Creepy - Four Hours It Stared

Episode Date: July 2, 2018

The things a person will do for money are driven by need and sometimes darker things. Beware the darker things. Don't open your eyes. ***Credited to IsisIssa on creepypasta.org and narrated by Victor...ia Juan***Content warning: assault, sexuality***You can also subscribe to us on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQ3SrH_3fsROXFAjomKcUtw***Please consider supporting the podcast at Patreon.com/Creepypod or creepypod.com/support***Produced by Steve Blizin, Puzzle Audio***Title music by Alex Aldea***Intro/Outro Narration by Joe Stofko Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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Starting point is 00:01:02 These stories may contain graphic depictions of violence. Violence and explicit language. Listener discretion is advised. Creepy presents. Four hours. It stared. Credited to Issa on creepypasta.org. And narrated by Victoria Wan.
Starting point is 00:01:31 For me, life was a whirlwind of lights and smoke, music, and men. I lived in a beaten-up shanty, close to North ETSA, crammed in a closet-like room with a bunch of other women. We slept on mats on the dirt floor and shared the space with mange-infested dogs, flea-bitten cats, and cockroaches. My wardrobe consisted mostly of skimpy skirts, tank tops, and the cheapest high heels you can buy on Kiyapo. After a hard night at the bars of dancing and exposing myself, sometimes spending time in a back room with a heavily drunk man, and my eyes like a dead fish staring at the ceiling.
Starting point is 00:02:11 I earned enough cash to go to the thrift shop. The weather in Manila had become chilly at night, and I needed a sweater. I took a walk down a few streets that smelled of garbage and human urine, mixed with the smog from jeep knees, tricycles, and trucks that never ended. It wasn't long before I found a street lined with second-hand clothes, undoubtedly from American charities, but somehow grabbed by greedy merchants looking to make extra pesos. The sweater was like a pearl in murky waters,
Starting point is 00:02:43 as it lay neatly on top of a bunch of tattered, motley clothes. Wondering how someone had not yet bought it, I quickly took it in my hands and studied the richness of the fabric. It was as soft as a rabbit's fur, and just as warm. Across its front was a large pouch where you could put your hands into for warmth, and that's where I found the note on a crumpled piece of yellowed paper. It smelled like the section of a library where ancient books could be found, dust and dank. On the paper where scrawled the words,
Starting point is 00:03:19 Where? 67th Bonoie Street. Pay, 1,000 pesos a night. Job. Lie on the bed, from 11 p.m. to 3 a.m. Keep your eyes shut. Never opened them. Past three, your money will be on the dresser.
Starting point is 00:03:40 Bonoie Street. The note did not say which city, but I recalled the name of a street in Kaysan that one of my roommates used to visit for a client. It was where the more upper-class people lived. I stuffed the note in my pocket and paid the merchant. Only 30 pesos. Not bad. The sweater was wonderful on my skin and made me glow like, like a snowflake. I felt like one of those young starlets on our local Kepamelia TV network,
Starting point is 00:04:10 and in my pocket was the promise of an easy, high-paying job. Those came so rarely. I must admit that even if the job seemed sketchy, the promise of a thousand pesos a night was tempting. I could get myself out of my situation. Maybe go to college. Find a real job. After a lot of asking and searching, I found the house that night. Sixty-seventh Bonnewy Street was in desolate condition, even if it was in an upper-class neighborhood. A single-story house surrounded by a short wire fence, yard unkempt, weeds stuck up like tussled hair, boards molded, loose, loose, and shingles chipped, paint faded, windows cloaked with dust. Still, it was a hundred times better than the shanty I slept in. The light of the patio was on as I approached, and when I knocked,
Starting point is 00:05:17 the door opened as if ajar. I called hello. No answer. The interior smelled aged and sour, like wet laundry left in the wash for days. I stepped inside, leaving the door slightly open so the light from the patio can illuminate my way. The floor felt as if it might give way beneath my weight. I felt the walls pressing in on me, heavy and damp. The place reminded me of a body they had found in the sewage canal, close to where I lived, bloated and bruised, deteriorated.
Starting point is 00:05:57 I passed the dark living room. There was a TV, a battered couch, a coffee table with an ashtray, and some empty cans. The room reeked of cat urine and dried feces. No one was there. I attempted to turn on some light switches, but found them useless. I turned away and headed down a hallway, noticing a pale light glowing beneath a closed door. I called again. Absolute silence.
