Dr. Creepen's Dungeon - S5 Ep225: Episode 225: Deadly Whispers and Evil Doctors
Episode Date: March 11, 2025We open proceedings this evening with ‘Deadly Whispers’ by Corpse Child, kindly shared directly with me for the express purpose of having me narrate it here for you all: https://www.reddit.com/...user/Corpse_Child/ Tonight’s second fabulous tale of terror is ‘I Posted a True Stalker Story Online: My Stalker Read It...’ by Snickeringhaystack, kindly shared directly with me for the express purpose of having me narrate it here for you all: https://www.reddit.com/user/snickeringhaystack/ Tonight’s third horrifying tale of therapy gone wrong is ‘I’m a Psychotherapist Who Specializes in Unlocking Repressed Memories’ by the wonderfully talented Grotesque Penguin, kindly shared directly with me for the express purpose of having me narrate it here for you all: https://www.reddit.com/user/Grotesque-penguin/ Today’s next phenomenal tale of terror is ‘I Went Camping with My Wife… But Now I Can’t Leave the Woods’, an original work by PostMortem33, kindly shared directly with me via my sub-r-ddit and narrated here for you all with the author’s kind permission. https://www.reddit.com/user/PostMortem33/ Today’s penultimate story is an old school classic ‘The Dead Man of Varley Grange’, an anonymous classic work; a story in the public domain, but recorded here under the conditions of the CC-BY-SA license: https://creepypasta.fandom.com/wiki/The_Dead_Man_of_Varley_Grange Today’s final tale of the macabre is ‘There Has Been a Secret Invasion: Only I Can See the Reptilians for What They Are!’, an original work by Bear Lair 64, kindly shared directly with me for the express purpose of having me exclusively narrate it here for you all. https://www.reddit.com/user/BearLair64/
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Welcome to Dr. Crins Dungeon.
Horror stories captivate us because they tap into our deepest fears while allowing us to experience them from a place of safety.
They awaken something primal within us, a thrill of the unknown, the fear of the dark and the rush of adrenaline that comes with confronting danger even if it's just in our imagination.
Whether it's ghosts, monsters, or the twisted minds of humanity, horror reminds us that the world is full of mysteries, both terrifying and tantalizing.
We can't look away because, deep down,
We love the feeling of being scared, as we shall see in tonight's collection of stories.
Now, as ever before we begin, a word of caution.
Tonight's tales make contain strong language as all as descriptions of violence and horrific imagery.
That sounds like your kind of thing.
Then let's begin.
So Medicala said she heard dead people whispering to her, telling her to join them.
And now I'm hearing them too.
By corpse child.
I'm insane. Please just tell me I'm insane. Please tell me that I'm a delusional freak who deserves to be locked up.
Hell, call me a schizohead or a psychomaniac. Freaking anything, just for the love of God,
tell me this isn't real. As if it is, I, well, I don't know what I'll do.
It's been going on for almost two and a half months now, at least since Jackie dies.
Jacqueline, the girl I took under my wing, the girl I let down and now,
the source of my torment.
We'd met about a month and a half ago
and I was still working a dead-end job as a cook for Porky Bros,
the old barbecue joint that sat in the middle of downtown
where I lived before it closed down last week.
I still remember how we met.
I was out back taking the smoke,
the only one I'd had so far that day,
and I'd just about gotten into a fist fight with Rick,
one of the waiters who would always particularly dislike me for whatever reason.
The guy seemed to amuse himself with trying to crack a bullwhip over my back to hurry up with an order.
And of course, when a customer would complain about something being wrong with the food,
be it not seasoned enough, or something was still cold.
You could bet your bottom dollar that the son of bitch would be in my ear about it.
Well, that time was over the order being three minutes late,
even though we were getting slammed with business and I barely had any help,
with multiple people calling out.
I was already tired from having to pull a double, and I've been putting up with his shit for far longer than I should have.
I was about to break his face in when Wendell, my buddy and one of the only other cooks working with me that day,
stepped in and told me to go take a smoke.
I did so without a single word.
So there I was, puffing away at a Marlborough Red, when she approached me for the first time.
I could tell she'd been crying, and her clothes were torn and raggedy.
Hey, can I burn my smoke?
She asked, her voice shaking.
I looked in the pack, seeing there was only one left after the one I was smoking.
Admittedly, I almost told her no.
I'm looking at her, though.
I guess at the time I didn't have the heart.
Thank you.
She just stood next to me, silently dragging on her smoke.
Pardon me wanted to ask if she was okay, but at the same time I knew she wasn't.
The way she looked said everything, the tattered close.
the way she was quivering, still in tears, and just how utterly frightened she was.
Plus, I could also see bruises on her cheekbones and around her mouth.
I was heartbroken.
I must have somehow shown it, too, because she soon told me that it...
It was nothing, just an accident.
Accident my ass.
She shrunk a bit before taking another drag.
She told me that, it was just a misunderstanding.
It wouldn't happen again.
I was becoming enraged.
I wasn't a saint, sure, but damn it.
I was raised to believe that no matter what, a man does not put his hands on a woman like that.
I wanted to find and hand this piece of shit his ass on a platter before putting him down like the animal he was.
What happened? Why did he do it?
I finally managed to ask.
She shook her head.
Look, don't worry about it, okay.
You couldn't get it anyway.
Well, I think I get it perfectly well.
some bastard just be the hell out of you and you're afraid of getting him in trouble by telling me who he is
yeah she scoffed what are you going to do her kick his ass why not at least then i can kick someone's ass today
well this made a chuckle bad day huh oh look who's talking and this time we both laughed
my name's auto by the way jacqueline she said her voice sounding just a little less timid she flicked a cigarette out before
thanking me and turning to leave.
Hey, hold up.
I shut out my hand to her, stopping her.
I pulled out one of the older tickets I crumpled up earlier out of anger and scrawled out
my phone number.
Call me later, okay?
She looked at it and then to me, smiling.
You got it.
She then turned and left, and I went back inside to continue torturing myself with the rest of my shift.
That night when I finally got home, at 1.45 a.m., having to close the kitchen.
I was grabbing a beer from the fridge with my phone bars with a text message.
Hey, it's me, Jacqueline.
Just wanted to say thanks for talking to me and letting me bum a smoke.
I really made my day better.
I smiled.
Something I hadn't done all day, or all week for that matter.
I replied that I was glad I made somebody happy today.
I also texted her that if she wanted to talk about anything, but I'd be there.
After that, there was no reply for a while, so I decided to proceed with drinking myself to sleep that night.
when I woke up the next morning
and by that I really mean about half hour to noon
I found that there were a couple of texts
from her waiting for me
the first one was only about three hours after the one I'd sent her
that'd be nice thank you
the other two were sent only another hour after that one
each only about ten minutes or so apart from each other
hey you still up
I'm kind of scared here
can we talk please
My eyes snapped wide when I saw this, and I felt my heart dropped.
The timestamps for these messages had been from five hours ago when I was asleep.
She'd needed me, and I wasn't there.
Immediately I shot her a text saying I was sorry, I didn't see a message, and asked if she was okay.
My heart was racing, waiting, praying for a response.
Finally, about five minutes later, my phone buzzed with a response.
Hey, it's fine.
Everything's okay.
Sorry for worrying you.
My hurt slowly returned to normal.
At least she's alive.
After what had happened and if she was hurt.
She replied that she was all right and that she was overreacting.
Though I was relieved that she was okay for now,
I wasn't convinced that she was just overreacting.
Look, I'm no kind of trauma counselor or psychologist.
Well, I wasn't born yesterday either.
I'd seen before I'd seen friends of mine looking like Jackie did.
It bruises cuss and black eyes covering them after their pieces of shit boyfriends would come home, usually sloshed, with some wild hair in their asses, and every time they too would try to pass it off with something like overreacting or just an accident or not what it looked like.
I decided to ask her if she was open for lunch that afternoon, since I was off work.
She replied that she was busy, but that dinner might be an option.
I told her that'd be great and asked if she'd like me to pick her up.
She replied with her address, I told her I'd see her around 6.30 that evening.
After that I spent the day getting cleaned up and rummaging through my storage unit of an apartment for something nice,
or at least something halfway distant, to wear for dinner.
I wanted to make an impression.
I wanted to see her that good men do still exist and can treat her like a lady, you know?
If nothing else, I figured maybe I'd help her feel more secure,
and she might open up about what was going on.
About five o'clock that evening, I'd managed to find her.
in the suit I wore from my brother's wedding, I was putting it through a cycle in the wash.
That's when my phone buzzed with a text from Jackie.
Hey, um, I know this is awkward, but is there any way you could come get me now?
Well, I froze. I just put the suit into the washer and it wouldn't be done for another 20 minutes.
I asked her if everything was okay. She replied that she was fine, but really wanted to meet up now.
I asked what was going on, but she didn't reply after that.
I was flawed I wasn't sure what I was supposed to do part of me wanted to try and press for details
I was getting a bit nervous with how vague she was being about everything I wondered what I'd
see once I got there would she even be alive when I got there again I'd seen shit like this
play out before and I wasn't gonna just sit by and what she'd happen with Jackie started
imagining what the boyfriend was like imagining a six-foot-two gorilla who's
breath reeked perpetually of bud lines.
It was with this in mind that I said,
Oh, fuck the suit.
I threw on a t-shirt and jeans,
well, cleanest ones I could find,
and hopped in my car.
I shot her a text saying I was on my way,
as I all but pealed out at the parking lot.
Took me about 50 minutes to find where she lived,
having to backtrack once or twice through roads
I wasn't really familiar with.
The city I lived in was small, sure,
but I didn't exactly get out much,
which made it all unfamiliar territory.
for me. Her house was a small one just off the corner of the downtown area, isolated with only two
other houses neighbouring it. When I pulled up, I noticed there wasn't a vehicle parked in the driveway.
Damn, I'm too late. Fuckers already gone. I thought as I jumped out of the car and made my way to the
porch. My hand tightly gripped around the butterfly knife I always kept in my pocket. It's not exactly
a nice neighbor that I living. Jacklin, I called out, knocking on the door.
For about a minute nothing happened.
I tried leaning my ear to the door to see if I could hear anything.
Nothing.
It was when I was texting her, telling her that I was on the porch that I heard the door slowly open.
The front door cracked open and my heart stopped when I saw her face.
It was worse than the previous day.
Covering almost every inch of her face would cut some fresh bruises alongside the ones from before.
My jaw fell open and hung like someone who tied a brick of lead to it.
I was horrified.
while at the same time overcome with rage.
Now I wanted the bus with six feet in the ground,
and I wanted to be the one that dug his grave.
What?
She stepped out under the porch,
quickly shutting the door behind her.
She stood there silently.
Her face chiseled in a state of fear,
and her eyes locked onto my feet,
seemingly unable to make eye contact with mine.
Now in the full light outside I saw one eye
was so badly beaten
that it was almost swollen shut.
as well as this there were gashes now across her cheeks fresh and still trickling with blood i was speechless
wasn't sure how to begin i didn't know whether to demand that she told me who this animal was and where i could find him
or to grab her and hoard her in the tightest bear hug i could manage in the end i just stood still speechless with horror
finally she broke the silence and asked shaking can we go please almost absently i nodded and stammered
And where to?
I don't care, she said, her voice breaking.
I just need to get out.
I gently took her hand and led her into my car and we drove off.
I decided against trying to take her out to a restaurant or anything like that,
looking the way she did and all.
With no other ideas of where to go,
asked if she'd like to come back with me to my place for dinner.
She just nodded nervously again.
That'd be nice, yeah.
I'll have to warn you, though.
I'm not exactly the tidiest.
I chuckled when I said this.
I'd been to lighten the mood with that.
It didn't work.
It doesn't matter.
It'll be fine, she said anxiously, still quivering like she was cold.
I could tell her she wasn't in the mood to hear my voice at the moment,
so the rest of the way to my apartment was spent in silence.
The whole time her eyes stared about a thousand yards ahead through the windshield
while she shook in the passenger seat.
When we pulled up to my apartment,
before I could even cut the engine off,
Jacqueline was already undoing her seatbelt and opening the door.
I turned the car off and got out after her.
I got her to follow me back to my apartment.
Tadda, I said, awkwardly as I opened the door to reveal my wreck of an apartment.
Home, sweet home, at least as sweet as it can be.
I saw her look at me, her eyes still wide and nervous,
yet still parting the left corner of her lip up into a shy half-smile.
I threw some of my clutter that was on the couch to the floor beside it.
giving her a place to sit down.
She stood in the doorway for a second
before finally trudging over and sitting down.
Would you like a drink? I asked, opening the fridge.
I must warn you, all I've got are millers.
Well, they're fresh and cold.
She smiled weakly again and replied.
No, thanks.
I grabbed one for myself and made my way to the couch,
sitting beside her.
For the next five minutes or so,
my apartment was so dead silent
that you would have been able to hear a pin drop.
from the fifth floor above me she just sat staring at the floor a couple of times I
saw her shaking her hair like she was dizzy or something I broke the silence by asking
her if she'd like to watch something on the TV she didn't seem to notice me at first
so I called her name again or this time her head snapped up to me her face
looked lost and afraid at the same time what um want to watch some TV oh yeah yeah that'd be
I turned it on and started flipping through channels.
Finally I managed to land on an episode of Family Guy and stopped there.
I asked her if she was cool with that, telling her it was one of my favourites.
To be honest, it wasn't.
She just shrugged and said she didn't mind.
By that point it was really starting to eat away at me that she wasn't telling me something.
Again, I get it.
People in her situation, especially after a particularly bad episode like what she'd been dealt with earlier,
I tend not to want to talk about it, but I didn't make things any easier for me.
I became especially anxious when I saw her start shaking her head and clutching her temples.
Then I started hearing her faintly mutter under a breath.
No, no, stop it. I don't want us. Stop.
Stop what? I asked nervously, putting my hand on her shoulder.
She didn't seem to notice, instead shaking her head more violently and tearing it her hair.
Her cloring became violent, pulling at her ears, and I was scared she was about to rip them off.
I realized that she must be having a psychological episode, maybe PTSD or something from getting
the hell beat out of her that day.
I was sure of what to do, I grabbed her arms and shouted her name.
Jacqueline!
Jacqueline!
She finally stopped and looked at me again.
Her eyes were wide, almost unnaturally so, looking absolutely lost and flooding with tears.
Her breathing was heavy.
It's okay, I said softly.
It's okay, I'm here.
I've got you.
I didn't really know why I said that.
Truthfully, I didn't believe what I said,
being just as lost, if not more so, than she was.
I guess it was the only thing I knew to say to make her feel better,
or at least to keep her from doing serious harm to herself.
Thankfully, it seemed to do as much,
because her body immediately relaxed and she then curled into a ball
and buried her face into her hands, sobbing.
I just froze.
What was I supposed to do here?
Wanted to hold her, but at the same time I knew that might cause her to freak out again.
The one thing was certain.
I definitely wanted to beat the shit out of that boyfriend.
I'm sorry, she said through her hands.
I shouldn't have come here.
I'm sorry, I should go.
She started to get up from the couch, and I got up to stop her.
Back to him?
I asked.
She tried to push past me to the door,
I continued to block her.
I couldn't let her go back to that.
I wasn't even sure I was comfortable leaving her alone at this point.
What are you talking about?
