Just Creepy: Scary Stories - Terrifying Deep Woods Horror Stories to Fall Asleep To
Episode Date: November 21, 2025These are 3 Terrifying Deep Woods Horror Stories to Fall Asleep ToLinktree: https://linktr.ee/its_just_creepyStory Credits:►Sent in to https://www.justcreepy.net/Timestamps:00:00 Intro00:00:18 Story... 100:20:35 Story 200:34:49 Story 3Music 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 #scarystoriesintherain 💀As always, thanks for watching! 💀
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for years, and I've always read the creepy camping encounter stories with a mix of fascination
and skepticism.
You always think, that wouldn't happen to me.
I'm too experienced.
I'd know what to do.
I was wrong.
This happened to me and my girlfriend Sarah two years ago.
We're married now, and we haven't set foot in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park
since.
We probably never will.
First, some context.
Sarah and I are not rookie hikers.
We're both here.
gear nerds. We do multi-day backcountry trips in the Rockies, the Cascades, you name it. We know how to read
a topo map, how to use our gear, and how to handle wildlife. We carry a GPS, a satellite messenger,
bear spray, the whole nine yards. The smokies were practically our backyard. We'd been dozens of times.
This trip was in late October. The leaf peepers, tourists who come for the fall colors, were mostly
gone, especially on the weekdays. We'd planned a three-day loop starting from a less popular trailhead
on the North Carolina side. The weather was perfect, crisp, clear, and cold at night. The first day
was incredible, 10 out of 10. We hiked about nine miles, saw maybe two other people on the trail,
and found a perfect spot to make camp. The rules in the smokies are that you're supposed to stay
in designated backcountry sites or shelters. We weren't.
We were about half a mile off the main trail, down in a small, flat hollow, next to a creek.
It was textbook Leave No Trace camping.
We were quiet.
We had our bear bag, and we felt like we were the only two people on earth.
We made dinner, cleaned up, and got a small, responsible fire going.
We sat there for an hour, just talking and enjoying the absolute perfect silence.
The kind of silence that's so deep it almost has a sound.
Around 8.30 at night, the fire was down to embers. We were getting cold, so we doused it with water from the creek, making sure it was dead out. We were crawling into our tent when Sarah paused. Did you hear that? She whispered. I stopped. I listened. All I heard was the creek. Hear what? The creek? No, listen. I held my breath, and then I heard it. Snap. It was a footstep. A single,
heavy, two-legged snap of a dry twig. It wasn't a deer, which plinks its way through the woods.
It wasn't a bear, which sounds like a small car crashing through the brush. This was a person
trying to be quiet and failing. My blood went ice cold. We were half a mile off trail in the
dark, miles from any road. There is zero reason for anyone to be walking through this hollow.
Who's there? I yelled. My voice sounded weak. Silence, then a powerful, painfully bright beam
of light blasted our tent, making the nylon glow. Evening folks, a voice called out. It was a man's
voice, deep and friendly. Didn't mean to startle you. This is park service. I felt a wave of relief
immediately followed by confusion. A ranger? Out here? At nine o'clock at night? I unzipped the
tent flap and shielded my eyes. The man was standing right at the edge of our camp, maybe 20 feet
away. He was tall, and his silhouette was all wrong. He was wearing most of a Ranger uniform.
He had the flat brim hat, but it looked off, a lighter almost tan color, not the standard
olive green. He had the shirt, but it was untucked and looked dark with stains, even in the
glare of his flashlight. He clicked the light off his face and pointed it at the ground between
us. A friendly gesture. Now I could see him better. He was probably in his heart. He was probably in
his 50s with a short, messy beard. And his eyes, they were just flat, no expression.
Sorry to bother you, but this is an unauthorized campsite, he said, his voice still friendly,
but in a rehearsed way. You're in a high-activity bear area. We had a problem bear get
aggressive at the designated site up the ridge, so we're clearing the area. For your safety,
I need you to pack up and relocate with me now. Every part of
this was wrong. First, a ranger wouldn't be clearing an area this late at night. They'd close
the trail during the day. Second, they would never lead hikers to a new secret site. They would
escort you back to your car or to a main shelter. Third, high-activity bear area. That's what all of
the smokies are. It's a non-warning. Sarah, who is braver than me, spoke up from inside the tent.
