Creepy - The Draining Of Blackwater Lake
Episode Date: April 15, 2021Some things should stay hidden...***Written by Steven Winters narrated by Alicia Atkins***Check out our reward tiers at patreon.com/creepypod***You can also subscribe to us on YouTube:https://www.yout...ube.com/creepypod***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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This is the bloody disgusting podcast network.
No.
This is creepy.
A podcast dedicated to sharing the most famous chilling and disturbing creepy pastors and urban legends in the world.
Whether these stories truly happened or simply fabrications is for you to decide.
These stories make me.
graphic depictions of violence and explicit language.
Listener discretion is advised.
Creepy presents
The Draining of Blackwater Lake,
written by Stephen Winters
and narrated by Alicia Atkins.
In local news, Blackwater Lake,
a longtime staple of Blackwater, Florida,
has been bought by Amos Entertainment Company.
The company recently came
forward, citing that they intend to drain the lake to make way for the development of an addition
to their new chain of movie theaters. Although wildlife enthusiasts lobby for the preservation of the
lake, local officials voted for the drainage. It's about damn time, Mac Harris said. His eyes,
along with most of the patrons of O'Brien's pub, were focused on the flat screen hanging over the bar.
The reporter, a pretty blonde thing, Mack's wife often said with no sort of
of contempt, faded into the background as the pub turned their attention to the old man.
Good riddance. That lake has been nothing but problems. The pub buzzed with murmurs.
Some nodding in agreement, some skeptical. The only exception was Harry Tomlin. Shadows played
across his wrinkled face as he hunkered over his beer glass. The only sign that showed he was
paying attention, that is, if he was paying any attention, was a subtle twitch of his mouth
beneath his unkept mustache.
Oh, get off of it!
Tim O'Brien, the very Tim O'Brien of O'Brien's pub, replied.
Tim was probably in his mid-30s, Mac guessed,
by the man's deep laugh lines and thinning hair.
A far cry from O'Brien's senior,
but that's what happens when you leave town
and go to the community college in Ocala, Mac supposed.
They filled your head with so much useful drivel
that you can't use common sense anymore.
There's nothing wrong with that lake, just a bunch of wise tales.
I've been out there plenty of times.
Nothing wrong with that lake, he says, Max scoffed.
Laugh all you want, but for all that learning you got, he ain't got to lick a sense.
You forget the old legend of Thomas Dunn.
Here we go, Tim muttered, shaking his head.
Back in 1752, way back before this town existed,
done set up shop by Blackwater Lake, moved here with his two girls and wife.
He was out there for only a few months before all contact was lost.
When they found him, they caught him as he was dragging off one of his daughters into the lake.
Turned out, he'd already drowned his wife and the other girl out there, saying the lake itself was telling him to do it.
I heard that story, too, Tim replied.
usually as a boy around a campfire.
Sharks live out in that their water, Dick, the proprietor of the local fish and tackle shop, said.
The pub patrons turned to the man, some looking at him incredulity, while the other half listened with wide-eyed amusement.
Don't be ridiculous, Tim replied, rolling his eyes.
Maybe you should stop drinking for tonight.
Don't patronize me, boy, Dick snapped, the lines on his broad face deep.
It was about ten years ago now.
Me and my boy, David, liked to take the boat and go fishing out there.
Not anything big biting, but it's a nice way to spend the lazy afternoon.
It was a lazy day like the last day we were out there.
It was rear in the end of spring, about the beginning of April.
I remember because I remember the heat of that day.
Hot enough to cook eggs on the sidewalk, I'd tell you.
Anyways, we're out there in the middle of the lake.
It's about as black.
Blackest sin in that part. The deepest part.
My boy would go out to that spot to fish with me.
It's a spot with the best bite.
But he'd never swim out in that part.
Frankly, I don't blame him.
We're out there in my two-seater rowboat.
It was a fine day, and we had our lines out, enjoying the day.
I was lounging about while Daniel was on his game guy, snitch.
Damn, these things are all the same to me.
He's playing on the damn thing when our boat rocks lightly.
I yelled at him to stop shaking, said he hadn't moved an inch.
So I looked back into the lake, but with the glare of the sun off the water, in that darkness,
I couldn't see nothing.
As I'm looking in the lake, the boat rocks again.
He nearly flips the boat over, and David's yelling.
I'm holding on to the sides of the boat so hard my knuckles are turning white.
It nearly settles on the surface of the lake when whatever's been hitting it does it again.
Next thing I know, the boat capsizes and were both thrown in the water.
I couldn't find my way out.
It was just too black.
I thought I was going to drown, could feel my lungs about to explode, when I saw the sun.
