CreepsMcPasta Creepypasta Radio - "My friends and I used to play tag at night. We stopped when strangers began to play" Creepypasta
Episode Date: March 31, 2021CREEPYPASTA STORY►by KinceP1: https://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►Márton Gyula Kiss: https://www.artstation.com/artwork/6qQ86SUGGESTED 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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farm's place for a couple of years now. I moved to the city to attend university after graduating
high school and haven't been back much aside from holidays. In truth, university was just an excuse.
I really just wanted to get the hell out of the sticks. I grew up in this town which is less than
12,000 people, a few elementary schools and only one high school. I know lots of you probably grew up
in much smaller places, but I think we're cut from the same cloth. I mean, going to Walmart
as a kid was practically the same as a vacation in my mind, or at least would be the closest
I'd come to one.
That being said, I might lose a lot of you when I say that our roads were paved, mostly,
and the town's hub garnered a lot of tourism, so it's not like we're smack dab in the middle
of nowhere.
My mom's house, on the other hand, is a different story.
It sits out in the lonely creek of the outskirts of town, about a 20-minute drive to the closest
grocery store. You wouldn't find street lamps or sidewalks out here, but you would find me,
my mom, and my older sister, Leah. While we have neighbours, our homes aren't packed in tight
like the suburbs. Even if you knew they were there, they're hidden from view by large stretches
of thickets and trees. As far as we were concerned, we were living in total isolation.
My friends in town loved coming over and playing out in the woods when we were
kids. Compared to the little
tuna can communes, it was the
equivalent of trailblazing through uncharted
territories. It may
sound exciting, but there's not much
else going on at my house. No
paved pathways, dainty gardens,
inset pools, or fancy decks.
Instead, there's extremely long
fences on either side of our property,
lined on ditches on both sides,
which end abruptly.
Where you'd expect to right angle, there was
nothing. No corners or turns
boxing us in, no frames around the
I think it's just there to drain water and show where our property ended between us and our neighbours.
While it walls us off on the sides, the gap at the back lay open to the vast forest,
which sprawls out all the way to the coast.
Accessible to anyone brave enough to venture there.
The house is a small, modest building, even after someone had added an extension to the weathered,
rustic cottage before we moved in.
I say extension, but in truth, it was clearly an afterthought.
It was essentially an unsightly trailer that had latched onto the home like a leech.
His tail extended out into the yard and trees, while its more opened up into our living room.
At the tail end of this ugly, L-shaped concoction was my bedroom, where I'm sitting now.
I used to love it, having windows on both sides of my room.
They were low enough that I could climb in and out during a game of tag if I stacked up some cinder blocks.
It annoyed my friends when I'd stow over.
away here, but I always thought it was pretty funny when I'd finally pop out.
The only other building on our property was a garage-like shed, which sat at the end of a long,
muddy road, which somehow outlasted the seemingly endless fences.
I always found it strange that it was erected so far away, until my mom relayed some hearsay
that it was there before the house was built, so they weren't actually sure if it was part of
the property at all.
It was so far, in fact, that there was a large,
swath of old trees and bushes which cover the space between the structures.
It was dense, but you could see the garage peeking through the brush at night since the last
owner installed some automatic lights on the outside.
It wasn't exactly convenient, so we never really bothered to use it.
It always was, and still is, just an empty building with stained concrete floors.
Despite this, the automatic lights came on all the time at night.
I guessed it was just small animals or my neighbour's dog running by.
I imagine the sensors must have ludicrously wide range.
With the property so small on the inside
and unfathomably large on the outside,
it was difficult to sit still indoors.
There was always new stuff to find.
After starting school,
I would regularly have a number of my friends come over
and we'd spend all day, nearly all night, outside.
I remember we'd often pretend to be Jedi's,
chopping each other's limbs off with saber-like sticks while force jumping on the trampoline.
I was more of a decapitation kind of guy.
I was always amused by the number of people who tried to convince me humans could survive without a head,
and, even more often, deeply frustrated by those claiming it was just a scratch.
Another favourite was hide-and-seek tag under the dark of night.
Regular tag just didn't seem to satisfy us back then,
so my sister and I would have friends over,
only to send them off to hide in the pitch black.
A seeker would look for the hiders around the property
who would have to run to the safe point after they'd been spotted.
If they were tagged, they'd join the seeker in rooting out the rest of the players.
There wasn't really any winning or losing,
just a lot of running, hiding and stretched out shirt collars.
