Just Creepy: Scary Stories - 5 Scary Wilderness Horror Stories That Will Make You Fear the Outdoors This Fall
Episode Date: September 24, 2025These are 5 Scary Wilderness Horror Stories That Will Make You Fear the Outdoors This FallLinktree: https://linktr.ee/its_just_creepyStory Credits:►Sent in to https://www.justcreepy.net/Timestamps:0...0:00 Intro00:00:18 Story 100:21:38 Story 200:30:19 Story 300:41:20 Story 400:54:42 Story 5Music by:►'Decoherence' by Scott Buckley - released under CC-BY 4.0. www.scottbuckley.com.auhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wM_AjpJL5I4&t=0s► Myuu's channel http://bit.ly/1k1g4ey ►CO.AG Music http://bit.ly/2f9WQpeBusiness inquiries: ►creepydc13@gmail.com#scarystories #horrorstories #deepwoods #outdoors #wilderness 💀As always, thanks for watching! 💀
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I am writing this, so I don't forget the order of things, and so someone else can recognize the signs if they ever find the same ground.
My name is Clara Redmond. I grew up in Salem, Oregon. My older sister Nora disappeared on a hiking trip when I was 14. She was 20. Her last text was a photo of the Wilson River near a bend below a rock outcrop off Highway 6, somewhere between the Jones Creek and Keenig Creek Trailheads. After that, nothing.
Every September I come back to Tillamook State Forest.
I tell people it's for closure, but it's closer to inventory.
I walk the trails, check the pullouts, read the bulletin boards,
and pay attention to anything that wasn't there before.
The forest has a public record if you know what to look for.
Reforestation signs about the Tillamook burn.
School children who planted seedlings in the 1950s.
The opening of the Tillamook Forest Center in 2006,
trail mileage markers that don't move but wear down from boots.
I thought history would make me feel less lost.
This year my friends asked me not to spend Nora's 30th birthday alone.
I agreed because I didn't want to make the same circle by myself again.
We camped just off the Wilson River Trail,
a few miles west of the Jones Creek Day use area.
We weren't far from the water.
You could hear it moving in the dark.
The group was Matt, who makes a joke out of a joke out of
anything first and deals with feeling second. Dana, a medical student who carries more first aid
gear than some small clinics. Coal, quiet and reliable, and Luis, who brought a guitar in a small
bag of weed he swore was, for sleep. I planned the walk, made sure we were outside the riparian
zones, and picked a flat spot that didn't show recent use. We cooked shrimp and rice on a camp
stove and talked about old music and how many times we'd all promised to quit our jobs.
I tried to keep the conversation on neutral ground and away from Nora. I failed. People who love
you will always steer back to the thing you avoid. Just after midnight, the coyotes moved close.
Most of the time they stay in the cut blocks or across the river. That night they came up the slope,
yipping in short bursts. We heard one weighty movement in the brush, and then nothing.
I told myself it was deer.
The air felt heavy.
It is hard to define this without sounding like superstition.
What I can say is that we kept stopping mid-sentence to listen.
The river stayed steady.
The wind through the furs sounded normal, and then it didn't,
like a hand pressed down on the whole scene.
We killed the fire to keep the smoke from sinking under the canopy.
Everyone went to tents.
I lay awake on my pad with my headlamp off, counting breaths.
and thinking about the odds that Nora had picked this trail the day she vanished.
I wasn't crying. I was waiting for the feeling to pass.
The sound under my tent started like sand shifting in a bottle.
I told myself it was root movement or a vole. It was not.
It turned into a steady scrubbing noise against the underside of the floor.
I sat up and placed my palm flat.
There was something pressing back.
The next push bowed the nylon.
I rolled off the pad and unzipped as a side.
fast as the teeth would allow and shouted for Matt. By the time he got to me, the tent floor
creased inward like someone had reached up from below and made a fist. Dana had her headlamp on my
hands as I pulled steaks. Cole brought the camp shovel. When the last stake came free,
the body under the floor shifted again. We grabbed the corners and dragged the whole thing aside.
The soil below was loose and dark, almost black. Matt knelt and started digging with both hands.
He hit knuckles first.
The hand was small and slick with mud.
He said he had it, and then we all had it,
and then a forearm, and then a shoulder.
There was a woman buried there,
face turned to the side in a pocket of air.
When I cleared her mouth,
the first thing she did was try to scream,
but no sound came.
She took a breath that sounded painful
and said one sentence.
If they know I'm alive, they'll come back.
We got her out.
She was light in a way that made me think of fever wards.
Mud caked her hair and packed the wrinkles of her ears.
Her nails were broken down into raw crescents.
The skin along her ribs and hips had a pattern of faint cross-hatched scars,
like old rope burns or a lattice that had healed.
Dana did the basics.
Airway, breathing, circulation.
The woman was oriented but shocking.
She gave her name as Mara and clutched at the ground whenever anyone stood up.
Dana wanted to hike her to the highway and flag a car.
it would have taken us an hour and a half dry, two with someone sick. Mara said no. She said the word
no with hard edges and shook her head so violently she almost fainted. They will know, she said.
I asked who. She looked toward the trees and said nothing. We wrapped her in a space blanket in
my coat. I held a bottle cap of water to her lips and watched her swallow the way you watch a newborn,
counting each motion like it might stop. We were careful.
We put the fire out cold and moved our food.
We checked for tracks and didn't find any new ones except ours.
That should have made me feel better.
It did not.
The fire ring was old rock, but the ash inside wasn't fully gray.
Someone had burned here very recently and raked it smooth.
The line where you expect to see boot edges had been brushed,
as if someone had used a leafy branch to erase the boundary.
Our food bags didn't hang where we left them.
They were cut down and slashed, not torn, cut.
The bananas and apples were still there, oddly left in the dirt.
The protein bars were missing.
I saw a loop of rope tossed over a low limb 20 yards from our tents.
At first I thought it was old line for a bear hang.
It had a small weight on the free end and a simple loop tied at the other.
Years of walking woods means you see a lot of forgotten gear.
This wasn't that.
five more hung within sight all the same, all with the same quick tie.
No wind moved them.
That detail stuck with me because even on still nights there is always some movement.
I thought I was prepared for anything tied to my sister.
I wasn't prepared for the fragment of fabric I found caught in Mara's torn shirt.
The stitch pattern matched a coat Nora wore the winter before she disappeared.
My mother had added a repaired patch with that same odd thread color
because the original seam wouldn't hold.
I told myself hundreds of jackets have similar repairs.
Then I felt the thread between my fingers and knew I was lying.
I did not tell anyone right away.
I stood with it in my hand and tried to breathe
until my body would accept the air.
We made a plan that satisfied no one.
We would wait for first light
and move together to the highway with Mara.
We would leave the tents and gear if necessary.
Rotate watch until dawn.
