Creepy - The Answer
Episode Date: April 19, 2021Do you really want to know?***Written by Michael Simon and narrated by Jimmy Ferrer***Check out our reward tiers at patreon.com/creepypod***You can also subscribe to us on YouTube:https://www.youtube....com/creepypod***Produced by Steve Blizin***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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These stories may contain graphic depictions of violence
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Listener discretion is advised.
Creepy presents
The Answer
Written by Michael Simon
narrated by Jimmy Ferrer
and produced by Steve Blizzin.
It took most of the morning,
but I finally found him on a deserted dock in the marina,
loading supplies into his new yacht.
My contact told me he had purchased the fiberglass
beauty just last week, which sent alarm bells ringing in my reporter's brain.
The man couldn't swim. The parking lot was empty. Tied up in their berths. Sailboats rose and fell
on the gentle swell like slumbering water carriages. A warm, westerly breeze stirred bits
of debris while seagulls dozed atop ancient wooden piling. I put the keychain with Emily.
Emily's name engraved on the tag him into my shirt pocket and climbed down the rickety ladder to the dock.
I wasn't a big man, but the wooden plank still creaked beneath my feet.
Next to the boat sat a pile of boxes in cases of water.
The object of my search wore a red flannel shirt and brown cargo shorts that exposed a pair of knobby knees.
Puffing the corned cob pipe, cast a wary eye and
direction. I brushed a lock of red hair out of my eyes and extended my arm. Professor Ripley?
Depends? He ignored the hand.
Who's asking? Sam Reynolds, from the post. Oh? He exhaled, filling the space between us with a
cloud of blue smoke. The Washington Post? I dropped my arm. Only in my dreams. I mean the local version.
He grunted and leaned his hip against the side of the boat.
You do look familiar.
Yeah, I forced to smile.
During your news conferences, I was the guy in the back, behind the network hot shots.
His expression finally cracked.
Sorry about that.
The seating arrangement was the university's idea of proper hierarchy.
I shrugged.
I had lost count of the hours spent covering his work.
all the articles and talk shows.
His eyes searched my face.
I don't suppose this is a social call?
Not exactly.
Professor Ripley had a reputation for shooting from the hip.
Gut instinct told me to do the same.
I came to ask why you unexpectedly tendered your resignation from the university.
And why you used the money from the sale of your Cape Cod,
which you sold in what amounted to a fire sale.
To buy this beauty, I ran my fingers along the fiberglass hull.
His expression slipped into a grimace.
So much for secrets.
Not in this town, Professor.
Not when my contact at City Hall was a family member.
I waited, but the tenured professor from Yale remained mute.
As he puffed quietly on his pipe, I couldn't help but notice how the long battle had carved wrinkles
into his face and dark circles under his eyes.
He looked thinner than I remember.
I sensed him drifting, so I pushed harder.
You were months away from retirement and a full pension.
The unspoken inference to something suspicious hung in the air, like a stale odor.
If there were skeletons in his closet, he did well not to show.
Instead, he glanced sidelong at me.
So, in your reporter role, have you attended my lectures?
That and read your papers and interviewed your students.
Professor, I've followed your career since your first book.
He pretended to examine his pipe.
If that's true, you must share a similar interest in the afterlife.
I kept my tone neutral.
It sells newspapers.
That's it, then.
You're just looking for a story.
specifically why I pulled up roots and flushed my career down the toilet.
As I suspected, straight from the hip.
Level with me, Professor.
For ten years, you've been the poster boy for life after death,
reincarnation, a higher dimension, whatever you want to call it.
You stood up to pundits and naysayers from all over the globe.
Why choose this moment to get out of Dodge?
He didn't answer.
Instead, he resumed moving boxes into the sailboat.
I waited silently.
After five minutes, he straightened.
I wiped sweat from his brow.
A harsh cough rattled through his chest.
These bones are getting old, Mr. Reporter.
So I'll make you a deal.
You help load these boxes, and I'll answer your...
I dropped my knapsack before he even finished the sentence.
grabbing the top boxes, I met his gaze.
Where do you want them?
He wheezed as he worked, like a scornish bagpipe leaking air.
Steps down into the boat seemed especially hard on him.
The greenish tinge that infiltrated his skin wasn't present in his last press conference.
I caught him staring at me a couple of times.
When he realized I was looking, broke into a whimsical smile, and turned away.
began to get an uneasy feeling in my gut.
After an hour, we took a break.