Anyway, the real story starts on one, particular summer night,
probably about eight years ago.
I would have been 12 at the time.
It was late at night
And my mom was working the night shift as usual
The creatures of the day
Had gone to sleep
And their nocturnal neighbours
Became to fill the air with chirps, croaks and howls
It wasn't uncommon to hear a branch of two
Break under the weight of a deer's hooves
As they pass by, deep in the woods
The sky was clear
But the porch light on the house made it difficult
To see any of the would-be stars above us
It was a new moon too
So the sky manifested
As an absolute void
Typically, the darker it was, the more interesting the game was.
In retrospect, I'm extremely relieved there wasn't any additional moonlight back then.
There were six of us at the beginning, but as it grew dark, I had to say goodbye to two of my friends when their parents came by.
It was getting quite late, after all.
There were four of us remaining.
Leah, her friend Crystal, my friend Derek, and me.
Everyone was about ready to go inside, panting.
and out of breath, when I suggested
one more round of tag.
Nobody was really interested at this point,
but I enticed them by suggesting
that the first one tagged would buy pizza.
It sounded like a good idea
at the time.
A few games of rock paper scissors decided that
Crystal would be the seeker this time around.
She wasn't very fast,
so I, being a cheeky bugger,
wasn't going to bother hiding.
Instead, I was just going to run circles around her
until she gave up, meaning
she'd have to cough at the pizza by default.
I wasn't the nicest kid back then, but I like to think I've changed, at least a little.
In a previous game of tag, we had an issue where people wouldn't shout the number loudly enough,
intentionally or not, allowing them to sneak up on people who weren't ready.
We found an interesting fix for this by making the seeker count out the seconds on the back of a metal pot,
wrapping their knuckles against the material, holding it high in the air while facing the house.
It carried the sound nicely and prevented the air.
aforementioned head starts.
Thankfully, our neighbours were too far away
to hither racket and complain.
Crystal's knuckles began knocking,
counting quicker than normal to avoid giving us
too much of an advantage.
I slipped around the corner of the house,
waiting for my chance,
not paying any mind to Leah and Eric
as they faded into the night.
When Crystal finally reached the 50 knocks
we had agreed upon many moons ago,
the ringing began to subside.
Everything went quiet.
Even the cricket seemed to silence themselves under the suspense.
I hadn't even started running yet and my heart was pounding in my chest.
My hair was still damp with sweat from earlier.
I kept listening for footsteps or to see her run by,
so the game of cat and mouse could begin.
Yet, she never came.
Several minutes had passed and nothing seemed to change.
I thought she might have given up or went in an entirely different direction.
Either way, the anticipation was killing me.
My impatient curiosity got the better of me as I peaked around the aluminium siding.
A face, waddled in hair, stood right around the corner.
His fingers were already stretched out towards me.
I panicked.
Before I could turn to run, my sneakers slipped on the grass and I fell backward onto my ass as it approached.
I tried using my hands to push myself backwards, but couldn't move fast enough.
I looked up as the dishevelled being.
fingers moved quickly and jabbed into my shoulder.
Not you, it was Crystal.
She pushed her dark brown hair out of her face and reached down to help me up.
Unfortunately, my pre-bubescent ego and wounded pride rejected the offer.
Instead, I opted to roll augly over and pushed myself back onto my feet.
My panic had turned to shame.
I was regretting the pizza thing now.
Crystal crossed her arms, rightfully offended in my childishness.
All right, she sighed.
Well, I guess we just have to find the others,
unless you don't want my help with that either, pizza boy.
Thankfully, I didn't have a snotty comeback, I'd have to repeat to you now.
The excitement I felt earlier at a free pizza had become a distant memory.
I was just eager to end the game and pretend the whole thing never happened.
To make this go faster, I asked Crystal where she'd already looked.
With a hint of embarrassment, she declared that she was actually waiting around that corner for an uncomfortably long time.
I felt a little better, knowing we were both pretty dumb.
As we stealthily walked around the property in search for the others,
we whispered back and forth about the likelihood they were hiding together.
It began to seem like the only option.
With each spot we checked, the number of possibilities dwindled until there was nowhere left to hide.
nowhere, except for the forest.
There was never any rule against hiding out in the dark woods.
It just happened that it was too creepy for most people to hide out there alone,
waiting to be found.
However, after searching the entire property,
the pieces started lining up in my head.
What if they really were hiding together?