No one leaves the first light.
the circle of the lights. Luis sat with his guitar case closed and stared at nothing. Cole walked
the distance between the river and the tents like an animal pacing. Matt sharpened a stick to give his
hands a job. I stayed next to Mara and Dana. Every 15 minutes I checked Mara's pulse. It was faster than it
should have been and steady. She would startle at nothing and scan the same part of the tree line
like there was a door there. At one in the morning, a single sharp whistle sounded from uphill.
It wasn't a bird.
The note was too flat, and the diaphragm behind it felt human.
Ten seconds later, another whistle answered from below us, closer to the river.
Seven seconds after that, a third came from the west.
One of the worst parts of that moment is I could hear Matt trying to decide whether to make it into a joke and failing.
We stood and faced outward.
Lights pointed into trunks and brush and empty spaces that looked like faces because fear,
makes patterns out of gaps. A minute later we found Luis's boots placed neatly 50 yards away on the
trail, toes pointed toward camp, laces tied. He had been wearing them when we started our watch.
Luis came back around two with his socks muddy up to the ankle bones. He said he had gone to pee
and then got turned around. There is a tone people make when they know they have to lie to get
back inside a circle. He had that tone. Dana checked his pupils. They were normal.
He wouldn't look at Mara.
I smelled kerosene on him even before I bent close.
He said it was from camp fuel and lifted his hands like that explained why soil was pushed deep under his nails.
We put him between Matt and Cole and told him to sleep.
No one slept.
At first light we found three shallow depressions under the moss behind where my tent had been.
They were the width of a body and less than three feet deep, each with fresh leaves layered on the bottom.
Later, I would think they looked like cradles for something adults don't talk about.
At the time, I focused on the practical.
The soil was damp, but not newly turned.
The edges were clean, not clawed out.
Beside the third depression, I found a thin line of chain half buried in mud.
When I pulled it free, a small charm came with it, the kind of cheap letter charm you buy in a gas station rack.
It was a capital N.
The backing was rusted so badly it flaked in my face.
fingers. The second I saw it, I knew I was done making bargains with fear. I said we weren't leaving.
I said whoever put Mara in the dirt did it in a place they could return to without being noticed.
I said if we didn't follow their path now, we never would. Matt told me I was thinking like a
person who needed the story to end a certain way. He wasn't wrong. Dana looked at Mara's wrists
and then at the depressions and said we had an obligation to do more than run. Mara did
didn't remember faces. She remembered hands. She remembered being dragged, and then lifted, and then
kept still by a board across her hips. She remembered the smell of fuel. She remembered hearing
practiced movements above her, not clumsy or frantic. Like they've done it before, she said.
She pointed downhill toward a place where the alder thins and the ground firms up.
There, she said, they take you that way. We move slow and careful without talking.
I marked our path with small torn bits of orange tape from my first aid kit whenever we changed direction.
We kept Mara in the middle and checked behind us more than ahead.
About half a mile from camp, the ground leveled into a flat with older stumps and younger growth.
In the center of the flat sat an arrangement of timbers that at first looked like salvage from an old bridge.
When we got closer we saw they were lids.
Rough-cut boards nailed across shallow pits.
Some had stones stacked on them.
A few had been staked through with rebar.
The pits were long enough for bodies, short enough that you'd have to bend your knees.
I put my ear to the nearest board and heard nothing.
Then to the next and heard a scrape from below.
Not a voice.
Not knocking.
The steady scratch of nails on wood.
It is important to be honest here.
We did not turn into heroes.
We did not pry up lids and carry strangers out in our arms like a news story.
Matt stepped back until he hit coal.
Dana reached for the rebut.
and then took her hand away. Mara wrapped her arms around her torso like she was trying to hold
herself closed. I looked at all the boards at once and felt my mind stretched thin. The whistle
came again, this time from the trees to our left, very close. Five shapes moved out of the understory
like they had been waiting for the queue. They wore canvas and old jackets patched with cloth I
recognized from flea markets and farm sales. Their faces were covered with masks made from burlapes,
and leather scraps, stitched with symbols that meant nothing to me except the time it takes to make
them. They carried tools, shovels, a length of rope with a loop already tied, a post-hole digger,
a pry bar, none of them ran. They just came on like they were walking to work. We back toward
the far edge of the flat. One of the figures cut across to block, two more separated to flank
us. The person in the center stepped toward Dana and reached for her without hurry. Matt hit that one
with the stick he'd sharpened. The sound it made against the shoulder was dull. The person stumbled,
then grabbed the stick and pulled it out of his hands so fast I lost track of it. Cole tackled
the one on the left, and they went down in brush hard enough to break branches. I dragged Mara toward
the far side while Dana tried to pull Matt back. In the middle of it all, I had the stupid thought
that we had no idea how many more were in the trees.
I don't know where the idea came from,
except the smell on Luis's hands.
Fuel means fire.
We carried a small canister in my pack to start wet wood.
I pulled it out and unscrewed the cap
and poured a line across the two closest lids
and then slashed a trail onto the brush.
Back, I said to Dana.
Back.
The lighter took on the fourth flick.
When the flame ran across the board,
the sound from beneath,
changed. I will not describe that sound. The second lid took. The flames climbed into dead grass
and then into a punky log. Heat pushed the masked people away a few yards. It didn't make them
run. It made them turn our way and take us seriously. Fire is a tool and a threat in this forest.
The Tillamook burn started in 1933 and burned over and over for almost 20 years. The replanting took
decades. There are signs everywhere about it. How quickly heat can ladder into crowns. How fast wind
can turn an ember into a line that runs a mile. I knew if I kept feeding the flame we would be
building more than a distraction. I also knew it was the only thing that changed the math.
The nearest masked person stepped in and swung the pry bar at Matt. The bar hit him across the
back and he folded. Cole got to his feet with a mouth full of blood and charged.
the same person. Dana grabbed one end of the rope and looped it around the person's ankle and yanked.
It was clumsy, but it worked. The person hit the ground hard. The mask shifted sideways,
and I saw enough of a face to know this wasn't a ghost story. It was a man in his 50s with a
white scar across his chin and a missing molar. He looked at me like I had interrupted a job.
The fire popped and one of the lids split. The heat washed across our back.
Two masked figures moved to stamp at the flames with wet burlap.
I took Mara's hand and pulled her toward the far trees.
Dana got mad under the arms and dragged him.
Cole covered.
We made it 20 yards before the person with the pry bar got up again and came on with
real speed.
I turned to throw the empty fuel can and saw the patch on their mask, brown cloth with a slanted
line of blue thread down the center.
I knew it from the coat in my mother's hall closet, Nora's jacket.
jacket patched the winter before she left home. For a second I lost the ability to move.