Your boyfriend?
A piece of shit that's done this to you.
She shrunk down again, closing her eyes and saying,
Look, you don't get it.
My boyfriend didn't do this.
I don't have a boyfriend, okay?
I live alone.
Just please, I need to go home.
I was caught off guard by this.
If she didn't have a boyfriend or anyone else, then who's been beating her up like this?
As much as I wanted to press that question, I could see that she was desperate to leave.
Okay, then at least let me take you home, please.
Just so I know you'll be okay.
She looked at me and nodded.
Sure.
We drove in silence, well, silent, except for her constantly mumbling.
I said, no, I won't go.
I don't want to.
leave me alone.
I said nothing, but I can't lie.
This was starting to scare me.
I was terrified that at any moment she was going to start trying to tear at her hair or something again.
Unfortunately, that didn't happen.
When we pulled into her house, before she could bolt out like she couldn't get out fast enough,
I put her hand out stopping her.
Call me again tomorrow morning, okay?
Just let me know everything's okay.
Please?
She half-heartedly nodded before getting out.
out of the car after she'd gone inside her house I just sat there for a good five or so
minutes waiting for something to happen almost expected to see her in the window getting hurt
either by herself or someone else that I was going to have to rush in after her as it happened all
the lights were off and it was dead silent I finally managed to satisfy myself that for the time being
she was okay and left her house it's no surprise that on the drive home that night my
mind was entrapped by one big question. What the hell was going on with Jacqueline? Why was she
hurting herself the way she was? What was causing her to have episodes like she did at my apartment?
And something happened to her, maybe something that somehow scarred her. That would make sense,
but then that brings up the question of why she wasn't seeking help. Well, as she told anybody,
and if not, then why? Of course, all of this was eclipsed by the biggest question.
Who the hell was she talking to when she was saying, stop, I don't want to?
The only conclusion I could think of now was that she might have some sort of schizophrenia
or even some dual personality or something like that.
Again, I'm an expert on psychology, but based on what I'd seen, that was the only way I could
explain what was going on.
This, however, made me feel all the more uneasy about leaving her by herself.
It was a good thing I was off work the next day, too, because all through that night,
I was essentially on high alert, just waiting for her to call or text me, panicking again.
In other words, sleep was not an option.
What's worse is that my entire time, try as I would otherwise, even downing a few millers,
I couldn't take my mind off it to relax.
I kept imagining that the next time I saw it'd be in the hospital or worse.
All I could do was pray that she'd call the next morning, telling me that things were okay.
finally around 8 a.m. my phone rang out of reflex I mashed the green button hello Jacqueline is everything okay
yeah everything's fine a voice sounded normal actually almost seemed relaxed it almost felt like a total
180 from the previous night listen I'm sorry about last night you probably think I'm nuts but well I can't explain
can we meet up again?
Yeah, yeah, I'm sure.
We're at what time?
In an hour.
Down at the park by the pier.
Okay, um, you want to bring anything?
Maybe something for her.
But she'd hung up before I could finish.
I quickly got dressed and got into my car.
On the way to the park, I decided to stop by the nearby subway and grab some fruit trucks.
The whole time I was wondering if the right thing to do would be to try admitting her to a hospital.
I knew she probably wouldn't like the idea, but I couldn't just let her keep hurting herself like this, could I?
I hadn't come to any sort of conclusion by the time I pulled up to the park either.
I resolved to hear her out first and then go from there.
That way I'd at least have a better understanding of what was going on.
I texted her, asking her where she was and where in the park she wanted to meet up.
She replied about two seconds later, saying she was at the pier by the lake.
Grabbing the sandwiches, I headed into the park and for the lake.
When I got there, I saw her sitting on the edge, looking out toward the lake.
Hey, um, so I hope you don't mind, but I brought us a bite to...
It's beautiful, isn't it?
I stopped.
Ah?
The lake, it's beautiful, isn't it?
Yeah, I guess so.
I slowly approached the rest of the way to her.
She just sat there still.
My mother always tells me that the current of a lake would always wash away one strife.
It was so peaceful, you could lose yourself in it.
Um, okay, I said.
I was sure of what I was supposed to say to this.
I couldn't explain it, but something felt off.
It was like some dormant instinct, a six-sense you could call it.
It was telling me that something was up.
But what?
When I reached her, I put my hand and I shone.
older you hungry um i picked us up some subs from subway wasn't sure what you liked so i got you i hear dead people
for a moment everything almost seemed to freeze in place she was still emotionless and the way she said
it was like she was accepting some great truth of life i guess a better way of saying it was that she
sounded numb or hollow i hear dead people she repeated in that same numb tone
They tell me to join them in the end.
In him.
My tongue felt swollen, like I'd been punched.
I'm sorry, you hear dead people, yes.
And they tell you to do what now?
She was quiet again for a moment, and I was flawed.
How was I supposed to respond to that?
How would you have responded to hearing this?
They want me to go with them.
said finally blankly go where what do you mean into the end to join with him they've been telling me that
he is what waits for us all who you mean like god or something what do you mean by waiting for us all
even before she'd answered though i knew deep down the answer was going to be something wrong
he doesn't have a name he is all of us
he's what we become on the other side he waits to be completed and they need me he needs me to join i could feel a series of chills prickle down my spine hearing this she sounded so relaxed when she said it like all of it seemed so normal to her
it all sounded like something a cult member would say and she said it like it was nothing this was scaring the hell out of me now and i was certain of one thing
one way or another I had to find her some kind of help they've been telling me this ever
since my mother died last year I always hear her telling me to follow her to the end and
join with him I slowly reached out and gently put my hand to her shoulder Jackie come
on let's get out of here we can find someone to help me she asked interrupting me
is that what you were going to say
I stayed silent.
She let out of scoff and said,
Look, if you won't believe me,
what makes you think anyone else will?
Well, I was stumped.
I wanted to grab her hand and take her to the nearest hospital.
I wanted to tell her things were okay and that the voices weren't real.
But I didn't.
Instead, I clammed up.
Besides which, she continued, starting to stand up.
It's all right.
Everything's going to be fine now.
I'm done running.
What happened next felt like it was lasting in eternity, despite it only being a couple of minutes.
I remember briefly noticing that she had her shoelaces tied together in a ball,
joining both feet together.
While my brain was busy with wondering about this,
as well as trying to take in what I was hearing and trying to figure out how to find some help for her,
she looked me in the eyes for the first time since I got there and said,
thanks for being here now otto i for a split second saw that her hands were duct taped together by the time it fully hit me exactly what she planned to do i'd be too late to stop her in one fluid motion she flung her body backwards and was instantly swallowed by the lake rushed over i saw that she was almost too far down to see only faintly glimpsing her eyes looking back up at me wide and panicking i turned back
and shouted at a few others walking by to call 911, before diving headfirst into the lake after
her. I flailed frantically as hard as possible, pushing myself deeper and deeper after her.
It was useless, though. The lake ran deep, and it got darker, murkier the further down it went.
And because of this, I couldn't see a thing. I had also never been a good swimmer in the first place.
I had to push myself back up for air and go back down again several times, still unable to
to reach her. Eventually my body grew weak and I couldn't even move my arms and legs anymore.
My body then started sinking too and I was forced to take in another mouthful of water,
unable to hold my breath any longer. That's when I finally blacked out,
falling to the bottom of the lake along with Jacqueline. I remember coming to on the pier,
dizzy, puking and spewing up lake water. Over me it was a paramedic holding a jump bag in an
oxygen mask. He's becoming responsive, he shouted to the group on the other side of the pier.
You okay, sir? I stared blankly at him, still catching my breath. It took a moment before everything
came rushing back to me. Jackly, I cried, bolting up. The paramedic stopped me, telling me to calm
down. I looked around to see police officers at the edge of the pier begin walking towards me.
When they questioned me as to what had happened, I told them the truth as I knew it,
that she jumped into the river after telling me that she was hearing voices.
I expressed that I also had every intention of trying to help find her.
They seemed to accept this as there was no other evidence, physical or from witnesses,
to suggest anything otherwise, and I was free to go home.
From their life sort of just went on.
It was weird.
I of course spent the following couple of weeks losing myself to the bottle every night after work.
Finally, it was turned out from Porky Bros.
When it got to a point when I wasn't able to really function in the kitchen anymore.
I read a week later in the paper that Jackie's body was finally found after being dragged out of the lake.
Eventually, though, I managed to actually sort of move on.
I found another job at a much nicer restaurants, one that actually paid a bit better.
and I felt like I could push Jacqueline to the back of my head to a distant memory.
That's when I started hearing it, though, or rather hearing her.
It happened one night when I'd come home from work and was about to go to bed
when I started hearing her voice calling my name.
Otto!
Otto!
And then I saw her.
She looked like she did when she was alive.
Actually, she looked even better, being without the bruises.
I rub my eyes.
What the hell?
Otto, it's me, Jacqueline.
Remember?
She was smiling when she said it.
Her voice was smooth and calming.
I closed my eyes, shaking my head.
When I opened them again, she was gone.
Oh, come on, get a grip, man.
I decided to quickly down a couple of millers before going to bed.
That night in my sleep, though, she was there again.
She was standing in front of me, naked and smiling,
warmly.
You're lonely,
aren't you, Otto?
It's time.
Come join us.
Join with him.
Before I could ask what she was
talking about, as well as how
she's there and what she wants with me,
I heard a flurry of shrill
whispers coming from behind.
Then out of the corner of my eyes,
I saw thousands of white streaks
rush past, each of them
with elongated mouths screaming
simultaneously.
Come and join her.
I was horrified.
I tried to wait myself up, but it was no use.
I could only watch as the screaming streaks began swirling around in a vortex motion behind Jacqueline.
Struggling herself then started descending towards the centre, her voice blending chaotically with the rest, enchanting for me to join with him.
Upon reaching the centre, I could see her and the others start to morph, blending together and moulding into the shape of a man.
He, it was tall and dark, like he was made out of the void itself.
That four long, gangly arms that stretched out further and further towards me to snatch me
and drag me into it.
Every part of it was comprised of the screaming faces, as more and more of them continued
to conjoin.
All around me was a horrific cacophony of their screams.
Join us!
The last thing I remember hearing before waking up was Jackie's voice.
telling me that it was time to join with him I almost jumped out of my bed and I didn't go
back to sleep again that night that was almost a month ago now and every day since I keep
seeing them hearing them always telling me to join them every time I see the thing
him getting closer and closer haven't been able to sleep but I can't function during the day
either. I'm always hearing them. I don't know what this thing is or what it'll do when it reaches
me in my sleep, but I'm a hundred percent certain that it's something unholy, something horrible.
I've been trying pills, but they only last so long before I hear them again. The only hope I have
now is that I'm just freaking losing it. Grief is somehow driving me like it drove Jackie
with her mother to see this shit. I beg of you, please show me. I'll just show me something. I beg of you, please,
some kind of proof that what I'm seeing isn't real. I'm so freaking scared right now. I can hear
them right now. God damn it. I don't want to go. Hey Ontario. Come on down to bed MGM casino and
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This is an update to a story I posted on a forum like this about four years ago.
In fact, what happened was a direct result of me posting it.
I've since taken it down, but I need to share what happened to me.
Don't worry about that first story.
You'll find that out as well as I tell you.
this one. So, let's get started. So, a little bit about myself. I'm 41 years old and currently
working as a salesman at a retail outlet that specialises in men's business suits. Well, the job
makes pretty good money, but with alimony to my ex-wife and child support on top of that,
I seem to just barely get by. I just finished going through the horror of divorce six months
before this last incident.
And, well, I'd started drinking again.
Drinking and looking longingly at sleeping pill bottles and razor plates.
I know what you're thinking, but I've always been too much of a coward for that sort of thing.
Though I will admit it's always seemed tempting,
especially after losing everything like I did.
Anyway, as you can imagine, I was feeling pretty low for a few weeks.
So I was quite pleasantly surprised when this elegant,
beautiful woman about my age came into the store and began to show me some interest she was tall and
slim wearing a charcoal jacket and skirt combo her hair discreetly dyed bronze amber had a very
unassuming smile not too blemished by laugh lines or crow's feet i admit i'd noticed her before
she approached me i spotted her the moment she entered through the door she seemed kind of familiar but
I wasn't going to tell her that.
That's got to be the most obvious non-pick-up-up line in the world,
telling a strange woman she looks familiar.
Anyway, she walked up to me with this coy smile,
just showing a glimpse of perfect white teeth and said,
You probably think I'm in the wrong store.
I gave a little giggle, cleared my throat and said,
Oh, I'm sorry.
This is a men's clothing store, obviously.
She elaborated.
her eyes were deep brown almost black and they were lively and active looking up into mine well ma'am i said we do have some pantsuits and some jackets for ladies if you like me to show you
mom she remarked playfully do i really look that old to you i chuckled nervously breaking eye contact with her and clearing my throat again god i must have seemed like a schoolboy for christ's sake
I then told her not at all that she didn't look old but I just wanted to be respectful a smile widened a long purple fingernails fidgeting with her purse strap
well she said in a soft voice I'm actually here to find a suit for my son he wants a tuxedo for prom
I fur at my brow this was the dead of winter proms aren't usually held until June or late May at the earliest
I know, she said, reading my look.
His school is impossible.
Well, they want to hold it early so that the students don't get too distracted from their studies.
My son's also too busy playing his computer games to go get a suit himself, so, well, he's too embarrassed to come with me, so here I am.
I couldn't help but grin eagerly.
Just my luck, I thought.
I showed her some of our more popular items.
She told me her son's size and together we found something she thought he'd like.
The whole time she sided close to me and I could smell her floral perfume.
It was soothing and I'll admit I didn't make any attempt to distance myself from her.
As I was ringing her up at the cash till, I told her that if anything didn't quite fit,
she could bring it back in and we'd happily have it adjusted to fit her son's measurements.
She gave a low, almost inaudible laugh and told me that I,
probably didn't have to worry about that. There were no other customers in the store then,
and the other cashier was on break, so we continued to chat. She asked me what I did in my spare
time for fun, and I hesitated, thinking of the rows of empty liquor bottles in my apartment
and the sleeping pills next to the bathtub. Instead of answering her, I jumped at the opportunity
and asked her if she'd like to get a drink later that evening. She said nothing, but tilted her head
and scanned me with her sexy, roaming eyes.
When do you get off work?
She muttered softly.
At seven, the words leapt from my mouth,
if that's not too late for you.
No, she said,
her pearly grin flashing at me over supple red lips.
That's perfect.
I know a bar around this area.
I'll be out front to pick you up.
Great, I said.
What's your name again?
"'Andria,' I repeated, extending my hand.
"'I'm Andy. Nice to meet you, naturally.'
That seemed to put my nagging feeling of deja vu to rest.
I'd never known an Andrea, or met any Andrea's for that matter.
But the name was fitting, and I rode each syllable over and over across my tongue,
waiting for the hours of my shift to wilt away.
By 6.30 we were locking up.
Jane, the girl working there, was balancing the cash register while I wrote the day's records
in the books. As I wrote down the total debits and credits, I could barely hold onto the pencil.
