Full Body Chills - BUNKER: Go Down
Episode Date: October 17, 2024A story of a girl who climbs through hell one step at a time.Written by David Flowers. Full Body Chills is brought to you by Max. This Halloween, the movies that haunt you are available on Max. Strea...m all month long. Subscription required. Visit max.com. Looking for more chills? Follow Full Body Chills on Instagram @fullbodychillspod. Full Body Chills is an audiochuck production.Instagram: @audiochuckTwitter: @audiochuckFacebook: /audiochuckllcTikTok: @audiochuck
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This episode was produced with immersive audio.
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Hey, hey, all you survivors.
This is Mike Madness and you're listening to Waves of the Waste.
For anyone new to the show,
I'm sorry, Mike's...
Mike's not feeling his mad self today.
So we're gonna make this intro short.
This is what we're here for, right?
A little shock to the senses.
Something to keep you up at night.
Oh, maybe this story will have you going down.
We're on episode 100 plus something.
Next up are Bicentennial.
I chose this story because,
well, I was getting a little tired
of all the doom and gloom, you know?
If you wanna see the end times, all you gotta do is look around.
So from now on, we're gonna take a hiatus.
No more hell on earth.
Just earth.
And the hell that's inside. But on that topic, you ever been somewhere you thought was haunted?
Or eerie to the nth degree?
Maybe that somewhere was some place simple?
Like a bar or bookstore?
A basement?
Or stairs?
Now tell me, have you ever gone back to that place alone?
Well, after tonight's story I doubt you will. Watch your step and listen close. When I first moved into Garrison House, my college dormitory, our resident advisor provided
us with a whole list of do's and don'ts.
Do park on the street, there's always a spot available.
Don't use a humidifier, the walls are prone to peel.
Do use the study rooms.
There's free donuts and coffee on Sundays.
And don't use the Northern Stairwell.
The stairs only go down.
Like any college university, ours boasted its own local legends.
Like the McCordsey Well.
It was said that the day before finals, if you ran a lap around the entire campus
and then threw a pencil down the well, you would pass your next test. Who is McCordsey?
I don't know, just another name ascribed to some landmark. But he must have been more
deserving than a ditch full of pencils because now there's a grate shielding the top.
There was also Lover's Window.
Spanning a whole courtyard, two windows across two buildings face one another.
Rumor is, on a rainy day, you and your significant other could smudge your initials on one window,
run over to the other, and, if it was meant to be, you'd see them reappear.
By how much running was involved,
I assumed these myths were made by track students.
That or they had longer legs because I can't imagine
anything less romantic than sprinting.
Yet all that to say, there was enough folklore going around
to make the most mundane of things hold some notoriety.
Even a set of stairs.
Now, Garrison House was devoid of most of the mysticism hold some notoriety, even a set of stairs.
Now Garrison House was devoid of most of the mysticism that seized our campus.
Save one little rule.
You could take any stairs, any elevator, any which way you want, but you can only take
the back northern stairwell going down.
But that was the end of it.
No elaboration, no why, no spooky story. the stairwell going down. But that was the end of it.
No elaboration, no why, no spooky story.
Hell, there wasn't even a name for the stairs.
It was just the Northern Stairwell.
Now, if I cared at all for any of the roughly hundred or so urban legends I faced each day
while walking to class, maybe I would have asked more questions.
But as it was, I didn't care.
The Northern Stairwell was in the back, out of my way from everything,
from all my classes where I parked.
And since my RA seemed to stress with more emphasis the no weed rule,
I had no reason to consider the stairwell as anything more than a possible fire escape.
no reason to consider the stairwell as anything more than a possible fire escape. However, some superstitions exist for a reason.
I moved into Garrison House junior year.
I was a transfer student, didn't have many friends, and knew next to no one aside from
my roommate.
Olivia was nice.
Quiet. Olivia was nice, quiet, kind of like me, but she'd been around for two years and had the friend group to prove it.
She invited me to meet them, at a party, off campus, but within walking distance.
I didn't have to ask, this was obviously a college party, lots of alcohol.
I'd never been much of a drinker. I'm too light of a lightweight,
but I wasn't going to turn down a chance
at making new friends.
So we went and it was fine, good, fun even,
which was more than due to the alcohol.
I don't really remember leaving,
if that gives you any idea,
but at some point I was stumbling, smiling, back to my dorm.