The person with the mask stepped toward me like he recognized that drop in voltage. Cole
hit him in the side and they went down together. I grabbed the pry bar off the ground
and swung it in a straight arc. The bar connected with a forearm. The masked person exhaled in a short
burst and went still. I didn't wait to see if he would get back up. We left the flat while
the fire climbed the brush. It was controlled enough not.
to ladder into the crowns, and for once the damp air worked in our favor. The masked people
did not follow us into the thicker stand. They focused on the lids and the flames, and I understood
too late that we were choosing which lives to save by leaving the fire where it was. We moved
down slope toward the river and found the trail in a cut between Salal and Swordfern. It felt
like stepping onto a road after being lost in a field. We kept moving. Luis was gone.
I don't know when he broke away.
I only know I didn't see him again.
We reached Highway 6 after sunrise near the pullout for the Tillamook Forest Center.
A couple in a Subaru saw the blood on Matt's shirt and stopped without asking questions.
They called 911.
The deputy listened to our story and looked at the burns on the back of my hands and wrote our names down.
He asked how much we'd had to drink.
He asked if we knew our attacker.
He asked if we were sure about the location.
A forest officer came and talked to the deputy in parking lot voices.
An ambulance took Matt and Dana and Mara to the hospital in Tillamook.
My hands shook so hard I couldn't sign the initial statement without resting the clipboard on the hood.
Two detectives met us later that day.
A search team went out.
They found old digs at a spur off the trail and evidence of recent soil disturbance, but no usable prints.
Rain moved in that afternoon and flattened the scene.
The burns were visible but contained.
The deputies talked about transient camps and illegal dumps,
and I understand liability enough to know you cannot write
organized burial ground in a report without a career change.
They asked if we could have misheard the whistles.
I told them I have heard enough wildlife in this forest to know the difference.
They nodded like people who have to nod when they don't have a box for what you are saying.
Mara gave a statement through tears and pauses.
She remembered being picked up near a highway turn.
turnout two nights before. She remembered a smell like cold dirt and fuel. She remembered the way her
own breathing sounded under a board. The hospital kept her overnight. Dana had a concussion and bruised
ribs. Matt had a fracture in his forearm and deep contusions along his back. Cole had stitches
along his scalp. I had burns across both palms that made every daily task a negotiation for
a week. Luis's family filed a missing person report two days later.
The deputy called me once to say there were no updates.
I went back to my mother's house in Salem and sat with Nora's jacket on my lap.
The patch on the sleeve had the same blue thread I saw on the mask.
I don't know if it means what I think it means.
I only know that fabric doesn't travel by itself.
Someone carried that cloth from a closet to the woods or peeled it off her after she was gone.
I kept wondering why our food was slashed while the bananas and apples were left.
The high calorie bars taken, the clean things left to rot.
Systems reveal themselves and what they ignore.
A week later, I drove back to the Wilson River
and parked at the same day-use lot where we started.
I did not step into the trees.
I stood on the shoulder of the highway with the engine off and listened.
Cars passed every few minutes,
and then the sound settled back into the quiet you learned to trust out there.
I could smell the river and damp duff and a faint trace of smoke,
that was probably someone's breakfast fire.
I didn't hear whistles.
I didn't hear coyotes.
I did hear faint and persistent,
a scratch under the roots
beside the first switchback down from the lot.
It wasn't wind.
It was not an animal I could name.
It was a human pattern against a surface.
I used to think the worst thing was not knowing.
I have changed my mind.
The worst thing is understanding the pattern
and realizing it has been there longer than your search.
and we'll be there after you stop.
This is the ending I can live with.
We got Mara out.
Dana and Matt healed.
Cole checks in on me even when I don't reply.
I filed everything I could with people who have to write things down.
I have stopped telling myself I'm going to find Nora alive.
That is not giving up.
It is choosing to count the lives we can still move from underboards to open air.
If you hike the Wilson River Trail and you see tidy lines where the ground shouldn't be
tidy, or you find rope loops where there is no reason for rope, or you smell fuel where there
is no lantern, leave. If you hear a single whistle, and then another, and then a third from a new
direction, do not wait to see who is comfortable enough to stand in the open, get to the highway,
call it in anyway. The forest keeps good records, but we have to add to them. I won't go back down
to the flat. I don't need to. I know exactly where it is. I know what it costs to walk
away, and I know what it gave me back, which is the right to stop walking in circles,
and let my sister be part of this place's history instead of my unfinished map.
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My dad lives in Otley, West Yorkshire, a few minutes drive from Shevin Forest Park.
During the lockdown years, he adopted a Labrador mix named Willow.
I barely saw her those first two years, and when restrictions eased,
she treated me like a stranger, pacing, whining, not taking food from my hand.
On my next visit I offered to take her out alone and do the simplest thing you can do with a nervous dog.
Keep the route familiar, keep the commands consistent, and finish before dark.
We chose the path that runs off East Shevin Road along the lower edge of the forest,
a loop I knew from childhood. It is well used by dog walkers and runners.
The plan was basic, let her off the lead in the open stretches, call her back often,
and clip the lead before we reach the road again.
Chavine Forest has history stamped all over it.
Old quarry scars break the slope.
Dry stone walls run in crooked lines that once marked fields.
There's a viewpoint called Surprise View,
where you can see the Wharf Valley and the rooftops of Otley.
I grew up with school trips up there.
The place never felt spooky to me.
It was just where people went to walk, sweat, talk, and go home tired.
We set out and laid out.
afternoon. The track was damp from rain the night before. Willow pulled for the first hundred yards,
then settled. I led her off in a straight sight line section and started a routine. Every time she
drifted more than 10 or 15 meters ahead, I used the same call. Her name in a steady tone,
my voice even, no shouting. Each return earned a pat and a soft, good girl. After 20 minutes,
she began checking back on her own. For the first first,
The first time since meeting her, she stopped pacing around me.
A runner passed.
Two cyclists went by, then nothing.
Most people were heading home to beat the early dusk.
The light dropped faster under the trees.
I turned us back with time to spare, planning to reach the road while we still had a clear view.
The wind died down.
You could hear small things, a blackbird moving in the bracken, the faint highway noise from
the A-road below, my boots in the wet grit.
About 200 yards from the end of the track, I called Willow in to clip the lead.
She came straight away, head low, tail loose.
I crouched, got the metal clip lined up, and heard a noise in the trees to my right.
Not a scurry, a single measured shift of weight on ground.
Willow stiffened.
I got the clip on.
I looked directly where the sound came from.
Nothing moved.
The trees were set back a little from the verge there.
Bracken and saplings filled the gap.
My first thought was another walker taking a shortcut off the path.
I said,
Hello, out of habit more than anything.
No answer.
Willow leaned hard toward the trees.
I held the lead and said her name once in the same tone I'd been using all walk,
more to keep her focused on me than to call her in.
That was when I heard it.