I was so jittery. I know how pathetic this must sound, but it had been a while since I'd been
with a woman in any way, and being older and just divorced, it was hard to build up the confidence
to start dating again. By seven o'clock, it was dark out. Jane walked out and walked out, and
wave goodbye as I locked up the front door. At the curb in front of the sidewalk was a small
blue station wagon. Not very fancy, but I wasn't going to complain. I looked through the passenger
side window and saw Andrea peering out of me, her hooded eyes meeting mine, that slight smile
drawn across her face. I got in and immediately noticed how cold it was. There didn't seem
to be any heating at all, and the radio wasn't even on.
strange i thought but maybe she lives close by as she navigated out of the plaza and onto the road i prattled on about the suit i'd sold her and how most customers said they were really happy with it
she didn't respond and wasn't smiling any more i didn't think too deep into it though after all she was driving it's important to keep concentration the only thing that struck me as odd was that she placed
her purse on her lap while she was driving. Since I'd had to sell my car after the divorce,
I was very pleased not to have to ride the subway or bus, so I just eased back in my seat and
enjoyed it. I think that's the reason that I didn't notice that we've been on the road a long
time, despite her telling me there was a bar close by. I knew something was up after she got
onto a highway interchange. I looked at her, very confused. Um, did you say this bar was out of town?
I asked.
She didn't reply.
Her eyes were glued to the road as we cruised up the ramp and onto the interstate.
By now I was really getting nervous.
I noticed she took her left hand from the steering wheel and began reaching inside her purse.
You really don't remember me?
She said.
Her voice just louder than the car engine.
I giggled a bit, but I didn't find this funny at all.
I hear...
I don't know, I stammered, looking at her.
You do look familiar, but I know I've never met in Andrea before.
I looked down at her lap into her now open purse,
felt my heart freeze in my chest.
The taped handle held in her delicate fingers
was a snub-nosed revolver.
I squirmed in my seat,
as if I was going to fly out from the window,
the seatbelt digging into my neck.
What?
What the hell are you doing?
I shouted between panted breaths.
The gun was now out and pointed out.
You probably don't know any, Andrea.
She said coldly.
Her voice empty, vacant.
But you might remember Alicia.
Alicia Moreto.
Probably from the panic I felt staring down the barrel of that gun.
The name didn't ring any bells.
And then she looked at me, those bedroom eyes now burning like hot colds.
Open the glove box, she muttered in a staid voice.
What? I asked.
Open the glove box, she screamed.
I shuddered from the sharp change in her voice.
I did as I was told.
Gingerly I stretched my shaking hand and pushed the log on.
The compartment door fell open and outspilled what had to be hundreds of pages of paper.
They were all lying at my feet.
She peered down in a quick glance and instructed me to read the staple pages printed on red paper.
I picked them up and immediately recognized what it was.
My post of my stalker story to an internet forum for true horror stories.
I then figured out who she was.
Alicia Moreto, the mentally disturbed girl who'd stalked me at my workplace and at my home years ago when I was in my late teens.
I pleaded with her and she just hollered at me to read it.
Her eyes back on the road but the revolver still trained on me.
I did as she said.
It was all there my words.
How she'd come into the coffee shop where I worked.
how her hair was constantly tangled and greasy,
how her clothes were always in tatters.
How she always smelled of B.O. and Vaseline.
Oh, it was all there.
How'd she come in every morning,
how she knew my schedule and when my shift was.
How my co-workers had told me that she sometimes come in on my days off
and ask where I was.
Now one night I'd found her waiting for me in my hat.
I tried to swallow, but I couldn't.
I was trembling and the printed-out pages fell from my weak hands involuntarily.
She peered over at me.
I could see her from the corner of my eyes,
and told me to pick up the next set of papers,
the one printed on grey pages.
I begged her again to just let me go,
and she screamed for me to read it.
I picked them up, not recognising any of the writing on it.
Then I realised that these,
with the comments people had written on my post of the story.
Comments like,
What a crazy bitch!
Or, I would have been so freaked out by that cow.
Or I'd have still hit it, though.
Oh, hell or well.
Tears had started streaming down my face
by the time I'd realized what this was.
She had found my story.
Recognised it and had come for me.
Please, I said to her.
Choked up, having read all the comments,
and realized her.
purpose I didn't realize how much it would upset you I never used your real name do you think
that that matters her voice cracked it was like an animal's growl all the prior sophistication and
sensuality gone I knew I knew that story was about me about a time in my life I was ashamed
of she trailed off it sounded as though she'd begun to sob I looked at the
her and her mouth was hung open, as if in a silent scream.
Her eyes squinting closed.
Yes, she too was crying.
After a terrifying moment, she gave a cough,
tossed back her hair and was once again icily composed.
I looked close and could just see the smudges of mascara under her eyes.
She then told me to reach inside her purse.
I, of course, was not about to do that.
I won't shoot you if you do exactly as I say, she then said in a calm but uneven voice.
The voice smacked with the psychotic desperation of the girl who'd stalked me those many years ago.
I nodded my head slightly, then quickly turned to glance out the window.
It was now very dark and there were few other cars on the road.
Careful not to brush up against the gun, I reached over and put my hand in her purse.
inside I found what felt like a set of polarites
my skin waxed cold
imagining that these were probably photos of me she'd taken without my knowledge
I pulled them out and looked at them
there weren't pictures of me at all
the first photograph was of a couple standing outside a wedding chapel
the woman smiling radiantly in a white lace gown
the handsome moustache man next to her wearing a black tuxedo
and Cammerbund. They were close and holding each other's hands. I flipped through to the next
photo to see the same couple kissing with their eyes closed, a sun setting above a glimmering ocean
behind them. I flipped through and in the next photograph I saw the woman lying in a hospital bed
covered by dark green surgical sheets holding a newborn baby. The baby was wrapped in a blanket,
the husband standing beside them, smiling. I flipped through.
I saw a photo of the couple with two pre-teen children,
sitting on a beach wearing jean shorts and bright-coloured shirts,
smiling up into the camera's POV.
I then realised these photos were of her.
This woman named Alicia.
She had a family or had a family.
What did this have to do with my story?
I don't understand, I mumbled.
She shot.
me a look out of the corner of her eye and didn't say anything. I looked out the window
and saw there were no lights on the side of the road. Past the barrier there was nothing
but tall trees and bleak wilderness. We were now far, far from any major city or town.
I thought about reaching in my coat for my phone, but I knew that if I did, she might have
shot me. Then I started wondering why she didn't just kill me already if that's what she intended
to do. The minutes fell like hours in that car. The darkness beyond the roadside seemed to stretch
for an eternity like I'd woken up in hell. And finally, after God knows how long, she spoke.
It took me ten years, she said, her voice straining, quavering like that dmented girl I remembered.
It took me three years to get over you and another seven to forgive myself. I went to counseling,
therapy. Eventually I agreed to take the medication. You see I suffer from paranoid schizophrenia.
It sort of runs in my family but it didn't appear in me until about five months before I met you.
My parents had gotten a divorce. Dr. Walden told me that's likely what triggered my breakdown.
And then I saw you. It's like you were there for me. Oh my psychiatrist says I was using you as a misplaced source of love.
Love and security, which I felt had been torn away from me by my parents' divorce.
You were always there and always so plight.
So I mistook your plightness and charm for love and affection.
At that moment, I don't know why, but I didn't feel scared anymore.
I just felt gloomy, depressed.
We often call people crazy, but when we actually hear the medical terms, it becomes a lot less distant.
She continued.
So for ten years after you, I avoided people.
I didn't see friends, I barely spoke to my parents and I absolutely never went out on dates.
First because I was still in love with you, and then because I was so ashamed, ashamed and afraid I would become that super attached psychopath that I had been to you.
I wanted so many times to contact you and to apologize, but my counsellor and Dr. Walton were adamant that that would be a badger.
I did. They said it would cause me to realize. So for ten years I was alone, hating myself. And then I met David.
David was a graduate student in university studying physiological geography. He'd approached me first.
We met at a bar, or restaurant, actually. My parents had insisted on taking me out for my birthday,
and he'd asked the waiter to put our bill on his tan. She then gave a sorrowful laugh,
a tear falling down her cheek.
He barely had enough money to pay for his beer,
and he wanted to pay for a whole family's meal,
just to speak with me.
We started out just as friends,
and then with his insistence we became more than that.
I loved him and felt so much better.
I finally felt well enough to go back to school
and complete my degree.
We got married shortly after he graduated.
He'd been hired at a consulting firm,
so we were mostly,
stable. I finally forgave myself and forgot all about you. But I never told him. Never.
A year into our marriage, we had Aaron and two years later, Cassandra. We were both so happy.
Oh, I was happy. I got a job as a typist at a law firm. It wasn't much, but it gave me something
to do after the children were old enough to go to school. I liked working there. Everyone was so
friendly and helpful one day mark one of the support staff members in facilities was showing me this website
he often goes to mostly to look up funny pictures and he told me about this page that was scary stories
and creepy encounters i immediately recognized what most of the stories were about i searched all the
posts and he didn't take me long to find one that was familiar too familiar i knew this
that it was you who'd posted it. She then stopped and let out a heavy sigh, her moist eyes rolling
up and looking long at the car route. It was as though she couldn't believe she was actually
telling me this. Her voice had stopped sounding like a nervous psychotic, and more like that
of a sobbing, distraught woman. The gloom lingered thick inside the car, over both of us.
After that, my paranoia and anxiety spiked, she continued.
i tried to fight it by upping the dose of my medication but that didn't work pretty soon i just stopped since they only seemed to make me drowsy she then gave another humorous little laugh as though she caught herself in a lie
you know i thought it was because david had seen the post that he left me and why i couldn't even get joint custody of the children but that's not true the truth is seeing your post made me act erratic
I started throwing fits, fighting with him for no reason, shouting at the children and beating
them over things that weren't their fault.
I'd stop sleeping at night, believing the next or neighbours were spying on us and plodding
to come in and steal everything.
It was because of me that David left me, and I acted that way because of your post.
I was now staring out the window.
I could make out open fields in the distance, with the slightest smattering of brush.
Where the hell was she taking me?
I couldn't forgive myself, she said.
I know now that I never will.
I gulped and asked.
So how did you find me?
She smiled maliciously in my direction, amused by my discomfort.
Oh, one of the criminal lawyers of my firm.
Mike Corson, he has a team of private investigators.
I do paperwork for him, so.
i forged a memo asking one of the p i's to find your whereabouts it didn't take long i knew your full name where you'd once worked and where you grew up i was of course surprised you still lived there after all these years
her smile was now spiteful and mocking that and her last comment made me look away slightly incensed of course when mike found out about it i was fired misappropriation of the first of the first of the first of the first of the first of the first of the first of the first of the first thing
firm's resources. It didn't help I was already on thin ice for obvious reasons.
The road we'd driven on had disintegrated into a rough, jagged path of scrappy concrete.
It was as though we'd gone back in time to when there was nothing but dirt and jungle.
I actually started worrying that if we drove any longer that the road would stop, or we'd be stranded
in desert. I looked at the clock on the dash and the green numbers revealed 12-03.
We had been driving for hours.
Another hour passed with nothing, just silence.
I started absorbing what she told me,
and felt this weight form in the pit of my stomach.
I'd caused this.
I'd ruined her life.
And for what?
A little bit of attention on an online forum?
Jesus, the episode hadn't been that much for my life,
and for God's sake, she was schizophrenic.
The whole damn thing now seems sleazyant.
I no longer felt scared.
I wasn't frightened at all.
I just wanted this to end.
By one fifteen, she slowed down the car.
We pulled over, parking on a gravel shoulder by a vast, empty field.
The car pointed away in perpendicular to the road.
When she switched off her headlights, it went all black beyond the windship.
my eyes adjusted I could just make out the black shape of the field beneath the lighter shade of the starless night sky
we both sat there not looking at each other like we'd just fucked for money
she didn't move didn't stir the revolver still trained on me I'm sorry I said my voice was
contrite and down. I know what I did was wrong. When I met you, it was at a moment when you were
your most vulnerable and it was wrong for me to take advantage. Even years later, she didn't
look at me, didn't move, but I knew she'd hurt me. Go ahead, I then said to her, kill me. I deserve to be
heard. I deserve to die. I don't want to live anymore. Just then, she straightened in her seat,
still staring out into the field before us. No, she said huskily. You deserve to feel what I feel
every day. I then heard the hammer click backward and watched as she opened her perfect mouth
and stuck the barrel into it. I shouted and lunged towards her, but there was a
flash and I saw spots. My ears were ringing and blocked like I was underwater. After about a minute my eyes adjusted. Then I stared, stupidly surprised by the sight of the woman's mutilated face resting next to me in the car. The interior was completely splattered with blood. My hand groped endlessly for the door handle, finally finding it and I fell out onto the pebble ground from the passenger side.
Got on my hands and knees and pute my guts.
After I stood up, I double over and dry heaved for several minutes.
From there I warped the shoulder, not thumbing, not trying to get home,
just trying to get as far away from Andrea as Alicia as I could.
Eventually, my daybreak, someone driving a rusted pickup pulled over and asked me if I needed a lift.
Still shaken and exhausted, I approached his path.
passenger side window. Once I was a foot away from his truck, I saw his face drain pale. His
pupils shrink in the sockets, and in one hyper movement he grabbed the gearstick, put it into
drive and sped off. I stared at the fleeing vehicle confused. And then I looked down on my clothes.
I was, of course, covered with blood. I took off my jacket and shirt, wipe my face with them,
and then tossed them, continuing the rest of the way in just my undershirt and slacks.
About two hours later, someone picked me up and drove me as far as the next major city.
From there, I took a bus home and called in sick to work.
About a week after the incident, two detectives came to see me at my home.
They asked me about my relationship to the deceased, Alicia Moreto Libman, and I told them the whole story.
They informed me that they'd found Google Maprint.
out of my address and a PI file of my name at the scene. They tried to get me to go downtown
with them, but I refused and called a lawyer. My new lawyer, Mr. Michael Cawson, who agreed
to represent me pro bono, told me there's no chance of a charge of murder being brought against
me. The evidence of possible foul play is pretty thin. My story, although incredible,
makes enough sense, and the police are happy to write off her death as a suicide rather than
spent endless man hours and O.T. investigating a homicide. Cawson recommended me to a better
matrimonial lawyer, and I got my alimony reduced and received more time to see my kids.
I also entered A, where I've started to get over my self-destructive thoughts and behavior.
Don't get me wrong. I feel horrible about what happened to Alicia, and her last words do stick
with me. But, I mean, how far do.
does guilt get you. My name is Dr. Elizabeth Hayes. I'm a psychotherapist who specializes
in the unlocking of repressed memories. A repressed memory, for those of you who may not know,
is a rare psychological phenomenon in which memories or traumatic events may be stored in the
unconscious mind and blocked from normal conscious recall. In simple terms, the human mind can
sometimes hide away memories of trauma or abuse, giving them an illusion as if the event had never
happened. Some theorists claim this is a defence mechanism developed in the cases of young children
who could probably not be able to mentally cope with the trauma from the experience. At first
glance, this may not seem to be much of a concern. What you can't remember can't hurt you,
right? For some people, this may be the case, but in others they find out.
themselves responding to mental triggers, smells, sounds or phrases with no prior knowledge as to why they're having these experiences. For others, they may unknowingly stumble across the memory in their sleep.
Have you ever had a dream that seemed so vivid and real, yet upon awakening, you think back to it, unable to recall when in your life the scenario happened?