Starting point is 00:06:30 I clasped the handle and pushed, ignoring the greasy residue it left on my palm. I found a single bed covered in drab sheets, one dresser beside it with a digital clock. It illuminated the time strongly through the darkness. 10.50 p.m. Feeling disturbed, I might have turned away. The house was empty.
Starting point is 00:06:55 I admit, I thought the job was just going to be another man looking for a quick fix, but now I was curious. It didn't seem that way, and the uncertainty of it unnerved me. But still, 1,000 pesos was too good to pass. I needed to find out if it were true. I lay on the bed with the note in my hands, facing the glow of the clock. 10.54. I listened.
Starting point is 00:07:26 The house made notes. no sound, muffled, as if a hand lay over it. I felt afraid, but excited. 10.56. My heart throbbed from my chest through my throat, in my head. I imagined the ticking of a clock. Try to match my heart with its beat. 10.59. I shut my eyes. Waited. Eleven came. I knew with my eyes closed because the change in the atmosphere was immediate. I was not alone. My eyes were shut, yet I felt it. So close to my face, the minute hairs on my forehead tingled.
Starting point is 00:08:17 It breathed, tight, stressed as it forced to breathe only from its nose. I felt the air warmed the area just above my lips. I smelled it. A sour smell, like pickled gums, and there was something else. Pungent, thick, sweet. The smell of blood. I resisted the urge to gag. Seconds turned into minutes, and still the presence lingered against my face.
Starting point is 00:08:54 My body suffered, paralyzed with fear. I felt every stream. drained breath. In, out. Slow. Afraid. I felt the slightest itch on my body. Pricles against my legs, bites up my thighs behind my back and neck. Sweat creeping, crawling, brushing up-turned hairs and begging me to scratch and move. I didn't. Bones ached, muscles wept. My heart. My heart struggled like a sparrow caught in someone's hands. The presence continued its steady closeness to my face. My forehead glittered with sweat and now began to throb. My nose pricked, twitched. I wonder if it saw that. Even my eyelids sweated. My eyes behind them
Starting point is 00:09:54 stiff, shot, scared, hiding behind lids like frightened children in close. closet. The smell was relentless. My lungs resisted its entry, asking for me to turn my head away, escape from such a foul smell. Yet I could not. Every part of my body was frozen so long as the thing stared into my face. Never opened them. My hand still clutched the note. As long as I kept my eyes closed, I thought. Nothing could happen to me. I analyzed the letter in my mind, repeated those three words. Never opened them. Again, ten times, uncountable times. Stealing myself to start my next move, I breathed, a long inhale. Sourness and the sickly smell of blood swamped my lungs. I gagged, coughed, and then I turned. I turned away into the bed, curled myself, fetal-like,
Starting point is 00:11:08 eyes clamped shut like vices. And when I relaxed, I felt it, still there, a hair's width away from my face. It was hovering, floating. How could the thing have moved with me? I did not feel any weight on the bed during the transition. Any sign to suggest that it had crawled over me, moved beside me, refocused itself against my face. I allowed a few minutes to pass before I tried again. I moved, slowly, deliberately, and it moved with mine, smoothly, smoothly, soundlessly, until I was completely on my back. My face, eyes shut, staring straight up. The thing looking down upon me, relentlessly.
Starting point is 00:12:05 I grimaced, knit my brows, sweated. I wanted to bat at it, but I could not. I was too afraid. All I could clutch onto was the promise that this could end. I waited, ached, sweated, prayed. It stayed with me, always there. I could not sleep. 3 a.m.
Starting point is 00:12:39 The digital clock alarmed, and just like that, I was released. The thing that had looked on at my face for four hours was gone. I did not immediately open my eyes. I waited until the sweat on my brows became cold and dry. I listened to my body unlock, one by one, like a warden walking through a prison, releasing the prisoners cell by cell. I could breathe again. My heart pumped, bold and strong.
Starting point is 00:13:12 I felt my fingers, the warmth on my skin. I yearned to stretch and let life sizzle through every part of me. I opened my eyes. 1,000 pesos lay on the dresser. 1,000 pesos for the horror I had endured. I took it and did not look back as I left. A week had passed since the night I spent there. Although my money was gone now, spent over things I can't even remember.
Starting point is 00:13:47 The memories from that night had not. Not a moment went by where I wasn't thinking of the thing that had breathed so close to my face. Could I have been imagining it? Perhaps my fears had been so strong, my mind had created something to justify it. But my senses could not have been tricking me. I smelled it. Blood and sour rank. I felt it.