He opened up a case of Budweiser and passed me too.
I found a comfortable seat on the dock and pressed one against my forehead.
I'm only a landlubber, but she seems like a nice boat.
He smiled and patted the white hull affectionately.
She's 40 feet of creature comforts and computer chips.
She can set course, cook supper, and wipe your ass all at the same time.
He laughed at my sudden consternation.
I exaggerate at times.
He admitted.
It was time to ask the first question.
Why did you quit?
Quit.
He studied me for a moment.
Perhaps I got tired of waging an unwinnable war.
I shook my head, dismissing his point.
I watched you too long.
A Rottweiler couldn't drag you off the scent.
He shrugged and struggled to relight his pipe.
And the rising breeze took several attempts.
My sources tell me you were under contract to produce a third book.
The first two had spent months on the New York Times bestsellers list.
And were soundly ridiculed by the scientific intelligentsia.
I was.
I changed my mind.
Despite the six-figure advance?
I had good sources.
He took a drag.
I gave it back.
That stopped me cold.
Why would a man throw away a sure-fire bestseller and that much money?
What was he hiding?
Do you believe?
He caught my eye.
I hesitated.
Careful not to put him off.
Your books are hard to put down.
And the patient's stories are captivating.
In fact, he had interviewed hundreds of people who had survived deaths and brace.
In every case, the medical evidence was unequivocal.
They had, for varying periods, been clinically dead.
What about the similarities?
I sip the beer.
You're referring to seeing the familiar faces.
That and more?
Like the feelings of patients recounted of serenity and acceptance.
I kept my expression neutral.
Your detractors described them as isolated incidents.
He smirked.
That's so old school.
Back when we were forced to form conclusions based on few events.
But now, thanks to modern medicine, there are literally hundreds of new cases every year.
The pool of data is huge, not isolated.
I fingered the key chain in my pocket.
Before plunging headlong into the paranormal, Professor Ridley had been a highly regarded scientist,
holding dual doctorates in psychology and neurology, and authoring a score of papers.
It wasn't until he published his first book of Survivor interviews that all hell broke loose.
It was the data that slapped me in the face, he said.
It didn't matter whether it was a heart attack or a car accident.
Everyone reported similar visions and...
His stare hardened.
An overwhelming sense of peace.
He took another puff while I sip my beer and waited.
Of course, without reproducible evidence, the establishment dismissed my findings.
Except for the university, I said.
They never cast you adrift.
Another wet cough forced him to catch his breath.
They never endorsed me.
They never endorsed me either.
For them, I was just a cash cow.
The media put the university on the front page, and they profited from the exposure.
I needed to take control of the interview.
Professor, can I ask you a related question?
He knew what was coming, and I expected him to bristle, and said, he simply nodded.
You want to know why I fell on this quasi-sum?
scientific field in the first place.
You only skirted the issue.
You don't buy the fact. It was simple curiosity.
Would you?
He slid down into sitting position and crack open a beer.
Probably not.
He sighed.
All right. It's time I got it off my chest anyway.
He put the pipe down and took a drink.
It was a morning just like this.
Hot and breezy.
when I picked up Lan on my girlfriend and little Jack for a weekly picnic.
My pulse picked up.
I couldn't believe it.
After all the years, this was it, is Razon Detra.
I was the first reporter to find out.
But why now?
It didn't take a genius to know something was different.
Augusta Wend my hair around.
It wasn't Land as I had.
idea to head for the coast.
We were on the freeway when a tractor trailer blew a tire, careened off the divider, and
smashed into our station wagon.
I woke up in the emergency room with fractured ribs and a concussion.
He took another sip.
That was 40 years ago in another country.
Lina Land the stretcher next to me.
Tubes and wires running everywhere.
I remember the blood pooling on the floor as they worked on her.
A second gurney in the corner held a small body covered in a white sheet.
The professor paused and took a deep breath.
I'm sorry.
I...
But he continued like I wasn't there.
The pain from my broken bones was incredible.
I wanted to reach out to Lana.
But a nurse put a needle in my thigh and I passed out.
I wanted to pinch myself.
All those network talking heads would...
kill to hear this.
Part of my brain banked me
to pull out my phone and start
recording, but I dared
not distract him.
I understood why
no reporter had tracked down the
smoking gun.
With no marriage license,
there was no common name.
It got worse.
He continued in a
slow, halting tone.
I was awake when
her heart stopped.
She was gone for over ten minutes.
They shocked her over and over.