What you simply dismissed as a strange dream could have very well been a repressed memory.
unwittingly stumbled upon in your subconscious. It's weird, I know, but please, bear with me.
I find the phenomenon fascinating, which is why I chose to specialize in this area of psychology
in my studies and practices. Periodically, from time to time, I visited by patients from all
over the country who believe they have experienced this phenomenon. After being referred to me
by their therapist who suspects their patients may have repressed memories from their childhood,
it's enough to me to unlock these memories.
Only after using social cues and making notes on their reactions to certain smells, sounds,
and pictures, can I estimate where in their lifetime the repressed memory takes place?
This is a slow process that can take up to a year before we even identify the timeframe of this memory.
Once the right time frame of the repressed memory is discovered, commonly between the ages of 4 to 12, I bring in what I call the Dream Screen.
A device invented by the National Centre for Neural Applications lent me by the University of Illinois.
The appropriately nicknamed Dreamscreen is a device that measures brain activity while you sleep.
This data can be plugged into an algorithm that reconstruct your memory so that it is.
could be played back in a recording. Subjects are first put into a stage of sleep called
Hipponagoya. This is a semi-lucid stage of sleep that takes place at the moment between sleep
and wakefulness so that I can communicate with them as I watch their memory unfold on the screen,
live as if I myself were the living memory. While walking the subject through the memory
for the first time, it's up to me to coax the subject through the entire memory, asking
the right questions, pointing out the hidden details all while making a conscious effort into
not leading the subject too much as to incidentally plant false memories into their subconscious.
This is an incredibly delicate procedure and requires absolute concentration on my behalf.
Something I've only been able to achieve after years of experience and practice.
This entire process can take up to an entire month to complete, but the results are always
worth it. Some patients were able to recover memories they lost years ago and finally be able to come
to terms with the past and put years of not knowing to rest. Other times, missing evidence from crimes
and horrific injustices such as rape, torture and child abuse were able to be reported in the court
of law so that the victim could finally get the justice they deserve. It is for moments like these
and I continue to do what I do.
It was only after viewing my most recent subject's results
that I ended up having more questions than answers.
Questions I'd never imagine asking myself.
Questions, in hindsight,
even I would much rather be left unanswered.
The subject, Hugo, was a 26-year-old male from Eden, New York.
He was initially referred to me by his family,
therapist after identifying gaps in his memories and recalling a strange reoccurring dream he had no
memories of in his childhood the subject appeared healthy both mentally and physically aside from the
obvious signs of sleep deprivation he was in great shape for someone his age during our initial
interviews he was able to recall memories from as far back as 1995 when the subject was only two years old these memories
memories were recorded and replayed to his living relatives and confirmed as being legit this is very impressive and gave me high hopes for this being a quick and easy case all there was left to do was find the key
i asked the subject if he could recall any forms of abuse during his childhood years either from the hands of a family member a friend or a stranger no nothing like that he replied with a false smile on his
face. Do you ever recall witnessing a traumatic event such as a traumatic accident or a murder
take place? I asked him, curiously. No, nothing. As long as watching reality, TV doesn't
count, he remarked comically. I forced to smile at the bad joke and continued. Tell me about
those dreams you've been having. I asked him with genuine curiosity. His smile
was quickly replaced by a look of concern as he unconsciously stole a glance over his shoulder and then
back to me. Well, he started. It started happening last year. He said as he took a casual sip
of water from his table and continued. I noticed a slight tremor in his hand as he plays the
glass back onto the table. I've been having this dream in a field at the old family farm.
You know it was that particular location? I asked. According to your file, you moved several
times during your childhood. I'd recognize those blue skies in open farmland anywhere, he said.
My mother would complain all the time about wanting to move back to the city, but my father claimed
that the open country air would do us kids and good.
What else do you remember? I asked, patiently. I, um, I remember. I remember standing. I remember
standing in an open field walking towards something.
Go on, I coaxed him.
He sat there for a moment in silence, becoming visibly tense.
Then, things get weird, he said nervously.
I'm all of a sudden in a dark room I've never seen before
and someone else is there.
Do you remember who this person is? I asked him.
No, no, I don't, he said.
Well, um, if I can be a hundred percent honest, I don't remember anything else that happened.
He leaned back in his chair, closing his eyes as if trying hard to remember.
How old were you when you lived on that family farm? I asked him.
Um, nine to ten years old, replied more confidently.
I lived with my grandparents at the time.
It was only for, well, yeah, it was only for about a year or so.
Anything else you could remember about your time there that you think could be related to this dream?
By honest.
I don't know, the patient admitted.
Yeah, that's where my memory begins to get a little foggy.
All I know is that hours, even days after having the dream,
I just can't shake this feeling of dread.
No matter how much I tried,
just can't calm my nerves after that dream.
I took a few notes and stood to my feet.
Well, I guess the only way we're going to find out is through Phase 2.
I moved the cart over to where the patient was sitting
and began to prep the dream screen.
After leaning the subject seat back into a prone position,
I administered the sedative to ease him into his semi-lucid,
days. After placing the electrodes to his temple and forehead, I slipped on a pair of headphones
to the patient so that I could communicate with him from the observation. After guiding
the patient through verbal cues and building the scenario, I began to see the first sign
of images on the screen. The memory started dark at first. But what began to look like an
open wheatfield came into view. I began to take in the sight.
blue skies, white clouds, the sway of the golden wheat blowing in the wind, and appeared to be a small country home in the distance.
Okay, now tell me, where are you standing right now? I asked the subject.
The farm, the subject mumbled.
The one I grew up on.
As he spoke, I took in the surroundings as they began to become clearer as the subject began to remember.
Now, tell me who else was with you, I brought it.
My, um, my friend, no, my cousin, Katie, the subject said.
Good, you're doing great, I said encouragingly as a figure appeared walking next to the subject in his memory.
Now, describe your cousin. What did she look like?
Dirty blonde hair, brown eyes, freckles on her nose.
The subject said confidently as Katie came into view exactly how he described her.
She looked to be around eight years old.
Come on, Huey, Kate said excitedly.
Can you see it? Your farmhouse. Look, we're almost there.
Can you tell me about this farmhouse? I asked the subject.
Yeah, it was an old abandoned house built on my grandfather's property.
It was built before my family bought the property. We just lived a few acres of
away from it. He mumbled quietly.
Well, Cade and I wanted to check it out. We were planning on making of our new clubhouse.
I spotted a small smile on the subject's face from the window of the observation room as he
began to remember. We had a backpack full of stuff. Action figures, comic books, a couple of
snickers bars, he said quietly. We were driven out of our old clubhouse in the hayloft after a
family of raccoons moved in.
Now, describe the old farmhouse to me, I asked him as the blurry image of the house
began to come into contracts.
Two stories, peeling dark blue paint, thatched roof, old tire swinging tree out front.
He told me.
The image now became clear as the farmhouse came fully into view, down to every detail
he described with you.
Come on, Huey, Kate beckoned.
Let's see what's inside.
As she walked to the front door, the subject's eyes darted to a window on the top floor.
The figure quickly moved out of view that appeared to be watching them.
Wait, I blurted.
Who was that?
The subject's eyebrows furrowed in confusion.
Oh, I don't remember, he said after a long pause.
I let it go, and the subject's eyebrows furrowed in confusion.
let the subject continue. Okay now, what happened to you after you went inside of the farmhouse?
What did you find inside? I asked. Uh, nothing, the subject said slowly. It was cleaned out,
no people, no furniture, not even a single scrap of litter. The dream suddenly grew darker
as the subject now appeared in a small, dimly lit room. Light pulled out from the creases in between the
boarded up windows.
Isn't this great?
Kate said excitedly.
We can have campouts.
We can have picnics out.
We can even invite our friends over it.
Her voice was cut off as a low creek sounded from upstairs.
What was that?
Kate said nervously.
It's probably another family of recants.
I heard Kate say as the subject's eyes trailed to the top of the stairs.
Wait, I remember now.
The subject said, shakily,
Who was it?
I asked, cautiously.
No, not who.
The subject said with genuine fear in his voice.
It was a...
His voice trailed off as a figure appeared from the top of the stands.
Leaning close, trying my best to make out the figure standing there.
Stay with me!
I coax the subject.
describe what you saw inside of that farmhouse.
The subject didn't say anything.
His facial features remained taunt, but his lips quivered.
My eyes went back to the screen as the humanoid figure began to warm down the stairs.
Huey?
Kate's voice said softly and nervously.
Who is...
The figure suddenly dropped onto all fours and dashed down the stairs with alarming speed.
Teeth, the subject shouted.
White eyes, pale skin.
The figure suddenly stopped, inches away from the subject's face.
My heart began to race as the image cleared up,
as the subject began to remember.
Most of what I could make out of the face of the figure
was only what was visible in the small slivers of light
from the boarded-up windows.
Pale skin, gleaming white teeth and brown receded gums from a mouth whose lips were pulled so far back they almost appeared to not exist.
Its eyes were also rolled so far back that the pupils and irises were not even visible, showing only the whites of his eyes.
Its nose was nothing but two slits as it breathed heavily only inches away from the little boy's face.
The being wore no clothes and appeared to be human, yet showed no discernible signs of gender.
For a long time, I watched in complete shock as the figure appeared unmoving.
The slits where the nose should have been flaring with every breath.
Its teeth began to click as if in curiosity as a movement was spotted from behind the being.
Oh, Katie, no! The subject screamed in unity.
screamed in unison with the child in the dream.
Kate stood behind the figure and swung a two by four at the being's head.
The creature spun around with lightning speed, catching the little girl's wrist in his hands
and lashed out with the other, slicing a clean cut into the child's stomach with its clawed hand.
Kate fell onto her back, hands covering the open wound and began to whimper, terrified, subdued sobs
as the creature slowly crawled on top of her.
His face now inches from hers.
Leave her alone!
The subject screamed once again in unison with his younger self
as he made his way forward,
arms outstretched as if to push the creature off his cousin.
A creature once again moved with blinding speed,
knocking the boy across the room with a mule kick to land
roughly against the opposite wall.
creature once again drew its attention back to the young girl lying beneath it it slowly leaned forward its mouth only inches away from the young girl's ear it then stopped and a hissing whisper could be heard from the creature's mouth kate looked up in confusion as the creature then broke into a sprint dashing out the open door faster than any living creature i've ever seen move in my entire life
The screen went dark as an alarm went off in the observation room.
The subject began to shake violently as if in a seizure.
I ran forward, quickly shut down the machine and removed the electrodes from the subject's head.
Katie, no, leave her alone.
The subject cried as the trashing became less violent and he slowly drifted into unconsciousness.
I'll be honest with you.
This was not the first time I'd see in this creature while you.
in this creature while using the dream screen.
The first time I dismissed it as simply a pseudo-memory.
Sometimes a subject's subconscious would replace the person who caused a trauma
with a childhood fear, like the monster in their closet, or a creature from a horror movie
that scared them as a kid, creating a pseudo-memory.
But the second time I saw it, I knew it was so much more than that.
Several times before I've seen this thing locked deep into a subject's locked memories,
as if its appearance itself was so horrifying that the human brain automatically retracted the memory into the deepest parts of the subject's memories as to keep them from going insane.
Each subject completely different, unrelated with no discernible trends or patterns in physical appearance, mental health or age.
Not know who or what this thing is, but,
Oh, but I have dedicated my entire career to finding out what it is.
Every case only leads to dead ends, but this case was different.
Never in any of my past subject's memories have I heard this creature speak.
Even in my most recent reports, it did not make out exactly what was said.
Earlier this month, I contacted the most recent subject's cousin from this memory, Kate.
After much convincing on my behalf, I talked her into visiting my office in Washington, D.C., to have her memories examined.
The now fully grown Kate was also experiencing similar dreams as the most previous subject prior to our first meeting.
Her resulting memory once unlocked, and parallel to that of her cousins.
She also bore an old scar on her stomach in the same place the creature had scratched her in the memory.
proving its legitimacy.
The only difference between that of Kate's memory
was the creature's voice was now clear as day.
I'll never forget the words I heard from Kate's memory.
The sound of the creature's hissing voice still fresh in my mind
of what I heard it say to that little girl almost 17 years ago.
Stop searching for me, Dr. Hay.
I went camping with my wife.
But now I can't leave the woods.
What was supposed to be a nice night in the woods,
eventually turned into a nightmare.
My wife and I were going to set up our tent
and have a lovely time there, surrounded by nature.
Oh, little did I know.
Things would take an unexpected turn.
I hadn't seen Christine in two months
because she'd been contracted to restore
some historical buildings in South America,
mainly Argentina and Uruguay.
So we couldn't have been happier
to spend some quality time
together. I'm a police officer and we live in Eli, a small town that's easy to miss in northern
Minnesota near the beautiful Shagawa Lake. We'd started packing and I was double checking to see
we didn't forget anything. Christine was so excited to go kayaking. She loved doing it on her days
off and she was clearly missing it after all this time away. Ethan, I can't wait. Come on, are you done?
Let's go already, she said. The rays of the sun.
sun reflecting from her blonde head i missed you so much christie i told her gently caressing her face on the way there we
stopped at a decrepit gas station to fuel up and buy some diet chips and soda behind the counter there was this
odd-looking guy he had a big mole on his nose he was sweating non-stop the cap on his head was soaked
and he had a twitching eye that was smaller than the other one on the left side of his face he had a big bird
it looked like someone had punished him for something bad he'd done by placing a hot iron on his cheek as we were taking a turn to enter the road leading to the woods the scenery changed its color from the monotonous asphalt gray of the highway to the enchanting green of the lively forest
it seemed like time was passing in a different fashion here and the trees looked very old standing tall the test of time
We arrived just in time to catch a few more hours of daylight and decided to set up camp by the lake.
We started unpacking, got our tent into place, and the kayak was ready to go,
and Christine was as happy as a kid watching the ice cream truck on a sunny day.
We chilled for another half an hour while listening to the sweet sound of birds singing and waves hitting the shore.
After that we took a small hike and we reached an open area filled with green grass and tall trees.
Oh Ethan, this is fabulous. Look at this place. The forest looks alive. Let's sit on that mossy ledge over there just for a bit. Then we can go kayaking. Christine said, absolutely impressed with this place. She looked like she really needed this trip.
Yeah, honey, this is great. I'm enjoying it so much. I said, inhaling the fresh air of the woods.
The lake was perfect for our adventure
We started paddling and Christine was really enjoying it
But all of a sudden
A sense of dread came over me
And I saw some shadows moving behind the trees
I decided to ignore them
They were probably just some animals
We arrived back at camp
It was around 8pm
So we had another hour to cook dinner and watch the sunset
The view over the lake was fantastic
Christine really enjoyed the food and before we knew it night had come
we sat outside the tent on a blanket watching the starry sky
Everything was exactly as it should be
Christine was smiling at me and we were so happy
We even saw a falling star so we both wished for something
Then we started making love her blue eyes were lit up with desire
Needless to say it felt really passionate
The mild breeze made the leaves rustle, and our hearts were beating faster than ever.
We then fell asleep in a lover's embrace.
I woke up in the middle of the night, all sweaty and thirsty.
Christine was missing.
Scared, I started screaming her name.
Christine, where are you?
Chris!
I yelled in desperation.
My screams lost in the vastness of the night.
Nothing came back.