I'm sure Liv tried her best to stop me or she was busy with some of her other friends.
Honestly, it wasn't her responsibility, and I'm as stubborn as I am a handful once I've had a few
drinks. Luckily though, as I've said, the party was only a stone's throw away from Garrison House.
Even still, I nearly got turned around, and when I did arrive, I missed it, tripping around
the building, forgetting where to enter.
I came in through the back, half giggling and lost, and I remember falling backwards
so that I was leaning against the glass door.
I closed my eyes for a moment, half coaxed into a dream.
I might have fallen asleep.
I was certainly drunk enough, and to anyone outside, that's exactly what it looked like.
But with a delayed thought, I sprung back to my feet and went for the second door, the
one that led from the stairwell into the building.
But it was locked. I dropped my head inside. Now I should mention that I had my keycard
on me, and the door was only locked by scanner. But at the time, I didn't know that. And at
the time, I was very drunk. So from here, I only saw two options.
Either I go back outside, all around the building, and take the main elevator.
Or I go up the stairs.
Honestly, knowing the layout, it wouldn't take a math major to tell you that either choice is about the same distance.
The only difference is one choice had me admitting defeat.
And so, taking too long to think about it, but not long enough, I began going up the
northern stairwell.
And I guess this is as good a time as any to actually describe the stairs.
From what I could tell they were solid concrete, not even
painted, just blah gray stone that went up to one landing, turned around, and went
up again. There was no railing because there was no drop. The stairs were
surrounded in stone, giving each side a very tight, very narrow, tunnel view going
up and down.
And when I say these were the back stairwell, I mean hidden in the back.
Whoever designed them wasn't trying to impress anyone, other than the guy who checks for
building violations.
But the lack of aesthetic was well concealed.
The only light showed from a set of fluorescent lights that gave a pale blue stutter wherever you stepped.
Around one stair I went and then another.
My dorm was on the fourth floor, a number that may have gone undervalued in my intoxicated state.
Very soon my feet were fighting to keep up.
If it weren't for the booze, I might have regretted this choice, but then again, if it weren't for the booze, there wouldn't be a choice to regret.
And so, up and up I climbed, slowly feeling like an upside-down caver.
Or an enclosed mountain climber?
My point is it was tough.
Not only was it an uphill battle, but the dim lights, the rigid walls, all of it made
me feel like I was descending
upward through a slight tunnel.
The stairwell even echoed like a cave with my sluggish footsteps skipping off the walls.
A big painted three spread across one landing, marking the third floor but what felt like
the third mile.
Maybe at the higher elevation the
drunken fog was starting to clear but at last a reasonable thought popped into my
head. Rather than keep climbing I should just get off on this floor and take the
elevator. My legs agreed. I tried for the door but duh it was locked. This time I remembered the scanner and my key card. I fumbled with
my ID scanning it but was rejected by a flashing red light. I tried again with the same result.
My thought, which at least made some sense, was that our keycard access was floor specific. Growning but three
fourths of the way there, I continued upwards. Up and up one landing and then
up and up another. The number four came into view as well as the door to my
floor. Exhausted, I dragged myself over and scanned the key card. The light flashed red.
I tried it again.
Denied.
I tried it upside down.
Denied.
Sideways, partways, jiggling the handle.
Red light.
I felt like banging on the door, but then I paused to think,
was this my floor?
No, I wasn't so drunk that I was confusing where I lived, but I remembered some elevators
and buildings were weird with how they labeled certain floors.
Sometimes they skipped a number, and sometimes they added one.
So maybe this was actually the third floor?
Ignoring the obvious four staring at my back, I turned towards the stairs going
up. Now, I was positive. My dorm was not only on the fourth floor, but the top floor. So
either my assumption about the floor mix-up was correct, or these stairs led straight
to the roof. Well, there was only one way to know.
By now, that full-blown buzz was gone, replaced by sweet dreams of my bed.
I was exhausted, mentally and physically.
Four or five floors seemed like so few, but with too much makeup and too little cardio, I was already
hot with sweat.
Even worse, the stairs were like the interior tubes of a fast food playpen.
So compact they strangled the air into a heavy fug.
Yet finally I came to the summit.
Floor five, for five pounds lost.
Almost relieved, I approached the scanner and door, before my eyes caught something
else.
There was a look on my face, stuck between confusion and some other emotion I had yet
to acknowledge.