From the same patch of trees came my voice calling her name,
the same way I had said it for the past hour,
the pitch, the rhythm, the slight,
pause I put in before the last syllable. I could have been listening to a phone recording of myself.
It was not loud. It was accurate. I did not move at first. I looked into the trees and tried to
build a normal explanation. Someone had heard me and was playing around. A ventriloquist trick
across the bracken, maybe a kid. But there hadn't been anyone behind me for at least half an hour.
I would have seen them on that straight stretch. Willow trembled against my leg and tugged
forward, not barking, just pulling like a dog that hears its owner in the next room.
I said, who's there, in a firm voice. No reply. I kept my eyes on the exact spot.
I don't know how long I stood like that, long enough to feel my legs start to shake.
Then, closer than before, the same voice called Willow's name again, identical to mine.
It hit me in a way I didn't expect. It wasn't just someone speaking the name.
It was someone who had listened carefully enough to copy how I'd been saying it all afternoon.
I hadn't been loud.
I hadn't varied it.
Whoever was there had either been near us for some time, or had moved with us without sound.
Willow lunged.
I yanked her back and started walking fast toward the road, half dragging her,
keeping my shoulders square to the tree line so I didn't lose sight of it.
I kept waiting for a person to step out.
No one did.
I heard a branch break off ahead to my left, one clean report like a heavy foot on dead wood.
My first thought was that whoever was there had cut across the slope to meet us further down.
The third call came from behind me, on the path I'd just walked.
Same tone, same measured call, as if I had turned around and spoken it myself.
I had not heard anyone pass us.
There was nowhere obvious to cut across the ditch and come up behind without noise.
Willow whined and tried to pull backward toward the sound.
I picked her up. She is not a small dog.
I got my arms under her chest and ran the last stretch with my head forward,
the lead dragging and the handle knocking my knee with each stride.
The road showed through the trees like a dark ribbon with spaced streetlights.
I kept running until my feet hit tarmac.
I put Willow down and scanned the verge in the gap we'd just left.
Cars went past every minute or so.
A couple walked on the far pavement with shopping bags.
Nothing moved in the tree line.
I stood there until my breathing steadied,
and then walked us the rest of the way to my dads,
cutting across familiar streets,
where the houses are close, and the hedges are cut flat.
I told him what happened.
He listened without interrupting.
When I finished, he said I was not the first person
to say they'd heard something off on that stretch at dusk.
Over the years, people in town had talked about strange callers
in the chauven, never in a crowd, always when it was quiet. He reminded me of a neighbor who had
lost a spaniel up there about ten years ago. They had searched for days, no collar turned up,
no body. The family eventually put a small notice up at the cafe by the car park asking people
to keep an eye out. There was nothing to do with that information except put it next to what had just
happened and let the two facts sit together. That night, Willow slept downstairs. I stayed in
my old room. I didn't hear anything through the windows. The next day, I called the non-emergency
number and logged what I'd experienced. The person on the phone was polite and told me to avoid
the area after dark. I also sent a note to the local council ranger service through their contact form.
I don't know if it helps anyone, but it felt like the correct.
step. We didn't walk that route again. For the rest of my visit, I took Willow along the river
path by the wharf, where you always see other people. We built a routine. She stopped pacing
when I entered a room. By the time I left, she would sit next to me without being asked.
That was the point of the whole exercise, and we achieved it. I have tried to settle on a practical
explanation. A person could have been in the trees, copying me as a joke or for a reason I don't
understand. Sound moves oddly and uneven ground, especially near a quarry face, and what I thought
was behind me might have been bounce. All of that is possible. What I cannot file away is the accuracy,
not just the name, the exact way I say it when I want Willow to come in, used three times from
three positions without a single rustle I could place on the path. I'm writing this because I would
tell anyone walking the Chevan near East Shevin Road in late afternoon to keep their dog close
and get back to the road before the light goes. I am not trying to sell a mystery. I am putting down
what happened, so I don't have to keep replaying it in my head. I left with my dog safe and a clear
decision. I won't take that track again. Some places are fine in daylight and different at the edge of it.
You don't have to prove anything to anyone. You just have to get home. I'd wanted the Lost Coast Trail for
years because everyone said it was the quietest stretch of California you could still walk.
No crowds, no switchbacks with a gift shop at the top, just beach and fog and bluffs where the road
gave up a long time ago. I'm not new to backpacking, but I'm not a hero either. My friends Mark and
Jason and I picked late September, printed tide tables, packed too many tortillas, and drove
north until the pavement ran out at Matol Beach. We knew the routine, time the headlands,
respect the surf, stash food high, leave no trace. I figured our biggest worries would be sore feet
in a bad night's sleep. I was wrong. What I remember most now isn't the miles or the sea lions
or the cold creek crossings. It's the way another person can become the whole world when there's
nowhere else to go. Day one felt like a beach walk with a grudge. Sand gave way to cobbles that
rolled under every step. The fog came and went in sheets. We saw no one after the lighthouse faded
behind us. A few sets of old prints in the wet sand told us people had been out here recently,
but the tide had already erased most of it. It felt clean. We fell into a pace. I led through
the firm sand near the water. Jason pointed out the tide lines and kelp piles, and Mark joked
about how this would be one long calf workout. We made Kuski Creek before dinner, and camped above
the rack line, tucking our tents into a pocket of driftwood that looked wind-friendly. I
We strung the food up with a clumsy pulley, and we cooked fast, trying not to smell like
a burger stand to everything with a nose.
After dark, the ocean noise pressed in.
Every time a wave crashed, the driftwood cracked against itself a little and shifted.
I told myself that's all it was.
The first odd thing was small, barefoot prints behind us that weren't ours.
We'd left camp with the tide dropping, trying to make the next headland before the water pinned us.
A fresh set of long wide prints appeared in the firm sand where we knew nobody had passed us.
No tread pattern, just the full shape of a foot.
They drifted in and out where the last wash of water smoothed everything.
We stopped and looked up the beach.
Nothing.
The day stayed gray and flat and quiet.
When we hit a rocky section and had to pick our way around a point, I checked again, still there.
I said it out loud, because silence was the uncomfortable.
part. Someone's out here barefoot. Mark shrugged and said maybe they liked it that way. Jason said it
didn't make sense with how cold the water was. We kept walking. Big flat is where we had our first
face to face. We picked a spot near the stream so we wouldn't have to haul water. It's a wide
open place where the trees sit back and you can see for a long way in both directions. We were
rinsing socks and trying to get sand out of tent zippers when Mark froze. I looked up and there he
was, a tall man standing at the edge of the driftwood line like he'd just unfolded out of it,
barefoot, pants rolled to mid-shin, shirt that might have been a long sleeve once,
in his hands, a long piece of rebar with the end ground into a point. He didn't say anything
and he didn't wave. He didn't even seem out of breath, like he'd been there the whole time and
only decided to be seen. We called out the usual stuff, hey man, you good, and
Do you need water?