Crystal was fast to agree with my theory.
Oh, totally. I bet they just tucked away behind some bush back there.
She continued in a suggestive voice while raising an eyebrow.
Maybe they want to be alone.
I playfully wretched at the thought of Eric being into my sister.
But who knows?
Maybe Crystal was right.
Either way, they would definitely crouch down together
somewhere in the dense undergrowth between my house and that old shed.
I could just sense it.
Yet, even though Crystal and I were working as a pair,
I could tell neither of us had any intention
of walking through those gnarled roots and thick trunks in the dead of night.
We stood at the edge of the woods for a while, examining the sight line, and Crystal seemed to notice something.
She swiftly walked several paces to my right, leaned slightly, and brought her arm to a point.
Hey, the light on that building turned on.
I sidestepped until we were shoulder to shoulder.
My eyes followed her outstretched finger, the same finger that probably left a bruise my shoulder.
The garage light was on, cutting through the dark and allowing us to better examine the lush green space in front of us.
I attempted to remediate my earlier cowardice by taking a few steps into the bushes.
But I stopped as a swift breeze rustled the greener in front of me,
and a snapping twig broke the forest for our silence.
Butterflies began to fill my stomach, pushing outward and making my inside's turn.
The sweat on my brown back went cold in the evening air,
and a chill ran down my body.
Even though I knew that was probably Eric and Leah,
I couldn't ask my legs to move any further.
In my head, we had found them.
The light was enough confirmation for me.
That would have to be good enough from my ego.
All right, you guys, we give up, seriously.
We know you're back there.
I shouted into the thicket,
hoping my surrender would warrant feedback, ending the game.
Crystal echoed my sentiment.
cup in her hand around her mouth to carry a voice deep into the ancient woodland.
Come on lovebirds, game's over.
Maybe a minute passed as we returned to absolute silence.
The crickets and the frogs from earlier still seem to suppress their natural urges to speak up.
Then another twig snapped.
Two dark silhouettes stood up in the distance.
They looked about equal in size, but shapeless and blurred against a faint light that broke up the dark miasma.
Hey, we see you, come on out now.
I followed Crystal's example,
encircling my hands around my lips as I commanded the shadows.
After a moment, they began walking towards us.
They were standing real close together.
It sort of looked like they were holding something,
maybe each other's hands.
I remember being shocked that Crystal might have been right about Eric.
It was dark and hard to tell,
but I rolled my eyes anyway,
just in case.
Crystal and I gave each other a knowing smile
mixed with a look of exasperation,
finally glad to be done with a seemingly
endless hunt.
From a distance, there was a call.
Man, why do you guys give up so easily?
It was definitely Eric.
Crystal's smile melted away.
Her lips ran parallel as a jaw dropped slightly.
Her relief turned to concern,
slowly spreading across the entirety of her face
and she gazed into the light slatted by black trees.
Seriously, you two walked past us three times.
It was definitely Leah.
I knew that Crystal realized it just after I did.
To a bystander, it must have looked like she was trying to mimic my face,
mirroring the primal fear that crept up my spine and out of my eyes.
The silhouettes continued to approach us.
My heart was pounding, but again, it wasn't from Rome.
Errik and Lea were definitely together, just like we thought, but their voices weren't coming from the forest in front of us.
They were definitely coming from behind us.
I looked towards the house, but Eric and Lear weren't in view yet.
When I turned back to confirm where the silhouettes once stood, I only found a deep, hungry blackness.
The garage light had turned off.
As Crystal continued to stay there.
deep into the encroaching shadows of the woods, I instinctively grabbed a wrist and began pulling her in the direction of our friend's voices.
It was the one time of my life where I knew being a coward was the right choice.
Eric and Leah came out near the road from the side of the fence.
They began explaining how they were lying in the ditch on the other side, but I didn't care.
It didn't matter where they were hiding, unless they somehow figured out how to be in two places at once.
I tried to hide my anxiety under hushed tones but spoke with urgency.
Guys, don't freak out, but there's people in the woods.
They both looked at me blankly before casting skeptical looks at each other.
I didn't bother to watch the reactions as I continued to pull crystal inside.
Branches continued to crack in the woods behind my house, just like they always did.
But now, each snap that came closer brought me closer to tears.