Starting point is 00:14:14 Warm breath on my face. Who had left the money? What was the presence I felt? And the question that caused me the most dread. What would have happened if I had opened my eyes? My return to the house was no longer just for money, but answers. The evening I returned, I noticed that nothing had changed. The only difference from the first time I had been there were the bed sheets,
Starting point is 00:14:46 still crumpled for my use. The effervescent light from the clock was resolute, like a statue's stern gaze, almost punishing as I lay on the bed. Just a few seconds before 11 p.m., I shut my eyes. The thing appeared close to my face exactly on the second. This time, my fears were replaced by a studious curiosity. I noticed that right before it arrived, I did not sense anyone walk into the room. Its appearance was fluid, soundless, as if it had materialized from thin air.
Starting point is 00:15:28 The thick smell of blood and sourness were consistent with the first time. I turned my head, slowly, left and right, and every movement was mirrored perfectly by it. Like studying yourself in a mirror, your reflection so close to your face, you could fog it with the breath from your nostrils. I dared to do the one thing I had not the last night I was here. I brought my hands up to my face, cautiously, feeling my bones creak beneath the tense muscle and cold skin. The sweat building on my frightened palm and fingers. As my hands reached close, they stopped, protested, hesitated. My heart banged like wild mice in a cage.
Starting point is 00:16:20 I grimaced, summoning all my courage, eyes sweating behind the lids. temples pounding. My hands moved again. The unseen presence continued its breathing. Steady, undaunted, unmoving. My fingers touched something. I stopped. Every part of my body froze.
Starting point is 00:16:46 I could not breathe. The blood on my face swelled as I choked on fear. The breathing from the thing changed. It grew raspy, excited. Its putrid breath hit my face more powerfully. I could not tell my fingers to move. They stayed where they were, paralyzed, touching it. The length of time that passed after, I could not recall. My mind too swamped in fear. All I could remember was that, At last, the lockdown on my mind had subsided enough for my fingers to try and comprehend what it was touching. Hair, sticky and cold.
Starting point is 00:17:35 My heart banged. My fingers moved slightly. I felt the firmness of a scalp beneath the hair. The thing continued to breathe, as if enthused. Somehow I had managed to detach myself from the paralyzing terror of my body. And now I was moving my fingers like a puppeteer would to his marionette. They followed the curve of the scalp, lowered until I felt skin. The skin felt torn and jagged, and the sticky fluid was thicker there.
Starting point is 00:18:08 My fingers passed the broken skin, and now I was palpating what felt like flesh, the flesh of chopped beef parts in the market, sticky and soft. I lowered my hands. My heart thumped so hard I thought I might die of heart failure. I was too scared to continue the investigation. It felt like, like I had been touching a severed head. 3 a.m. Again, I waited until I was relaxed enough before opening my eyes.
Starting point is 00:18:50 Like before, 1,000 pesos lay neatly on the dresser. My hands, still paralyzed from what they had felt earlier, were clean. I thought they might have been soaked in blood, but there was nothing. I ran from the house terrified. Perhaps a ghost was haunting the building, and I promised never to return, no matter how much I needed the money. But that was a month ago. My roommates and I had taken a turn for the worst. town officials were cracking down on businesses like the one we worked at,
Starting point is 00:19:28 and required to show proof that we were tested, just to make sure we weren't spreading any diseases. But lab tests required money. The bar managers I worked for were snapping up only those girls who could give him the negative tests quickly, and space was limited. In spite of the fears I felt and promises I had made to never return, the need for money was greater.
Starting point is 00:19:56 After all, hadn't nothing bad ever happened to me while I was there? 11 p.m. The demonic presence returned. I grimaced, my eyes tight, determined not to let it scare me. I told myself, the job was easy. Keep my eyes closed from 11 to 3, and I will be paid, handsomely. I suppose I had gotten used to the presence. For only a few hours into the night, I found myself fighting the urge to sleep.
Starting point is 00:20:32 The rhythm of its breathing lulled me. In, out, in, out. Its sour, fetid breath, mixed with the sickly sweet smell of blood, perfuming me to sleep. I tried hard to fight it. I failed. and soon Sleep's heavy hand had successfully pressed down on my weary mind. The girl in my dream was pretty, slim body, short, hair long and straight, as dark as the skies in the province, eyes deep and shadowy.
