CreepsMcPasta Creepypasta Radio - "The Reason I Quit My Job as an Underwater Engineer" Creepypasta
Episode Date: May 3, 2021CREEPYPASTA STORY►by conorb_93: 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, rath...er 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►YOUNG IL CHOI: https://www.artstation.com/artwork/D4xmGSUGGESTED 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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Arrowhead Lake, the ideal and picturesque image of an all-American man-made lake.
It's fast, its waters fresh, yet rarely cold and brimming with fish.
Like the other big man-made lakes, such as Norman, Harrington or Thunderbird,
Arrowhead had developed somewhat of a colourful cultural superstition.
Everything from man-eating leeches with underbellies covered in fangs,
capable of toppling over canoes to catfish who grow to enormous size due to radiation leaking out from the
the nearby plant. Then there's the ghosts, the bargain bin Bigfoot rip-off, and the occasional
flying saucer. But none of these have ever held any place in my mind. Being your typical,
conservative-raised, athletic type who loved fishing on the lake, I was immune to the fears and warnings
from the locals. I'd scoffed when I'd hear old Mrs. Cutler telling people how a dog was
snatched from the shoreline by Black Black, the giant man-eating leech with an underbelly covered in teeth.
Furthermore, I made it my mission to humiliate and ridicule my peers who had a tale about a cousin who was eaten or drowned by something under the surface.
In other words, I was a bit of an ass.
In my defence, I had never seen anything to suggest my version of the world was wrong.
I had lived on the lake, went fishing with my grandpa throughout my childhood, before his boating accident, and I'd become convinced that there wasn't anything to be afraid of.
I was wrong.
There was something in that lake.
In truth is the reason I'm telling you this,
partly to see if anyone else encountered what I saw,
partly to warn people to stay away,
and also partly as a form of therapy,
to help me come to terms with what I experienced.
Firstly, we needed some context for my encounter,
and I think it all began after high school.
You see, growing up on that lake,
there were a few jobs for those of us,
who dived out of school with barely any idea of what to do next.
It was either working the power plant or work on the lake, so I combined the two, and made
it my mission to get some more grades and more training under my belt, and then come back to
work as an underwater engineer.
I was excited at the thought of fixing the dam and repairing the plant's coolant tunnels, where
the lake's water was pulled in and used to keep the reactor safe.
Mostly, I was just curious to see what actually was down there, below the still surface of Arrowhead.
The first person I told was my grandpa.
But, uncharacteristically, he was far from enthusiastic and made a point of telling me in a tone I'd never known he possessed to stay out of the lake.
Naturally, I laughed it off, telling him I was shocked he believed Mrs. Kotler's old fish-wife's tales of man-eating leeches and child-drowning catfish.
He rolled his sleeves and began to show me various scars
From the fish he encountered on the lake and elsewhere
But one set he never spoke of
A peculiar arrangement of deep cuts running up his arm
I asked him how he got them
And his face went pale
He told me that unlike the others
These wounds weren't from catfish, gars, alligators or eels
But rather from his boating accident
Never before had to beaunt
had he discussed what actually happened that day out on the lake,
and he still refused to tell me much.
Instead, he diverted the conversation back to the lake's folklore's tales.
He told me of the Arrowhead Three,
a group of divers in the 80s who went down to fig something on the dam,
and never came back.
It was a story I was familiar with.
Five went down, two of them came back up,
and the other three vanished without a trace.
They were ruled as accidental drowning,
caused by malfunctioning equipment.
They didn't find their bodies, though,
and so they too became part of the local Lake Law of Arrowhead.
My response to this was to do a childish.
Ooh, scary.
Something my grandfather didn't take kindly to.
He snapped at me and exclaimed that he knew the lads who survived.
One of them was found swinging.
The other drank himself to death.
Grandpa asserted that one night when he was sat in the company,
of the man, dragging his liver and beer and whiskey chasers, the man told him what he remembered.
He spoke of dark serpents, things emerging out of thin air, and snatching them one by one,
dragging them into the unknown.
When I laughed this off and said aloud, I didn't expect my grandpa, a weathered-beaten
or fisherman, an ex-naval officer, to be so superstitious. His face became a scowl, and his
gruff voice spoke to me.
them's bad waters
I've seen things I wish I hadn't
Things that would strike you dead from fright
You youngans
Think you know the world
Think you've seen it from behind your screens
But you haven't
Stay out of them waters
And especially keep away from that plant
Grandpa commanded
Sadly
That was one of the last things
I remember of him
As whilst I went out of state for training
He passed away
Still I thought the
best way to one of him and his memory would be to totally disregard his warnings and worries
and get to work on the lake as soon as I was qualified. So, once the training was completed,
I returned home, got a job with a power plant as an engineer, and since I was one of a handful of
people qualified for underwater repair jobs, I became somewhat invaluable. I mean, the jobs
weren't flying in, and in some ways that was reassuring. I mean, no one wants to be working at a power plant
that regularly has power failures or structural damage.
