Full Body Chills - CAMPFIRE: Hidden Treasures
Episode Date: October 23, 2024A story of old salvage and its weight in blood.Written by Ryan C. Major. Full Body Chills is brought to you by Max. This Halloween, the movies that haunt you are available on Max. Stream all month lo...ng. 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: /audiochuckllc
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Shadows lapped on the edge of embers.
The dying light was an island, submerged, caught between a mound of ash
and the miles upon miles upon light years of space.
In slow motion, the Amber City was sinking, shrinking.
It occurred to Olive, not for the first time, that she was cold.
Saturated in clothes, in sweaters and skin, even this close to fire, her warmth expired.
The fire cracked, launching a light probe into the night.
She followed its trajectory as the spark,
barely a speck, sped up and up through the smoke,
slowing down, drifting, so far from home,
and still so much farther from anything else.
The spark went out.
Well, who's up next?
Matt held out the torch.
Before Olive could even refuse, Jake stole the light and pressed it to his heart.
Ahem. I'd like to thank my friends and the Academy for this shining opportunity.
The Academy of what? Clowns?
And what, friends?
Ow! Y'all are a bunch of sharks, you know that?
Kidding. What's your story about?
This story is about...
a haunted house.
Wha- you can't...
My story was about a haunted house.
You can't just double dip.
No, your story was about a haunted painting.
Mine's a proper ghost story.
So was mine.
Oh, sit down, Matt.
Let him go on. I'm just saying... haunted painting. Mine's a proper ghost story. So was mine!
Oh, sit down, Matt. Let him go on.
I'm just saying...
Look, your story was spooky, sure. I won't dispute the facts.
In fact, I think you'll find our two tales are as different as life and death.
Oh... does that mean someone dies?
Technically, if it's a ghost story, yeah. But it's not death you
have to worry about. Death is what you should watch out for. What? Shoot, I screwed
it up. It's not death that you have to watch out for, it's death that you... Just
get on with the story already. Okay, okay. How about this?
If you're ready, gather around and listen close.
But that's my line!
Shh! Work smart, not hard.
That's what my old man told me.
But it was advice he never seemed to have taken.
Patrick Loven spent 35 long years as a general contractor and he'd haul me around from job to job for as long as I could remember.
Electrical, framing, plumbing, landscaping, you name it, my dad did it.
He worked hard and died the same way.
Lung cancer in the end.
The man smoked like a damn freight train from sunrise to sunset.
I picked up a lot of his habits, including smoking, but quit after he died.
Watching someone waste away in those final moments of small cell lung cancer makes those
Marlboro Reds lose their appeal. Work hard he did. Work smart he did not.
We did all the jobs ourselves. Working smart would have been hiring a few guys to help.
I never understood why he said the phrase over and over.
Maybe he thought he lived by it,
not having to pay subcontractors.
When he passed, I inherited the business
and decided to put his unused advice to use.
After a year or two of the same old jobs,
my wife introduced me to a new business concept,
architectural salvage.
It was a simple concept, but one I'd never thought about. You buy dilapidated homes,
make a manifest of the items to be salvaged, and pay a contract crew to dismantle them
piece by piece. You sell the usable parts, demolish the house, and auction the land.
Smart, not hard. You'd be amazed at how much antique glass
doorknobs or restored Victorian banisters get on the resale market. The houses were
often cheap too. Most people inherit collapsing properties and don't realize the gold mine
they were sitting on. I was glad to help, though, give them a little more money than
they expected but nowhere near as much as I'd make.
My wife found our most recent purchase. It was a crumbling Georgian colonial-style home
a few miles outside of Corridan, Indiana. Four thousand square feet of warped walls
and squirrel nests, every inch an untapped resource. An old fella named Barrett Compton
was selling it himself and seemed motivated to get it off his hands.
The price was about right, but
I'd been sure I could badger him down a bit.
I called Compton and he agreed to meet me the next day.
My wife packed an overnight bag and
printed out all the photos the old man had sent over,
sticking them in a Manila folder.
After a two and a half hour drive and a questionable greasy spoon dinner,
I kicked back in the motel bed and thumbed through the pages in the folder.