Then I saw a figure swimming straight toward me.
I thought it was David at first, except it was moving too fast.
Too unnatural, like it floated more than it swam.
It came into the light, and I nearly drowned right there on the spot.
I was face to face with a shark.
That narrow face was inches from me,
and when it opened its mouth, all I saw was teeth,
open and wider and wider until it could have swallowed my head.
What'd you do?
Mike, a youngster about 22, asked, leaning in.
I did the first thing I could think of, Dick replied.
I swung.
I swung as hard as I could.
With the water, it felt like my fist was going slower than a snail.
I was lucky my arm didn't go straight into his mouth.
Instead, I hit it right on the snap.
It swam off.
I found my boy and got the hell out of there.
Didn't even bother getting my boat back.
It's probably still floating out there somewhere.
A moment of silence befell the room.
It was only broken by Tim's laughter.
You can't be serious.
The young bartender spat back.
Sharks and a freshwater lake?
Give me a break.
It's true, Harry replied.
His voice was hardly above a whisper, but the whole pub seemed to have heard it.
In an instant, the chatter died.
Many patrons bowed their blushing heads at the realization that Harry had been amongst them during the conversation.
Most others, like Mack, kept their heads up, hiding their embarrassment through their own stoutness.
As to the younger patrons like Tim, they turned their confused or curiously.
his faces towards the man in the back of the pub.
Whatever the patron's reactions to the man,
Harry didn't seem to notice as he remained with his head down.
Several seconds passed, and yet no one dared speak.
His gray eyes surveyed the pub under two bushy eyebrows
before finding Tim leaning forward on the counter.
It's true.
Harry repeated, this time his voice softer.
Believe me or not,
I'm not here to convince you otherwise.
I don't really care.
But I will tell you what happened.
It's all any of you want.
Been wanting it for years, I guess.
Harry took a long drag from his beer.
In the span of a few seconds, it seemed as though he had aged a decade.
His eyes looked more sunken, the creases in his face deeper.
There was a faraway look in his eyes, as though he didn't exist mentally within that moment.
Harry Tomlin was in another time and place.
Finally, he put down his mug.
At least three quarters of the beer gone.
Swallowed hard.
And began.
It started back in 71.
Me and the family were one of the first families out there.
Lakeview homes.
That's what they were going to call it.
Get a gorgeous home with a Lakeview.
I was working for the company in charge of the development project.
I get a nice house with a view, a nice pension.
and all I had to do was draw up advertisements for the place.
Make sure everything went smoothly.
We were barely out there a month before the trouble started.
I would be in my den, working on another deadline,
when someone would shout somewhere.
I thought it was Becky, my wife, or the television.
It was always a woman's voice, you see.
Every time I'd go to investigate, I'd never find anything.
I'd walk around the house.
Then head outside until I was left dumbfounded by the edge of the lake.
It would be so quiet out there, especially in the evening.
You wouldn't even hear the birds.
Not even a goddamn cicada.
I could live with that.
It's probably something that could be explained.
Maybe some animal howling, sounding like a woman.
Wind through a crack.
Hell, I'd be satisfied with just ghost.
Leave it at that.
Except it wasn't.
Billy, my boy, he started having these episodes.
He'd start sleepwalking a few weeks after we got there.
First, it was just around the house.
Nothing terrible.
But then he started going outside.
He'd walk out to the edge of the lake, just standing there.
Whenever I went out to shake him awake, he'd always ask,
where'd she go?
I'd ask him who he was talking.
about. He always said the lady in the water. Checked him in with the doctor. Said that he was just a
sleepwalker. Nothing to worry about. I should have packed us up then. Left that damn place.
But no. I didn't. It was a good job. A good home. And I thought it was just some ailment.
I thought if we just went and got help, got the proper middle.
"'Herry's voice cracked as they escaped his trembling lips.
"'He bowed his head, his whole body quivering.
"'A wave of guilt rushed over the pub,
"'and even Mack found himself shifting uncomfortably in his seat.
"'For then seconds, Harry coughed and raised his head again.
"'The trembling was gone, but his eyes were glossy in the dim light.
"'It was that night.
"'I woke up to screaming.
"'It sounded far away.
At first, I thought I was dreaming.
But then I recognized it as Billy's.
Becky was up by that time.
She checked the house and I checked outside.
I know more than walked out the front door than see splashing about a quarter of the way into the lake.
Billy was out there, thrashing about.
Screaming.
The screams.
I dove out there, swimming as quick as I could.
I still remember seeing him flailing.
Just staying over the water's surface.
I had him in my hands.
I had him.
I was dragging him out, and then...