These weren't dear
We all piled into the living room
And I immediately began locking all the doors
While Eric closed the windows and drew the blinds
My bedroom was the largest room with a lock
So Leah ushered a near catatonic crystal inside and onto my bed
I closed and latched the door behind us
After grabbing a couple of knives from the kitchen
I kept the lights off and joined everyone else
kneeling in the dark next to my bed
Crystal and Leah were pressed up against the back of
wall facing the door while Eric sat on the edge of the bed beside me.
We waited in silence as I pulled out my cell phone.
Looking at the time, I expected my mom to be home any minute, so I sent her a text asking
for an ETA.
I get that it seems silly to text my mom and not call the authorities, but I never dialed
911 before and was afraid I'd be in trouble.
I don't know why, but I thought at the time that once my mom was home, everything would be
okay. I clutched my phone as a looming sense of dread filled the room. Footsteps could be
heard, approaching outside, slowly pacing around the entirety of my bedroom. A sharp sound surprised
us, and Leah moved her hand over Crystal's mouth, trying to stifle her rising panic. It sounded
like they might have thrown something at the house. Knock, knock. Two more staccato strikes
came from behind my head.
It was like they knew where we were.
Knock.
Another loud tap made me grip the knife tightly
as I remembered what was happening.
Knock, knock, knock.
They weren't throwing things at the house.
They were outside my room, knocking on the walls.
They knew we were in that room.
Knock, knock, knock.
The knocks continued moving both sides of the room.
Large shadows filled the majority of the
shuttered windows.
I could hear a deep guitaral breathing outside,
as though someone was trying to heave breaths in and out,
but copious amounts of phlegm blocked the way.
I wondered what sort of being could make such a sound,
but there was absolutely no way I was going to look.
Knock, knock, knock, knock, knock.
Eric put his hand on my shoulder and whispered over the knocks,
which grew in both number and intensity.
How many people?
did you say there were?
Two, I replied without thinking.
I could tell my answer wasn't comforting as tremors emerged from Eric's hand,
yet he refused to let go.
Instead, his grasp tightened as he continued with a quiet stutter.
Then, how are they knocking on every side of your room at once?
My gut sank to the floor.
Knock, knock, knock, knock, knock, knock, knock.
I hadn't realised.
Knock, knock.
There were knocks coming from every direction, on every wall of the room, all at the same time.
Knock, knock, knock.
I could hear Leah whispering in the corner.
Twenty-five, twenty-six, twenty-seven.
Crystal led out a muffled screen between Leah's fingers, as what I assumed was laughter erupted from outside.
It sounded like a pack of ghoulish, cackling coyotes.
Except coyotes don't know how to knock.
Knock, knock.
As the cacophony of sounds seemed to grow,
I pulled out my phone again to call for the police, animal control, anyone.
But my phone rang first.
It was my mom.
My hand wouldn't stop shaking as I answered the call.
Hey, hon, what's up?
Are you almost home?
I must have nearly screamed it.
I could hear her yelp on the other side of the line.
Knock, knock, knock, knock, knock.
I'm just about to pull down our road.
Why? What's wrong?
Leah was still going for some reason.
31, 32, 33.
I wasn't sure what to say to my mom.
But I can only think of one thing as the horrible sick laughter continued outside.
Please, just lay into your horn as soon as you pull up.
up, please, mum, don't ask why.
I was hoping the desperation would get through to her.
She stuttered, clearly confused.
Uh-huh, okay, okay, I'm almost there, it'll be okay.
I think she's always assumed that there was some kind of wild animal outside that we wanted to scare away.
God, I hope she was right.
Knock, knock, knock, knock, knock, knock, knock.
I looked at my friends and saw Leah cover her.
her own mouth too now. Tears
dripped from the corner of her eyes as her head tilted back into the wall.
38, 39.
Oh, my God.
She choked out as she cried.
She never explained to me what she figured out that night.
Knock, knock, knock, knock, knock.
The nauseating knocking had turned into a frenzied assault.
The things outside began hammering against the aluminium siding,
creating the most thunderous climax I'd ever heard.
I slumped down and wept, having no idea what would happen when it was over.
Knock, knock, knock, knock, knock, knock, knock, knock.
Then, the sound, nearly as loud, pierced the night and rivaled the demonic clanging from outside.
The horn from my mum's car.
The knocking stopped, immediately drowned out by the blaring siren coming from our short driveway.
The shadows in front of the windows had moved away.
in the direction of the woods.
Crystal broke free from Leah's grip
and shouted,
pleading for our saviour to come and get us.