I drifted to sleep, already counting the profit from stripping the old house.
Early the next morning, I pulled out of the motel parking lot and followed my GPS down the country lanes toward the house.
The GPS indicated a right turn onto a gravel lane,
and I pulled my truck onto the rough stretch of road.
Roof peaks bobbed above the tree line ahead of me,
and I was relieved to have found the place
without much issue.
As I turned around the last bend of the S-curved driveway,
the two-story relic came into view.
It stood atop a low hill, dominating the small clearing in the
trees. Paint-peeling shutters dangled haphazardly from each window. A once stately metal archway
had long since rusted and leaned lazily in on itself. Thick ivy had invaded and conquered
most of the lower floor. On the front steps sat an old man,
a black cigarette hanging from the side of his mouth.
I could smell a combination of tobacco and clove.
My dad had smoked the same kind from time to time,
usually after a few beers.
I think it made him feel dignified.
The thought caused a childish grin to spread across my face.
Walking up the cobbled path toward the old man,
I stuck my hand out and he took it in a surprisingly firm grip,
introducing himself as Barrett Compton.
When he stood, I felt certain he would topple over in a stiff breeze.
He was ungainly tall, over six feet, and stood on two thin legs.
An oxygen canola ran from his nose
to a portable tank he clutched in his left hand.
A walking fire hazard, I thought,
as I watched him take a deep drag of his black cigarette.
His face was lined and hard, eyes set in too deep.
It felt like looking into a dark burrow
only to see a set of glowing eyes staring back
at you.
He smiled at me, but it held all the charm of a dog backed into a corner.
We made small talk for about ten minutes, but I was getting a bit impatient and I wanted
to get inside.
I tried to walk toward the door, but the old man stood resolutely at the base, idly discussing
the weather and asking
how my drive had been. He hadn't taken the hint, so I finally interrupted.
If you don't mind, Mr. Compton, I'd love to get inside and take a look at the house
so we can get a deal together.
The old man smiled his cornered dog's smile and took a deep pull from his black cigarette.
He dropped it to the ground and crushed it beneath his brown loafers.
A pile of the black butts sat scattered around his feet
and I couldn't help but think he may meet the same end as my old man.
The oxygen mask told me it may well have already taken root.
No going inside till the cell's made.
He grumbled, reaching into his pocket and producing a stack of folded paper.
He extended it toward me in a pale, shaking hand.
I've reduced the price by 20,000.
Need the damn place gone today.
You'll see that I've signed and dotted all the right spots.
There's a notary stamp on there, too.
Write the check, look over the house,
and then go to the law office listed on the contract.
They'll wrap it up and the whole thing will be done.
I looked down at the pile of papers.
There was a seller's disclosure, title, deed,
and dozens of other documents.
Each line was signed by Compton,
and a notary stamp was pressed onto each page. It felt strange. Rushed.
Look, sir, I started. Let's just go down to the lawyers. The old man held up a hand to silence me.
Take it or don't, he said before lighting another cigarette. I'm not pissing around with this all day.
It's cheaper than I wanted, and I know you'll rip this place down.
Land alone is worth more than you're paying.
I'm old and I just want this business done.
I thought to argue again, but something about the old man made me feel small, weak.
I wanted to walk away from the deal and forget meeting Compton, but my feet wouldn't cooperate.
He just stared me down like a disobedient child.
My blood went to ice as I wrote the old man a check.
He took it, dropped one final black cigarette on the ground, and walked away.
I sat on the stairs outside the house for nearly an hour.
My phone was buzzing in my pocket, and I fished it out to see half a dozen missed calls from
my wife.
She had expected an excited call by then, no doubt, but I was still reeling from the
uncomfortable meeting with Compton.
Hitting the ignore button, I put the phone back in my pocket and pushed myself off the steps to head inside.
Talking to the old man had left me unsettled and I didn't want to trouble her with it.
A set of dull keys dangled from the lock in the front door and I turned it with a great deal of effort.
lock in the front door, and I turned it with a great deal of effort. It pushed in and squealed like a dying animal before hitting a pile of moldy plaster on the floor. The air smelled
of mildew and old decay. Stray beams of light gleamed through moth-eaten holes in the window
drapes. Bulky furniture set, covered in heavy canvas tarps. My heart would have usually been filled with delight to see a house filled with antiques,
but there was no enthusiasm in me.