I got dressed quickly, grabbed a flashlight and went to search for my wife.
Being a police officer, I never lose my calm in tough situations like these,
but now it was really tough, because I love her and she is missing.
I ran like crazy for what seemed like hours, but she was nowhere to be found.
I didn't know what was going on, so I kept searching and searching.
ultimately I decided to go back to the tent just to find it had been ravished like it had been attacked by some wild beast what's happening here hey is someone there christine where are you i screamed until my throat was raw
as i was looking around to see if i could find anything i saw a tree with a wooden pentegram tied to it and blood dripping a piece of her nightgown was on the ground
I quickly went to the car to get my gun, start looking for Christine again.
I needed to kill whatever was holding her captive.
Well, the tires had been slashed and the windows were broken.
Fortunately, the gun was well hidden, and whatever or whoever had thrashed our tent and car didn't manage to get it.
I was running low on battery, so I was really glad to find my extra one lying on the floor.
Luckily, it wasn't damaged.
Enraged and dejected, I started going through the woods, and every branch seemed to point that I should move forward.
The stars above my only guide as I went deeper, not knowing what I would find.
I had a branch cracking behind me, turned around quickly, but there was no one there.
After that, I had a cry for help.
Ethan, hurry up.
They have me. Please, hurry.
I started following the sound of her voice,
until I reached an open area in the woods,
where I found what looked like a church?
It was the same area that we'd seen earlier in the day,
but how was that possible?
Right beside that mossy log,
this wooden church appeared.
It was painted black with a light coming from inside it,
while the thick fog was enshrouding it.
It was surrounded by a metallic fence, the front gates opened wide, while the hinges were creaking
under the light of the moon.
The building looked ancient, like it was over a thousand years old.
It seemed not of this world, and more so it looked evil.
It looked like a place where nightmares come to life, and pain was its favourite meal.
I was watching cautiously from behind the trees and couldn't believe my eyes.
Last time I was in this area, there was nothing here.
So it must have been built recently.
But how and why did it look so old?
How was it built so fast?
Impossible.
Had I been lured here?
What was I to find when I snuck in?
I decided to approach this building carefully with small steps.
I went to the left side of the building.
keeping my grip firm on the gun i raised my head a little just to look inside where i saw some sort of a gathering
i noticed hooded people chanting and raising their hands to the ceiling they had a live lamb placed on a stone
their leader approached it and began an incantation mother fury take this offering as a gift from us to you
Oh, unholy goddess of chaos and destruction.
Protect us and let us live to do your biddy.
Then she cut its neck open and blood started painting the altar.
She then called one of the people in the group.
They both removed the hoods from their heads.
And as I looked in despair, not understanding anything at all anymore.
I saw my wife talking with the guy from the gas station.
I recognized him by the burn on his face.
Christine was wearing a crown of branches on her head and some sort of makeup that was dripping down from her face.
On her forehead, a half-moon was painted with the blood of the land.
My loving wife began to berate her followers as my heart shattered into a million pieces.
She wants human sacrifice and she wants it fast.
Her patience is wearing thin.
That's why I came here with him.
You were supposed to catch him while he was sleeping.
Why did you fail?
Why?
I put something in his drink to make him sleep longer.
You had one job to do.
Take some man with you and go fight him fast.
Go now, my wife said, enraged at the utter failure of her men.
And then, out of nowhere, I saw my wife floating in midair.
She was possessed by some unknown entity.
Probably this fulia goddess.
Her eyes rolled back and turned white,
as she said in an unholy voice
or throwing the dead lamb against a wall,
I'm hungry, I'm hungry, I need to eat, bring him to me.
Then she quickly came back to her senses,
as my skin prickled with heart.
My time with the force had taught me to be strong in situations like this,
so I kept my composure.
I heard a cracking behind me
as I turned I saw one of the cultists trying to attack me
I blocked him
punched him in the face and choked him
eventually killing him
then I dragged the body back to the woods
stole his clothes
so I could dress up like one of them
my battery's running low
reception's pretty bad but
I can't make any phone calls from here
so I'm hiding behind a tree
thinking of what
I should do next. Now that I can't leave the woods, I must find out what's happening and who my
wife really is. Part 2. Nightmares exist in reality too, and I know it because I'm living in one
right now. I've been hiding in a hole under a tree with this dead guy lying beside me,
but I managed to keep my composure. It started raining so I needed to take shelter.
shelter somewhere I stole the clothes off of the guy I killed and wanted to go inside and
searched the church although I knew it was dangerous but well I had to take my chances
time stand still here it seems because it's been night for the past 24 hours I saw
the trees hunching over the church like they were drawn to it as it started transforming
it seemed alive it even grew four towers each on every extremity
this is a place of evil of ill-will i can feel it in my gut the obsidian towers looked like they were guarding the evil inside watching carefully for any trespasses
their goddess was hungry and in need of a sacrifice well i'll sacrifice them all right i remember thinking to myself being a cop has you dealing with tough situations but not
with anything like this not when it involves a supernatural my plan was to take them down one by one
as i only counted ten hooded figures inside the church and then of course there's my wife but i didn't
want to think of anything of that sort my glocks mag had 17 bullets in it so it should have been enough
i never miss a shot and i always aim for the head they were leaving the church as a sort of
them splitting into three groups. I noticed that one of them was coming towards me.
I quickly took the dead guy, who I had dressed in my clothes, and put him on the trail and
waited to see if they'd fall for it. They had flashlights, and as they approached, one of them
yelled, there's something lying on the ground. They all came quickly, and as they rotated
the body face up, another one said, wait, but this is... They turned as they heard me,
me stepping on a branch while sneaking up behind them and I slowly whispered hey you fucks say goodbye
like I said I never miss three head shots seven more to go and I only wished that the last
one standing was the guy from the gas station so I could question and rough him up a bit before
putting a bullet in his head they must have heard the shots so I decided to go hide under the
tree again. And I waited, silently, watching and hearing everything around and above me, as the
second group came to see what had happened. He came from there. Get your gun, Anthony. The voice said
as when a set of footsteps started running frantically. I had a door creaking open, and then closing.
I let them pass me, and then I slowly emerged from under the tree. I think I saw him run that way.
I said while they turned around and before they even got a chance to see who I was, I dropped
them all.
Poor Anthony forgot to put bullets inside the chamber, which was a pity.
Or an extra gun would have been useful.
Four more lunatics to go.
I took all the bodies and piled them under the tree.
As I was moving towards the church, I heard a crack to my right.
And then a cultist asked me,
Hey, I heard gunshots.
Are you all right?
Did you find him?
This man, she's starting to get impatient.
She needs food, otherwise she can't leave the black church, he said to me.
Fear breathing from his mouth.
Yep, I found him.
You're talking to it.
I replied while turning to face him,
and noticing that there were two of them standing one next to the other.
Don't make a move.
this thing is loaded. As they both collapsed to the ground, I heard another one yelling behind me,
and as I turned, he hit me in the stomach with a baseball bat. An immense wave of pain passed
through me, and I fell to the ground. I saw the guy getting ready to hit me once more,
but I avoided the bat as he hit the soil beside me. I drew my gun and put three bullets in his
chest. As I looked at his face, I saw that this was not good.
the guy from the gas station blood started staining his clothes he was gasping for what was the last breath
of his life i wanted to find gas station guy quickly before entering the church i decided to take
another look around and i saw that a shack had appeared just a few feet away from it i went inside
only to find dead rabbits hogs birds snakes and other small insects lying on a wooden table the walls were
filled with sickles, machetes and very sharp knives. They were probably using them for hunting
and gutting the animals. Probably they were done the same to me if they caught me sleeping.
I heard someone coming. But before I could reach my gun, I heard him say,
you gel them, but you forgot about me. Take your gun from the holster and place it on the ground
and turn towards me slowly. The man said,
Oh, I finally had him where I wanted.
All right.
Take it slow.
You got me.
Look, look.
I'm putting it down.
I said as I was checking the table for a sharp knife I could use to slit his throat.
As I turned around, I could see that his face was now burned on the right side as well.
Damn, you're one ugly son of a bitch.
I said again, making fun of him.
I wanted him to lose his nerve so I could attack.
him. The mother shot me in the shoulder, and I yard in pain as I saw him grinning from his yellow,
ugly teeth.
"'You bastard! Why did you do that?' I asked him again.
The pain becoming unbearable, and the blood would not stop flowing.
I got this second burn because of you, you son of a bitch, because you didn't stay asleep
so we could get you. Mother Furia punish me. She always punishes us when we fail a task.
But I'll be fine.
You, on the other hand.
You won't be.
Wait until she finds out you killed all her followers.
Oh boy.
At least she'll be well fed.
She'll decorate the walls of her church with your blood.
The burnt guy said, still pointing the gun at me.
Not entirely sure if he'd pop another bullied in me.
I then asked him about my wife.
And he told me that she's been furious devoted follower since her childhood.
all the women her family were things were going pretty good up until i decided to start this fuss he said
she ate men from christine's family as she did with her father grandfather and probably that's how she
survives it's a sacrifice they have to make it's been like this for hundreds of years when there's no more
men to eat from one family furia takes the form of the last leader moves on to find another one and then another
one and so what i was the last man in my family and so i had to stop her if not she'd go on and destroy another
family and should we do in this forever i have to kill this guy and then christine well if fury doesn't
kill me first strong wind came howling in the shack as the man turned i took my chance and
severed his hand with a machete as he started screaming i slid his throat and
watched him die right before my eyes gurgling on his blood as his hand landed on the ground the gun
came off and luckily enough the bullet flew right by my ear you you'll die a horrible death he said as he
fell to the ground his blood quickly absorbed by the soil meaning that furia was feeding i took a knife
and decided to take the bullet out because it didn't go through oh the pain was
was excruciating but I managed to get it cleaned up I took his gun only to see one
bullet remaining so I got the gunpowder out and quarterized the wound my
survival instinct saved my life I got my gun and decided to go inside Furious Church
the full moon in the sky became a half-bloody moon I figured that meant evil was
rising silently I opened a side door and the view inside was growing
The walls were decorated with dead animals, pinned to the walls with nails, as if someone
got angry when failing the taxidermy exam. Strange drawings were depicted on the walls, showing
a female figure eating the flesh of men and painting her face with their blood. The last
part of the ritual showed antlers growing from furious temples. She was floating in the air, her eyes
all white, and branches were embracing her as blood was dripping down from her.
her mouth. On her forehead, a half-moon was depicted. This means that when I first saw Christine
floating in the air, I saw one of furious forms, and the thought of seeing her final one chilled me
to the bone. I only have five more bullets in the chamber. I decided to go and look for her,
and I saw a small hatch leading to the basement. I took the stairs down, and at the other end of the
room, I saw Christine praying and silently chanting to one of Furia's wooden statues.
The final step creaked.
As Christine turned, she saw my face and let out a shriek.
She started running towards me, so I quickly went back upstairs, closed the hatch, and now I'm
hiding behind a wooden bench.
I hear Christine breaking the hatch door.
Ethan, my love, come out, please.
I need to eat.
she's saying oblivious of the life we had before except of course that's not christine anymore part three
heart was pounding at that moment yet somehow i managed to say lucid amidst all this insanity i knew then
very well what i had to do with her christine or furia needed to be killed my mind and soul were
inundated with pain and sorrow at the thought because i was absolutely
I'm absolutely certain that I will never understand what's happened here, more will I ever receive any sort of explanation.
She started screaming my name, obsessively.
But I could hear Furia taking over her, as Christine's voice was changing, emanating sounds from beyond this plane of existence.
The voice sounded like it was letting out all the agony, despair and inconsolable grief of all the men she devoured throughout time.
Ethan, if you don't come out right this instant, you will suffer a slow and violent death.
The distorting sound of her voice filling the room inside the church.
Fine, so be it, I will devour you.
She went on, ravenous.
I started gnashing my teeth as the wretchedness inside took over what little love I had for the woman who was once my wife.
But Christine wasn't there anymore.
more. Furia had taken over her completely, throwing the wooden benches all over the place while
searching for me. I tucked the pistol behind my back and got out before she would have gotten to me.
Okay, I'm coming out. I give up. I can't win this fight anyway. I said, trying to stall her a bit
and think about my next move. This was a fight for my own life now. It was either her or me.
It was survival of the fittest.
She was laughing uncontrollably, as if it was a single most ardent pleasure of her life.
Her appearance was monstrous.
She looked exactly like she was depicted on the walls.
Her eyes were all white, antlers were coming out from her temples,
twigs and branches were embracing her.
The half-moon on her forehead was carved into her skin,
blood falling down her cheeks and painting them to look like rivers on a man.
There you are, my love. Now I want you to play hard to get with me a little, okay?
She said, probably enjoying the thrill of the hunt and adrenaline rush that you feel when you shoot and kill the prey.
Then I noticed the animals on the walls starting freeing themselves and falling down.
They came to life and squirming, they started rising up.
Their mutilated bodies, eyes dangling from their sockets and flesh hanging from their bones,
were an absolute horror to behold.
I squished a possum with my foot,
blood and gut sticking on my boot.
I then decided to take a piece of loose wooden plank
that was sitting behind one of the benches
and proceeded to kill them one by one.
The last animal standing was a wolf.
Its lower jaw was missing,
the tongue was dangling in the air,
and saliva was dropping on the floor.
It charged me,
but when it tried to jump,
I hit it so hard,
that I decapitated it.
Oh, Ethan, it's all fun and games, but my hunger is growing stronger.
So, come here, she said, floating in the air as she came to me, trying to grab me.
I moved to the side and hit her with the plank.
Christine, this is not you. Stop it, please. I said, still trying to cling on to whatever
was left inside.
Christine is gone forever.
Come here.
Don't make this harder than it has to be, she yelled.
I started running towards the exit,
but she placed herself in front of the door.
I was trapped,
so I had to find something else to escape from there alive.
Then I wanted to go towards the hatchdor,
but to no avail she was faster than me.
But she was also more and more irrespect.
and enraged. Her hunger was making her do irrational things. She started throwing the benches
everywhere. She even raised the dead animals and threw them on me, leaving me covered in animal
guts and blood. Then she smacked me so hard out of nowhere that she threw me across the room
into a wall. I started coughing. My eye was cut and bleeding. She came towards me again.
I need to eat. I'm hungry. She was.
said as she grabbed my throat choking me please stop please stop you're killing me christine i begged as a final plea hoping maybe just maybe things could work out after all and we could go back home to live our happy life together she then started sinking her teeth into my already damaged shoulder blood painting her lips a bright shade of red i watched her with tears in my eyes before she could
even get to bite my throat and kill me i slowly took the gun from behind my back and shot her in the
stomach what did you do she said coughing up blood and looking at me with teary eyes her own blood was
mending with mine you killed me she said but now in christine's voice as she gave her final breath
i took her lifeless body and placed it on the grass outside the church and watched her lying there
as if she was finally freed from her demons there was one more thing that needed to be done i went back to the shed and took a canister of gas soaked the church in gasoline and set it ablaze
a purple incandescent flame took over the church and while it was burning bright it let out screams of agony i went back to stay with christine looking at the burning church and contemplating my past life knowing things will never be the same
and not knowing if I will fully recover.
As the fire was slowly extinguished,
I saw the sun rising up in the sky.
A brand new day was upon me.
I placed the gun under my chin and closed my eyes,
contemplating if I should use the last bullet in the chamber.
