Just Creepy: Scary Stories - 4 Scary Deep Woods Horror Stories For A Dark Winter Night (Christmas Edition)
Episode Date: December 23, 2024These are 4 Scary Deep Woods Horror Stories For A Dark Winter Night (Christmas Edition) Linktree: https://linktr.ee/its_just_creepy Story Credits: ►Sent in to https://www.justcreepy.net/ Timestamp...s: 00:00 Intro 00:00:18 Story 1 00:19:08 Story 2 00:38:35 Story 3 00:58:21 Story 4 Music by: ► Myuu's channel http://bit.ly/1k1g4ey ►CO.AG Music http://bit.ly/2f9WQpe Business inquiries: ►creepydc13@gmail.com #scarystories #horrorstories #deepwoods #christmas #forest 💀As always, thanks for watching! 💀
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Pay off your home, travel for life, drive a Ferrari.
In celebration of the world premiere of the Monopoly
Big Board Buckslot slot machine by Aristocrat Gaming,
Yamava Resort and Casino at San Manuel is giving one person a $1.6 million dream package.
The biggest prize in Yamava's history.
Club Serrano members can earn daily instant prizes and secure a spot in the finale May 29.
Don't pass go and own it all. Only at Yamava, celebrating its 40th anniversary.
You win?
Details at yamava.com must be 21-20.
Please gamble responsibly.
Monopoly is a trademark of Hasbro.
Hasbro is not a sponsor of this promotion.
The cold hit me the second we stepped outside.
Sharp and quiet.
Christmas dinner was a memory already.
Too much food, too much heat in that stuffy little living room.
Dan nudged my elbow with a grin, holding up the flashlight like a trophy.
You sure you're ready for this?
Frostbite makes a great Christmas gift.
I rolled my eyes tightening my coat.
I'll risk it.
Just don't drop that flashlight or will end up as frozen statues.
The village felt empty, even for Christmas.
Christmas. The houses sat still, lit faintly by warm yellow glows. Dan flicked on the industrial
flashlight, and its beam cut through the dark like a blade, sweeping across the road ahead.
Everything outside the circle of light looked unnervingly black. We walked in step,
boots crunching against ice and gravel, our breaths curling in the air. I hugged my camera to my
chest. We needed this, I said. It's too quiet in there. I felt like I was suffocating.
exactly why I suggested it.
Dan swung the beam side to side as we veered onto the narrow path that led toward the woods.
This stretch of road always felt lonely at night.
On one side, open fields stretched out, flat and dead-looking beneath the moon.
On the other, the forest loomed, a wall of twisted branches that clawed at the sky,
waiting to swallow anyone who wandered too close.
I thought about the wild boars Dan always teased me about.
It was mating season, and the last thing I wanted was to come face to face with one in the dark.
When we reached the forest's edge, I spotted something ahead, metal glinting faintly in the light.
Dan's beam landed on it, and I grabbed his arm.
What the hell is that?
It was a car, an old battered sedan half sunken into the underbrush like it had been left to die there.
The windows were frosted over, thick and milky.
The longer I looked, the stranger it felt.
Like it didn't belong.
Nobody drove out here.
The path was too narrow, and there were no turnarounds for miles.
Abandoned, Dan muttered, his voice low.
He stepped closer, the light catching more details.
Dirt streaked windows, deep scratches along the driver's side door.
Why would someone leave a car here? I said.
My voice sounded too loud.
Maybe they broke down.
I don't know, Maya. Come on.
Let's keep moving.
but I was already raising my camera.
The scene was too strange to ignore.
I adjusted the settings and motioned for Dan to aim the flashlight at it.
Just hold it still for a second.
This is...
Weird.
It'll make a great shot.
The beam wobbled a little, but I focused on the car,
framing it against the twisted forest backdrop.
The flash popped, bright and jarring,
and for half a second, the entire scene was lit up in stark white.
When the light faded, I caught a glimpse of something past the car, in the trees.
A shape.
Dan? I whispered, lowering the camera.
He didn't hear me. I turned to find him standing completely still.
Flashlight aimed at the ground.
Maya, his voice was barely audible. Don't freak out, okay?
Why would I...
Someone standing behind us.
I froze. The air turned to ice in my lungs.
What?
He didn't move, didn't turn, just shifted the flashlight slightly, enough to widen the beam,
and there, maybe 20 feet away, in the middle of the path we just walked, stood a man.
I couldn't see his face.
He stood just beyond the reach of the light, wrapped in shadow, but I could make out his shape,
tall and thin, head tilted slightly, as if he were studying us.
I tried to speak, but my throat had locked itself shut.
Dan managed first.
Hey!
His voice cracked.
You okay, man?
You need something?
The man didn't move, didn't respond.
He just stood there.
Dan tightened his grip on the flashlight.
Maya, let's go.
I was already backing up, my pulse thundering in my ears.
The man shifted, not forward, but backward, sinking step by step into the darkness like a ghost.
The way he moved was wrong, slow.
but deliberate, as if he wanted us to know he was leaving, or waiting. Dan grabbed my arm,
tugging me along the path. Come on, don't look back, just walk. And we did, fast. I clutched my
camera to my chest, every muscle in my body screaming at me to run, but I couldn't. I felt him
behind us, felt his eyes, the silence where footsteps should have been. Dan, I whispered breathless.
What if he's following us? He's not.
But he didn't sound sure.
We hit the end of the path, where the first weak glow of a streetlight appeared.
I turned just for a second, and my stomach dropped.
The car had moved.
The headlights flashed on, briefly, blindingly, before the engine coughed to life.
The car crept forward, grinding against the dirt, but then stopped.
Just stopped.
The headlights turned off again, and the man's silhouette appeared behind the wheel,
staring down the path toward us.
Is he leaving?
I asked, voice trembling.
Dan didn't answer.
We didn't wait to find out.
We sprinted the last stretch to the village,
not stopping until we reached the first house,
where the light felt safe and warm.
I turned one last time, panting,
and saw the faint outline of the car,
still parked at the edge of the forest,
its body hidden in shadow.
Dan grabbed my hand and pulled me away.
Neither of us spoke until we were,
back inside, the locks turned tight. I leaned against the door, the weight of what we'd seen
sinking in. Dan, I finally whispered, yeah? That car, it didn't belong there. Dan didn't say anything.
He just stared out the window, past the fields, and toward the black edge of the forest.
And I couldn't stop thinking about the man, how he'd been standing there. The next morning,
everything looked normal, like the woods hadn't swallowed a car, and a man hadn't stood there in the dark,
watching us like we were lost pets. I tried to convince myself it had been nothing, a bad dream
stirred up by too much food and too little sleep, but I knew better. Dan didn't say much over
breakfast. He just sat at the table, chewing his toast like it was chewing him back, and stared at the
window. Outside the forest loomed in the distance. The trees thick and dark, even under the trees thick and dark,
the weak winter sunlight. I finally broke the silence. We need to go back. Dan looked up, blinking.