But as I stood before the door, frozen, keycard
in hand, my gaze was locked on the other set of stairs. Going up, I could see it glowing
in the faux sunny blue fluorescent light. A landing above me. Nothing, not a step seemed out of place save in the little
mental map I had drawn in my head. Was it possible that our building went higher? Sure,
absolutely. Right before me was standing proof. But even knowing that, my eyes wouldn't let go. Watching out of the corner of my eye, I tried my ID against the scanner.
The light flashed red.
Screw it, I thought.
I'd try the front door.
I had zero desire or reason to go any higher.
There was nothing up there for me, and if there was a floor, it wouldn't be mine.
Just an attic or or storage, or whatever.
I went leaping down the steps in stride, sometimes taking two or three at a time.
I don't know why I was going so fast, because nothing was wrong.
Nothing was wrong.
That's what I kept telling myself, and yet even going down now, my lungs were pushing harder.
Nerves racing, I bolted around the second landing, getting faster and faster, spinning around the last landing and down before...
The stairs... stopped.
Suddenly, my eyes were at war with what I was seeing.
I counted four corners, then again, I ran towards it, feeling for what I was seeing. I counted four corners then again I ran
towards it feeling for what wasn't there. Knocking, scratching, banging my fists
against a wall. A wall. That's all that stood on the bottom floor. There wasn't
even a bottom floor. The stairs just went down and abruptly hit concrete. I tried looking around for a
door as though somehow, in this limited space, I only got turned around. But round and round
I turned, only making myself feel dizzier.
I sprinted up to the second floor. The number two stood in bold lettering across the wall.
But there was no longer any door. It was gone. Just like how
the first floor was gone, erased with smooth concrete. I ran up to the third floor, not
even stopping to see that the door was missing, but running. Faster, up another landing and
another, trying to catch the first door I could find. But higher and higher, there was
nothing. I blazed around another empty wall, another landing without a door, towards floor number
five, up and up, losing the race and slowing to a sharp pitch in my breath.
Floor five, the door I had scanned just a minute before, it was like it never existed.
I think I tried screaming for help.
I know I cried.
I know I paced the floor like a caged animal.
But I don't know how long I stayed there.
Time and all of my emotions spiraled into such an incoherent frenzy that the minutes
burned like hours.
I might have stayed longer, but out of some nightmare logic, I was now convinced that
the walls were closing in on me.
That they were tightening like the stomach of a snake.
They weren't, of course they weren't, but my paranoia had reached a fever pitch, and
with a growing fear, I now felt that I was sinking.
My heart already racing, I flew up the stairs, but I was crazed, crawling, hunched over on
both my hands and feet. The landing turned and went up again. Peeking over the stairs
was the number six. There was no door, but somehow even more stairs. Quickly I climbed,
going further and higher, from
seven to eight and eight to nine floor numbers marking my degree of insanity.
I think I stopped around the fourteenth floor. My body ached all over, and it was all I could
do to just keep breathing. Ironically, the cold concrete floor was my only comfort.
Everything else I hid behind closed eyes. Then I remembered. My phone. In another moment
I was on my knees, tearing at my jacket, digging through pockets. I found it, but one flash of the screen was enough to scatter
all my hopes. There was no reception. I tried lifting it higher, taking it to one corner
of the landing and then the next. Neither worked. Then I turned towards the stairs.
There was no reception on this level, and going down was a dead end.
But maybe if I went higher?
I was in no rush this time.
In fact, I approached every step with a rabbit's temper.
I held my phone out hoping with each step that that step was all I'd need. And so, step by step, floor by floor,
I slowly went up, searching for any signal.
If I wasn't sure before, by floor 20, I knew.
This place wasn't real.
Or at least, it wasn't Garrison House anymore.
Unless the whole stairwell had somehow slipped into the ground, there was no way it stretched
twenty stories high. A tower like that doesn't go unseen sitting around a college campus.
So then where was I? Would my phone even work here? There were several more questions I'd have to tackle, but in the meantime I decided to
conserve my battery, stopping only every few floors to check for service.
Yet at the back of my mind I could feel all my anxiety bubbling.
I had no idea where I was.
No clue as to how I was getting out, or if I was getting out.
Was anyone looking for me?
Do they even know I'm lost?
It was too easy to stress.
Like the stairs, it was an endless climb trying to overcome this growing dread.