Because that's what you do.
He stared.
After a minute, he stepped backward and vanished into the wood like he had a door we couldn't see.
That night, I found our bare hang rope cut halfway through.
It wasn't frayed, it was sliced.
I showed the guys, and we tied a knot above the cut and moved the food.
We talked about packing up and hiking in the dark,
but the tide was wrong, and the headlands ahead would be worse at night.
We agreed to do shifts.
Sometime after midnight I heard a thump near where our bags were hoisted,
and I saw a figure climb a log, reach up, and yank, I yelled.
He dropped and turned fast, head down, shoulders forward,
and rushed me with that spear like a sprinter starting late.
My body did the math for me.
I grabbed a trekking pole and held it across both hands like a bar.
Mark came out swinging his own pole.
Jason pulled the pepper spray and caught the pepper spray and caught the,
the guy in the face. The sound he made wasn't mystical or animal or anything people love to say
after the fact. It was a regular human scream with rage cranked all the way up. He stumbled
backward, eyes closed, and then sidestepped behind a stack of driftwood and was gone. We stood there
shaking with the spray blowing back into our mouths and eyes. I tasted metal for an hour. We didn't
sleep. Morning comes fast when you never leave alert mode. We packed like a drill team.
and moved. The plan was simple. Make miles. Keep daylight. Don't stop long enough to be easy.
Every time we looked back, we scanned the wood line. Sometimes I saw nothing. Sometimes I saw a shape
that could have been a log until it wasn't. Once I watched a shadow move along with us for a hundred
yards, and then stop when we stopped. We started eating without cooking. Tortillas with cold peanut
butter and a handful of jerky. No stove, no steam, nothing that would carry a smell or make us
sit still. At Shipman Creek, the beach looked like a place someone had been playing with time.
Our old prince circled. Stacks of driftwood balanced on stones. A stick figure scratched into a log
with a rock, simple lines, long arms. No message that meant anything, which somehow made it
worse. We pushed into the evening without a real camp, telling ourselves we'd stop as soon as we
hit a stretch with easy sight lines. The tide had its own opinion, and we had to get above a narrow
section before the water came in. Past that, we gave up and pitched fast in the first spot that wasn't a
wind tunnel. We strung the food high again and set the bear spray by our pads. It didn't matter.
He came back. I heard the shuffle and the scrape of something hard on a log. When he stood,
Stepped into the edge of our headlamp beams, his eyes were red and watering from last night,
and he'd smeared something dark across his face like it would help.
Up close, he looked strong and underfed at the same time.
He didn't talk.
He didn't bargain.
He moved.
Mark caught a forearm with his pole and got a long scratch from the rebar for it.
Jason sprayed again, and I jabbed for the hips like a fencing coach on autopilot.
The man dropped to a knee, then sprang sideways and disappeared between the arm.
two huge logs. I don't remember breathing for the next minute. We kept it together by staying
dumb and simple. Forward. Water when we had to. Cold food. When the beach curved, one of us
watched the curve and one watched the wood line. The idea of turning back felt like choosing to
lose. The only good thought we could stick to was Shelter Cove. It was still a long way.
My legs were cramping and Mark's arm looked like a cat had tried to climb him.
We didn't say the obvious, which was that we were being hunted,
because that word felt like it would make it true in a way we couldn't take back.
Near Miller Flat, the coast finally opened wide,
and we saw a commercial boat off the shore, a dark shape moving slow.
Jason said,
If we can get their attention, that's our ride.
We dropped our packs in a clean spot on the sand and started flashing our headlands,
in the worst, neediest rhythm you can imagine.
No code, just panic with batteries.
At first, nothing happened.
The boat kept its line like we were just another piece of the horizon.
We kept flashing anyway and shouting even though we knew they couldn't hear us.
The boat paused.
It turned.
It started creeping in.
For the first time all day, I felt something like relief start to happen in my chest.
I didn't see him come out of the wood.
I heard the run, and then I saw the line he was taking to cut us off from the water.
He covered ground like he knew exactly how many steps it would take.
We grabbed what we had in our hands, two poles, one can of spray, and ran for the edge of the surf.
I threw my pole like a javelin.
It hit him, not hard, but enough to steal a step.
Jason waved his arms at the boat like he was landing a plane.
The fisherman at the bow had a skiff on a line, and was already pointing it at us,
reading the scene without knowing the story.
We crashed into the first wave, boots filling, and the skiff shoved through to us.
Hands grabbed us by packstraps and jackets and pulled.
I looked back and saw the man stop where the logs turned to bare sand.
He held the spear like he'd just remembered he had it.
He didn't come into the water.
He stood there while the boat swung around,
his face flat and unreadable behind the streaks of whatever he'd smeared on it.
I realized then I'd never heard his voice outside of the screaming.
They dropped us at Shelter Cove like three soaked seals and asked the questions anyone would.
We told them what we could between shakes.
Someone called it in.
A ranger met us.
Sorry, wrong word for you, but that's who it was, and took a report.
People searched.
We handed over what we had, the cut rope, the scratch on Mark's arm, our story.
They told us maybe he was a hurt.
hermit, or someone slipping through the cracks. Maybe he, lived off fish and driftwood, knew the
tides better than we did, worked on boats sometimes, slept in places nobody goes. They didn't
find him. They found prints that washed out with the next tide and a few piles of balanced
wood that meant nothing on paper. Our pack stayed where we left them until the ocean decided
otherwise. I've thought about that trip more than is healthy, not in a myth way, not in a
monster on the coastway. In a way that admits we stepped into a place where the rules are different
because the people are scarce. Out there, one person gets to be the only thing that matters for miles.
He didn't talk because he didn't have to. He had the home field, and we were just passing
through carrying food. I still hike, just not there. When I see driftwood stacked in a nice
little shelter on a beach, I give it a wide berth. I don't assume empty places are safe places.
And to the tall man with the rebar spear who stepped out of the wood and made three days feel like a year, let's not meet.
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Hey, Mama.
Thanks for making all my favorite recipes.
Hi, Ma.
Thanks for your unfiltered advice.
Hi, Mom.
Thanks for always being by the phone.
Hey, Mom.
Happy Mother's Day.
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I go into the Dali Sods wilderness when I need a reset.
I live in Pittsburgh and make the drive in three hours if traffic cooperates.
I've hiked there enough to know the trails and how quickly the weather flips on the plateau.
Dali Sods is high for this part of the Appalachians,
barons, bogs, and exposed rock where red spruce grow low and crooked,
and the wind never seems to settle.
I'd read the usual bits of history.
The wartime artillery practice on the ridges and the occasional warnings about unexploded shells that still turn up.
The place has rules you learn by paying attention.
Carry extra dry socks.