Go back where? To the woods. To the car. We didn't imagine that, Dan. I didn't say we imagined it.
He avoided my gaze, but I caught his hands, clenched into fists on the table.
Dan had always been the practical one, never prone to paranoia or flights of fancy. That's why
seeing him rattled, unnerved me more than anything. You don't want to know who that was?
I pressed. What he was doing there? I want to forget it happened, Maya. That's what I want.
But I couldn't. Something about that man, how silently he moved, how he melted into the shadows,
was burned into my mind. So, after lunch, I convinced Dan to go back. Just for a minute,
I said, grabbing my camera and pulling on my coat. We'll check it out in daylight. I just
I need to know. Dan sighed but grabbed the flashlight anyway. It didn't feel like overkill.
Not after last night. The walk back felt completely different in the light.
The path was smaller than I remembered. Frost-covered gravel and muddy patches where the sun had
started to thaw the ice. Birds chirped in the distance. Everything seemed too normal,
like the forest was gaslighting us. When we reached the spot where the car,
had been, I stopped short. It was gone. See? Dan said, sounding almost relieved. He left,
told you we shouldn't have come back. But I stepped closer, staring at the dirt where the tires had
been. There were faint impressions still there, the ground frozen and soft at the edges. You could see
where the car had backed up, deep ruts in the mud, then just disappeared. Where did he go? I muttered.
Dan turned away.
Maya, let's...
Hold on.
Something else caught my eye.
A bit of fabric, small and pink,
caught on a bramble a few feet from the tire marks.
I bent down and pulled it free.
It was a glove, a child's glove,
tiny and muddied, one fingertip torn.
Dan, I said, holding it up.
He squinted, his face darkening.
Where'd that come from?
I don't know, but...
I trailed off as something shiny caught the sunlight.
a few feet further into the brush. I moved toward it, ignoring Dan's grumble of protest. My boots sank
into the wet ground, brambles clawing at my pants as I pushed into the undergrowth. What I found made
my stomach turn. It was a knife, rusted and buried halfway into a tree trunk. Someone had jammed it
there with enough force to leave the bark splintered around the blade. A hunting knife, but old,
like it had been sitting there for weeks, maybe months. Jesus, Dan.
whispered behind me,
What the hell is this?
I turned slowly, heart pounding in my ears.
Someone was here, someone's been here a while.
And then Dan spotted the hole.
About ten feet deeper into the woods,
a shallow depression had been dug into the dirt.
It was ringed with footprints, boot prints,
and surrounded by empty bottles, plastic bags, and scraps of fabric.
A sleeping bag sat bunched in the center,
damp and stained with something dark.
Dan didn't say a word. He just stood there, staring at it.
What is this? I whispered, my voice shaking. Is someone living here? Dan shook his head.
No, not living, hiding. I stared back at the footprints circling the sight, the broken sticks,
the knife wedged into the tree. My skin prickled. Do you think he was watching us last night?
From here? Dan grabbed my arm, hard enough to make me wince. We're leaving.
Now. Back home. I didn't wait this time. I called the police immediately explaining everything.
The car, the man, the strange camp in the woods. I told them about the knife, the glove,
the sleeping bag. The officer on the phone sounded calm, but he asked me to describe the car in
detail, color, make, the little I could remember. An hour later an officer called back.
We checked the area, he said. There's no car, but we found the spot you'd
described, we're going to keep looking. I exhaled shakily, but before I could thank him, he added,
here's the thing. A car matching your description was reported stolen from the city a week ago,
six hours away. Stolen, I repeated. Yes, he said. His voice dropped lower, like he didn't want
anyone else to hear. The owner's missing. They haven't been seen in over two weeks. I felt the
blood drained from my face. Dan sat across from me, watching as I clutched the phone tighter.
We'll keep you updated, the officer finished. But listen, stay out of those woods for now.
People hide in places like that for a reason. He hung up, leaving me in a silence that suddenly
felt alive. Dan shifted in his chair. What did they say? I swallowed hard. The car was stolen,
and the owner, they're missing. Dan's face paled.
For a while, neither of us spoke.
I looked out the window where the edge of the forest stared back, dark and still.
That night I swore I heard footsteps outside the house.
They started soft, almost imagined, but then came closer, boots pressing slowly against the frost-covered grass.
I sat up in bed, heart pounding.
Dan was already awake beside me, clutching the flashlight from the night before.
Did you hear that? I whispered.
He nodded, eyes locked on the window.
we didn't move, didn't breathe.
And then the footsteps stopped, right beneath the window.
The flashlight flickered in Dan's shaking hand, its beam aimed at the curtain.
Neither of us dared to pull it back.
And then, finally, the sound came again.
A slow, deliberate retreat, back into the woods.
I didn't sleep at all that night.
It was two nights later when the real terror set in.
Dan and I hadn't spoken much since the police called.
there wasn't anything left to say.
We kept busy.
Watch TV we didn't really follow.
Pretended we weren't both jumping at every sound outside.
But that feeling, the one that lingered from the forest, hadn't left.
I couldn't shake it.
Every time I looked at the window or heard a creek on the floorboards, my stomach clenched.
We'd checked the locks twice, sometimes three times before bed.
Dan had even gone outside to make sure the shed and garage were bolted shut.
and every night we slept with the flashlight on the bedside table, its beam ready to pierce the
dark at a moment's notice. It made us feel safer. That night, though, something changed. I woke up
suddenly, gasping like I'd been dragged out of a nightmare, except there had been no dream,
just a feeling, heavy and suffocating, that something was wrong. The room was pitch black.
I reached for the flashlight, but my hand hit empty wood.
flashlight wasn't there. I froze every inch of me on high alert. Dan? I whispered my voice
hoarse. He shifted beside me. Hmm? The flashlight, but where is it? He sat up, groggy.
It's... His hand fumbled for the table and froze, just like mine had. Where the hell? We stared at
each other, eyes wide. We hadn't moved it. It had been there when we went to sleep. The sound came
And then, a soft tap, tap, tap against the window. Deliberate, slow. I couldn't move. My body refused to obey me. Dan turned first, his breath shallow, his face pale in the faint moonlight filtering through the curtains. The tapping stopped. And then, impossibly a beam of light swept across the window. It was a flashlight, our flashlight. I gasped, choking on the air. Dan shot out of bed and grabbed my arm. Stay here.
he whispered. No, I said panic rising. Dan, don't. But he was already moving, stalking toward
the window. His hands hovered over the curtains, hesitating. Then without warning, he yanked them
open. The flashlight beam shone directly into our bedroom. It hovered there, motionless,
blinding us for a moment, and then tilted downward toward the figure holding it. There he was.
Standing at the edge of our yard, just past the garden. It was the man from the woods,
the same tall, thin silhouette, his face hidden beneath the shadow of a hood.