There was no door.
No change to my surroundings saved the rising number upon one wall.
Twenty-nine.
Thirty.
Thirty-one.
I counted them as I went.
They were my only marker, my only indication of possible progress.
I took a break, checking for service, but found nothing.
And then I went on.
Thirty-six. Thirty-seven. Thirty- another break. 44, 45, and another.
I wondered what would happen when I reach 50? Would I finally find a door?
Would the stairs come to a stop?
But that's the problem with numbers.
We assign them some significance, but...
In the end...
They're all made up.
50.
51.
52.
The stairs kept going.
I was furious, raving at every one and thing that got me here.
I was mad at myself for drinking so much.
I was mad at Liv and her friends.
I was mad at these unfeeling, unending stairs.
Desperate, I tried tearing at the light fixtures that hung above the landing.
My half-formed idea was that I might break through them
and find a cutout or opening that I could climb through.
Stupid, I know.
Even worse, I hadn't anything to reach with,
and so I was left hurling my shoes like a madwoman.
But every throw either missed
or bounced off the lights without a scratch.
So then I took my jacket and tying a shoe inside the hood, I slung it at the ceiling
once, twice, maybe twenty times.
But the plastic covering was thick.
No matter how hard I tried, I couldn't break it.
I dropped my coat and slumped against the space where a door should be.
I sat there, brooding in the light of
these hellish stairs. How was this happening to me? Why was this happening to me? Was I
dead? For the first time I felt around my head for any signs of trauma. Maybe a bump
or trickle of blood. But for every measure except my aching
feet I was perfectly fine. I checked my phone again. No service. Which meant no messages,
no location data, nothing. I scrolled through several of my photo albums hoping for something
wrong. Something that might suggest this horrible stair scenario was but a twisted
dream.
Yet every photo was there, unaltered.
Not even a dream is this convincing.
If this were a test, I'd be biting my pencil.
I tried but failed to remember anything about these stairs or the legends surrounding it.
All I knew was that you weren't supposed to climb them.
Too late for that. So now what? Usually in myths and fables there's some sort of solution, right?
Some lesson to be learned? Maybe that was it, I thought. Maybe this was all happening because
I had too much to drink. Well obviously it was.
But I meant like actually.
Spiritually or whatever.
It sounds insane, but at the time I was willing to believe and do anything just to get home.
I swore out loud that I'd never drink again.
I swore I'd be kinder to those who cared for me. I swore
that I'd get my master's degree, a doctorate. I swore that I'd never take another set of
stairs ever again. And after each promise and prayer, I opened my eyes, hoping by some
impossible means that I would be freed of this place. And when that didn't work, I tried proving
my conviction by going down. I tried again and again until I had wasted every meaningful
vow and every step upon the stairs and found myself back on the bottom floor. I've never felt more useless or pathetic in my entire life.
Wallowing in front of a wall,
begging it to open, not even a rat trapped inside a maze looks so pitiful.
But I had given up.
I was at my lowest point mentally and literally.
What if the exit was only a floor above where I'd been? Or worse,
what if it kept moving and now that I've forfeited fifty floors I'll never catch up? Every thought
only seemed to weigh me down, to keep me there. I was better off waiting for help. I was better off starving. I was better off dead.
I don't know how long I laid there, depressed and unwilling to move. But I know at some
point I must have fallen asleep. Because for a brief moment I forgot. I opened my eyes and forgot where I was.
But creeping out of my dream came the memory.
And a spark.
I turned around almost believing that it was all a dream, that I was back in the real world.
But a solid concrete wall put a stop to all my optimism.
Still, that spark was enough, and afterward I was on my feet and at the very least with
the mindset that I had to keep trying.
And so, for perhaps the millionth time that day, if it was still the same day, I took
another step up the stairs.
It would be pointless to re-describe everything I saw. Each landing,
each floor, each step. It was all the same. It was the very definition of madness. Doing
the same thing over and over and expecting different results. And yet, other than giving
into madness, it was my only option.
However, on my second ascent I did notice something new.
And perhaps it was there before and I only ignored it.
But this time as I climbed ever higher, I was sensitive to the fact that it was getting
colder.
Even with my jacket on, it was starting to feel like I had gone outside.
But there wasn't any wind, nor even any vents.
And maybe that's when I realized I was having trouble breathing.
Was it because of the elevation?