Stay on wood planks in the bogs, and plan on having fewer people around than you think.
I started from the Bear Rocks Trailhead early on a Friday to avoid weekend traffic on the trails.
It was late September.
The Heathbalds were already turning color.
Mountain Laurel dulling to bronze.
blueberry shrubs red along the edges.
Svagnum moss held water like a sponge under every step.
Ravens circled in the updrafts coming over the ridge crest.
The plan was simple.
Take bare rocks trail to Raven Ridge,
angle toward Dobbin Grade for water,
and find a campsite on higher ground where the wind would keep the bugs down.
Two nights. Back to the car Sunday.
By mid-afternoon I was several miles in
and hadn't seen anyone since the parking lot.
Visibility on the meadows is long.
You can see a person's backpack moving on the horizon from half a mile away.
I saw nobody, which was what I wanted.
When I stopped to pick a spot near a spring-fed seep,
something caught my eye across the slope.
A tent sat tucked against a brush line, low and irregular,
with a weather-fated camouflage fabric.
It didn't look new.
The ridge there had no good windbreak.
no shelter. That placement didn't make sense to me. I watched it for a full minute, no movement,
no smoke, no shoes set outside, no gear hung to dry. I set my own tent on a small shoulder of rock
above the spring. The wind had a bite to it. I boiled water, ate a meal, and decided to top
off my bottles before the light dropped. The creek was a narrow channel choked with alder and grass.
While I crouched to pump water, I heard what I first mapped onto the usual sounds,
brush shifting, maybe a deer stepping through sedge.
Then I heard the sound again, closer to my tent than to me.
It was careful walking, not heavy, not running.
I closed the valve, stood up, and listened.
Nothing.
The wind pressed through the heath.
A jay called once and went quiet.
When I climbed back to camp, my backpack was unzipped and laid on its side.
The cook kit was out on the ground. The bag of trail mix was open but not spilled.
Nothing was missing as far as I could tell. On my sleeping bag, centered on the body of the bag,
lay a rabbit. The rabbit's throat had been cut with a blade. Whoever did it had placed the animal,
not tossed it, and had set its forefeet together like it was meant to be looked at. It had been
killed minutes earlier. The fur around the neck was still wet and warm. I didn't say anything out
loud. I picked it up carefully and set it in the grass away from camp, then wiped the sleeping
bag with a spare bandana. I scanned circles around my sight until I found a single boot print
in a patch of wet moss. Vibrum style, small size. The print came in from the direction of the
tent I had seen earlier and angled away toward the spruce thicket above me. There were no other clear
tracks. The ground in Dolly Sods is a mix of rock, root, and springy vegetation that erases
his footprints fast. I built a small fire for light more than heat, using dead branches I'd carried
up from below the tree line earlier. The wind gusted over the ridge, the flame threw a tight ring of
orange on the grass. I kept my headlamp off to save the battery and to keep my eyes adjusted
to the dark. Around the edge of the light, the shrubs moved when the wind hit them and settled
when the wind let go. I tried to read. I couldn't focus. When I was a little,
When I looked up, there was a man standing just beyond the firelight in the direction of
the seep. He was thin enough that his clothes hung loose on him. He stood with his head tilted
to one side far enough that it looked like something was wrong with his neck. He didn't shift
his weight, didn't lift a hand, didn't speak. I held my breath and didn't move. I made my voice
steady when I said I didn't want trouble and that I'd leave in the morning. The man did not
respond. I picked up my headlamp slowly, clicked it on, and in the time it took to bring the beam
to his face, I lost him. The light fell across alder stems and sedge. The spot where he had stood
showed flattened grass, nothing else. I did not sleep much. The fire dropped to coals by midnight.
I kept the headlamp on low and the trekking pole next to me. Once or twice I heard light
steps on rock. At three in the morning I sat up because I heard two distinct breaths close to my
tent wall, the kind you make after climbing a hill, the shallow kind when you're trying to be quiet.
I held my breath and waited. It didn't repeat. At four, something touched one of the guidelines,
enough to make the fabric drum. I said calmly that the wind was going to pick up at sunrise and that
he should leave. No answer.
When first light pushed up the ridge, I got out to check the area.
The rabbit was gone.
A dark stain remained on the sleeping bag.
In the mud near the fire ring, I found two boot prints I hadn't left.
Same tread as the one from the evening.
He had stood between my tent and the fire while I was inside.
I packed fast.
I didn't make coffee.
I put food and trash in my pack and kept the trekking pole in my hand.
When I crossed the meadow toward the junction with Raven Ridge Trail, a person moved between spruce clusters above me, headed in the same general direction.
I stopped. They stopped. I walked again. I didn't get a good look, only the sense of a thin frame, dark clothing, and that head tilted off center.
The route across Raven Ridge is open and exposed. It was the wrong place to be if I wanted to break a line of sight.
I stayed on the tread where the rock kept me from sinking into the bogs.
At a low point where the trail cut near a seep, I saw something off to the right that made me step over to look.
There was a lean two frame of cut branches that had been patched with pieces of polytarp.
Under it, someone had arranged a platform of sticks to stay up off the wet ground.
The bones of small animals, squirrels, a grouse, and several rabbits were piled in a shallow depression
and stained the moss around it.
A pair of torn jeans lay there,
crusted in mud.
Next to the lean-to was a shallow hole with blackened stones
and a coffee can full of muddy water.
No sleeping bag, no stove, no food wrappers,
nothing that looked new.
It had the feel of a spot that gets used and abandoned
and used again when needed.
I didn't linger.
When I looked back at the ridge behind me,
the man was visible at the edge of the spruce line,
watching from above.
He was closer than he had been. That moved the problem from a vague worry to a practical one.
I was alone, several miles from the car, and being followed by a person who had cut an animal's throat and placed it in my tent.
I changed my pace to test his behavior, walked fast for five minutes, slowed, stopped at a clear vantage to listen.
He matched it. No approach, no call out, not even a fake cough to make contact.
just steady pressure.
The wind shifted around noon and brought cooler air from the west.
I ate while walking to conserve time.
At a junction marked by a wooden post and a cluster of low spruce,
I dropped onto a rock to retie a bootlace.
When I stood up, he was in the open about 60 yards up slope,
thin, maybe early 40s,
beard stubble that had gone past neat, dirt like old paint on the cheeks.
He wore a dark jacket zipped to the throat,
throat and pants that had been patched at the knees with duct tape.
He stood straight, but his head stayed tipped, like a habitual posture.
I raised the trekking pole so it was visible and said I was leaving and didn't want contact.
He kept watching.
It felt like he was waiting for something to happen that I couldn't see.
I walked away first.
The trail dropped into a shallow drainage, then climbed a set of rocky steps where small oaks held on between boulders.
My breathing went ragged.
At the top I looked back.