His body was unnaturally still, like he'd been planted there, rooted to the spot.
He held the flashlight pointed upward now, as though showing it to us, as though taunting us.
Dan dropped the curtain like it burned him.
Call the cops, he whispered, his voice shaking.
I scrambled for my phone, my fingers trembling so badly I could barely type in the passcode.
It rang once, twice.
Dan moved to the front door, grabbing the bat we kept behind the coat rack.
Stay upstairs. I mean it, Maya.
No, Dan, stop, I hissed.
But he was already descending the stairs.
Flashlight gone. Bat in hand.
The operator finally answered.
911, what's your emergency?
There's someone outside my house, I blurted.
He's standing in my yard watching us.
He has our flashlight.
He has our flashlight. He's.
Stay calm, ma'am. Is your door locked? Yes. Is the person still outside? I peeked out the curtain again.
The man was gone. The yard stood empty, still blanketed in frost and silence. I pressed a hand to my
mouth, a wave of nausea washing over me. He's not there anymore, I whispered. The operator asked me
to hold, but I didn't listen. I stumbled downstairs, heart pounding in my ears. Dan was in the living
room. The bat clutched in his hands, staring at the front door. He's gone, I choked out. Dan,
he's gone. Dan didn't turn to look at me. He just nodded, still staring at the door. I stepped
closer and saw it. The flashlight, our flashlight, was lying on the welcome mat. I couldn't
breathe. Dan didn't move. The beam was off now, but the handle sat there clean and cold, placed
perfectly in the center of the mat like an offering. Did you see him leave?
I whispered.
Dan shook his head.
His knuckles white around the bat.
No, I didn't hear anything.
The police arrived 20 minutes later.
They searched the yard, the shed, the perimeter of the house.
But there were no footprints,
just faint disturbances in the frost that led back toward the trees.
Toward the forest.
One officer handed me the flashlight.
You're sure it's yours?
I nodded weekly.
We brought it to the woods two-nightly.
ago. It, it disappeared. The officer glanced toward the tree line, his expression hard to read.
We'll patrol the area tonight, he said, but you two need to stay inside, lock your doors.
If you see anything else, don't go outside. Call us immediately. The rest of the night passed in a
sickening blur. Dan didn't sleep. Neither did I. The flashlight sat on the table like a cursed object.
I couldn't look at it without imagining him standing there, holding him.
it, pointing it at the window. Just before dawn, I heard it again, the soft, deliberate tap,
tap, tap, only this time it came from the back door, and I swear to God whoever it was
whistled before disappearing into the dark. Christmas Eve was supposed to feel magical. It always
had for me. Warm houses full of people you only see once a year, tables sagging under plates of food,
the kind of laughter that could shake the walls. That's what the night had been. Perfect.
I spent hours at my uncle's farmhouse, tucked deep in the country, where snow dusted the
trees, and the fireplace roared loud enough to drown out the Christmas music. I watched Emily,
her first time meeting the extended family, fit in like she'd been there for years. She even won two
rounds of poker, probably thanks to my cousin's inability to bluff when flirting. She'd had her fair
share of spiked eggnog. Too much, really. By the time we were read.
ready to leave, she was warm and giggling, half asleep on her feet. That's when I took the keys.
I didn't mind. I knew the roads home like the back of my hand. Emily slumped into the passenger
seat as I eased her car down the driveway, headlights slicing through the dark. It's hard to explain
how empty those roads felt, just long stretches of pavement surrounded by black woods, and the occasional
clearing where a farmhouse would sit like a lonely ship on a sea of snow. No streetlights.
no traffic, nothing but me and the hum of the engine. Emily dozed beside me, breathing slow and
steady, her head lolling against the window. The deeper we drove, the quieter the world seemed to get.
Highway 117 was my old friend, miles of nothing connecting forgotten towns. I could have driven
it blindfolded, but that night felt different. Maybe it was the cold creeping into the car
despite the heater blasting. Maybe it was the way that
the trees seemed thicker than I remembered. Their branches hanging low like they were trying to
block out the sky. We reached Cedar Creek just after midnight. The road dips there, a steep
plunge into a gully where an old bridge crosses the creek at the bottom. The bridge was nothing
special, rusted guardrails, wooden planks reinforced with asphalt, but something about that
spot always felt wrong, like the air changed when you crossed it. I didn't mention it to
Emily, of course. She was awake now, blinking grogly and rubbing her eyes.
Almost home, I said, trying to sound cheerful. She gave me a sleepy smile and nodded.
That's when it happened. Out of nowhere, something shot across the road, a flash of red and white
at the edge of the headlights. I slammed the brakes. The tire shrieked on the frozen pavement,
and Emily yelped, grabbing the dashboard. The car skidded.
jerking to a stop just shy of the shoulder.
My heart hammered against my ribs.
The echo of the brakes ringing in my ears.
What the hell was that? I blurted.
My voice too loud in the sudden silence.
Emily was wide-eyed clutching her seatbelt.
Did you see that?
I nodded, throat dry.
Yeah, yeah, I saw it.
What was it?
I didn't know.
It had been too fast, a shape, something human-sized.
But the way it moved, it wasn't right.
It wasn't right. There was no stumble, no hesitation. It shot across the road like it knew exactly
where it was going. A deer? Emily offered weekly, but we both knew better. I stared out at the dark
forest beyond the road. The high beams barely touched the tree line, just enough to reveal
twisted trunks and branches like reaching hands. My stomach churned. I'm going to check it out,
I said before I could stop myself. What? Emily grabbed my arm.
No, no, we're not doing that. Just drive. Let's go. Someone could be hurt, I said, though I wasn't
sure I believed it. Maybe I was trying to convince myself that's why I was getting out.
My gut told me to leave, to forget it, but I couldn't shake the feeling that something,
or someone, was still out there. I turned the car around, pointing the headlights back at the
stretch of road where I'd seen it. Emily stayed silent, arms crossed tightly over her chest,
eyes darting nervously to the trees. I flicked on the high beams, and the world seemed to shrink to the
bubble of light in front of me. Beyond it was endless dark. I stepped out of the car, the cold slamming into me
like a wall, my breath fogged in the air, hanging there like a ghost as I shut the door behind me.
The silence was unbearable. There were no insects, no wind, no distant cars, just the faint hum of the
engine and the snow crunching under my boots as I walked toward the woods.
Daniel, Emily called softly from the car, please don't. I ignored her. I don't know why.
I stood at the edge of the road, staring into the forest. My pulse pounded in my ears.
I felt like I was being watched, though I couldn't see anything, just shadows and branches that
twisted into shapes my brain kept trying to turn into people. Then the horn blared. It was deafening.
endless blast that made me jump out of my skin. I spun toward the car, blinking against the glare
of the headlights. Emily had her hand pressed hard on the horn. Her eyes locked on something past me.