And then, unexpectedly, the monitor began beeping.
They got her back?
He wiped his eyes.
The doctors said it wouldn't be for long.
They couldn't stop the bleeding.
Did she know?
She took my hand.
A tear ran down his cheek.
Her skin felt so cold.
She wanted me to live a good life.
A lump formed in my throne.
She told me not to worry that she and little Jack would be fine.
He took out a handkerchief and dabbed his cheeks.
I made some vague comment about Jack being so young.
I was so unfair.
When she interrupted and said he was happy playing with his new friends,
I figured she was.
was hallucinating. But then she mumbled something about Jack missing his fire truck.
Fire truck? His eyes meant mine. It was Jack's favorite toy, a birthday present.
I don't understand. Lana said Jack wanted me to save it for him. Back then, I didn't understand,
but as you can imagine, I've had plenty of time to ponder those words. She didn't say anything else?
The professor signed.
She passed minutes later.
I'm sorry.
I murmured.
I never knew.
He cleared his throat.
Nobody does, Mr. Reporter.
Else they would have attributed my research to just another nut on a personal crusade.
I published my first book 30 years after the accident,
and no one has been able to connect the dots.
Until now.
So the motivation came from your need to understand.
His expression hardened.
It's hardly my need.
Each of us has an unquenchable thirst to know.
Look at my book sales.
For thousands of years, mankind has wondered about the next stage of existence.
Are we simply aggregates of stellar dust randomly combined into human form,
living and dying in the blink of a cosmic eye?
Or do we harbor something more valuable?
deep inside.
We all want to believe in a soul, I said.
Yes.
He stared over my shoulder.
We all want to believe.
But in our modern world, we rely on hard, physical evidence.
The foundation of science.
And why not?
He threw his arms up and a defeated gesture.
Science has given us electricity, automobiles, and improved quality of life.
None of which has to be taken on faith, unlike the accounts from a revived patient.
which are impossible to verify.
In my mind, a piece of the puzzle fell into place.
You thought by piling up a ton of anecdotal reports,
the sheer evidence will tip the scale?
He looked away.
People want to believe.
Without another word, he got up and grabbed a box.
I fingered the keychain in my pocket.
We joined him.
I cracked open a beer.
as he secured the last of the can goods in the gallery.
Dark clouds approached from the north
injecting a chill in the air.
The winds had picked up,
and Whitecaps lashed the boat.
A storm was moving in.
I waited until he stepped out on deck.
Where are you going?
Does it matter?
He said.
You have your answers?
He was right.
The story alone would elevate my career.
However, my reporters,
six cents continued to buzz.
There was more.
You said you'd answer
all my questions.
He sagged back against
a sailboat as a series of
thick cough sucked the energy out of him.
He used a
handkerchief to wipe the specks of blood from his
lips. Understand you're married,
Mr. Reporter?
The question took me off guard.
Ah, yes.
You have children?
I nodded.
Unsure.
Two boys.
He paused to relight his pipe.
Then you know, kids.
I grinned.
As a parent that goes without saying,
at that moment, I realized something else.
The man had never married.
After the car accident, he had never moved on.
Children are different, he said.
Like when they enter a room, what do they do?
They usually make a beeline for the nearest shiny object, I said, which is how things usually get broken.
Exactly.
He smiled.
They only have eyes for certain things.
I started to take another drink, but stopped.
He was going somewhere.
Adults are different.
The professor continued.
When they enter a room, the first thing they do is look for references.
You came to the stock, recognized me, identified my boat and supplies.
My six cents buzzed louder.
We take the pulse for a room, Mr. Reporter.
Is it a friendly place?
Is there a feeling of foreboding?
That's the way we as adults are programmed.
He leaned forward like he was going to poke me in the chest.
The idea came to me years ago.
Paranormal scientists have always interviewed adults and gotten similar results.
Nobody has taken the next step.
I choked on the question.
One step.
Nobody interviewed kids.
His eyes flashed.
Cancer patients, trauma victims.
You name it.
Modern medicine has brought thousands back.
For God's sakes!
I blurted it.
He had crossed a line.
Relax.
He waved down my indignation.
Nobody was tortured, and kids like talking about it.
In their young minds, it's only a dream.
I couldn't shake my rising anger.
and fear.
I can't believe you'd subject children to that kind of talk, just to support your theory.
He cracked a wry smile that quickly evaporated.
My publisher loved the idea.
That's why they were so keen on a third book.