He had moved to the bottom of the steps and was staring up.
There was no expression I could map onto it.
He didn't look angry or excited, just fixed on the sight line.
By mid-afternoon I made the turn toward the lot.
The trail ran the spine of a narrow ridge, then fell through scattered spruce and mountain
ash toward the gravel road.
The footing became worse, loose rock and collapsed root wads.
I chose speed over care and almost rolled my ankle three times.
I heard him twice without seeing him, a foot sliding on grit behind me, a branch knocked against another branch.
On one straight section, I risked a full look back and saw him crouched in the middle of the trail like he was resting on the balls of his feet.
He didn't look tired.
When the trees thinned and the road cut came into view through the brush, my legs surged.
I ran the last hundred yards.
There were three cars in the lot, including mine.
I threw my pack in the back seat without packing it right,
and got into the driver's seat with the keys already in my hand.
When I looked up, he was at the tree line.
Same distance as the night before, same tilt to the head.
He did not step into the open.
He did not try the lot.
I turned the engine over, lock the doors, and pulled out.
Gravel hit the undercarriage.
I didn't look back for long.
In the rear view, he got smaller between the spruce trunks,
and then the road curved him out of sight.
I kept the windows up until I hit the highway.
I stopped at a gas station in Davis,
and only then realized my hands were shaking.
I washed them and changed shirts in the restroom,
then drove the rest of the way home with the radio off.
For two days I didn't tell anyone.
I didn't want to make a report based on impressions
and the kind of details people discount,
tilted head, quiet following, animal on a sleeping bag.
On the third day, an article showed up in a regional feed.
The Tucker County Sheriff's Office had asked for help locating a man wanted for assault
and suspected of hiding in the high country east of Davis and Thomas.
The picture was from earlier in the year, not recent, but the shape of the face matched.
The article mentioned camps found off trail in the Dali Sad's north area
and asked hikers to avoid solo travel until the person was located.
They listed bare rocks and the northern ridges by name.
I called the number and gave them what I had.
They asked for times, distances, where I'd seen the tent, where I'd found the lean to.
I told them about the rabbit and the boot prints.
They asked if any words were exchanged.
I said no.
They said they would send a patrol up the road and notify Forest Service law enforcement.
I don't know what came of it.
I didn't see a follow-up article about an arrest.
I'm writing this in the way I'd want to read it if I were planning a weekend up there.
Dolly Sads is not a haunted place.
It's a place where weather moves fast and where you carry your own weight.
It's also a place big enough for someone to live out of sight for a long time.
If you go, tell someone your route.
Keep your food and tools in reach at night.
If you see a camp that looks wrong, don't investigate.
If a person follows you at a steady distance and never speaks, treat that as a problem even
if they never crossed the last 40 yards.
I keep a single image from that trip when I think about going back.
It's not the rabbit or the lean-to.
It's the way the man's head stayed tipped while he watched me, as if that posture was the only
thing holding him up.
There was nothing theatrical about it.
It was just how he was.
I left when I still had options.
I think that mattered.
I planned to go back to Dali Sade's in day.
with a partner, and I'll still love the open meadows, the bog laurel around the pools,
and the way the ravens ride the air at bare rocks. But when the wind presses across the ridges
and the shrubs move, I'll remember that someone used that motion to close ground without a sound,
and I'll keep moving. I grew up in Duluth and learned to paddle before I learned to drive.
The Boundary Waters' canoe area wilderness was never a mystery to me. It was a system,
lakes with names I knew by heart, portages measured in rods, weather patterns that punished impatience.
Late October is the line most locals won't cross. Campsites are empty, nights drop below freezing,
and the wind can trap you on the wrong shore for days. My friend Caleb wanted one more trip
before winter. He was newer to this, and liked the test of it. We put in out of Ely with a plan to run east
toward Knife Lake, swing through a chain of small lakes,
and be back before the first real snow.
It was a clean plan until the wind changed.
The first two days went fine.
We moved in steady pushes,
aiming for sheltered coves when the afternoon gusts rose.
The third day, the wind came straight down Knife Lake and stayed there.
White caps marched at us like rows of sharp teeth.
We waited it out on a small island,
just a patch of rock with a tight stand of spruce and cedar.
We rationed what we had and watched the thermometer slide.
I've always said the boundary waters punishes optimism.
We ran low on food by day five.
The wind wore us down in a way that had nothing to do with miles.
We turned quiet.
Hunger has a way of making you careful with words.
The smell showed up first.
It wasn't the sour wet of leaf piles or a fish left on a rock.
It was the thick, sweet rod of meat that had gone wrong.
It came in on gusts and then vanished.
Caleb said a deer must have died in the brush.
That's common.
Winter kills here.
I tried to agree.
What bothered me wasn't the smell alone but the way it seemed to move with us.
There one hour, gone the next, back again when the wind shifted.
When the lake finally calmed, we moved.
Knife Lake is long and narrow, with steep tree-lined banks and water dark as tea from tannins.
We skirted the southern shore and cut into the river.
to a portage, a narrow path with exposed roots slick from old rain. Midway through, I heard
branches snap off to our right, not a twig under a grouse. Thick wood, wet, and heavy.
The footfalls that followed had a dragging sound. Moose will do that on mud, but these steps
had a pattern I could not sort, too irregular for a four-legged animal, too heavy for a person.
We stopped. The woods went storking.
I told myself it was nothing and kept going.
You keep going because you're too far from help for anything else to make sense.
We took a cove site on knife that evening, a half circle of rock with a flat tent pad and a cedar
at the edge of camp. The light drained fast. I went for wood and found the first sign.
The cedar had deep gouges raked down the trunk, higher than my head.
Each groove ended in a sharp point, not the blunt tear you see from a black bear.
A person could have cut them with a tool, but there were curls of fresh bark at the
base as if something had driven hard into it and dragged down.
I called Caleb over.
He said bear anyway.
I let it go because arguing in the cold wastes heat.
We ate thin, granola split in half.
Jerky chewed too long to trick our stomachs.
The wind fell away after dark and sound carried across the lake like an open hallway.
Something broke the quiet around midnight.
Started low, then turned into a ragged howl I could not place.
Wolves have a clean rise and fall.
Coyotes have a yipping chorus.
Loons are their own thing entirely.
This was none of those.
It sounded strained, as if the throat making it didn't fit the noise coming out.
It ran along the far shore and then stopped like a switch had been thrown.
We listened to nothing for ten minutes that felt like an hour.
The fire burned down.
We crawled into the tent.
At first light I went to the water for the food bag.
The rope was on the ground in torn threads.
The bag shredded.
Something had worked at the knot and the fabric, not with teeth like a raccoon or a bear's single
rip, but with repeated pulling and scraping.
Fifty feet down the shore, half in the water, was what looked like a deer rib cage opened
like a book.
