CreepsMcPasta Creepypasta Radio - "Why my father went into the woods" Creepypasta
Episode Date: March 2, 2021CHECK OUT MORE OF THE AUTHOR'S WORKS HERE-►https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/s/ref=is...►https://verastahl.com/►https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC73P...CREEPYPASTA STORY►by Brandon Fairclo...th: 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►Boris Groh: https://www.artstation.com/artwork/Nd6q1SUGGESTED 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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My father was a careful man, meticulous even.
He lived a life that was well measured,
and if some considered him bland or dull,
he didn't seem to mind it.
He was moderately successful in his business.
He was moderately well thought of by the community we lived in.
When my mother went missing, he was,
to anyone that might observe him or inquire,
moderately worried and sad.
He was the same as me,
reasonable, patient, and generally kind in the unfocused way you might expect from a pleasant
doctor or taxi driver.
A detached civility and courtesy that had more to do with how my father was than how he felt about me.
Not that I complained.
Even when I was younger, I had enough sense to know so many kids had it worse.
When my mother was around, they got along well enough, though he seemed to feed her the same brand of love as me.
a bland, almost flavourless thing with an artificial aftertaste.
I was 12 when she disappeared,
and, as much as I missed her,
I was somewhat preoccupied with what would come next,
because I had known for some time that occasionally,
just every few weeks or so,
my father would go out into the woods.
It never occurred to me to follow him,
or to even question internally why I didn't consider doing so.
My fear of my father was like a background radiation, invisible but ever present since I was old enough to understand that something was wrong.
Eating and mutating me slowly enough that I never stopped to wonder if everyone lived so tight with tension and foreboding,
perpetually waiting for the other shoe to drop.
When I saw him going into the woods one winter afternoon, I wondered if the time had finally come.
He never went into those woods.
He wasn't the outdoorsy type.
as he was quick to point out, as he pulled his lips away from dry, polished teeth,
and nod in that precisely affirmable manner that he had,
a mannequin making the motions of a real man.
He was just home from work,
but an hour earlier than usual,
which was hard in and of itself,
when he parked and turned to all the trees instead of the house.
I couldn't help but watch from my upstairs window,
heart beating a little faster as a voice whispered to me that this was it.
He was starting to unravel, and now we were going to see the thing that lay beyond those placid smiles and cool pats on the back.
The thing that made Mom flinch when she heard the door open at night and made me stay in my room when I was home alone with him.
I was terrified, but also relieved, because at least it would be over.
Except it wasn't.
He went deeper into the woods until I couldn't see him.
and after an hour I gave up watching.
When he came inside later that night,
we didn't comment on his lateness,
and neither did he.
I went to bed, half expecting to wake up to screaming or not at all.
But no, everything was fine.
It was the same,
except that occasionally, just every few weeks or so,
my father would go out into the dark that lay between the trees.
That continued, until my mother vanished.
and after a period of disruption where people searched and questions were asked,
our lives went back to a form of normal.
The dread I felt was constant now,
but it was also an old and familiar friend by that point.
I escaped a school or friend's houses when I could,
and TV and books when I couldn't.
For this part, my father left me alone past the threshold attention and affection
he felt he needed to show.
His trips into the woods continued as long as I lived,
there. As soon as I graduated from high school, I moved out across the state to college. I went
home that first Thanksgiving and Christmas, but after that, I never went back. He didn't mind.
He called to check at me once a month, always the first day of the month at 8 o'clock, and,
other than that, we never spoke or saw each other again. I went back home to see his funeral
and put his affairs in order,
but nearly everything had already been done for me.
He died in the backyard of a sudden embolism,
but you'd think he'd know the moment he was going to go.
Every corner of his life had been tucked and folded,
lines even and corners crisp,
much like the envelope he had left for me.
It wasn't some heartfelt message of love or loss,
and it wasn't a confession of some dark, secret life.
It was just a single line,
written in my father's small, neat script.
It said,
It begins with the dreams.
I rented a hotel for the two weeks I planned to be back in town.
The house just wasn't an option.
I couldn't stay in that place again.