However, I couldn't help feeling I had wasted some of my time training for underwater repair
when most of the time I was just sorting out maintenance and basic repairs around the plant.
Perhaps some sadistic god out there sensed my disappointment in not being given a chance to dive,
because, out of the blue, one of the higher-ups approached me and asked if I'd be willing to help sort out a problem.
According to him, one of the two cooling tunnels had stopped working properly.
The consensus was that there may have been damaged to the tunnel, and it had partially collapsed,
but the higher-ups wanted to assess the damage first, and then if it was a simple on clogging
or a relatively straightforward repair, we'd get to fixing it.
So me and another guy suited up for a dive.
Eddie, the guy joining me, was a sweet guy, always eagerly trying to reassure me.
since this was my first proper dive.
On a little motorized raft, we made away to the area just above the underwater tunnels.
There we disembarked and slipped off from the security of a small raft and sank into the water.
Being that he was a bit older than me, he made a point prior to us entering the water of saying just to stick with him.
He told me that he gets quite murky down there, and adding the fact that it was night time,
it was a recipe for your mind to play tricks.
He wasn't wrong either
because I remember feeling an overwhelming dread
after only a few minutes into the dive.
The kind of dread one feels
when you feel like you're being watched
or when you're alone in the house
and think you hear someone.
Irrational dread.
That's what I told myself.
Just my body reacting to the fact
I could barely see anything in front of my face.
So, on I swam,
try my best to ignore the
anxiety rising in me and focus on the task at hand.
Soon though, my mind was back to observing my surroundings in an over-vigilant manner.
I remember the water getting warmer, the deeper we swam, and it got more and more cloudy as we descended.
Though it was dark and murky, my torch occasionally caught glimpses of catfish that were large enough to make me feel even more uncomfortable.
But I tried to keep my nerve.
Plenty of food, warmth and depth.
what fish wouldn't thrive in such conditions, I told myself.
Besides, I never saw a catfish that I can honestly say was capable of man-eating, or drowning me,
and that was somewhat reassuring.
Then, suddenly, they scattered.
All of them, the big ones and the small, thrashing the way past me and Eddie,
as they shot out of their hiding places.
That should have been the only warning we needed,
but we foolishly thought we had to see.
disturb them. How are we to know that we were about to come face to face? With the truth.
We were at the cooling tunnels when things took a turn. Eddie went about looking at the one on the
right, shining his torch into it, whilst I inspected the left. My one appeared to be working
fine, sucking in water, churning it up into the power plant basin, where presumably it spat
it back out on the other side. In the short time it took for me to inspect the tunnel.
something happened.
Having looked away for just a moment,
I was shocked when I turned to find Eddie
had vanished.
Frantically, I spun my head around,
but there was no sign of him.
Not a trace of Eddie existed in the gloom.
If it had been a joke,
or he was messing with me,
I would have at least expected to have seen
some debris kicked up from his frantic swimming
as he dived out of my line of sight.
And yet, there was nothing.
I paused for a time, waiting for him to suddenly jump out of the opaque surroundings and scare
the life out of me. That would have been a welcome terror, but fate was not that kind, and
Eddie did not reappear or reveal himself. Truthfully, my heart began pounding a little
faster the minute I saw he was gone, for, in the isolation, all I could think of was my
grandpa's words.
Them be bad waters.
They repeated and repeated, thundering through my head, almost as fast as my heart thundered
in my chest.
It was in those moments of fear I spotted it, the faint yellow glow shining below and
drifting deeper and deeper.
Eddie.
It was his torch I could see in the mist below.
He must have been playing a prank on me after all, or maybe he dropped his welding tool.
Relief washed over me and I swam down to meet him
But as I kicked frantically my eyes began to see more clearly
The light ahead of me was his torch
That much was true
But Eddie wasn't holding it
Instead it was just singing down to the depths of the lake
Adrift and abandoned
Not unlike myself
Concerned for my colleague's safety
I swam back up to the tunnels
I started worrying that maybe he was clearing out the debris in the block tunnel
and somehow it turned on and he got stuck in.
I turned my torch on the tunnel entrance.
It was wide,
wide enough to fit a truck through it
and escaping more was dark and empty.
Strange, because there didn't seem to be any structural damage,
no sign of a blockage at all.
It was just a void, a black void,
so dark that even my torch is lost.
light couldn't penetrate it.
Primal dread filled me as I looked into the silent and still shadows filling the opening.
My courage and confidence were devoured by the darkness.
It was all-consuming.
I felt more lost than I had ever felt before as I floated in front of that coolant tunnel,
staring into the abyss, hoping to see Eddie emerge from the void unharmed.