The marrow was gone.
The edges of bone were polished smooth, not gnawed in the rough way I'd seen in winter kills.
went quiet. We both stared at the mud near the carcass. There were prints, but not the kind
I'd been trained to read. They were longer than my boot and narrow. At the front, each had
points that had sunk deep, as if claws had gone in at an angle. The weight looked wrong.
The spacing suggested a two-legged step, then a drop to something like a lunge. I tried to make it
match a black bear moving strange and wet ground. The longer I looked, the less it matched anything
I knew. We should have left then. We said we would, but the wind on the open water had kicked
up again, not the worst of the week but enough to make a long crossing risky when you're weak
and shaky. We made the call to lay low, conserve strength, and shoot the miles at dawn if the
lake turned glass. That decision is the one that sits in my chest when I try to sleep. We kept
a bigger fire going that evening. There's a rule here. Fire makes sense of the dark.
We talked softly about anything except the smell and the tracks.
Around dusk it came again.
The thick rot, stronger now, riding a gust from our right.
We both turned at the same time.
Nothing moved between the trees.
The feeling of being watched isn't a sixth sense.
It's a hundred small inputs, hair shifting on your arm,
breath that isn't yours rolling past your face,
the body reading a pattern it can't name.
Caleb set his paddle next to his sleeping bag like a club.
I did the same.
The attack didn't start like one.
It started with a single dry crack from the tree line.
Then the sound of weight hitting dirt.
The tent wall flexed inward.
The pole next to my head snapped under a force that felt like a shoulder.
The smell of rot flooded the fabric.
I heard Caleb swear and scramble.
My hands went to the zipper and stuck because the nylon had tension on it from the collapse.
I cut a slit with my knife and pulled through.
There are images from that minute that won't leave me.
The thing that came through the gap in the tent moved partly upright and partly on hands that were too long.
The frame was built wrong.
Long ribs visible under gray skin pulled tight, patches torn open to show bone.
The head was angled forward like a person who had forced themselves up after too long on the ground.
The mouth was open too wide.
Teeth were there, but not in a neat row.
The eyes were not shining like stories say.
They were dull and deep set, as if light had trouble reaching them.
It covered the distance between the tent and the fire in two quick jerky motions,
then checked itself, like it had to relearn a step.
I swung the paddle and hit along the shoulder blade.
The impact sounded like wood on a hollow log.
It didn't stop it.
The thing made a sound that started human and then broke into something else,
like a voice grinding through a damaged instrument.
Caleb was already hauling the canoe, half dragging it, half throwing it,
the bow scraping rock and throwing sparks.
The creature lunged.
I jammed the paddle between its arms like a bar.
The smell was so strong my throat closed.
It was cold out, but heat rolled off its body in surges
as if whatever ran it was burning through fuel fast.
We got the canoe to the water in pieces,
movements that were not clean or skilled, just driven.
The stern snagged on a rock.
I felt weight hit the hull.
The canoe tilted hard and filled with a slab of black water.
I shoved off with my knee and a hand on Caleb's shoulder.
He swung his paddle at the shape reaching for the stern and connected.
The canoe lurched free.
We threw ugly strokes into the lake, not matching sides, not counting, just moving.
The fog drifted in and cut the shore away.
Behind us, I heard it along the rocks.
footfalls, and then a slide, and then nothing, and then a scream.
The sound felt close even when it wasn't.
We kept paddling until the muscles in my forearms flickered like wires about to go dark.
I don't know how long we stayed on the water.
Time shrinks down when you are doing only one thing.
We hit a rock-studded shore somewhere down lake, not a campsite,
just a place we could pull the canoe above the waterline and fall down.
The cold worked into us from the ground up.
We made a small fire with damp wood and shook and tried not to talk.
The lake was a wall.
The woods were a wall.
We sat between them like a bad equation you can't balance.
At first light we went back for the packs we'd left.
The tent was torn in two.
The cedar had new gouges, deeper than before, the wood bright where it had been opened.
The deer remains were gone.
What stayed was a black stain in the dirt with flies that should have been dead by this time.
of year. The prints at the edge of camp were clearer in the morning cold. Some showed the long,
narrow shape again, with claw points buried deep. Others were just churn, mud driven down by weight.
I looked for anything I could label, bear pad, moose-du-claw, wolf-nail. I found nothing that held
up to the standards I had learned from old guides on snowbank and knife in Saganaga. We packed
in silence. When we pushed off, the canoe felt heavy.
than the day before, like our bodies had lost ground overnight. We set our course west,
hugging the shore breaks, ready to pull out if the wind came up. It didn't. The lake lay flat
like a sheet of dark glass. We covered miles we had earned in fear and in hunger. Only once
that day did we hear anything from the trees, a single branch breaking far off the water.
We didn't stop to check. There is a point where curiosity is stripped
away, and what remains is transit. It took two days to reach the takeout near Ely. We ate little
and moved slow. The first burger we bought in town sat heavy and tasted wrong for the first five
bites. That is not a metaphor for trauma. It is what hunger and bad air due to your body. Friends
asked how the trip was. We said cold, windy, beautiful. That was true. It just wasn't the whole thing.
There is history behind the word for what we saw that night.
The stories from Anishinaabe and other first peoples in this region are not campfire entertainment.
They describe a thing born from hunger and broken judgment in the hard months.
In the early 20th century, there were documented cases of so-called Wendigo Psychosis in northern communities,
men who believed they had become something that eats to fill a hole that never closes.
Anthropologists have argued over the term for decades.
I am not going to argue it here.
I am going to tell you the facts I can stand behind.
We were windbound for days on Knife Lake.
We found clawed trees higher and deeper than I have ever seen.
We found a ribcage split and cleaned in a way that did not match scavengers.
We saw tracks with a two-legged rhythm and claw points sunk like chisels.
Something tore our tent, moved in a way a person cannot,
and chased us to the water with a smell.
I can still taste if I think too hard about it.
I have paddled a lot of miles since then, but not back there.
A part of me is ashamed of that.
Knife Lake is beautiful and teaches good lessons to people who go in humble, but humility
is not the same as denial.
There are things in those woods that are older than the trail map and less concerned with
our rules.
They don't need our belief.
They need only a cold night, a quiet shore, and a mistake.
I am writing this now because I woke at three in the morning and could not close my eyes again.
If you read this and think I layered some local myth over a rough trip, I won't try to convince you otherwise.
I don't want this story to do anything except put a hand on your shoulder and slow you down
when you're tempted to squeeze one more night out of late October.
Check the wind.
Count your food twice.
Don't camp where the smell turns your stomach.
And if you hear that broken howl move along the shore, don't wait to see what shape it wears.
I said out loud, in the parking lot in Ely, that I would never go back to Knife in October.
Years later, I have kept that promise.
Some vows are not about fear.
They are about respect.
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