As I was about to pull the trigger,
I heard a voice from the distance.
Ethan, put it down. It's not worth it, man.
Put it down, please.
we'll figure this out the voice said gravely trying to save me i open my eyes and turned to see my
colleague and two other police officers pointing their guns at me as i put the gun down he said to me
good job Ethan can you please run me through what the hell happened here so i can understand
why you killed her she was running a cult jim i killed them all 11 one of them's in the shed
behind the church and I stuffed the other ones in a hole under the tree over there. I said,
replying to his question as best I could. She was in league with these crazy people,
and they tried feeding me to their goddess. I said, realizing that this sounded like utter madness.
Ethan, there's no church, and there's no shed, just that dead chargai line on the ground.
He said, looking at me like I was crazy.
Did you burn something over there?
He asked me, pointing to where the church used to be.
It burned down.
That's why it's not there.
You can only see the ashes, I said to him.
It was something evil, Jim.
I think not of this world and it possessed Christine.
Her family's been worshipping this Fourier goddess for God knows how many generations.
He then gave me a blanket to warm myself and told me,
It's been a tough night, Jim.
Thanks for coming.
Why'd you come so fast?
I asked him with an expressionless face.
What do you mean one night, buddy?
You've been gone a week.
That's why we have the search party here.
Come on, let's get you fixed.
You're bleeding and you're in shock.
He said, trying to be as helpful and respectful as he could be.
So that's probably why the sun never came up.
I was trapped in some sort of place where time was nonexistent.
I remember thinking to myself.
After they called an ambulance and took the bodies out of the hole, I took them to the camping site and told the whole story from start to finish.
I went to the hospital for three days and now I'm home, recovering.
I've been placed under medical supervision for 60 days, but at least I'll be fine, and I stopped Fourier from ever doing harm again.
I still miss Christine sometimes.
But given that we lived in a house of life, I'm sure that I'll get together.
on with my life and be happy again. One day. Hello Jack. Where are you off to? Going down to
the Governor's Place for Christmas. Jack Darren Toos, in my old regiment, stood drawing on his
do-skin gloves upon the 23rd of December the year before last. He was equipped in a long
ulster and top hat, and a handsome, already loaded with a gun-case and portmanteau, stood awaiting
him. He had a tall, strong figure, a fairer.
fresh-looking face and the merriest blue eyes in the world he had a cigarette between his lips and
late as was the season of the year there was a flower in his buttonhole oh when did i ever see handsome
jackdirt and he didn't look well-dressed and well-fed and jaunty as i ran up the steps of the club
he turned round and laughed merrily my dear fellow do i look the sort of man to be victimized at a
family Christmas meeting do you know the kind of business they have at home three
maiden aunts and a bachelor uncle my eldest brother and his insipid wife or my
sister's six noisy children at dinner church twice a day and snap-dragon between the
services no thank you I have a great affection for my old parents but you don't
catch me going in for that sort of national festival you irreverent ruffie
I replied, laughing.
Ah, if you were a married man.
If I were a married man, replied Captain Darren with something that was almost a sigh.
And then, lowering his voice, he said hurriedly, how is Miss Lester, Fred?
My sister's quite well, thank you, I answered with becoming gravity.
It was not without a spice of malice that I added,
she's been going to a great many balls and enjoying herself very much.
Captain Darren looked profoundly miserable.
I don't see how a poor fellow in a marching regiment,
a younger son too, with nothing in the future to look to,
is ever to marry nowadays.
He said almost savagely,
when girls too are used to so much luxury and extravagance
that they can't live without it.
Matrimony is at a deadlock in this century, Fred.
chiefly owing to the price of butcher's meat and bonnets.
In fifty years' time it will become extinct,
and the country will be depopulated.
But I must be awful, man, or I shall miss my train.
You've never told me where you're going to, Jen.
Oh, I'm going to stay with Old Henderson in Westonshire.
He's taken a furnished house with some first-rate pheasant shooting for a year.
There are seven of us going, all bachelors and all kindred spirits.
We shall shoot all day and smoke half the night.
Oh, think what you have lost, old fellow, by becoming a Benedict.
Hmm.
In Westernshire, is it?
I inquired.
Whereabouts is this place, and what's the name of it?
For I'm a Westernshire man by birth myself, and I know every place in the county.
Oh, it's a tumble-down sort of old house, I believe, answered Jack carelessly,
gables and twisted chimneys outside and uncomfortable spindle-leg-ferch of inside you know the sort of thing but the shooting is capital henderson says and we must put up with our quarters he's taken his french cook down plenty of liquor so i've no doubt we shan't starve well but what's the name of it i persisted with a growing interest in the subject let me see
referring to a letter he pulled out of his pocket.
Oh, here it is.
Varly Grange.
Varly Grange, I repeated, Auguste.
Why it's not been inhabited for years?
I believe not, answered Jack, unconcernedly.
The shooting has been let separately,
but Henderson took a fancy to the house, too,
and thought it would do for him, furniture and all, just as it is.
Oh my dear Fred, what are you looking so solemnly at me for?
Jack, let me entreat of you not to go to this place.
I said laying my hands on his arm.
Not go?
Why, Leicester, you must be mad.
Why on earth shouldn't I go then?
There are stories, uncomfortable things said of that house.
I hadn't the moral courage to say, it's haunted.
and I felt myself how weak and childish was my attempt to deter him from his intended visits,
only I knew all about Farley Grange.
I think handsome Jack Durant thought privately that I was slightly out of my senses,
for I'm sure I looked unaccountably upset and dismayed by the mention of the name of the house
that Mr. Henderson had taken.
I dare say it's cold and draughty and infested with rats and mice,
he said laughingly,
and I have no doubt the creature comforts will not be equal to Queen's Gates, but I stand
place to go now, and I must be off this very minute, so have no time, old fellow, to inquire
into the meaning of your sensational warning.
Goodbye and well, and remember me to the ladies.
He ran down the steps and jumped into the handsome.
Write me if you have time, I cried out after him, but I don't think he heard me in
the rattle of the departing cat.
He nodded and smiled at me and was swiftly whirled out of sight.
Well, as for me, I walked slowly back to my comfortable house in Queens Gates.
There was my wife, presiding at the little five-o'clock tea table,
now too fat, pink and white little children tumbling about upon the hearth rug amongst dolls and bricks,
and too utterly spoilt and overfed pugs.
Oh, and my sister Bella, who between ourselves, was.
the prettiest as well as the dearest girl in all London, sitting on the floor in her handsome
brown velvet gown, resigning herself gracefully to be trampled upon by the dogs and to have
her hair poured by the babies.
Why, Fred, you look as if you've heard bad news, said my wife, looking up anxiously as I
entered.
Oh, I don't know that I've heard anything bad.
I've just seen Jack Darant off for Christmas.
I said, turning instinctively towards my sister.
He was a poor man and a younger son,
and of course a very bad match for the beautiful Miss Lester.
But for all that,
I had an inkling that Bella was not quite indifferent to her brother's friend.
Oh, says that hypocrite,
shall I give you a cup of tea, friend?
It is wonderful how women can control their faces
and pretend not to care a straw
when they hear the name of their lover mentioned.
And I think Bella overdid it.
She looks so supremely indifferent.
Where on earth do you suppose he's going to stay, Bella?
Who?
Oh, Captain Durant.
How should I possibly know where he's going?
Archie pet, please don't poke the doll's head quite down Ponto's throat.
I know he'll bite it off if you do.
This last observation was addressed to my son and there.
Well, I think you'll be very surprised when you're here.
He's going to Westernshire to stay at Varley Grange.
What?
No doubt about her interest in the subject now.
Miss Lester turned as white as her collar and sprang to her feet impetuously,
scattering dogs, babies and toys in all directions away from her skirts as she rose.
You can't mean it, Fred.
Varley Grange, why, it hasn't been inhabited for ten years.
Oh, and the last time, do you remember those poor people who took it?
it. What a terrible
story it has.
She shuddered.
Well, it is taken
now, I said.
By a man I know called Henderson,
a bachelor. He's
asked down a party of men for a week's shooting,
and Jack Darant is one of them.
For heaven's sake,
prevent him from going,
cried Bella, clasping her hands.
My dear,
he's gone.
Oh, then write to him,
the telegraph tell him to come back she urged breathlessly i'm afraid it's no use i said gravely he would not come back he wouldn't believe me he would think i was mad did you tell him anything she asked faintly no i had not time i did say a word or two but he began to laugh yes that's how it always is she said distractedly people laugh and poo-poo
the whole thing, and then they go there and see for themselves, and it's too late. She was thoroughly
upset when she left the room. My wife turned to me in astonishment, not being a Westernshire
woman. She was not well up on the traditions of that venerable county. What on earth does it all
mean, Fred? She asked me in amazement. What's the matter with Bella? Why is she so distressed
that Captain Durant is going to stay in that particular house?
Well, it's said to be haunted, and...
You don't mean to say you believe in such rubbish fret?
Interrupted my wife sternly, with a slight glance of apprehension at our firstborn,
who, needless to say, stood by all eyes and ears,
drinking in every word of the conversation of his elders.
Never know what to believe, or what I don't believe, I answered gravely.
All I can say is that there are very singular traditions about that house,
and that a great many credible witnesses have seen a very strange thing there,
and that a great many disasters have happened to the persons who've seen it.
What's been seen, friends?
Pray tell me the story.
Wait, I think I'll send the children away.
My wife rang the bell for the nurse,
and as soon as the little ones had been taken from the room, she turned to me again.
I don't believe in ghosts for any such rubbish one bit,
but I shouldn't like to hear your story.
Well, the story's vague enough, I answered.
In the old days, Varley Grange belonged to the ancient family of Varley, now completely extinct.
There was, some hundred years ago, a daughter, fame for her beauty and her fascination.
She wanted to marry a poor, penniless squire, loved her devotedly.
Her brother, Dennis Varley, the new owner of Varley Grange, refused his consent and shut his sister up in the nunnery
that used to stand outside his park gates,
a few ruins of it left still.
The poor nun broke her vows and ran away into the night with her lover.
But her brother pursued her and brought her back with him.
The lover escaped,
but the Lord of Varley murdered his sister under his own roof,
swearing that no siren of his race should live to disgrace
and dishonour his ancient name.
Ever since that day, Dennis Varley's spirit
cannot rest in its grave he wonders about the old house at night time and those who've seen him are
numberless now and then the pale shadowy form of a nun flits across the old hall or along the gloomy
passages and when both strange shapes are seen thus together misfortune and illness and even death
be sure to pursue the luckless man who's seen them with remorseless cruelty why wonder you believe
believe in such rubbish, says my wife at the conclusion of my tale.
I shrug my shoulders and answer nothing for,
but who are so obstinate as those who persist in disbelieving everything that they cannot
understand.
It was a little more than a week later that, walking by myself along Palmaal one afternoon.
I suddenly came upon Jack Darren walking towards me.
Hello Jack.
Back again?
Why man, how odd you look?
There was a change in the man that I was instantly aware of.
His frank, careless face, now look clouded and anxious,
and the merry smile was missing from his handsome countenance.
Come into the club, Fred, he said, taking me by the arm.
I have something to say to you.
He drew me into a corner of the club's smoking room.
You were quite right.
Oh, I wish to heaven I'd be.
never gone to that house you mean have you seen anything i inquired eagerly i have seen everything he answered with a
shudder they say one dies within a year oh my dear fellow don't be so upset about it i interrupted
i was quite distressed to see how thoroughly the man had altered let me tell you about it friend
chair close to mine and told me his story pretty nearly in the following words you remember the day i
went down you kept me talking at the club door and i had to race to catch the train however i just did it
i found the other fellows all waiting for me there was charlie wells the two halford's old colonel redell
who's such a crack shot two fellows in the guards both pretty fair a man called thompson a barrister and one
Henderson and myself, eight of us in all. We had a remarkably lively journey down, as you may
imagine, and reached Vali Grange in the highest possible spirits. We all slept like tops at night.
The next day we were out from eleven till dusk among the coverts, and a better day shooting
I never enjoyed in the whole course of my life. The birds literally swarmed. We bagged a hundred and thirty
brace. We were all pretty well tired when we got home and did full justice to a very good dinner
and first-class Perrier-Juet. After dinner we adjourned to the hall to smoke. This hall is quite
the feature of the house. It's dark and bright, panelled halfway out with somber old oak,
and vaunted with heavy carved oak and rafters. At the farther end runs a gallery,
into which open the door of my bedroom and shut off from the rest of the passage.
by a swing door at either end.
Well, all we fellows sat up there smoking and drinking brandy and soda, and jarring, you know,
as men always do when they're together, about sport of all kinds, hunting and shooting and salmon
fishing.
And I assure you, not one of us had a thought in her heads beyond relating some wonderful incident
of a long shot or big fence by which we could each cap the last speaker's experiences.
We were just, I recollect, listening to a long story of the old colonels about his experiences among Bisons in Kashmir, when suddenly one of us, I can't remember who it was, gave a sort of shout and started to his feet, pointing up to the gallery behind us. We all turned around, and there I give you my word of honour, Lester, stood a man leaning over the rail of the gallery,
staring down upon us we all saw him every one of us eight of us remember he stood there for ten seconds
looking down with horrible glittering eyes at us in a long tawny beard in his hands that were
crossed together before him were nothing but skin and bone but it was his face that was so unspeakably dreadful
It was livid, the face of a dead man.
How was he dressed?
I could not see.
He wore some kind of black cloak every shoulder, I think,
but the lower part of his figure was hidden behind the railings.
Well, he all stood perfectly speechless for, as I said, about ten seconds.
And then the figure moved, backing slowly into the door of the room behind him, which stood open.
It was the door of my bedroom.
As soon as he disappeared, our senses seemed to return to us.
There was a general rush for the staircase, and, as you may imagine, there was not a corner of the house that was left unsearched.
My bedroom especially was ransacked in every part of it.
But all in vain, there was not the slightest trace to be found of any living being.
You may suppose that not one of us slept that night.
We lighted every candle and lamp we could lay hands upon and sat up till daylight,
but nothing more was seen.
The next morning at breakfast, Henderson, who seemed very much annoyed by the whole thing,
begged us not to speak of it anymore.
He said that he'd been told before he'd taken the house that it was supposed to be haunted,
but not being a believer in such childish follies, he...
would pay little attention to the rumour he did not however want it talked about because of the
servants who would be so easily frightened he was quite certain he said that the figure we'd seen
last night must have been somebody dressed up to practice a trick upon us and he recommended us all
to bring our guns down loaded after dinner but meanwhile to forget the startling apparition as far as we
could we of course readily agreed to do as he wished although i do not think that one of
one of us imagined for a moment that any amount of dressing up would be able to stimulate the awful
countenance that we all had seen so plainly it would have taken a hair or an arthur cecil
though the theatrical applicants is known only to those two talented actors to have made up that
face that was literally that of a corpse such a person could not be amongst us actually in the house
without our knowledge. Well, we had another good day shooting, and by degrees the fresh air
and exercise and the excitement of the sport obliterated the impression of what we'd seen in some
measure from the minds of most of us. That evening we all appeared in the hall after dinner
with our loaded guns beside us. But although we sat up till the small hours and not frequently
up at the gallery at the end of the hall, nothing at all disturbed us that night. Two nights
thus went by and nothing further was seen of the gentleman with the tawny beard.