My blood turned to ice. I turned slowly, following her gaze. There, standing ten feet into the trees,
was a man. At first he didn't seem real. He was so still, like part of the forest had grown into the
shape of a person. His skin was pale, almost gray, smeared with dirt and streaks of something
darker. His chest was bare, naked, and he stood barefoot on the snow. But the thing that stuck out
the most was the Santa hat perched on his head. Bright red, tilting slightly like some twisted
joke. He held something in his right hand. It took my brain a moment to register what it was,
a machete. The blade caught the light from the car, glinting
just enough to make my stomach drop. He smiled, not a friendly smile, a wide, slow, knowing smile that
didn't reach his eyes. He raised his left hand and waved at me, slowly, deliberately, like he'd been
expecting me. I don't remember running back to the car. I don't remember starting the engine or
slamming the door. All I know is Emily screamed, drive! And I did. The Santa hat was the last thing I saw.
A splash of red disappearing into the trees as we sped away.
Emily's screaming filled the car as we tore down the highway.
My hands were white-knuckled on the wheel.
Every muscle in my body locked and shaking.
I didn't dare look in the rear-view mirror.
I didn't want to see him.
It standing on the side of the road.
Waiting.
Watching.
What the hell was that?
Emily's voice cracked.
She was curled up in the passenger seat.
Her knees pulled to her chest.
Her hands trembling so badly she had to clench them into fists.
Daniel, what the hell was that?
I couldn't answer.
My chest felt tight, like I couldn't get enough air.
The Santa hat.
That goddamn hat.
I had seen the machete.
I had seen his face.
And somehow the smile, that slow, deliberate grin, was the worst of it.
Like he knew me.
Like he'd been expecting me.
He waved, I said, my voice hoarse.
My words didn't even sound like my own.
He waved at me.
Shut up, Emily snapped, her voice sharp with fear.
Just shut up and drive.
So I did.
I drove.
The dark pressed in from all sides,
and the headlights felt pitiful against the black of the forest.
I swear the woods looked thicker now.
The branches huddled close like they were whispering to each other.
I kept expecting to see him again,
stepping out from the trees,
grinning, machete glinting in the light.
My pulse didn't slow until I finally saw the glow of Emily's house in the distance.
Street lights, porch lights, the faint orange tint of a living room window,
civilization. My foot was shaking so hard on the gas pedal that I almost missed her driveway.
I swerved in, throwing the car into park and killing the engine.
Neither of us moved. The only sound was our breathing, ragged and shableness.
I glanced at Emily. Her eyes were wide and wet with tears. Her face pale. She wasn't looking at me.
She was staring out the windshield back toward the road. Inside, I said. Let's get inside.
She nodded wordlessly, and we bolted from the car like it might explode. My boots hit the
gravel and the night air felt sharper here, cleaner, but colder. My hand shook as I jammed
her keys into the lock. Once we were in, I slammed the door shut behind us, turned the deadbolt,
and pressed my back against the wood, like it might somehow keep the man, that thing, outside.
The house was silent except for the ticking of a clock somewhere deeper inside. Emily sank onto the
couch, dropping her face into her hands. What did we just see? She whispered through her fingers.
I didn't answer. I couldn't. My legs were trembling and I had to sit. I dropped. I
into the chair opposite her and just stared at nothing. My brain refused to catch up to what had
happened, the dark shape sprinting across the road, the man, the hatchet, smiling at me like we were
old friends, and the wave, that slow, deliberate wave. Emily looked up. Daniel, she said, her voice
trembling. When you got out of the car, I met her eyes. Yeah? She swallowed hard, her throat
working like she didn't want to say the words. He wasn't in front of us. He wasn't where you were
looking. My mouth went dry. I saw him, she continued, her voice barely above a whisper.
While you were staring into the trees, he was behind you. He came out of the woods further down
the road. I saw him step out, and he started walking toward you. So quiet. The machete was
raised, Daniel, like he was going to. She broke off, her voice catching.
her hands curled into her sweatshirt sleeves, gripping the fabric like it might keep her steady.
I felt like I was going to be sick. She nodded, fresh tears sliding down her cheeks.
You didn't see him. He was so close. I hit the horn because I didn't know what else to do.
I stared at her, my heart hammering in my chest. My brain played the scene back over and over,
me at the edge of the woods, staring into nothing, while behind me, right behind me, right.
behind me. That man was closing in, and I hadn't heard him. Not a twig snapping, not a footfall,
nothing. Jesus, I whispered, slumping back in the chair. We sat in silence for a long time.
The clock ticked endlessly, counting down to something I didn't want to think about.
Finally, Emily stood up. We have to call the cops. I didn't argue. I grabbed the phone,
hands still shaking, and dialed.
The cops arrived about an hour later, two of them.
Officer Daniels and Officer Ruiz.
They were polite, but they didn't hide their skepticism well.
We told them everything, the man in the Santa hat, the machete, the way he had waved and vanished back into the trees.
Ruiz took notes, barely looking up from his notepad.
Daniels kept shifting his weight like he couldn't wait to get back in the squad car.
It was probably a drifter, Daniels said finally.
methhead maybe you get him sometimes in the woods out here i stared at him a drifter did you hear what i said
he waved at me he smiled drifter's smile too daniels replied with a shrug emily's face was pale again
and the machete the officers exchanged a glance ruiz sighed look we'll drive out there check the bridge
if he's out there he won't last long not in this cold the words made my skin crawl if he's
out there. And just like that, they were gone, a promise to call if they found anything,
and two retreating taillights disappearing down the road. Emily locked every window in the house
after they left, even though I was sure we were safe now. I told her it was over, just a random
psycho, a freak incident. But as I lay awake that night, staring at the ceiling, my mind
kept drifting back to the man's face, that horrible grin, the way he tilted his head,
the Santa hat perched on his filthy hair. I couldn't stop thinking about how he had waved,
not like a stranger, not like a man caught in headlights. No, he had waved at me like he knew me,
like he'd been waiting for me. I thought time would bury that night on Cedar Creek Bridge.
I thought after a while it would feel like some hazy nightmare. A bad story I'd tell once or
twice at parties, embellished until it became something harmless. That's what I told myself.
That's what I wanted.
But some things don't stay buried.
It's been years since Emily and I drove down Highway 117,
since I stared into the trees and saw him smiling back at me.
Life moved on.
The relationship ended, as young relationships do.
I moved away, started fresh somewhere far from the empty roads of Oregon's backwoods.
And then, like some cruel trick, life brought me back.
Two months ago, I took a job in my old hometown. It was good money, close to family. I told myself I'd
outgrown the fear that had gripped me all those years ago. That man, the Santa Hat, the machete.
It had all been some deranged drifter playing games. He was probably dead in a ditch somewhere.
That's what I wanted to believe. But here I was. Driving home on Christmas Eve, alone.
The road looked the same as it always had, black as tar, no traffic, no light except the faint glow of my high beams.
