Full Body Chills - Deadwood
Episode Date: October 24, 2025A story of three kids who dig towards an unearthly sound.DeadwoodWritten by A.P. Royal.Thanks to our sponsor, HBO Max. You can read the original story at FullBodyChillsPodcast.com.Looking for more ch...ills? Follow Full Body Chills on Instagram @fullbodychillspod. Full Body Chills is an Audiochuck production. Instagram: @audiochuckTwitter: @audiochuckFacebook: /audiochuckllcTikTok: @audiochuck Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Hi, listeners. I have a story I want to tell you.
There was this doctor over at St. Agri's who would kill his patients.
Oh yes, it was madness.
Aren't you afraid the light take might get you?
I'm sorry I didn't listen to you.
I have adrenaline.
I want more of it
I snapped
Totally lost it
He had no idea
What was on those tapes
It was like a song
It's Ollie and the outcast
So gather around
And listen
Close
Close
Close
You weren't looking for anything, really.
Back in those days, it was about pride.
How fast you could travel down Sycamore Avenue on your six-speed
while the world whistled around you.
Flapping of an old Randy Johnson rookie card pinned to your spokes as the last rays of sunlight dripped away.
It was catching fireflies, chasing bullfrogs, and who could stay up the longest.
There was no purpose past burning the hours of boredom, and that's what made the whole situation that much stranger.
The fact that we were the ones to find it.
we were out peddling that day because bobby was livid about something or other that's just how he was
he woke up one morning at his grandparent's place and just never left a sleepover turned into a lifetime
his mom had always been flaky to the point of utter neglect and then at some point at some point
I guess she had bad enough.
After that, and understandably so,
the kid had developed a paper-thin trigger.
It was just one of those days,
and Jenny and I were there trying to help him along.
We took our usual path, stopping here and there.
Bobby had to brandish his old pocket knife
to leave his mark on the neighbor.
like some wild dog.
Jenny collected rocks like trophies and her satchel.
I stopped at speedies to reload on sweets.
It had been the perfect summer day, by our standards,
apart from Bobby's mood.
He barely spoke as sweat dripped from his matted curls
down his beep red, sun-kissed face.
I asked him what was wrong.
But all I got was a dismissive nod of the head to keep riding forward.
But it was getting late, close to curfew.
In typical Bobby fashion, he rolled his eyes and begged us to at least stop at the ravine to skip a few rocks,
before calling it a night.
Capping the day off right, he said.
Jenny and I reluctantly agreed.
But we'd have to hurry.
Already the trees were trading their lush green for dark silhouettes.
Their branches clawing at the last light.
The asphalt fell away to a rugged extension of gravel and dirt
as the last hints of suburbia disappeared with it.
We weaved along as best we could,
avoiding sunken chunks of earth and the exposed roots woven into the hills.
At some point, Jenny's chain bolted its sprocket.
Coding our hands in grease and grime, we helped pop it back onto its track.
But this took time.
She gave Bobby a pleading look, but his expression only hardened.
We weren't going home, he said.
Not yet.
Only once we reached the turnoff did the tension.
and his shoulders seemed to ease.
We skidded our bikes to the dirt
and proceeded into the trees.
The ravine was located up a narrow strip of trail,
a conglomerate of large, jagged rocks
that made it impossible to ride on.
As we zigzagged up the hill,
my lungs began to burn.
Too many happy meals,
and TV dinner trays had piled up atop of each other.
Some ways up the trail, Bobby suddenly clutched his bad ear.
His face bunched in knots.
He crouched down, a quiet groan escaping his chest.
We asked him what was up, but he wouldn't say.
With gritted teeth, he forced himself to his feet and continued to climb.
this time away from our intended path not knowing any better jenny and i followed finally we landed upon a
small level clearing probably a few hundred feet from the ravine bobby circled the spot brow furrowed and still cupped to his ear the field was
was just big enough to fit a large tent and maybe a fire pit, although there was no evidence
of any of that. Just an abrupt absence of trees and a grassy lawn. Jenny placed her hand
on one of the neighboring pines, and my eyes caught a strange pattern on the bark. They were
singed. Black ruffled waves spun around the trees, around the trees, around the
perimeter of the glade, almost like someone had taken a flame thrower and scorched it clean.
A rush of nerves overtook me as Bobby continued to examine the area, a feeling that just
wouldn't settle. Just then, he fell to the ground. Bobby planted the side of his face right up
to the soil, and ant or two crawled up his cheek. Something had gotten.
into him, something primal, relentless. We had to yank him to his feet, and even then, he put up a
fight. He yelled for us to stop, to wait, but daylight was fading fast, and we risked losing
our way home. Eventually, we forced them along, back to the trail, and then to our bikes.
advanced behind us sporadically, with a gaze that was strangely confused.
We rode back, the streetlights and porch lights warning of the hour.
As civilization came into view, Bobby told us what was wrong.
He had heard something in the dirt, though he could.
couldn't say what, whatever it was drew him in.
We vowed to return the next morning, to investigate.
But due to our tardiness, my parents were to ground me for a week.
I was to be afforded few luxuries during this period.
A stack of books in my bedroom.