Just walking in felt like putting my foot into quicksand,
and I could feel the hands of that passed me reaching up and grasping at me,
hungry to pull me back down.
So, I slipped in a hotel room.
I could have been like any other.
the hotel room in any city in the world, somewhere far away, and for the first couple of nights,
it worked.
Then, I started dreaming of the woods.
I toyed with the idea of going into the woods since I'd gotten the call of my father's death.
It had been years since I gone deeper in than the edge of the yard.
I already spent most of my playtime away from home, and after I saw my father go there,
it wasn't even a consideration.
That was his place now
And whatever he did there
I didn't want to know about it
Maybe I would have just choked in my dreams
Of picking my way between those dark and tangled trees
As residual trauma dredged up by stirring the muck of my childhood
But on the fourth day
The day after the first of my dreams
The estate lawyer gave me the envelope with my father's last words
When I pulled out of the parking lot
I headed away from town and back towards the house
I was a grown man
And I wasn't wasting another day of being afraid
Of letting that strange man poison my life
My heart still hammered as I stepped into the woods
But I was determined
I could see the ghost of the trail ahead of me
And I followed it further and further
Past the small creek and across a field
Into a deeper part of the wood that was thicker and swampier
The mud sucked in my shoes as I went
And the air was more humid
and the air was more humid, but also deathly still.
I'd have expected insects, but there were none.
Bird sounds or furtive motions beneath the strange plants that grew here,
but everything was silent.
I had the thought that I had stepped back in time,
a frozen moment from some ancient swamp,
oxygen-rich and teeming with unseen life,
life that was hungry and powerful,
laying just beneath the black mud, watching me perhaps,
or suspended from the inmate.
enormous bows of the gargantuan trees that twisted overhead.
The nightmare king are some dead dinosaurs forgotten memory,
but somehow alive and ready to be remembered.
I blinked and looked around.
Where was I?
What was I thinking about?
I...
My eyes fixed on the muddy bank I was standing in front of.
In the middle of it,
as though it had been excavated like a fossil,
was the thing I felt sure my dream
and my father had sent me to find.
It was a brass fortune-teller machine.
I glanced around again.
I had to be miles away from the house.
How was that even possible?
The woods weren't that big, less than a mile, and I should have hit the highway.
I tried to swallow, but my mouth was too dry.
My body felt desiccated and hollow, just bone and dry skin and terrible will,
as I walked closer to the thing half buried in the hill.
It was five feet tall.
All polished wooden brass, though the metal was tarnished and the wood began to bleach and speckle after time in the wetten sun.
The top three feet were a glass cube containing the torso of a puppet woman dressed in a headscarf and golden jewelry.
Her painted green eyes regarded me from beneath arched, knowing eyebrows, they're told of knowledge of unseen things.
Above the glass, the brass arched into an arabesque roof, framing a small sign of red and gold-stained glass.
I couldn't read it at first, but then it lit up as a soft violin began to trail from a speaker grill below the fortune teller.
I was startled, but I didn't jump or step back.
I was transfixed, looking at the red lettering of the glass.
I read the words glowing there.
The voice of Aradat.
I did let out a small scream when the fortune teller began to move, waving metal arms over a glowing crystal ball resting in.
in front of her. The violin picked up speed, growing louder and more insistent, the insectile
trilling of some long dead note. My skin prickled as excitement began to grow in my belly,
spreading up into my heart and head, down to my groin. A small tray popped out in front of the
machine, and from it a milky white card jutted out. I didn't hesitate in reaching out and grasping
it, pulling the card free from its silky strands that held it in place with some effort.
On one side
It was a strange symbol
That I didn't quite recognise
As though I'd seen it in a dream
And the other
There were two words
Offer yourself
I let the card fluttered to the mud
As I saw motion next to the machine
There was a hole beside it
Somehow I hadn't seen it before
But it was there now
Less than half the height of the fortune-telling kiosk
And thick with shadow
And more strands like the ones
That had a trow from the card when I took it
There was no fear or confusion.
I knew what had to be done.
Of course I knew.
I was doing something as old as rain or the sun rising,
as scared as being born or taking a life.