The snow was falling now, fat flakes swirling in the beams of my headlights, coating the road in a thin, treacherous layer.
I turned off the radio.
I didn't know why, maybe because it felt wrong to hear someone crooning about peace on earth while I drove this stretch of road.
The closer I got to Cedar Creek, the quieter the world seemed to grow.
It was like stepping into a bubble of silence.
My tires rolled over the snow, making soft, muffled sounds.
I came to the hill.
The steep descent into the gully looked the same.
I felt it in my chest, the memory of that drop, the place where it happened.
The bridge waited at the bottom, a flat, black smear across the snow.
My hands tightened on the wheel.
I told myself to breathe.
I'd driven this road before, dozens of times since I came back.
Nothing had happened. Nothing would happen. But still, my eyes flicked toward the woods.
And there it was. It was just a glimpse, a flash of red, deep in the trees, off to the right.
I nearly drove off the road trying to convince myself I hadn't seen it. It was probably a piece of
trash, a bit of cloth snagged on a branch. My imagination, I didn't stop. But as I rolled onto
the bridge, I realized how much I was holding my breath.
The car's headlights cut through the darkness.
The bridge itself was narrow.
The guardrails rusted and brittle with age.
Beyond them, the creek was a sliver of frozen blackness.
I could feel it under me, waiting.
Something moved.
It was quick, barely there.
Just past the reach of the headlights.
I slammed on the brakes.
The car skidded to a stop in the middle of the bridge.
My heart was pounding so hard I could feel it in my throat.
The headlights carved pale slashes.
into the trees on the other side of the bridge, their beams breaking against the trunks.
Everything was still, too still. I leaned forward, squinting into the dark. My breaths fogged the
windshield, and I wiped at it with my sleeve. I wasn't sure what I was looking for, maybe nothing,
maybe something I didn't want to see. And then I saw him, the man. He was standing just beyond
the guardrail, barely 20 feet away. My headlights caught him full on.
washing out his face until it looked like a blank mask but i knew it was him i knew it from the way he stood still as a statue shoulders slumped slightly forward like he was waiting for me to see him
and on his head oh god on his head was the same filthy santa hat it was tilted to one side and the white trim was dark and wet with grime his bare skin was a sickly gray streaked with dirt that looked black in the light his feet were bare planted firmly in the snow
but he didn't move, didn't flinch.
He just smiled.
The same smile as before,
like I was an old friend who'd just stumbled back into town.
I couldn't breathe, I couldn't think.
I gripped the wheel so hard my knuckles burned.
My eyes darted to his right hand,
and there it was, the machete.
Its blade hung low, almost brushing the snow.
And then he waved, a slow, lazy wave like he was taunting me,
like he'd been waiting for me all this time.
I slammed my foot on the gas, tires screaming as they fought for traction.
The car shot forward, and I didn't look back.
I couldn't.
My whole body was shaking, and I could barely keep the wheel steady as I tore up the hill.
I didn't stop, not until I was miles away, the bridge a distant nightmare swallowed by darkness.
That night, I sat in my living room with every light in the house on.
The front door locked and double-checked.
My heart hadn't stopped racing.
I couldn't get his face out of my head, that smile.
I thought about what Emily had said all those years ago.
He was already there.
He was behind you.
Had he been waiting for me tonight?
All these years later had he just known.
I didn't sleep.
But as I sat there in the silent house,
staring at the curtains that didn't quite cover the window,
I swore I saw it again, just a flicker,
like a shadow moving where it shouldn't.
A splash of red.
I didn't check.
I didn't dare.
Some nights, when I'm on that road again, I don't even let myself blink.
I keep my eyes straight ahead and my foot heavy on the gas.
I don't care what I see out of the corner of my eye, deep in the trees.
But I know he's there.
And sometimes, when the night is quiet enough, I swear I can hear it,
a slow, deliberate knock on the glass and a soft voice whispering.
Merry Christmas.
It was Christmas Eve when I made the mistake of going into it.
to the woods. The snow had fallen in sheets all day, piling up in perfect, undisturbed mounds outside
my parents' house, the kind of snow that blankets everything, and makes the world unnervingly quiet.
Growing up here, just outside a tiny mountain town, I was used to winters like this. Back then,
the silence felt magical. Now it just felt heavy, like something was holding its breath. We just
finished dinner, the house warm with the smell of roasted ham and pine from the old wood stove.
My parents sat on the couch, mumbling about the weather and the storm expected later tonight.
I don't know what got into me, restlessness maybe, but the idea hit me like an itch I couldn't
scratch. The old trail, the one I used to walk as a kid. I stood up, pulled on my boots and coat,
and told him I was going for a quick walk. You're kidding, right? My dad asked. His brow first. He's
road as he sipped his whiskey. It's Christmas Eve, Eli, don't be stupid, my mom added. She wasn't
smiling. I'll be back in an hour, just the trail to the creek, I said. It's not like I don't
know the way. My dad shrugged, mumbling something under his breath, but my mom shot me a look
that made me hesitate at the door. It was weird, almost like she knew something I didn't,
but I brushed it off. The cold hit me like a slap as I stepped outside. The air, the air,
sharp and thick with the smell of snow. For a second, I stood there in the dark, my breath
turning to clouds in the beam of my flashlight. The woods stretched ahead of me, tall black
shadows standing perfectly still under their snow-heavy branches. I could hear the creak of ice
in the wind, the distant sound of something dripping, and then silence. The trail was barely
visible beneath the snow, but my boots found it instinctively. I used to know every step of this place.
steeply down through the forest, narrow enough that I had to duck under the occasional low-hanging
branch. The air was colder here, sharper, like the trees held the wind hostage. About halfway down,
I stopped to listen, nothing. Not a bird, not a branch, not a damn thing. It was so quiet my
ears buzzed with it. The woods had always been quiet in winter, but this was different, unnatural,
almost like the forest was waiting. I shook it off and kept moving, pushing deeper into the
trees. Eventually the creek came into view, a thin sliver of ice-covered water, cutting through the
landscape like a scar. The old logging cabin sat just beyond it, an abandoned rotting relic my friends and I
used to dare each other to explore. It looked smaller than I remembered. That's when I saw it.
At first, it looked like a lump of snow hanging from a branch across the creek. I shone my flashlight at it,
and my heart dropped. A rabbit.
strung upside down its body stiff and frozen a noose of twine digging into its ankles i swallowed hard it was fresh its throat had been slit clean the blood frozen into thin black lines that traced down its fur
i turned quickly scanning the woods with my flashlight someone had to have done this recently to-day maybe even to-night the thought made my chest tighten i'd grown up here spent years in these trees i'd never seen ever seen these trees i'd never seen this recently i'd never seen this recently today maybe even to-night the thought made my chest tighten i'd grown up here spent years in these trees i'd never seen
seen another soul this deep in the woods. Who would even come out here in the middle of winter?