Starting point is 00:21:12 She watched me as I slept, so close to my face, I could place a hand to her cheek and ask why she was there. Leave, she whispered. Leave. Her face grew distorted, and then she started making choking, gagging sounds. I sat up with horror and watched as her skin turned to a ghastly bloom. Her eyes bulged and turned red. She was trying to scream, say something,
Starting point is 00:21:44 but all I could hear were the hoarse, ragged breathing sounds that watched me, watched me as I... and I was awake. By some miraculous reason, I had not opened my eyes. But the room was filled with the same choking gasping noises I had heard in my dream. The floor shook as if there were some violent commotion happening in the room with me. And then, silence. Only my beating heart banged in my ears.
Starting point is 00:22:18 Still, I did not open my eyes. eyes. Not now. Not until I could hear the alarm so I can safely take the money and leave. But it did not end there. The next sound I heard sickened me more than anything I had ever experienced. A rhythmic, moist sound, like someone carving flesh with a saw. And then dripping. A thump as something heavy hit the floor. I heard footsteps, heavy and slow, headed my way. Every inch of my body screamed to open your eyes. Run! I was shaking, sweating, so fear-stricken like a bellowing animal held upside down before its throat was slit. The footsteps kept coming. Breathe. Breathe. I couldn't. I needed to Run, but I couldn't.
Starting point is 00:23:21 I was afraid. I'd lasted for too long keeping my eyes closed. I couldn't open them, no matter how insane it sounded. The footsteps stopped right next to the bed I lay on. The thing was once more pressed close to my face, breathing, gasping. It felt like my muscles would snap under the tension. My fear was like a thousand knives angled toward my. my body, the slightest move threatening to kill me. Minutes stretched on, slowly, cruelly.
Starting point is 00:23:57 I wanted out, out of everything, the room, the need for money, the nights with strangers and terror of it all. Call girl. I wanted out, out, out. And then, a blessing like the sun after a typhoon. The sound of the alarm clock. 3am. I opened my eyes and found myself in an empty room. There was nothing there. Nothing on the floor where I'd heard someone screaming and their body being carved. The money on the dresser, but it didn't matter.
Starting point is 00:24:40 I didn't even grab it. I fled out of the house like a beaten dog. I could not sleep for the rest of the night. The next morning, I sought out some answers to the house I had been visiting. The town captain believed my story that I was sent by a wealthy family to find out if the house was for sale and check if there was any history behind it. Years ago, a wealthy man once lived there. He was quiet and kept to himself.
Starting point is 00:25:15 Seemed to cause no harm to anyone. Every once in a while, he took in a call girl to keep him company for the night, but many men did the same. not much to be suspicious about, until the neighbors smelled something foul coming from his home. They found him in his room with the headless body of a girl on the floor. Who knows how long he had been there with the body, maybe days. He was standing still, like an upright coffin, and in his outstretched hand was the girl's head. He wouldn't put it down, just held it out, so steady and still.
Starting point is 00:25:53 His expression dead. They shot him right there. The captain opened a drawer and drew out a file. This is a photo of the girl they believed was killed. She was an orphan, only 16. Probably did what she did for the money. The other girls who worked with her said she had been with the man two other times. It was on the third night when he killed her.
Starting point is 00:26:21 Here, take it. She was the same girl for her. my dream. But what chilled me more was the sweater she wore in the photo. White and soft, the same one I had found in the second-hand store with the note in the pocket. I thanked the captain, barely able to let out the words. When I returned to my shanty later that day, I discovered that the white sweater had disappeared from my closet, and so did the note. When I asked my roommates if they had seen or taken it, all I got was the answer no. I gave up working as a call girl and found a job as a caregiver for an elderly couple. Although the work was hard
Starting point is 00:27:08 and slow, I persisted and saved up enough money to start college. Sometimes I passed by the thrift store where I had found the white sweater with the cursed note. I remember the three nights I had spent with the dark presence, and how insane I had been, returning even after so much fear, for money, for curiosity. That's what a call girl's life did to you. You become jaded to the dangers you repeatedly put yourself into, sleeping with strangers, potential murderers, returning for the money and the thrill of it. I tried to stuff the memories into the dark cracks of my mind. Forget it. But still, I wondered, what if I had opened my eyes? A few years later, I came upon an article in the news, a small one amongst a few other murders. They always wrote
Starting point is 00:28:11 these stories with such detail, and my blood curdled. The body of a call girl had been found. Her head severed. The girl's eyes were wide open. information, including pictures and videos of the stories told on this podcast, or to suggest stories for future episodes, please visit us. At Creepypod on Twitter, Instagram. All stories told on this podcast can be found at creepypasta wiki.com and are protected by a creative commons license. preserved unless otherwise stated.

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