Was I running out of air?
I wouldn't let myself panic, but now I wondered if there was a limit to how far I could go.
I could see my own breath now.
I could hear it, too, a wheezing, gasping sound.
Consequently, my breaks were becoming more frequent.
I used to stop every ten floors or so, but further on I found myself struggling, making
only half the distance in twice the time.
Before I wouldn't have cared for a railing, but now I was gripping the sleek wall for
any support.
I reached the top of one floor.
Shivering, dizzy, and heaving air. No matter how hard I tried, it felt like my
lungs were never full. Each gulp only sent a shock of ice through me. I lifted my eyes
to the wall. Floor sixty-eight. Would I even make it to a hundred? Just then I felt something, a fuzziness at my side. At first I thought
I was going numb but this feeling had a pattern to it. It was vibrating. With shaking hands
I managed to pry my phone out and inspected the screen. Next to the caller ID was Olivia's photo.
I answered, hello?
I was more shocked to hear my voice, a weak, dry crackle than the noise that blasted through.
There was almost too much of it to hear.
There were people, maybe music, all blaring over the poorest audio quality. Somehow I was able
to isolate Liv's voice.
Hey Biddy, what are you? I'm at the poverty zone, can't find you. Are you at the dorm?
Liv, help me. I'm stuck inside.
My voice was so quiet that I could barely even hear it. And before I could
try to clear my throat, the call dropped. No! Panicking, I tried calling her back, but the
signal was gone. I cursed myself, yet short of chucking the phone away. I realized there
might still be hope. I could still get a signal, and from the sounds
of it, what sounds I could hear at least, Olivia was looking for me. I had a reason
to keep trying.
Gathering myself, I continued up the stairs, but I was barely halfway to the next landing when I stopped again.
I thought my ears were playing tricks on me.
There was a sound, the same sound I had heard for over sixty floors, and a sound that was
no different from before, except now I was listening.
I took another few steps and listened.
There it was again.
This stairwell carried an echo.
That I knew from all my screaming and fits of rage, and it even reflected some of my
footsteps.
But somehow, gradually, the echo coming from below me had gotten... louder.
It was more displaced from where and when
I placed my foot. It almost sounded like my echo belonged to someone else. A cold sweat,
freezing cold spread across my body. Anxious in the silence, I started up the stairs, but as soon as I did, they did too.
I paused and everything stopped. I went on and they followed. I froze again and called out,
Hello? Who's there? There was only my echo this time, but it was my echo, one that felt right. The other set of footprints remained silent.
There was nothing else I could do except run or turn around to meet them. And so, I ran.
The instant I did, they took off after me. I tried going faster, but I could hear them keeping up. Pushing harder only
made my legs lock up. They were so cold and tired that I felt I couldn't control them.
And with the air so thin, I barely made it. Two sets of stairs before I collapsed. Out
of breath. Yet the moment after I stopped, whoever was below me stopped too.
I knew I couldn't just sit around.
I was too cold and there was no guarantee that this stalker wasn't currently creeping
up the stairs.
But I couldn't keep running, not at this rate.
So I switched tactics.
I collected my breath and without wasting any time, slowly, quietly, I went up the stairs.
I wasn't sure if my stalker only moved when I did, or only when they heard me, but at
least for as long as I kept quiet, it sounded like no one else was following.
But this process took time, and walking so deliberately stressed some
muscles that were already burnt. Eventually, I had to rest.
Floor 75. My knees nearly gave out as I hit the top. Maybe if the concrete wasn't ice cold I would have sat down, but even then the brittle
temperature kept me stiff.
My hands and feet felt like they were carved from ice and my breath had lost all its warmth.
I was debating whether I should turn around, go back where it was warmer, when a far more
chilling sight kept me still.
At the bottom of the stairs, there was someone there.
But they weren't moving.
They were facing the other way, the same way I was.
Yet even though I couldn't see their face, I could see their clothes and their hair. And from that I could
tell that it was me. I raised my left hand, and like pulling on puppet strings, this other
me followed. But the movement wasn't right. In fact, it was too right, too even and smooth. None of my
shivering or hunched posture was reflected in this thing. Rather, it was straight and
lifeless like some 18th century self-portrait. I took a step back, and still going backwards, it took one step up the stairs.
I spun around and ran up the next floor, limping, trying to put some distance, but I could hear
loudly now as it came clamoring behind me.