A sound broke the silence. Clang. I froze. Clang, clang, clang, clang. It was a bell,
low and heavy, ringing from somewhere in the distance to the north. My flashlight trembled in
my hand as I scanned the trees, but there was nothing there, just the shadows shifting under the
snow. I tried to tell myself it was nothing, a cowbell maybe, or someone's dog, but deep down,
I knew better.
There were no farms out this far, no houses,
and the bell wasn't ringing randomly.
There was a rhythm to it, slow, deliberate, wrong.
I stepped back, my boot crunching hard in the snow.
The sound stopped.
The silence rushed back in, thicker now,
pressing against my ears like cotton.
I turned around and headed back up the trail,
faster this time.
I told myself I was just being paranoid,
that it was probably some hunter messing around.
But then I saw it, not the rabbit, another one.
This one was sprawled across a stump, its fur stripped clean,
its limbs spayed out unnaturally, almost as though it had been arranged.
My flashlight shook as I stepped closer and realized something else.
Boot prints.
Fresh ones.
Deep and large circling the stump.
I felt like the air had been sucked from my lungs.
I spun around scanning the dark.
darkness. My flashlight flickered, and for one terrifying second, I thought I saw a shadow move
between the trees. I stopped breathing. The bell started again. Clang, clang, clang,
closer. My heart hammered in my chest and I bolted. I didn't care if I tripped or if I broke my
ankle. I just needed to get out. The snow seemed deeper now, grabbing at my boots,
slowing me down. I could hear the bell following me, the sound growing louder.
Faster. When I reached the top of the trail, I didn't stop. I burst into the yard, my chest heaving,
and ran straight into the house. My mom looked up from the couch, startled, while my dad stood up
alarmed. What the hell happened to you? He barked. I couldn't answer. I just turned and locked the
door. From the kitchen window I stared into the woods, half expecting to see someone step out of the
trees, but there was nothing, just snow falling in thick, heavy flakes, coating the world in white.
Somewhere in the distance, I swore I still heard it. Clang, clang, clang, clang. I barely slept that night.
Every time I closed my eyes, I heard it, the ringing, slow and deliberate like a clock counting down.
Clang, clang, clang, clang. I kept telling myself it was in my head. It had to be. The woods were
empty, nothing but snow and shadows. My parents didn't hear anything after I came back last night,
so what the hell was I hearing now? By morning it didn't matter. The sound was gone, and I decided
to chalk it up to stress. Too much Christmas ham, too much nostalgia messing with my head. I wouldn't
be going back to the trail. That was for damn sure. Or at least that's what I told myself.
By the time the afternoon rolled around, I started pacing. I don't know why.
The house felt too small, too warm.
The idea of that trail wouldn't leave me alone, though I tried.
I stared out the window, my eyes drawn to the tree line.
It was like the forest was watching me, calling me back.
That's how I ended up in the woods again, walking that same snow-covered trail.
It was stupid.
I knew it was stupid, even as I shoved my boots on and told my dad I just needed some air.
He grunted something in response, but didn't argue.
The snow had stopped falling, and the sky was the kind of pale, flat gray that makes everything feel unreal,
like the world had been drained of color.
The first few minutes weren't so bad.
I could hear the crunch of my boots on the snow, steady and loud, grounding me.
The trail looked the same, though the trees seemed taller today, the shadows between their trunks darker.
I kept my flashlight with me just in case.
The sun set early in winter, and I wasn't planning on staying.
long. It wasn't until I reached the creek that things started to go wrong. The rabbit was gone.
The first one I'd found, the one hanging from the branch, it wasn't there anymore. For a second I thought
maybe I'd gotten turned around, but the broken snow below the tree told me otherwise. Something had
taken it. My throat went dry. I looked around, every muscle in my body tensing like a coiled
spring. The silence was overwhelming again, so deep it made my ears hum, and I heard it,
clang. It was faint at first, somewhere to my right, a single note that broke through the quiet
like glass shattering. Clang, clang, clang, clang, it was unmistakable now, the bell, and it was
closer. I turned toward the sound, holding my breath and scanned the woods with my flashlight,
nothing but snow and trees. I took a step back, suddenly hyper aware of my own
breathing. Then I saw the boot prints. They weren't mine. They were huge, pressed deep into the
snow, fresh enough that the edges were still sharp. They led toward the creek, then off to the right,
into the trees where the light didn't reach. My heart began to hammer against my ribs.
Clang, clang, clang! The bell was louder now, closer, so close I thought I should be able to see it.
I spun around, light trembling in my hand as I swept it across the forest.
movement i stopped cold my breath catching in my throat between two trees far ahead i saw it a figure at first i couldn't make sense of what i was seeing it was tall unnaturally tall its shoulders hunched slightly forward as it stood there still as the trees
It was wearing a long coat, heavy and dark, with a hood pulled low over its face.
Its hands hung at its sides, one gloved hand holding something.
The bell. It swung gently, softly, as if the figure had only just stopped moving.
The light from my flashlight caught the bell's surface.
It was old, rusted, maybe brass, with strange grooves carved into it.
It wasn't like any bell I'd ever seen.
The figure didn't move.
It just stood there, staring at me.
And then it took a step.
The bell rang with the motion.
Clang.
I stumbled backwards, slipping on the snow, but I didn't take my eyes off it.
Hey, I shouted, though my voice came out thin and ragged.
What the hell do you want?
No answer.
It took another step.
The bell swung.
Clang.
My instincts screamed at me to run, but my legs wouldn't move.
I felt frozen.
like I was sinking into the snow, becoming part of the forest.
The figure tilted its head slightly, just enough to make my skin crawl.
Clang, clang, clang.
It was coming toward me, slow and deliberate, the bell ringing in time with its footsteps.
My body finally woke up.
I turned and bolted, tearing back toward the trail, slipping and stumbling through the snow.
The sound of the bell followed me, steady, constant.
I fumbled for my phone as I ran, my frozen fingers barely managing to press the call button.
My mom picked up on the first ring.
Mom!
I gasped, nearly choking on my own breath.
Come now, please.
I need dad.
Tell him to meet me at the trailhead.
Eli?
What's happening?
Where are you?
Her voice cracked.
Someone's out here.
Someone's following me.
I screamed.
The words spilling out as I sprinted.
My flashlight bobbed wildly in my hand,
illuminating nothing but white snow and black trees.
I could hear the bell.
Clang, clang, clang, clang, always the same pace,
like the thing didn't even need to run to keep up with me.
Dad's coming, run, Eli, run.
My mom's voice broke into sobs as I kept moving,
my legs screaming in protest.
Branches snapped to my left.
Footsteps crunched behind me, closer now.
I wanted to look back, but I couldn't.
The bell was deaf.
clang, clang, clang. I burst onto the trail, half sliding as I tried to climb the slope
back toward the trailhead. My legs felt like lead, but I didn't stop. I couldn't stop.
