bargain had been struck.
Starting point is 00:48:15 But the word stuck in my throat. Instead, I asked, And the seal, the fissure? Static swallowed half. a reply, but I caught the words that mattered. It's holding. For now. The signal crackled, faded. I twisted the dial desperately, searching for her again, but only static answered. I sat in the dark long after the wind died, her voice circling my head like the spiral in the ice. It's holding. For now.

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