Only it wasn't a void at all, and it was far from empty.
For as my torch shined across the night-colored surface, it shimmered, stirred, squirmed even.
Then, to my utter disbelief, an eye the size of a car tire.
Fear struck me and sent me scrambling back for a second, and between the mist of panicked bubbles streaming up around my goggles,
I saw the enormous thing, slowly shifting in the tunnel.
Great, thick black back tentacles unfolded around a large phosphorus eye,
with each limb displaying red rings of light that pulsed and moved across the dark skin of the beast,
growing ever quicker in their motion as the glowing blue eye focused its horizontal slit-shaped pupil on me.
And as it saw me, I too saw it, saw the thing for what it was,
and though my mind could not process the reality, I was sure of it.
The thing in the tunnel, the blockage, was an enormous cephalopod,
A giant octopus, a cracken of monstrous dimensions,
a creature clever to conceal itself in the shadow inside a tunnel
and evade the sights of a bustling lakeside community.
It was evident from this and from its appearance
that the creature was far from ordinary.
Beneath each black tangle running under it were fangs and toothy hooks,
which retracted and extended in and out of red flesh.
These appendages clasped the exterior and the rim of the tunnel,
slithering outwards in a serpentine manner.
I froze in place
and my mind raced back to the wounds
upon my grandfather's arm,
the strange tooth patterns running up his sleeves
that he could have been caused by such an appendage.
Then, worse still,
I came to understand those old fish-wife's tales
of blackback the leech with his underbelly of fangs.
The stories I had dismissed in my arrogance
were true.
Only it wasn't a man-eating leech.
It was a tentacle.
one of many tentacles
they were about to reach out and snatch me
as they had done the arrowhead three
I knew what was about to happen
and swam for my life
rushing to the surface as hard as I could
I looked back down
to see if the thing was given chase or following
but it wasn't
there was nothing beneath me or around me
just total absence
my mind immediately realised
it was still there
hidden camouflage
and around the time it took me to realize that.
It was too late.
A toothy tentacle emerged from the gloom,
shifting from the grimy green murky colour of the water around me,
as it grasped hold of my back.
I fumbled and wrestled, desperately trying to wriggle free.
But it was no use,
as more and more tentacles reached around me
and their hooks piercing my suit and skin.
I screamed and cried out,
but beneath the water, my voice was silent.
Then it pulled me in close towards what can only be described as a pit of tusks and gnashing jaws stuffed with broken fangs.
It was like the mouth of hell, an inescapable grinder, acting on total impulse and instinct, just desperate to crush, skewer and moll me into shreds.
Before it could devour me, like I presumed it had devoured Eddie, I remembered.
I was far from an armed, and in a frantic motion I scrambled from my welding tool.
and turned it on.
White and blue punctured
and burned into one of the tentacles holding me
and instantly it untangled away from me.
Like a torpedo, it shot back,
recoiling into opaque walls around me,
disappearing once more as its chromatophores shifted
and made it invisible to my eyes.
I knew it was still there,
and so, without a moment of hesitation,
I began swimming for the surface,
sure that the nightmarish and marvelous thing
was right behind my every kick.
Desperate to survive, I unclipped my harness and let the oxygen tanks sink below me, trying
to remove as much weight from me as I possibly could.
And the moment I let go, I saw it.
A vast, black, writhing nest of tooth-covered appendages, grasped hold of the tank and dragged
it into the depths below.
With one final surge of adrenaline, I thrashed my way back to the surface and onto the boat.
me tell you. It didn't make me feel
any safer being on that tiny raft
knowing that beneath me, there was
a monster-sized octopus, more than
capable of dragging me, and the boat
down to its sunken nether realm.
And, even
after speeding the boat onto the shoreline,
I couldn't expel the imagined images
of that thing clattering ashore to get me.
I told the higher-ups
what I saw, and explained what I
believed had happened to Eddie.
But, as you can imagine,
no one believed me.
Eddie became another tragic event on the lake, an oxygen tank malfunction which killed him,
a conclusion that the authorities reached without an autopsy or even a body.
The wounding I'd suffered, nothing more than self-inflicted according to the power plant's first
ada, a side effect of nitrogen narcosis.
I quit and stopped going out fishing in my spare time, but I continued to warn people to tell
them of what I saw on the lake. Just as I've been skeptical of the tales of the blackback,
the man-eating leech, now others were skeptical of my tale of an old, huge-sized octopus,
living in the coolant tunnels of the power plant. I've had experts and Facebook critics
alike, telling me how there are no freshwater octopuses, how it's impossible for them to get
to the size I described, and to them. I have this to say. As my grandpa told me,
Lake Arrowhead is bad water, and should they dive beneath its surface with the same skepticism as I had, they will be met with the truth.
There is something in that lake.
I don't know how or why, or what exactly it is, but it is there and it's hungry.