I knelt down and crawled toward the hole,
keeping my eyes lowered as I reached it and lay down,
rolling over onto my back as I scooting myself forward,
pushing my head into the moist darkness beyond.
Once my shoulders touched the sides,
I waited.
holding my breath as it began to worry that I had done something wrong.
But no, a coolness came to rest against my cheek
as an inner darkness within that gloom came to greet me.
I began to cry as that coolness dug into my skin
as a voice told me to keep my eyes closed, not to look.
I couldn't see it, not even a shadowy glimpse,
or I'd be lost forever.
I lay in the muck, head surrounded by shadows and webs,
as its icy weight settled over my face.
When I left the woods, I saw a sheriff's patrol car parked behind mine.
I was going to try and ignore it, but Sheriff Haveling got out and met me at my car.
We had met briefly two days earlier when I'd run into him at the funeral home,
and he had seemed a jolly and affable man at the time.
Now I could see beneath that, and I knew why he was there.
Everything going all right, Kenneth.
Need anything for the service tomorrow?
I offered to give you an escort from the church still stands.
I nodded.
I appreciate it.
I don't think many people will be at the funeral,
so traffic shouldn't be a problem.
Raising an eyebrow, I studded him.
Is that why you came, to offer help at the funeral again?
He shrugged and gave me a small smile.
Partly, yeah, that.
And, well, I just thought I should warn you.
I felt my jaw tightening.
"'Warn me of what?'
The sheriff puffed out of breath as he looked down the road.
"'Your dad.
Well, he's your daddy and his past,
and I don't make a habit of talking bad about the dead, but—'
He met my eyes again.
He was a strange man, and I'd be lying if I said me and the others around here
didn't wonder if he was up to more than he let on.'
I frowned.
"'Up to what exactly?'
you talking about my mom?
You never found any sign he did something to her, did you?
Or that she had done anything but abandoned us?
Shrugging again, he nodded.
No, you're right.
But it was still odd.
No one that knew her expected her to leave like that,
and we never saw any sign of how or where she could have run off to.
It's natural to suspect foul play involving the husband in something like that.
You understand.
He bowled at his bottom lip thoughtfully.
but it wasn't just that.
These last 20 years,
we've had people go missing.
It always happened sometimes.
People move, run away, or get themselves killed.
But since I was a deputy,
we've had three times the number of people go missing here
than in any of the surrounding areas.
I know, because I've checked.
I stared at him.
Okay, so, what are you saying?
Do you think my father had something to do with any of that?
Avelin let out a short laugh.
No, I'm not saying that, though I admit I didn't wonder a few times over the years.
He always gave me an odd feeling, your dad.
Nice enough fella, but I could never tell what he was really thinking.
His smile fell away.
You look like him, you know.
I didn't see it the other day, but I do now.
I glanced past him to the swaying green of the woods.
I appreciate the sentiment.
and the offer of help, but I really do have a lot to do today.
Was there more that you needed to tell me?
When I looked back at the man, his face was troubled.
Just...
If you find anything going through your dad's stuff,
things that don't belong or don't make sense,
something that might belong to someone missing or...
Well, I don't know.
Anything that feels wrong, he swallowed.
If you find anything like that, let me know, yeah?
I gave him a smile, not too friendly or happy, but not too cool or hard as I nodded.
Sure thing, Sheriff, I'll be sure to do that.
Seemingly satisfied, he stepped back from my car.
Well, I'll let you get back to it.
I know you want to get done and back to your life, living in Colorado, right?
I paused in opening the car door to glance back at him.
I did, yes, but I'm going to be staying here.
now.
Havelin raised his eyebrows.
Really? I got the idea the other day
you were hot to be done and on your way.
What changed your mind?
I studied him for a moment.
You know how it is.
The past is a powerful thing.
I guess I just realised where I am.
A distant wind picked up behind the man,
rustling the trees and pushing him hard enough
to make him have to catch his hat.
Fumbling with it awkwardly,
he looked back.
at me. Where's that? I sucked in a deep breath. The air smelled rich and thick, with a dozen
different scents. I smiled slightly at the fear. I smelled coming from him. Home.