What with the good company, the good cheer and the pheasants, we'd pretty well forgotten all about
him. We were sitting as usual upon the third night, with our pipes and our cigars.
A pleasant glow from the bright wood fire in the great chimney lighted up the old hall
and a shed of genial warmth about us, when suddenly it seemed to me as if there came a cold
breath, chill of air behind me, such as one feels when going down into some damp, cold vault or cellar.
A strong shiver shook me from head to foot. Before I even saw it, I knew that it was there.
It leant over the railing of the gallery and looked down at us all, just as it had done before.
There was no change in the attitude, or alteration in the fixed, malignant glare in those stony, lifeless eyes.
no movement in the white and bloodless features.
Below, amongst the eight of us gathered there,
there arose a panic of terror.
Eight strong, healthy, well-educated 19th century Englishmen,
and yet I am not ashamed to say that we were paralysed with fear.
Then one, more quickly recovering his senses than the rest,
caught at his gun that leant against the wide chimney corner
and fired.
The hall was filled with smoke, but as it cleared away,
every one of us could see the figure of our supernatural visitant slowly backing,
as he'd done on the previous occasion into the chamber behind him,
with something like a sardonic smile of scornful derision upon his horrible death-like face.
The next morning, it is a singular and remarkable fact that four out of the eight of us
received by the morning post, so they say,
stated, letters of importance which called them up to town by the very first train.
One man's mother was ill, another had to consult his lawyer, whilst pressing engagements
to which they could assign no definite name, called away the other two.
They were left in the house that day, but four of us. Wells, Bob Hartford, our host and
myself.
Another sort of dogged determination not to be worsted by a scare of.
of this kind kept us still there. The morning light brought a return of common sense and natural
courage to us. We could manage to laugh over last night's terrace whilst discussing our bacon and
kidneys and hot coffee over the late breakfast in the pleasant morning room, with the sunshine
streaming cheerily in through the diamond-pained windows.
It must be a delusion of our brains, said one. Our host champagne, suggested another.
A well-organized hoax, opined a third.
Oh, I will tell you what we'll do, said our host.
Now that those other fellows have gone,
and I suppose we don't any of us believe much
in those elaborate family reasons
which have so unaccountably summoned them away,
we four will sit up regularly at night
for night after night and watch this thing,
whatever it may be.
I do not believe in ghosts,
however this morning I have taken the trouble to go out
before breakfast to see the rector of the parish, an old gentleman who's well up in all the traditions
of the neighbourhood, and I've learnt from him the whole of the supposed story of our friend of the
tawny beard, which, if you will, I will relate to you. Henderson then proceeded to tell us
the tradition concerning the Dennis Varley, who murdered his sister, the nun, a story which I will
not repeat to you, Lester, as I see you know it already. The clergyman had found.
Furthermore told him that the figure of the murdered nun was almost sometimes seen in the same gallery,
but this was a very rare occurrence.
When both the murderer and his victim are seen together,
terrible misfortunes are sure to assail the unfortunate living man who sees them.
And if the nun's face is revealed,
death within the year is the doom of the ill-fated person who has seen it.
Of course, concluded our host,
I consider all these stories to be absolutely changed.
childish. At the same time I cannot help thinking that some human agency, probably a gang of thieves
or housebreakers, is at work, and that we shall probably be able to unearth an organized system of
villainy by which the rogues, presuming on the credulity of the persons who've inhabited the place,
have been able to plant themselves securely among some secret passages and hidden rooms in the house,
and have carried on their depredations undiscovered and unsuspected.
Now, will all of you help me to unravel this mystery?
We all promise readily to do so.
It is astonishing how brave we felt at eleven o'clock in the morning.
What an amount of pluck and courage each man professed himself to be endued with.
How lightly we jestered about the old boy with the beard,
and what jokes we cracked about the murdered nun.
Oh, she'd show her face oftener if she was good-looking.
No fear of her looking at Bob Harford, he was too ugly.
It was Jack Darron who was the showman of the party.
She'd be sure to make straight for him if she could.
He was always run after by the women, and so on,
till we were all laughing loudly and heartily of our own witticisms.
Well, that was 11 o'clock in the morning.
At 11 o'clock at night we could have given a very different report of ourselves.
At 11 o'clock at night each man took up his appointed post in Solomon, somewhat depressed silence.
The plan of our campaign had been carefully organised by our host.
Each man was posted separately, with about 30 yards between them,
so that no optical illusion, such as an effect of firelight upon the oak panelling,
nor any reflection from the circular mirror above the chimney-piece,
should be able to deceive more than one of us.
Our host fixed himself in the very centre of the hall, facing the gallery at the end.
Wells took up his position halfway up the short, straight flight of steps.
Harford was at the top of the stairs upon the gallery itself.
I was opposite to him at the further end.
In this manner, whenever the figure, ghost or burglar, should appear,
it must necessarily be between two of us, and be seen from both the right and the left side.
We were prepared to believe that one amongst us might be deceived by his senses or by his imagination,
but it was clear that two persons could not see the same object from a different point of view
and be simultaneously deluded by any effect of light or any optical hallucination.
Each man was provided with a loaded revolver, a brandy and soda,
and a sufficient stock of pipes or cigars to last him through the night.
He took up our positions at eleven o'clock exactly,
and waited.
At first we were all four very silent and, as I've said before, slightly depressed.
But as the hour wore away and nothing was seen or heard, we began to talk to each other.
Talking, however, was rather a difficulty.
To begin with, we had to shout.
Well, at least we in the gallery had to shout to Henderson down in the hall.
And though Harford and Wells could converse quite comfortably,
I, not being able to see the latter at all from my end of the gallery, had to pass my remarks to him second-hand through half-wards,
who amused himself in misstating every intelligent remark that I entrusted him with, added to which natural impediments to the flow of the soul,
the elements thought fit to create such a hullabaloo without that conversation, was rendered still further a work of difficulty.
I never remember such a night in all my life.
The rain came down in torrents.
The wind howled and shrieked wildly amongst the tall chimneys and the bare elm trees without.
Every now and then there was a lull, and then, again and again.
A long sobbing moan came swirling round and round the house,
for all the world like the cry of a human being in agony.
It was a night to make one shudder and thank heaven for a roof over one's head.
we all sat on our separate posts hour after hour listening to the wind and talking at intervals
but as the time wore on insensibly we became less and less talkative and a sort of depression crept over us all
at last we relapsed into a profound silence and suddenly it came upon us that chill blast of air
like a breath from a charnel house that we had experienced before and almost simultaneously a hoarse cry broke from henderson in the body of the hall below and from wells halfway up the stairs
half a dene and i sprang to our feet and we saw it too the dead man was slowly coming up the stairs he passed silently up with a sort of still gliding motion within a few
few inches of poor wells, who shrank back, white with terror, against the wall.
Henderson rushed wildly up the staircase in pursuit, whilst half had an eye, up on the
gallery, fell instinctively back at his approach.
He passed between us.
We saw the glitter of his sightless eyes, the shrivelled skin upon his withered face, the mouth
that fell away, like the mouth of a corpse, beneath his tawny beard.
We felt the cold death-like blast that came with him
And the sickening horror of his terrible presence
Oh, can I ever forget it
With a strong shudder Jack Durant buried his face in his hands and seemed too much overcome for some minutes to be able to proceed
My dear fellow, are you sure? I said in an awestruck whisper
He lifted his head
forgive me lester the whole business has shaken my nerves so thoroughly i have not been able to yet get over it but i have not yet told you the worst good heavens is there worse i ejaculated he nodded no sooner he continued had this awful creature passed us than harford clutched at my arm and pointed to the farther end of the gallery
look he cried hoarsely the nun there coming towards us from the opposite direction was the veiled figure of the nun
there were the long flowing black and white garments the gleam of the crucifix at her neck the jangle of her rosary beads from her waist
but her face was hidden a sort of desperation sees me with a violent effort over myself i went
went towards this fresh apparition.
It must be a hoax, I said to myself,
and there was a half-formed intention in my mind
of wrenching aside the flowing draperies
and of seeing for myself who and what it was.
I strode towards the figure.
I stood within half a yard of it.
The nun raised her head slowly,
and Lester, I saw her face.
There was a moment,
silence. What was it like, Jack? I asked him presently. He shook his head. That I can never tell
to any living creature. Was it so horrible? He nodded assent, shuddering. And what happened next?
I believe I fainted. At all events, I remembered nothing further. They made me go to the Vicarage
next day. I was so knocked over by it all, I was quite ill. I could not have stayed in the house.
I stopped there all yesterday, and I got up to town this morning. I wish to heaven I had taken your
advice, old man, and never gone to that horrible house. I wish you had, Jack. I wish you had.
I answered fervently. Do you know that I shall die within the year?
He asked me presently.
I tried to poo-poo it.
My dear fellow, don't take the thing so seriously as all that.
Whatever may be the meaning of these horrible apparitions,
there can be nothing but an old wife's fable in that saying.
Why on earth should you die?
You, of all people, a good strong fellow with a constitution of iron.
You don't look much like dying.
For all that, I shall die.
I cannot tell you why I am so certain, but I know that it will be so.
He answered in a low voice,
that some terrible misfortune will happen to Harford.
The other two never saw her.
It is he and I who were doomed.
A year has passed away.
Last summer fashionable society rang for a week or more
with the tale of poor Bob Harper's misfortune.
The girl whom he was engaged to and to whom he was devotedly attached,
young, beautiful and wealthy,
ran away on the eve of her wedding day
with a drinking, swindling villain
who'd been turned out of ever so many clubs
and tabooed for ages by every respectable man in town
and who had nothing but a handsome face
and a fascinating manner to recommend him,
and who, by dint of these,
had succeeded in gaining complete ascendancy
over the fickle heart of poor Bob's lovely fiancet.
As to Harford's, he sold out
and went off to the backwoods of Canada, and has never been heard of since.
And what off, Jack Durant, poor handsome Jack,
with his tall figure and his bright, happy face,
and the merry blue eyes that had wild Bella Lester's heart away.
Alas, far away in southern Africa,
poor Jack Durant lies in an unround grave,
slain by Azulu Assegai on the fatal plain of Isandula,
And Bella goes about clad in sable garments, heavy-eyed and stricken with sore grief,
A widow in heart, if not in name.
Perspective is reality for the perceiver.
Is reality simply what we perceive through our five senses?
What happens to those who perceive things that are just beyond the periphery of physical senses?
What does one do if he finds himself alone in reality?
the only one to perceive a lurking threat.
I was getting desperate.
The alien lizard people invasion was in full swing.
They moved among us in disguise, and very few humans could detect them.
Fortunately, I could see through their disguises,
especially when they touched their noses to adjust their masks.
I'm not really sure how that technology worked,
but when they touched their faces, especially near their noses,
I could see through the disguises for a moment.
I knew that they were here to prey upon humans.
To them, we were nothing but meat.
I suppose I should explain why I have this ability.
I'm from a wealthy family and my father was what in the Washington, D.C. area,
they called a Beltway bandit.
These were government contractors, especially military contractors.
My parents were older when I came along.
Dad was 63 and mom was 40.
I had everything growing up, yet most called me trouble.
I was part of the early generation medication kids who grew up with drugs to help us focus and remain attentive.
ADHD was the latest excuse for bad behavior.
When I was a kid, well, I was certainly capable of that.
I acted out often and violently.
I was preparing for what would come.
My parents took me to doctors and counsellors of every description until by the time I was ten years old, the medicine cabinet in my bathroom remained constantly full.
They even dragged me to church twice a week, but nothing could change what I saw, what I knew.
The medications worked against my knowledge for a while. They made me feel sluggish, then I quit taking them and returned to my rambunctious ways.
school would keep me for long, no matter how much my parents spent, so I had private tutors
and, of course, my well-educated parents to provide my education.
I was the heir to a small fortune, and a prestigious family name, so my parents remained
desperate to get me on track, all the while pretending nothing was wrong with me.
He added some therapy suggested by my dad's military friends.
They entered a martial arts instructor to teach me discipline.
When I turned 14 they bought me a home gym and had it installed in the garage.
Before long I was a lethal weapon and everyone around me feared when I stopped taking my medication
and had an episode.
I was just preparing for the invasion.
I'd seen signs of it all my life and now as an adult I was prepared to act.
Finally they could see what I did.
I knew from Eve's dropping on my father's conversations.
tend to ignore crazy people, even when they are in the same room, that the military had developed
special technology to detect things that most could not see. I suspected they had a special
division to deal with the threats that had begun to come to my attention. The lizard people.
Not really lizards. I just can't think of what else to call them. They're certainly not humans.
They had no hair and delicate scales covered their faces. They had ridges over.
each eye and each eye was yellow or green with vertical pupils and in in dictating membranes.
They appeared husky and muscular, with long arms and thick legs. When they spoke, their tongues
were forked and the inside of their mouths were white and contained savage fangs. Their scales
were basically green but iridescent and gleaming. They could disguise themselves as humans,
usually large, tall humans. They even covered up their hissing manner of speaking.
and their awful carnivore stench.
They definitely possessed tech beyond ours
to hide so well in plain sight.
They had a very rare natural ability
to see through their subterfuges,
but my special talents were inhibited
by the medications I took.
I knew that no one else seemed capable
of detecting the creatures,
so I had to remain clear-headed
and look out for everyone else.
Perhaps Dad's military connections
had a way to see them,
since I'd noticed even more black helicopters around the DC skies than usual.
Perhaps other groups, fundesting groups, whatever means to assist.
In a case, it was up to me to sound the alarm and save the world.
I didn't want to start with my father's friends.
I assumed they were already working to stop the invasion.
I decided that a secret organization that had to know and be willing to help was the Freemasons.
My dad was one, and he and I had visited the big lodge in Alexandria, Virginia, not far from our home in Fairfax.
I formed a plan.
I had to make a scene to gather attention and alert not only the Freemasons, but the local authorities and the public.
I would need weapons and protection.
There was a store across from the lodge that solved specialty items.
I could get what I needed from them, then unless the Freemasons and the black helicopter unit are aid me.
I taught my mother into driving me down to Alexandria to spend the afternoon.
She thought I was medicated and readily agreed.
I knew that my birth had taken a toll on her health and vitality.
To give birth to such a special man must have drained her.
She took opportunities when I was behaving the way she and therapists thought I should
to let me wander through society in hopes that I'd learn normal behaviours.
poor mum
I didn't want a deceiver
but I had to save her and my dad
along with the rest of the planet from these monstrous invaders
I went to the store window
and peered in to see if they had what I needed
I knew that firearms wouldn't do
the aliens had technology that protected them
I needed cold steel
and they did
I found a loose piece of concrete curbing
people are always running over the curbs at intersection
I used it to break the window of the store and take two items from the display, a horned helmet like a fantasy Viking, and a basket-hilted sword like they carried at the Scottish Games event as I attended in the area.
It was too hot for further armour, but the helmet and hand protection would do perfectly.
All I had to do now was spot and kill a lizard person.
Once they were down, their disguises would fail and everyone else would see.
I took up a position near the lodge entrance and looked around.
Out over the harbour, I saw two black helicopters.
I had allies.
I raised the sword in salute to my valiant comrades and called out to the Freemasons
and was surely a raid just inside the doorway.