Somewhere up ahead I heard my dad's voice, faint but real. I screamed back, my voice hoarse.
I'm here, I'm here. I didn't dare look behind me. I just kept running, faster than I ever thought
I could. Finally, the beam of my dad's flashlight cut through the trees, and I almost
sobbed with relief. I barreled toward him, feeling the ground give way beneath me as I threw
myself into his arms. Who's out there? He demanded, spinning around to look back at the woods.
From the trees behind us the sound came one last time, clang. It was slow and deliberate,
echoing through the forest like a warning. My dad froze, holding me tightly as we both turned
to stare into the darkness. The woods were still, empty, but I knew it was there.
There. My dad didn't say a word as he pulled me up the final stretch of the trail.
His grip on my arm was iron, but I couldn't stop shaking.
My lungs burned, my legs felt like wet cement, and I kept glancing over my shoulder
convinced that if I looked back long enough, I'd see that thing stepping out of the trees.
The car sat waiting at the edge of the trailhead, its headlights punching through the dark
like desperate hands clawing for something solid.
my mom was inside hunched over the wheel her knuckles white when she saw us she threw the door open get in she shouted her voice was shrill higher pitched than i'd ever heard it before i stumbled toward the car collapsing into the back seat while my dad climbed into the passenger side the door slammed shut and the car lurched forward fish-tailing briefly on the icy road as my mom stomped the gas i huddled against the cold seat every muscle in my body
locked, still half expecting to hear it again.
Clang, clang, clang, clang, but there was only the sound of the tires grinding against the
snow and my own shivering breaths.
No one spoke as we drove.
My dad stared out the passenger window, one hand resting tensely on his knee.
My mom's eyes flicked to the rearview mirror every few seconds.
Her face pinched tight, as if she expected something to lunge out of the woods behind us.
I finally found my voice.
Did you hear it?
The bell?
Neither of them answered for a long moment.
My mom's gaze stayed locked on the road,
but I saw her nod, almost imperceptibly.
My dad turned slightly, his face pale in the glow of the dashboard lights.
I heard it, once, right before I found you.
He didn't look at me when he said it,
and that scared me more than anything.
When we got home, my dad locked the doors behind.
us, double-checking each one like he was sealing us into a bunker. My mom started pacing the living
room, wringing her hands. The Christmas tree sat in the corner, its lights blinking silently,
the ornaments reflecting warped little flashes of color across the room. It felt wrong,
cheerful, and out of place against the suffocating fear pressing down on us.
What the hell happened out there, my dad finally asked. I told them everything. The rattle
the rabbits, the bootprints, the bell, and the figure in the woods, the coat, the hood,
the way it moved. My dad's face darkened, and he glanced at my mom, who was still pacing.
Her eyes were glassy, far away. When I finished, he didn't speak. He just stood up,
grabbed his coat, and disappeared into the garage.
"'What is he doing?' I asked. "'Your father doesn't like not having answers,' my mom muttered.
She sank onto the couch, pressing her fingers into her temples like she was trying to push the fear out of her skull.
I didn't say anything else.
My head was pounding and I felt sick to my stomach, like I'd swallowed ice water that refused to warm.
I wanted to believe this was over, that we were safe here, behind locked doors and solid walls.
But the longer I sat in the living room, the more I felt it.
A wait.
Like something was pressing on the house from the outside.
I pulled back the curtain and looked out the window, even though I didn't want to.
The yard was empty, just a sea of untouched white.
Beyond that, the forest waited, black and endless, stretching into the night.
I told myself I didn't see anything, but the longer I stared, the harder it was to shake the feeling that someone was out there, standing just beyond the tree line.
Watching.
My dad didn't come back inside for nearly an hour.
When he did, he was carrying his old hunting rifle.
He sat at the table, checked the chamber, and set it down in front of him.
The look on his face was hard, more serious than I'd ever seen him before.
Tomorrow I'm going out there, he said.
No, my mom snapped, standing up.
No, you're not.
We need to know what's out there.
You heard it, Bill?
She shot back, her voice rising.
It's not some animal.
It's not some drunk hunter.
There's something wrong with those woods.
with those woods? I didn't know what scared me more, hearing the fear in my mother's voice or the
fact that my dad didn't argue. He just stared at the table, his jaw working silently, like he was
trying to grind the fear down into dust. Eventually, I couldn't take it anymore. What do you think it is?
I asked quietly. Neither of them answered me. That night, I sat in my room with the door locked,
my back pressed against the wall. I kept my phone in my hand, the screen lighting up every
so often to tell me there was nothing new. No messages, no notifications. The hours dragged on.
Midnight came and went, and the house fell into a deep unnatural silence. I swore I could hear every
creek, every faint hum of the furnace, every crack of ice shifting outside. At some point I dozed off,
slumped against the wall. I didn't dream. When I woke up it was because of a sound. Klang,
I froze. It was faint, muffled by the walls in the snow, but it was.
it was there. Clang, clang, clang. My pulse thundered in my ears as I crept to the window,
my legs trembling. I pulled the curtain back an inch and looked out. The yard was empty.
Snowflakes floated lazily to the ground, covering everything in a fresh layer of white.
But something caught my eye. Two faint impressions in the snow, leading from the tree line toward
the house, bootprints. They stopped halfway across the yard. I felt a cold sweat crawled
down my back as I followed the trail with my eyes. At the very edge of the forest, just before the
darkness swallowed everything whole, I saw it, a figure, tall, still, half obscured by the trees.
Its head was slightly tilted, just enough to let me know it was staring back at me.
A gloved hand dangled at its side, holding the bell, which swayed gently, almost as if in greeting,
it raised the bell slowly and rang it once more. I dropped the curtailed.
and stumbled back, my chest heaving. My phone slipped from my hand and clattered to the floor.
In the silence that followed, I swore I could hear it moving closer. Clang, clang, clang, clang.
I didn't hate Christmas, not exactly. I just didn't see the point of it anymore. All the forced
smiles, the garish lights, the empty cheer that buzzed under the surface like a blown out light bulb.
This year, I did what I always do when the holidays get too loud.
I grabbed my coat, laced up my boots, and took off for the woods.
The air bit hard, sharp and cold enough to stab through my layers.
The moon was full, big and pale, spilling silver light over everything like a thin sheet of frost.
I didn't need a flashlight.
The snow did all the work, glowing in the dark like it wanted to show off.
Out there, everything felt distant.
The carolers, the bells, the endless hum of humanity.
The forest stretched on forever, each tree skeletonized by winter, their spindly branches reaching out
like they wanted to snag me and pull me closer.
But I didn't mind.
The quiet was nice, at least at first.
I was a mile in when I noticed the silence had changed.
It wasn't the usual quiet of winter, the kind where the snow swallows sound and leaves you
walking through your own private void.
This was different, heavy.