Harry's voice trailed off, leaving the pub in silence once again.
He sat there for several minutes, staring into his now empty glass.
Matt cleared his throat before rising from his stool,
the money for his tab already on the counter, and made for the pub's exit.
Better get home before Maggie starts up.
He thought, hiding the jitteriness in his aging limbs.
The slamming of the pub's door seemed to bring Harry too.
I was dragging Billy out, he said.
But there were hands.
Coming out of the water.
Another person's hands.
They grabbed his shoulders and yanked him down.
Harry's head bobbed to and fro lightly as he set for several minutes.
Everyone waited.
For Harry to either fall out of his seat drunk or to continue talking,
Harry set his eyes on O'Brien.
Put this on my tab, will you?
With that, Harry rose from his seat and staggered out into the night.
The pub eventually developed into a low murmur,
though the topic of Blackwater Lake was left out of the conversations.
Nevertheless, an eerie shadow hung over the pub,
even as the last patron left O'Brien's,
and Tim closed for the night.
Davis lit a cigarette as he watched the last bit of water flow out of the man-made canal,
connecting the lake across 15 miles out to the Gulf of Mexico.
Good riddins, he thought, taking a deep inhale from the Marlborough.
Amos had contracted his company from Sarasota.
Davis had been in blackwater for two months and was ready to go back.
The weather was still hot as Satan's left tit,
and the mosquitoes buzzing around made anyone paranoid
about malaria. But Jesus, the backwater yokels here were enough to drive him crazy. He was lucky
that they had a Walmart here. Besides, this place, the lake in particular gave him the creeps.
There was something in the air, the way that there never seemed to be any wildlife, or how the
wind barely blew. It made the hairs on his arms stand on end, like the earth here was holding
its breath. Davis glanced up, watching orange hues start to tent the once-blue sky.
Help!
Davis's body tightened so tightly that his joints creaked. He turned his attention downward to find
his crew swarming to the center of the muddy pit. There was something in their movements,
something frantic that made him set up straighter.
Shit, he muttered, pulling himself off the hillside and replacing the cigarette in his pocket.
He recognized that scene below, the cry for help.
Fuck.
I need workman's comp paperwork like another asshole, he thought,
descending into the empty lake.
Davis was pushing 50 and was in relatively good shape.
He ate as healthy as he could in modern-day America,
and went to the gym at least two days a week.
But that didn't stop his knees from popping.
He knew that his legs would be yelling at him by the time he got back to the hotel.
Take it easy.
Easy there, he told himself.
Yet the second course of help forced him to push on.
A figure ran up from the crowd, one of the younger guys he had hired just before this little expedition to Central Florida.
He thought his name was Gibbons.
Sweat ran down Gibbons's thin face, plastering the bangs of his short brown hair to his forehead.
It was the lack of color in his face that made Davis's heartbeat faster.
Jesus, what is it? Davis asked.
Who's hurt?
Gibbons stood rooted, opening and closing his mouth as he turned from Davis back to the crowd of workers a yard away.
Davis had half a mind to slap the young man back to his senses when Gibbons finally answered.
It might be better if you come see for yourself.
Davis grunted and rushed forward.
The ground under his boots sucked at the sole of his foot, as though the ground was trying to suck him in.
When a step didn't land just right, the mud underfoot threatened to make him do a split.
"'It's going to be all right,' Davis said, pushing his way through the crowd.
"'Someone called the 911—'
The words died on his lips as Davis reached the center.
When Davis was a kid, he and his family would go down to Rainbow River.
His brother had a nasty habit of yelling, Gator.
Davis would run back to shore, his body struggling against the river before the gator got him.
Of course, every time he reached land, his brother would be doubling over and laughter.
Davis couldn't help but fall for it every time.
The rational part of his mind knew that it was his brother just being a little shit.
Still, that primal part kept replaying the same image.
An open maw lined with pointed teeth.
It was that primal urge in the back of his head that told Davis to run.
What the fuck is that?
He asked breathlessly.
At first glance, he thought it was a seven-foot shark ride the
in the mud. Its black eyes stared up at them, its gaping mouth of razor teeth opening and closing
as though struggling for breath. Its lean body narrowed toward the midsection, where two arms
felled about with webbed hands raking at the earth. Two mounds protruded from its chest,
and it took Davis several seconds to realize they were breast. The creature's bottom ended into a
fin that struck the damp ground with a wet thump. Bits of white surrounded the creature buried in the mud,
littering the ground for feet around them.
Bone, Davis thought in horror.
Hundreds of buried bones.
The creature's black eyes locked onto Davis.
It opened its mouth and gave a single utterance.
Help.
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