To me! Rally! To me! We must stop the invaders and take back our planet.
I frantically searched among the passers-by, but there were no lizard people.
perhaps they knew to avoid the lodge.
I'd made a tactical error.
I realised it as two Alexandria
Police Department units arrived
and officers stepped out and drew their firearms.
I knew that the lizards had infiltrated
the various and numerous law enforcement
agencies in the area,
but that most officers were still human.
These two were, so I cooperated.
There was a lizard creature working at the jail
but I couldn't get to him.
I was only able to stare hatred at him through the windows of myself.
Oh, we were in so much trouble as a species.
The lizards had won this round.
They could not have been anyone else with my abilities,
and I was once again medicated and under the care of his psychiatrist,
a lizard person in disguise.
I knew she was, but I had to remain calm around her.
They'd realize I could detect them.
Then I'd be a special target.
Maybe I was happy.
I played the game and took my medication for a few months.
Eventually, I was able to avoid or spit up the doses.
I became quite clever at this game.
I worked out intently and focused on my martial arts training.
I was on my sixth instructor, but I had learned from each before.
I each in turn declared that I was not learning discipline or focus, only destruction.
Only I knew how positive an assessment that was.
the lizard people deserved destruction i was confined to home until i had behaved long enough to lull my parents once again
they were always dependable and loyal i knew they would eventually let me roam again and yet this time they did not no matter how well i behaved or how much i pleaded they would not let me go out on my own perhaps the lizard people had gotten to them made threats
surely the aliens had infiltrated the government, maybe even the military and dad's friends.
Perhaps Dad was unsure of who was who.
I could offer to detect the lizards for him, but Dad had become distant with me as I'd entered my late teens and early twenties.
Likely he wanted to protect me, but I was the one who needed to save him and everyone else.
I used the time to develop a new tactical plan.
Perhaps I didn't need to slay a lizard.
Perhaps I could simply kill their disguise mechanisms.
Well, I'd have to start in some place less frequented by respectable people.
I'd go after dark.
I'd figured out that the lizard people did not like bright sunshine.
This time I would not wear armour, but dress lightly and be ready to flee.
My only weapons would be my fists and my training.
I was strongly built from weightlifting,
and I knew I could deliver potent strikes
that would destroy the technology of the alien predators.
I found my moment, when Dad was sick and in the hospital.
I had gone to visit him since he was in grave condition.
It was late autumn and the light faded quickly.
It was cold but I dressed lightly to be able to run.
I went to my room and on the way told the cleaning lady and my nurse
that I didn't feel good and was going to bed early.
They looked relieved of the blind fools.
I slipped out of my window into the cool evening.
Now my folks had always ensured that I had some cash on me,
so I knew I could follow through with my plan.
It was time to get revenge on those murderous savages.
I took the train into Arlington.
I knew that if anyone noticed I was missing,
that they'd first look at the mall in Fairfax,
and then at the harbour in Alexandria.
Those were my two favourite hangouts,
but I'd rarely visited Arlington, and certainly not the bar scene.
I took the train, one of the best features of the metro region.
I noted no lizard people in my car, but there had been a couple at the station.
They were getting off the train as I got on, so I didn't have time to simply start with them.
It was post-rush hour, but still prior to 9pm, so there'd be plenty of happy-hour guests where I was going.
I first went to courthouse square, but the crowd was light and there were no nightclubs in sight.
I got back on the train and returned to the previous stop.
there was nothing much at all around the area i began to fear that i'd have to go into georgetown to find the venue i needed it when i saw a young man tall and slender with a high and tight military hair-coats a soldier and a human
i asked him if there was a bar a nightclub in the area and he directed me to a small place down the road a few blocks a neighbourhood bar whiteys or blackies or something like that it didn't matter because when i arrived it was busy
busy. Perfect. I set up my hunting stand near a group that was playing darts and drinking heavily,
and glowed at the patrons around me and looked intently for a lizard to slip his or her disguise.
A big fellow in the group playing darts stood to take his turn. He was certainly large enough,
and there, just every second toss, he scratched his nose, and for a moment I could see that he was indeed an alien lizard man.
He threw his last dart and the electronic panel flashed to indicate he'd hit his target.
That's when I stepped up and hit my own target. His nose.
When I stepped up, he looked confused. My face was full of fury and I struck before he understood what was happening.
He reacted quickly and his friends all leapt up to help. But I ran.
I ran quickly because I knew that they would not.
chase me, and I'd destroyed his disguise mechanism. They would see what he truly was, and this
would be my initial triumph. I'd finally won a battle and struck a blow for humanity. I ran for a
full block before I paused to look back at the entrance. I saw that a few people had emerged
from the bow and looked in my direction, for the man who had just saved them. One of the bigger men,
likely another lizard man still in disguise, yelled toward them.
I didn't hear what he said, nor did I care.
I just had to unveil more of these creatures.
I had to get to the train station and head into Georgetown.
I'd definitely cause a stir there when others could finally see what I saw.
I made it to the metro entrance, but I slaughtered a couple of men.
No, males, lizard men, had followed me.
I was about to run down the same.
stairway to board the train when an Arlington Police Department unit pulled up to the curb.
Two officers exited and told me to stop. I did as they told them. One of them, the driver,
was a large older man. I wasn't sure what he was, so I bided my time and remained quiet.
If I exposed an officer as a lizard, I would definitely get the attention I needed to expose
them and save the world. The human officers would never stand for it. I waited in the back. I waited in the
back of the car, handcuffed, and for the moment, defenceless. I saw the officers speak to the two
men, and they were clearly talking about me. I recognised one as the lizard man I'd struck.
Oh no, I thought. He was able to repair his disguise, and likely just killed all the witnesses at that bar.
The older officer instructed the young, slightly built officer, to call for another unit
to transport me to jail while they interviewed the witnesses at the bar.
Shortly afterward another police car arrived, and the large, older officer spoke to the even larger but younger transport officer, clearly about me, but quietly enough that I couldn't hear.
The big officer escorted me to his car and we headed toward the jail. I suspected that both he and the older officer might be lizard men, but I wasn't sure yet, since many officers were largely built. And then it happened.
He sneezed a couple of times and was about to do so again when he grabbed his nose to stifle the third expulsion.
His hand had slipped, and I'd found my new target.
I determined to remain silent until I'd exposed him.
I knew that when humans spoke, the lizard aliens could read our thoughts.
I did my best to keep my features neutral, to suppress the image of rage that I felt towards this monster.
At the jail, the sheriff's deputies did some paperwork, took my fingerprints and photographed me,
and put me in a cell to await the magistrate on duty.
When the lizard officer came to the cell to escort me to the magistrate, I was elated.
I would expose him in front of a court official, and everyone would know.
I tried to hide my excitement as we entered the small hearing room in the booking area.
There was a desk, and behind it sat a large woman with a prominent nose.
As we entered the room, I noted in horror that she wiped her nose with a tissue.
For that fraction of a moment, her features shifted.
Another lizard.
I was shaken, and for a moment I was unsure what to do.
I waited and formulated my plan.
Surely the deputies in the booking area will come to my aid once I destroyed the disguises on these two.
I hadn't planned on taking two at a time.
apparently while my mind was occupied
the magistrate had spoken to me
asked a question
the big lizard officer leaned in and said
wake up buddy
the magistrate needs your answer
and that's when I struck
I smashed his jaw and pushed him toward
the inner wall
and then tried to leap across the desk
and do the same to the lizard magistrate
unfortunately the lizard officer was too quick
He grabbed me around the waist and tackle me to the floor.
I knew I was in trouble, so I went limp.
I knew that the lizard aliens preferred prey that would fight to the last.
They had to play with their food like big reptilian cats.
The deputies entered the room and put handcuffs on me once again.
They took me through a door, away from the magistrate's room and the lizards.
I wanted to tell them.
I wanted to scream, but the deputies didn't seem to care that the lizard
officer was exposed. Must have been in league with the beast. Traitors to humanity. Oh, this conspiracy
ran deep in deep. Surely they served the aliens to save their own sorry lives. Perhaps they've
been promised some reward, but they didn't understand the lizard people. They would never
honour an agreement with what they considered cattle. The deputies put me in an open area and removed
the handcuffs. They told me to remain in the area and pointed down.
out of phone in case I wanted to make a call for someone to come and bail me out of jail.
I just sat and stared.
It was likely a trap to catch my poor parents.
Poor, sick dad and worried mom.
Sat quietly and contemplated my next move.
Then the hairs on the back of my neck rose.
I had that sickening feeling of a monster creeping up on its prey.
A feeling emanating from behind me.
I noticed a fat, dark-complected man sitting in the chair behind me and off to one side.
I didn't have to see his disguise slip. I knew what he was.
Oh, my anger rose up, and I stood, turned and punched him hard in the forehead.
His disguise shattered, and I ran in triumph into one of the open cells along the back wall.
I'd let the deputy that's handle their buddy.
Now the two deputies arose and approached the seating it.
The fat man wailed that I'd hit him.
Neither deputy saw the danger as they walked past him and towards me.
Oh, this was bad.
The entire force of both departments was working with the lizard aliens.
They simply closed the cell door and ensured that the lock engaged.
And then one of them caught over the intake nurse and the other made a phone call.
I was left to my own devices.
I paced for a while.
I sat on the bare metal bunk.
I stood at the door.
I squatted in the front of the door.
I glared hatred at everyone I saw.
Traitors, each and everyone.
My plan had failed once again.
I should definitely have spoken with Dad's friends, all the Freemasons,
enlisted some trusted allies before I enacted my plan.
God, I was learning this the hard way.
Eventually another burly deputy.
A sergeant.
by the two stripes on his sleeves, came in and looked through the windows at me.
He spoke to the deputies, and then took a seat at a computer and began to time.
At first he reminded me of a bear, but then, sure enough, he rubbed his nose for a moment,
and there was the tell-tale, iridescent sheen to his features, just for a flash.
Two of the deputies left the area and took an elevator somewhere.
Only the sergeant and a female deputy remained.
This was my last chance to prove what these things were.
While I was glaring at the monster aliens,
I noted that there were cameras all over the area.
Perhaps someone in the organisation was still loyal to our species.
I tapped on the window, and the sergeant looked up at me.
He approached and asked what I wanted.
I told him that I wanted to call my family, and this cell had no fun.
He opened the door and stepped back out of reach.
He told me to walk to the cell at the end of the row, since it had a phone.
He started to tell me how to dial out, and that's when I swam.
I hid his mouth, but he saw it coming, and at the last second, rolled back.
I was already prepared, and had turned to run when I felt his fist clipped my left jaw.
I saw sparks from a moment, but then I ran, only to realize that I was in jail.
I had nowhere to go.
I reached the walls between the cells
And the big sergeant was on top of me
He pushed me up against the wall
As I shook in terror
His talons were exposed
The razor-sharp claws paused to strike
And slice me to riddons
I broke out in a cold sweat
The female deputy had arrived to help
But as I remained limp
The big lizard bear
Simply placed me in a solid hole
About that time
The female deputy sprayed us both
with pepper spray.
It stung, but I think most of it hit the lizard sergeant.
He dragged me over to the cell where it'd been taking me
and pushed me onto the mattress of the metal bunk.
He had my arm locked out straight and twisted
so that I was helpless.
I looked at the cell walls, and they faded away,
and I saw approaching an army of lizard aliens
slavering and flexing their talents.
Everything was a blur for a while,
and the next thing I knew
I was in a different cell
this one only had a hole in the floor
for a toilet and a mattress
not even a blanket
I used the hole to urinate
then took up a stance by the big window
in the metal door
it was dark in the area
the way the lizard's lightings
I remained alert
until I could see that sunlight had begun to
appear through the windows of the other cells that lie in the block
during the night
the deputy and nurse
duty had watched me closely. They left a cup of water on the fold-down slot on my door.
Shortly the lights came on and a new crew took over from the night shift. A nice doctor with
a thick accent of some kind spoke to me. He asked if I was on any medications and whether I was
under treatment. I remained silent. I would wait for the video and simple word of mouth to
spread the word. Maybe my plan had worked after all. I was once again on the hunt.
in my stand, waiting for the enemy to reveal itself.
Several minutes after the doctor left, the new nurse came over to see me.
The new deputy loomed behind her, and warned her not to get too close to the slots.
By now I could tell which of the staff members were lizards, even if they didn't touch their faces.
Oh, something had changed. My powers had grown.
She spoke, I stared and said nothing.
she tried again and again i stared this was no new game for me she leaned down to the slot perhaps she thought i hadn't heard oh maybe she wanted to sniff me before she attempted to feast on my flesh
honey you need to eat some breakfast and take your medicine it'll make you sick if you don't eat well i saw through her smile i saw her fangs her vertically slit pupils she was trying to
trick me. I reached
through the slots and grabbed her collar and pulled
her to warp my fist of vengeance.
Then I stepped back and put up my hands in surrender.
Later that morning, the deputies
took me back to the magistrate's office.
There was a man on duty,
a slight elderly fellow.
He spoke directly and atonily at me.
He was clearly human,
unlikely a forlorn prisoner of the lizard aliens.
Then the deputies walked me through a
Sally Porton into the magistrate's lobby where my dad's attorney and my mum's driver awaited.
I was soon drugged and rendered impotent, once again dragged before doctors and therapists
and preachers.
I watched TV at every opportunity, hoping for news of a human uprising.
None came, and I began to despair.
Between the lack of news and the medications, I became despondent.
The doctors told me that, regardless of what I saw,
the lizard aliens were not real,
and I was not to act when I saw them.
I told them that I would not act, and I meant it.
I no longer saw the point in trying to reveal,
much less defeat the invaders.
The war was lost.
Humanity would be devolved.
A few months later I attended court.
All of the lizard creatures I'd exposed or tried to expose testified.
My doctors testified.
My father had died around the time I'd returned home on bail.
I thought that my mother blamed me.
It was the lizards.
She sat in the courtroom and stared at the floor in despair.
If only she knew what I'd done, she'd have died from fright.
When I was called, I told the truth.
It was all I had left.
Our family attorney asked me about the medications,
and I, glassy-eyed and nearly drooling,
told him that I'd been taking them and taken them before the triumph.
I told him and the courtroom that I believed that the lizard aliens were real
and a clear and present danger to humanity.
I also told him that I intended to follow my doctor's instructions
and avoid acting on what I knew.
It was a bench trial,
and the judge sentenced me to three months in Central State
for evaluation and treatment.
Central State Mental Detention Facility was for danger
insanely people with violent tendencies.
Oh, the conspiracy continued.
I knew that I would go there and they would try to recruit me or kill me.
I felt I'd given up, but this was the first time the state had taken control of me.
My father's influence had saved me several times before, but not this time.
The aliens had me.
Oh, the stakes were now much higher.
Perhaps others at Central State also had the power to see the lizard people.
Perhaps I could find allies, enlist their aid.
Perhaps the war wasn't over after all.
And so once again, we reach the end of tonight's podcast.
My thanks as always to the authors of those wonderful stories,
and to you for taking the time to listen.
Now, I'd ask one small favour of you.
Wherever you get your podcast wrong,
please write a few nice words and leave a fight.
lifestyle review as it really helps the podcast. That's it for this week, but I'll be back again, same time, same place, and I do so hope you'll join me once more. Until next time, sweet dreams and bye-bye.