This is where people go to die, I thought to myself with a shudder.
Why had I thought that?
The intrusive words burrowed deep into my brain.
It made no sense, but lingered all the same. I had explored and stripped
dozens of houses over the last few years, and none of them had given me so much as a second thought.
But that house filled me with a sense of dread. I did my best to shake off the apprehension and
began to explore the house. Every room was filled to the brim with antique
furniture. Each wall was covered with peeling wallpaper, molded pictures and creeping vines
that bulged from cracks in the plaster. The constant sound of scampering animals filled
the walls. Pulling some of the canvas tarps away, my mood improved as I discovered relatively intact furniture.
Desks, dining tables, wingback chairs, and rockers.
Some had seen better days, but many weren't outside of the skill for an antiquarian to restore.
Even without the architectural salvage, the house had already proven to be a good investment.
After taking a brief inventory of the furniture,
I began to open drawers and cabinets,
hoping to find other valuable items, but each sat empty.
I entered what I assumed to be the master bedroom
and marveled at the regal canopy bed set against the wall.
Tattered drapes hung in shreds around the top of the frame.
Through the gaps in fabric, I saw a closet door.
I walked around the bed and turned the brass knob.
It rattled but refused to give way.
The wooden frame had swollen, holding the door solidly in place.
I went to my truck and grabbed a small toolbox and headed back inside,
placing it on the floor beside the closet before digging out a small pry bar. The teeth slid tightly between the door and the frame, and I levered it open.
A blast of dry, pungent air hit me in the face.
My nose curled and my eyes squinted as decades-old dust flooded into my lungs.
I coughed and choked, stumbling away from the door. Once I had wiped
the film from my face, I looked into the closet, and a sense of unease washed over me.
The rod and upper shelf of the closet stood empty, but the floor was covered in dozens of pairs of women's shoes.
High heels mainly, colors faded, and bits of leather chewed away by vermin.
They sat in neat rows,
only a few toppled by whatever rodent had crawled over them.
The tip of each one was scraped deeply down to the dark base leather,
heavy grooves shedding the top coat.
It looked like they had been dragged over concrete.
Compton's wife had quite a shoe collection, I thought to myself,
but she didn't take care of them. But no, that thought felt all wrong.
The shoes looked to be in multiple different sizes. Some were much wider
than others. I could tell they had come from different years, different decades most likely.
Black pumps sat by neon and pastel heels. Some of them even had a hand-stitched fashion
that looked like they had come right out of the 1950s. I shut the door and felt my stomach constrict into a tight ball.
It's just a closet full of shoes, I said in my mind. It's just an old house that belonged
to an old man who had a closet full of women's shoes.
Walking out of the master bedroom, my mind reeled.
There had been no other personal effects, only furniture.
I just wanted to finish my inventory and head home.
The dismantling and demolition crew could handle the rest.
I was nearly through the entryway and to the front door
when I saw a final door that I hadn't opened yet.
Hesitantly, I walked over and opened it.
A set of dusty wooden planks
led down into an abysmally dark basement.
A lump bulged in my throat as I peered down.
My mind screamed at me to leave the house,
but I just wanted to finish my inventory and
never have to go back to that unsettling place.
Forcing my feet into motion, I started down the steps and pulled a flashlight from my
belt clip.
The LED beam pierced the darkness and brought the mostly empty basement into focus.
I breathed a sigh of relief,
realizing that there wasn't much there
that needed my attention.
In the far corner of the basement
sat a bulky coal-fired boiler.
I'd only seen two of them intact in the past,
and so my interest overwhelmed
my diminishing sense of dread.
Moving through the darkness,
I approached the boiler and began to examine it. Excited
to see that all of the parts were still in place. There were only a few flecks of rust.
My mind was already making plans on how to extract it and what restoration specialist
to send it to. I knelt and opened the coal door to inspect the inside. Shining the light in, there were still flecks of half-burnt coal.