I stopped before I reached the next landing to look over my shoulder.
It was there, looking over its shoulder so that I couldn't see its face.
But somehow, it was closer.
Not by much, maybe only one step, but I realized sooner or later this other me was going to
catch up.
What do you want?
I asked.
It didn't respond.
Slowly I turned away and out of the corner of my eye I could see it turning too.
I tried to think of a solution but my mind was clogged with fear and cold and air that
was too thin.
Then, suddenly, I heard something running up behind me. I bolted. This was it. Whatever was
left inside of me, I felt I had to use it now. I slung around floor 76 and went up again but was
so blind in my haste I barely noticed my pursuer was now above
me. I paused for only a fraction of a second before I realized what was happening. Booming
through the stairwell was a new sound, one familiar but lost. This noise on loop, it
grew louder as we raced towards it. It was the sound of a million doors closing.
A door. There was a door. And this other me was going to get there first.
I screamed, fueling every bit of myself into my body. People talk about an adrenaline rush,
mothers lifting cars to save their kids. Oh, I felt it.
It was like I had been given new legs, like my soul had only one purpose.
Run.
Climb.
Faster.
I bolted onto floor 77 and saw it all in a flash.
A bold lettered four across one wall.
The metal door and green lit scanner.
The other me turning the handle.
No.
I would die before I let myself be stuck here again.
Charging at them, I seized the other me's shoulder just as the door flew open.
I launched myself slipping away and through the frame and slammed
the door shut.
Gasping for air, I felt...warm. Rage and fear pulled from my eyes and revealed light. Not
the faint blue flickering of a shadowy stairwell, but the tender orange glow of our hallway.
I broke away from the door, afraid it might suck me back in.
But it stayed closed.
From someone's dorm, I heard the muffled sound of music.
I checked my phone, and there was service.
I made it out.
Not much later I called Liv. Apparently no one knew where I was, but apparently no one
was looking for me. And that's because technically, I was never missing. I left the party around 1143 and arrived home from a three minute walk at 1147.
I got back within the same day, no within the same half hour as when I was trapped in
that stairwell.
But how?
Was it all my imagination?
Absolutely not. Liv admits that she tried to call me around 1146, which was the same call I remember answering,
but she says when I picked up, she heard only static.
Shortly after, the call hung up.
Liv thinks I was drugged.
She believes me, thank god, but it's harder for her to believe
my story. And honestly, someone slipping my drink makes more sense than getting lost in
Hell's stairwell. Who knows, maybe there's a drug out there strong enough to reproduce
that kind of nightmare. But I highly doubt it.
I wasn't willing to go to the police, and despite Olivia's interest, I for sure wasn't
going back to investigate those stairs. In fact, I made her promise me to never set foot
in that place. It took some serious convincing, but eventually, whether or not she believed what I was saying,
she swore she'd stay away.
I barely drink anymore, and if I can, I avoid any and all stairwells.
Maybe what I experienced was local to Garrison House, but you really think after what happened
I'd be willing to risk that?
Only Liv knows the whole story. Most of it, at least. I've debated whether I should share
it with anyone else, maybe make myself out as the resident kook proclaiming doom to all
those who tread the back stairs. But I don't think I have the courage.
The only part of my story I didn't tell Liv, the part that I never
want to think about, is the part where I escaped. When I bolted past the thing that looked like
me, when I ran through the door and slammed it in its face, I got a good look at her. And even though I was panicking and my eyes were blurry with tears, I know what I saw.
It was me.
Of course it looked like me, but it was more than that.
Not some reflection or faulty clone.
It was me. It was me, and I locked her in there. It was me, and I don't
know if it was just a part of me, or something more. Sometimes, when I dream, I dream that I'm back there, trapped in a cold stairwell that never ends
and where it's so hard to breathe.
And even though I survived, even though I think I escaped, sometimes it really feels
like I didn't.
Well, that's it for our story.
I don't have anything I really want to say, so...
This is Mike Madness signing off. There's no one else can reach me I'm on the dark side of town Full Body Chills is an AudioChuck production.
This episode was written by David Flowers and read by Kirsten Anderson.
Intro outro written by David Flowers and read by Anthony Coons.
So what do you think Chuck? Do you approve?
And show me the way
That I am
Come on!
You son of a...
Hello!
Hello!
Please, someone help me!
Hello!