Did you expect the confused utterings of children to legitimize a theory that's mired in sleaze?
His lips thinned into a white line.
I never said it would.
Remember, I refused the book deal.
I tried and failed to fit the pieces together.
You're not trying to substantiate your theories?
His eyes narrowed.
Not for the public.
As you say, the confused utterings are not going to push my theory over the top.
Then what?
You lied to me, Mr. Reporter.
He waggled the finger in front of us.
my face. That's not very polite. My pulse hammered in my ears. You have three children,
not two. Your third died young. I jumped to my feet. How the hell did you know that?
The same way I knew you'd be visiting me. He replied. The same way I prove the afterlife exists.
Not in a manner I could demonstrate to a skeptical scientific community, but more importantly to myself.
and that, as I've come to accept, is all that matters.
My brain swam in a sea of confusion.
Why?
I interviewed hundreds of kids, Mr. Reporter,
and they presented a unique insight,
one unclouded by learned adult behavior.
They described the experience like entering a room.
And as you say, they always made a beeline for something that attracted their attention.
My hand, unbidden,
reached into my pocket.
Like what?
His eyes twinkled.
He was dragging me somewhere
I didn't want to go.
Sometimes it was a shiny toy,
sometimes a television show.
A show?
I'm sorry, that's the best way I can explain it.
They saw events, Mr. Reporter,
events that hadn't happened yet.
I scoffed.
Are you trying to tell me
Dead Kids saw the future?
No.
He stifled another cough with his hand.
Nothing that grandiose.
But they did return with snippets that gave me pause.
Like the four-year-old who wanted his dog to sleep with him,
the night lightning knocked over a telephone pole and crushed the dog house.
Or the five-year-old who warned her parents not to fly.
They ignored her pleas and died in the subsequent crash.
Of course, none of these anecdotal reports can be scientifically proven.
But you believe.
His gaze froze me.
I do.
Professor, you've been a trained scientist.
You need reproducible evidence.
He studied me for a long moment.
Two weeks ago, I interviewed Ryan,
a six-year-old who had been in a horrific bus accident and lost both legs.
Fortunately, Ryan's young heart survived the blood loss.
and they brought him back.
He told me that, while away.
He played with two other children.
He described colorful swings
and nearby picnic tables
filled with cookies and cakes.
Sounds like a typical six-year-old.
The professor nodded.
Yes.
But when I asked him about his playmates,
he recalled having strange conversations.
Conversations he promptly forgot
the next day when I returned.
Like a dream.
Indeed.
He told me one of the kids was named Jack, and that Jack somehow knew Ryan would be revived.
Jack told Ryan he still missed his fire truck, and he wanted to know if I could bring it when it came.
I hesitated. The boy didn't know you?
Did I mention Ryan was from Dublin?
I shook my head. Coincidence.
Maybe.
He sucked on his pipe.
Let me tell you the rest of this story.
After Jack left, his second child approached Ryan and asked him to pass along a message.
This child told Ryan a man with red hair that worked for the newspaper would be visiting me.
What?
I could barely get the words out.
What was her name?
The professor stared at me.
I never said it was a girl.
Then.
Emily.
She said her name was Emily.
The same name.
That's on your keychain.
My heart surged into my throne.
This was crazy.
Dead was dead.
One was the message?
I asked hoarsely.
She's worried about her mom getting sick again.
Oh, God.
He gave me a look that conveyed both empathy and confusion.
My wife, I whispered.
She had cancer before.
Emily was born. It's in remission.
I see.
We sat in silence. The professor puffing on his pipe,
me staring into the darkening sky as the wind howled above us.
Finally I got up and put the warm beer on the dock. I have to leave.
I know.
He stood.
It's tough. Faith is not for the faint of heart.
I extended my hand, and this time he took it.
Good luck, professor.
I hope you find what you're looking for.
He nodded silently, and I retreated up to the dock.
At the top of the ladder, I stopped and pulled out the keychain.
It all made sense.
Jack wanted his favorite toy because the professor was dying.
Lung cancer.
Not that the details mattered.
Fyfer's pseudoscience was over.
This voyage would be his last.
I slipped out my cell phone
and dialed my wife's doctor.
She needed an appointment first thing in the morning.
Tonight, I would take her out to dinner at her favorite restaurant.
As I walked toward the car,
I caught a glimpse of the sailboat stern,
emblazoned, and bright, boldly.
letters was the name
SS
Fire Truck.
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