I didn't know if these things outside
were a bunch of demented people,
or some group of diseased animals,
but the sound of the vehicle was loud enough
to scare them away.
But I knew it would only be for a minute or two.
Guys, we've got to go, now!
I cried out as I stood up.
I took a quick look behind me
to see that the others were already climbing
to their feet, though Crystal took some coercion as she leaned into Leah.
We ran down the hallway and out of the door.
My mom was standing in front of the vehicle's headlights, beckoning us to open the doors.
I let everyone run past me towards her.
I could hear her gasped lightly when she saw Eric run by, wielding her chef's knife.
If I was going to get a look at these things that had been terrorising us, I figured now would have
been my only chance.
I grasped the edge of the extension, took a bow.
breath and looked. For better or worse, peering around the trailer, yielded no results.
Whatever had been there was gone. I remember hearing a symphony of branches and twigs
snapping in the dark, hidden just beyond the tree line. I held my gaze until my mom called for me.
Then I merely turned tail and ran to the car. As my mom backed up, I couldn't take my eyes off the woods.
headlights pointed directly into the blackness, and I caught a glimpse of something.
It was fast, so I could have imagined it. In fact, I really hope I did. Yet, the image of it has
been burned into my brain. A pair of eyes caught the light, reflecting a haunting yellow back
at us from within the shadows. The glowing retinas were embedded deep into the seemingly exposed
skull of a frail, dear-like creature that was hunched over, almost like a great ape.
It lacked antlers, and its fur or skin was mostly black and patchy in some places,
almost like its outermost layer was peeling back.
It reared backwards as the car screeched into drive,
lifting one of its elongated scenery arms tipped with three distinct fingers to shield its body.
This image on its own was the stuff of nightmares,
but what made me tear up again was what I saw as we drove away.
For only a couple of seconds as my mom turned.
to move to the road, the last bit of light revealed an ocean of twinkling stars throughout the forest.
Only, they weren't stars.
It was an ocean of eyes.
My mom sped off, and I found myself at a loss for words.
We took Eric and Crystal back to their homes.
I could barely manage a goodbye.
It didn't take much convincing for our mom to rent a room that night.
Leo and I tried our best to explain what it transpired that night
and while I could tell that it was hard for my mom to understand
I could see that she believed the unfiltered terror in our voices
I don't blame her though
I honestly still can't wrap my head around it either
though the two of us were reluctant to return to the house in the morning
nothing seemed out of place when we arrived with a family friend
one who owned a rifle
aside from some flat and grass
and a strange musky odor.
There wasn't much to look at.
I couldn't really pin the smell either,
but it was enough to make Lear plug a nose
while we looked around.
I expected the siding to be bent out of shape
because of the noises we heard,
but it looked normal.
I kept racking my brain over it.
An animal trying to reach a spray
wouldn't have held back or cared about denting the house.
The more I thought, the more horrible my theory became.
What if it, or they, knew what they were doing?
What if it did it specifically to scare us before?
I don't know.
I'd really prefer not to know.
Our mom took us to get a dog that same afternoon.
He's some kind of mixed lab, and we named in Cooper.
I don't know if having a dog really changed anything,
but having Cooper round really helped us during my mom's late shifts.
We never played tag at night again,
and whatever came out of the woods that night
never seemed to come back
or at the very least
never came out from behind the trees
from deep within the forest
man
it seriously gives me chills just thinking about it now
while I've heard the strange laughter
several times since
it was further away
and much easier to blame on some animal
I feel better thinking
it was just our overactive imaginations
rather than let that thing exist
somewhere out there
I know it seems far-fetched,
but it was real enough that Crystal never came back to our house.
I don't have a good answer as to what happened that night.
I'm hoping it was either some teenager playing a bad joke
or some sick animal that was displaced by a storm earlier that year.
But I guess we'll never know.
I only feel comfortable thinking about this now,
because I'm going back to the city tomorrow
and my mom will be moving into town at the end of the month.
I'll admit, telling this now, it's made me feel a little uneasy,
especially since I haven't seen Cooper since this afternoon.
He normally stays outside during the day,
but tends to come scratching at the door once it's dark.
I'm going to go look for him when my mom gets home,
if he's not back by then.
Speaking of, it's getting near that time,
and I think my mom is knocking on the front door right now.
She joked about forgetting a housekey lately,
and said she'd lose her head if it would be.
wasn't attached, and I guess she wasn't kidding.
Hope to hear from you guys soon.