As the beam darted around the interior, something metallic reflected the light into my eyes.
I winced for a moment before reaching inside and sifting through the ashes.
My hand bumped against something hard.
I grabbed it and pulled it out.
It was the buckle to a belt,
charred and warped from the heat of the coals.
I shined the light into the coal door again and saw more tiny reflections.
As I sifted through the coals, I uncovered a small field of metal items.
More belt buckles, rivets from blue
jeans, broken zippers, melted buttons. I could hear the beating of my heart in my ears. Standing
quickly I turned to leave. Nothing felt right there. I had seen enough and needed to, I
don't know, call the police, maybe? As my flashlight swept
the basement a final time, I saw a final door in the opposite corner of the basement.
The door was slightly cracked, and I could see the edge of a wooden box framed in brass.
My unhealthy curiosity got the best of me, and I changed my path from the stairs to the unexplored
room. Pushing the door open, I shined my light through the room. There were dozens of steamer
trunks, maybe two dozen lined neatly in a cinder block room. I slowly moved through the rows of trunks, inspecting each one.
A heavy metal lock was clasped to the front of each, some still shiny while others had gone over to rust and neglect.
Each lock was looped through the clasp of the chest,
and hanging from each lock was a delicate necklace.
Gold, silver, platinum. Some still shone brightly, while
others had turned as dull as the loop they hung from. My fear renewed as I looked over
the room full of trunks. I staggered backward as my mind raced over all of the strange things
I had seen in the house. The shoes, the burnt
items in the boiler, the necklaces clasped to the locked chests. Nothing there was right.
I stumbled backward when my leg connected with something hard behind me. Crashing down,
I felt my lower half crash through brittle wood. In full panic, I pushed myself to my feet and
aimed my flashlight at the floor behind me. There
was a trunk, old and splintered from my fall. The lock and necklace that had been attached
only moments before sat in the dirt of the floor. Next to it, I saw something I couldn't
make out. Leaning in, I saw they were the black butts of clove cigarettes.
Just beside them, jutting out of the broken corner of the chest, was a hand.
Strips of long dried flesh laced the ivory bones together and a tattered woman's blouse
rested on the skeletal wrist.
I ran from the basement and up the stairs, fighting the urge to vomit.
Bursting through the front, I swallowed lungs full of fresh air as I tried to calm myself.
I pulled my cell phone from my pocket and opened it to call the police, but the signal was weak
and the call wouldn't go through. Jumping in my truck, I fired up the engine and headed toward
Corden to find the police station. As I drove, I saw a bright red notification bubble on my text messages and flipped it open. My wife had
texted me over 20 times while I'd been in the house, the last one nearly two hours ago.
I opened the messages and scrolled through them, just quick notes, checking, asking how the house was. When I finally reached the last message, my heart erupted in fear.
Mr. Compton called and said that you bought the house.
He's traveling out of state to visit family and wanted to drop off a thank you gift on
his way so I gave him our address.
He's outside right now, unloading the most gorgeous steamer trunk I've ever seen.
Well, what'd you think? What happened to the wife? Is she alive?
And what about all those other women? Are they all...
I thought you said this was a ghost story.
It is!
A real ghost story.
I hope not too real.
There's no way.
Right?
Eh, maybe.
I've got a cousin who works with the red, white, and blues.
He and his cop friends trade stories.
When we meet up, he passes them on to me.
He's mostly just trying to scare me.
I think.
Yeah, well, he certainly scared some of us.
And that's just one story.
There's this other one about a guy who went nuts off some bad bread, started talking to
ghosts and stuff, and ended up stabbing his wife.
Oh, and then there's this gingerbread witch type who turned her son into pies.
These are real.
Sure, more real than Van Gogh's ghost piece.
What's Van Gogh's ghost?
Oh, you're smiling. Ha ha ha, very funny.
I thought so.
Yeah, me too.
Sigh.
Music Full Body Chills is an AudioChuck production.
This episode was written by Ryan C. Major and read by David Wheeler.
Intro outro written by David Flowers and read by Ashley Flowers, Idris Jones, Kirsten Lee,
Nathan Noakes, and Chai Chiray.
So what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?
Woo!