The kind of quiet that makes you realize.
something's missing. No wind, no crunch of a squirrel darting across a branch, no owl hooting somewhere
deep in the dark. It was as if the whole forest was waiting for something. I kept walking,
kicking up little flurries of snow with each step. It was fine. I told myself it was fine,
but my hands were buried in my coat pockets and they wouldn't stop flexing. That's when I saw them,
tracks. At first I thought they were deer prints, the kind that scatter across
the snow like a child's game of hopscotch, but the more I looked, the less sense they made.
Each print was long, like a stretched out foot, but with sharp clawed edges digging deep into the
snow. Worse, something had been dragging alongside them, a long furrow that cut through the snow,
unbroken, like whatever left the tracks had been pulling something heavy behind it. I stopped walking,
the wind held its breath.
Just a bear, I whispered to myself.
My voice sounded too loud in the empty air,
and I hated how it wavered.
But bears didn't leave tracks like these.
Bears didn't pull things.
And these tracks were fresh, too fresh,
sharp-edged and clear,
not softened or filled in by wind or more snow.
Whoever or whatever left them wasn't far ahead.
I should have turned back.
My gut told me to turn back.
But I didn't. I kept walking. The farther I went, the stranger the woods felt. The trees
seemed taller now. Their limbs twisted as though they'd grown in pain. My boots crunched louder
against the snow, like the sound was bouncing back at me, mocking me for being here. I couldn't
stop looking at the tracks. They veered off the path and into the trees where the darkness
thickened. Something in me wanted to follow them. I didn't know why. And then I saw the
saw it. Up ahead, maybe 20 yards off the path, something stood among the trees. At first it was
just a shape, a tall shadow, too still to be natural. I squinted, hoping my eyes were playing tricks,
that it was just an old tree or a fallen branch perched at a weird angle, but then it moved.
It stepped forward, just enough for the moonlight to catch it. I felt something cold curl around
my chest and squeeze. It wasn't a person, though it had the shape of one. It was tall, too tall,
its head brushing against the lower branches, and it was wearing something red, a coat,
I thought at first. But as it moved again, I saw the coat wasn't fabric. It was skin,
tattered, hanging loose, stitched together like an old rotting quilt. Blackened fur clung to the edges
in clumps, matted with something I didn't want to name. It dragged something behind it. A bag. The
thing's arm stretched impossibly long. Boney fingers curled around the neck of the bag as it pulled it
through the snow. Whatever was inside writhed and shifted like it was still alive. I heard it then.
A faint, muffled thud, like fists punching against fabric. The shape stopped. And then it tilted
its head. It didn't tilt like a person. It was too sharp, too fast, like something had yanked
it sideways. The motion sent a ripple through its body, the loose skin shuddering in the moonlight.
My legs locked. I couldn't move, couldn't breathe. I was sure that if I so much as blinked,
it would lunge at me. I could feel its gaze. Even though I couldn't see its eyes, I knew it was
looking at me. Hello? I choked out. My voice cracked and the word tumble.
out like a mistake. Why the hell had I said that? Why the hell was I still standing there?
The thing didn't speak, but it made a sound. A low, wheezing laugh bubbled out of it, rattling like air
escaping a broken pipe. My body screamed at me to run, but I couldn't. I was rooted there,
watching as it took a step toward me. Its limbs moved wrong, jagged, snapping motions like a
marionette with tangled strings. The bag scraped behind it, leaving a dark streak in the snow.
The laugh came again louder this time, wet, guttural, hungry. Finally, my legs listened. I turned and
ran. The forest exploded around me, the sound of my boots pounding against the snow, my breath
ragged and ripping from my chest. Behind me, I could hear it coming. I didn't dare look back.
I could feel it gaining on me, though, closing the space between us with each uneven step. My
burned my legs screamed but I ran the path was gone now I didn't know where I was
running just that I had to get away branches clawed at my face and arms whipping
against me as I barreled through the dark snow filled my boots freezing my ankles
but I didn't stop somewhere behind me the laughter broke into a screech high and
shrill like metal grinding against metal I ran harder and then I tripped my boot
caught on something buried in the snow and I went down hard I
ice tearing at my palms as I hit the ground. For a second, the world went silent except for my own
gasping breath. Then I heard it, the scrape, right behind me. I turned my head and saw the shadow
looming closer, its ragged coat flapping like wet leather. The bag writhed beside it, twisting violently
against the snow. I scrambled to my feet and bolted again, the trees blurring around me.
The path, the forest, the moonlight, everything dissolved into a single thought pounding through
my head. Run. I don't know how long I ran. Time didn't exist anymore. Just the tearing in my lungs and the
sound of that thing behind me. Scrape, drag, scrape, drag. Every breath burned like fire. My legs felt like
dead weight, stiff with cold. My boot slipping with every step as the snow got deeper.
My brain screamed at me to stop, to hide, to collapse, to do something. But I knew if I stopped,
it would reach me. I chanced a glance over my shoulder, and regret punched me square in the gut.
It was closer. The figure, that thing, loomed larger than before, its skin coat flapping like it was
alive, clinging to the wind in unnatural ways. The bag scraped alongside it jerking and writhing,
and I swore I heard it scream from inside. A voice, a child's voice.
Help me! The words shattered me. My feet faltered just for a second.
But that second was enough to seal the image in my mind, the bag shifting violently,
as if someone, something, was fighting to get out.
I didn't stop.
I couldn't stop.
I tore my gaze forward again, squinting into the darkness.
The tree line had to be close.
I could see something ahead, a faint glow.
My brain latched onto it like a lifeline.
The road, it has to be the road, the glow got brighter as I plowed through the under,
underbrush. My boots caught on roots and snowdrifts, but I forced myself to push forward. The
scrape and drag behind me didn't stop. If anything, it was faster now, pounding in rhythm with my
panicked heartbeat. And then I broke free. The trees spit me out onto an open field,
and I stumbled, almost falling flat on my face. The moon was glaring down at me, making the snow
blindingly bright, but I didn't care. I was out. I turned, breathed,
clawing at my throat, expecting to see it burst out of the woods after me. But it didn't.
It stood at the edge of the forest, just beyond the tree line, its long, spinly body still and
silent. The bag twitched one last time before falling limp. The thing tilted its head again,
watching me. Then slowly, it stepped back into the shadows, disappearing like it was part of the
forest itself. The silence returned. But it didn't feel empty. It felt like it was listening.
I turned and bolted for the glow.
A porch light, thank God, a house on the other side of the field.
My legs screamed as I ran, but I didn't stop until I was pounding on the door, shouting for help.
When the door finally opened, I nearly collapsed inside, gasping, shaking, and wild-eyed.
I didn't sleep that night.
I locked every door, pulled the curtains tight, and sat in the dark with every light in the house on.
I didn't look outside, not once.
But as the hours dragged on, I swore I heard it again.
That low wheezing laugh, somewhere in the distance, and a single knock at the back door.