And if my father was manning the TV,
Some mid-afternoon history documentaries.
I could barely distract from my disappointment.
I moped around the house until evening, when the phone finally rang.
Jenny's voice sounded scattered, anxious.
She told me Bobby had been acting strange that day.
Apparently, they had been digging all day.
Bobby had strapped Jenny's dad's old spade to his backpack,
and they returned to the clearing,
proceeding to dig and dig until Jenny got tired and downright refused.
Bobby was convinced that there was humming,
some kind of black static that he couldn't leave alone.
I figured his hearing aids were just on the fritz.
some sort of short-circuit messing with the frequency, or something.
Bobby had always had health problems, complications, as my folks would say.
I always felt bad, like it was another reason his mother had left.
His ears were one such issue, the left one particularly bad.
His hearing aids had been donated, and they weren't again.
exactly state-of-the-art technology.
They looked more like faded dentures than a medical device.
But technological malfunction or not,
I guess Bobby just couldn't ignore the noise.
The steady whir was driving him insane.
And somewhere in that hole was the source.
At least that's what he claimed.
The forest was where it started,
and it was louder near that field.
But they dug and dug to no avail.
There was nothing.
Still, Bobby wouldn't stop until it stopped.
I felt bad.
I was useless to their plight.
Frustration bubbled up inside me
as I was reminded of my sentencing.
24-hour lockdown, maximum security.
My high school, snot-nosed sister would be waiting for any opportunity to snitch.
It was torture, not being there to help my friends.
I wished Jenny good night and stared off at the ceiling until drowsiness overtook me.
By the weekend, I'd had enough.
Bobby had been begging for help with this place he now called Deadwood.
And I couldn't spend another moment cooped up and bored.
If prisoners could escape their penitentiaries, I could avoid detection for the evening.
I let my friends know about my intentions, with much trepidation from both of them.
I understood
It was a big risk
One they didn't have to take
After some debate
We planned to meet up at Jenny's place
I waited
Until the purr of the TV cut off
I stuffed pillows under my blankets, packed a flashlight in my back, and then tiptoed into the hallway.
The house was off its guard. Fumbling with my keys, I escaped through the back door. I gathered my bike,
stashed under the porch, and strapped on my helmet. I took one last glance back home, quiet,
and lightless, before riding off into the night.
When I arrived, Jenny was shivering in her downcoat.
Bobby gave me a high-five, a weak grin upon his face.
He assured me everything was fine, but something felt off about him.
Like he was there, but really wasn't.
Jenny wore a thin smile of her own, but I could tell she just wanted it to be over.
Her ponytail appeared rushed, the rims of her eyes strained red.
It was this blind childhood allegiance, something that, at that age, you're too young to appreciate.
A bond built on bickering and playful jabs.
Union to fight the lonely summer and ward off playground threats.
Bobby needed us, and we needed each other.
A certain electricity buzzed in the air.
Sparks of danger, strokes of mischief.
Anything past curfew made it exponentially scarier,
but it was exhilarating all the same.
We tried our best to keep to the shadows.
The last thing we needed was for an adult to intervene.
Since the roads were quiet and we knew exactly where to go,
we made it to the trail in record time.
We dropped off our bikes and climbed.
It was a cloudless, blustery evening.
the stars like speckles of diamonds.
Darkness warped our surroundings.
Our flashlights couldn't source out any of the chittering
or rustling of leaves,
and the unknown had left us skittish.
Our only real landmark, the path to the ravine,
seemed to elude us,
and the feeling that we would never make it,
began to spoil our confidence.
Bobby led us, wandering eerily in a concentrated march.
Before we found it, my eyes widened, nearly dropping my light.
The whole Bobby had dug now resembled a small pit.
It filled the entire vacant space, maybe sad,
seven feet wide and deep. Bobby had tied a rope to one of the neighboring trees to lower himself
in, like a coffin at a funeral. The thought made me shiver. This must have taken him a long time.
How many hours did he spend out here? His hand cupped his bad ear again, and he went.
His eyes narrowed, surveying the area.
To be this desperate, this determined, I felt terrible for him.
Just how bad was this mysterious, relentless noise?
Without another word, he grabbed a hold of the rope and began to climb down.
Once grounded, he gestured for me to toss the shovel.
He went to work, grunting as layer by layer of soil was tossed into the air.
Jenny stared down with a look of concern while I beamed my flashlight in between trees.
Once he was out of breath, Bobby wriggled up the rope.
his hair was caked in clumps of mud his face ashy like a coal miner who just came up for air i patted his back as we swapped spots we took turns into the night until our shoulders burned and backs ached we coughed and heaved and yawned as the futility of the exercise began to wear on us
What were we even looking for?
Would we even know when to stop?
Soil rained down in waves,
and my heart began to race when...
I heard something.
The low whirr was like a drum.
a rhythmic pounding from inside of a womb.
It started faint, but as the night wore on, it began to build.
I questioned whether exhaustion had distorted my senses.
The sounds of the forest had heightened our dread.
And now every twig, every branch in the wind, croaked with a voice that was wholly alien.
of course i was hearing things but jenny's face had run pale she heard it too our reactions seemed to bolster bobby's efforts
he stabbed the shovel deeper and deeper clinks echoed throughout the night jenny and i patrolled the perimeter
Jenny acting as a light source, illuminating the pit and all that was inside, and me as guard
with eyes on the forest, the black stains around the neighboring pines. The deadwood
made something in my stomach churn. We stopped when sparks began to fly.
At first, Bobby thought he hit a large rock.
The sound was different, though.
He worked his leverage, trying to shift the object of the place.
Then, as he crashed the shovel into its side,
rubble began to clear.
And what looked like a grooved metal plate started to emerge.
Jenny and I called down, asking if he needed help.
No reply.
He pummeled the ground with heavy strikes, fixated and exhaling with exasperated cries.
There were streaks of tears running down his face.
And that's when I really began to panic.
I had never seen him cry before.
but then as the dirt began to clear a trigger set off inside of me i stared at the object bobby had uncovered
under the glaring flashlight i realized what it was from all those war documentaries bobby ignored my pleas to stop to come back up
then the humming began to radiate through the earth
I could feel every thrum travel through my bones
in my teeth
Jenny screamed his name
he dropped the shovel
hunching down
the humming continued to roar
the ground began to shake
Jenny bellowed from the top of the hole
her hands on the dangling rope
but it was all too late
I instinctively held her back
as she wriggled and snarled and tried
to push me off
Bobby's hand danced
around the center of the plate
our flashlights trembled across the pool
of unforgiving black
my ears rattled and swelled under the merciless drum
my head about to burst
Flashes of Bobby, his hands scraping dirt, something rising.
And then...
A pure, unfiltered pillar of light split the sky in half.
It was sunlight on polished chrome, brilliant and bright as the essence of stars.
But there was no joy behind.
joy behind it. The beam began to engulf him, and all I could make out was his silhouette,
his back to us as he knelt down. It was quicksand, sweeping and relentless, and like the grip
of a black hole, it pulled the boy in. He cried out. Words burned forever in my mind.
Then, all at once, the streak of white fire consumed itself and flew out in a flash.
I woke up surrounded by curtains, bleary-eyed under fluorescent lights.
Every muscle ached.
My skin burned.
But most of all was the pounding in my head, the ringing in my ears.
The doctors believed I had a concussion.
My body was covered in first-degree burns.
They told me I was lucky to be alive.
I'm sure you can imagine the difficult conversations being found next to a makeshift grave in the middle of the woods.
This further compounded by the absurdity of our story, and the fact that Bobby was missing.
The base of the hole had been torched by the blast.
Most of the area had been incinerated, making it impossible to clearly identify a source.
Nothing. Not Bobby, nor any scrap of metal was found within that glade.
It was hit with the kind of heat that took everything with it.
It left a lot of questions unanswered.
Like, how did we survive?
The pragmatic working theory was that someone had planted a bomb,
a flimsy old tank mine, or IED, or something.
But they could never explain
who or why it had been planted or buried so deep or in the middle of the woods where no one would find
and they sure as hell couldn't explain our depiction of events jenny was in much of the same state
as me hurt and hurting i visited her once or twice once she regained consciousness but it was too tragic to see her in that
date, when the scars were that visible.
After what happened, she bounced around schools.
It's especially hard when you're under that kind of spotlight.
No matter how much you try to move on or restart,
there's always someone who's heard something,
who has nothing to do with you or your life,
but somehow knows the worst day you've ever lived.
And then rumor spreads.
I don't blame Jenny for moving away, but I blame myself.
Although she wouldn't say it, I knew she never forgave me, for holding her back, for leaving
Bobby in that pit.
In the end, we just lost touch.
Now, all I had was our childhood memories.
I still thought about him.
Some nights in my dreams, I could damn well hear his voice.
It still struck me as odd that Jenny and I could somehow survive,
while not a single trace or speck of ash was ever found of Bobby.
Nearly three decades had passed.
I was forced back home for my mother's funeral.
I managed to stay away as long.
long as I could, but nostalgia drew me in. It didn't look the same. All of the charred trees
had been chopped down, inspected, and collected as evidence, I presumed. The hole had been
filled, and now new undergrowth assumed the space. But still I knew, this was the
spot. Deadwood. As I approached, the ringing in my ears intensified with a deadly rhythm.
It was the same ringing I had been hearing for years after the incident. I hear it along certain
street corners, playgrounds, alleyways, beaches, graveyards. The sense of it. The
sensation always gripped me with terror.
What was that humming, pulsing, banging?
Were there more places like Deadwood?
The burns on my body began to flare up with an intense itch.
The charred black scars seethed.
My fingers ran along the bumps of bark, sap clinging to my finger.
tips as I caught the marks carved crudely into one of the pines b j c bobby jenny and me i cried with his final words bobby called out for his mother she had died a few years prior to the incident unbeknownst to any of us at the time
he called out her name before reaching in and sometimes i wonder was something reaching back
full body chills is an audio chuck production this episode
episode was written by AP Royal and read by Mike Soporkin. This story was modified slightly for
audio retelling, but you can find the original in full on our website. I think Chuck would
approve.