Oh, we didn't know. We'll pack up right now and just head back to our car. We're sorry. The Ranger didn't move. He kept the light on the ground. That won't be necessary. It's a five-mile hike back to your car. The new site is just a quarter mile through the trees. It's safer. You need to come with me. The way he said need to made every hair on my body stand up. I got out of the tent standing in my base layers and camp shoes. Can I see your badge, sir? I asked.
The man's smile was a thin line.
It's on my belt, but we really do need to be going.
I looked at his belt.
His flashlight was huge, a big metal mag light.
Next to it was nothing.
No radio, no pepper spray, no sidearm,
just an empty leather loop,
and on his other hip,
a massive, old-looking hunting knife in a worn leather sheath,
the kind with a stag antler handle.
You know, I said,
trying to keep my voice steady. We're fine. We've got bear spray. We've got our food hung.
We'll take our chances. We'll pack up and leave at first light. The Ranger took one step closer.
The friendly mask was still there, but it was cracking. Son, I don't think you understand. This isn't a request.
This bear. It's a problem. It's not safe here. I'm responsible for you. You have to relocate.
No, Sarah said. She was out of the tent now, standing next to.
to me. We're staying, or we're leaving, but we're not going with you. I glanced at Sarah
and she gave me the slightest nod. I knew what she was thinking. I reached back into the tent
and grabbed our canister of bear spray. Sarah, faster than me, grabbed her hiking axe. It's a small
one, but it's sharp. The second he saw us arm ourselves, his whole face changed. It was the
single most terrifying thing I have ever seen. The friendly mask didn't just drop. It disintegrated.
The smile vanished.
His eyes which had been flat now looked furious, and hungry.
It's the only word I can use.
He stared at us, this rictus of pure, silent rage on his face.
He didn't say a word.
He just stood there, his hand resting on the handle of that giant knife.
It felt like an eternity.
The only sound was the creek.
We were in a standoff.
I had the bear spray aimed at his chest.
You need to leave, I said.
He just stared.
It felt like he was memorizing us.
Then, he did the strangest thing.
He smiled again.
But it wasn't the friendly smile.
It was a wide, toothy, wrong smile.
He raised his flashlight, shined it directly in our eyes, blinding us.
Suit yourselves, he said.
He clicked off the light.
The world went pitch black.
I mean absolute, total, new moon in a forest hollow black.
We couldn't see a thing.
He's gone, Sarah whispered, her voice shaking.
No, he's not, I said.
He's right there.
He just turned his light off.
We stood there frozen, staring into the dark where he had been.
We heard nothing, not a footstep, not a leaf crunching, not a branch moving.
He hadn't walked away.
He had just vanished.
Mark, Sarah said, her voice a tiny squeak.
Pack now.
We've never moved so fast in our lives.
We didn't pack.
We threw things.
Sleeping bags were stuffed into packs.
Pads deflated with a wush.
We left the tent for last.
My hands were shaking so badly I could barely unclipped the poles.
We were making so much noise, fumbling, zipping, clipping.
Quiet, I hissed.
We both froze, and we heard it.
Crunch, crunch, crunch, footsteps, but not moving away.
They were moving parallel to our camp.
About 40 yards up the ridge in the direction of the main trail.
He was just walking, pacing.
pacing. He's watching us, I whispered. We threw the tent into my pack, half folded. We have to go,
Sarah said. We can't stay here. Go where? Back to the trail. He's on the trail. We have to. We'll follow
the creek down. It'll be louder. It'll mask our sound. It was a good plan. The creek flowed away
from the trail, but it would eventually hit a larger river that ran near the park road. It was a
longer, much harder hike, but it meant not walking towards him. I gregor. I gregor.
I grabbed my headlamp in our GPS unit. Sarah had hers, axe in one hand, spray in the other.
We turned on our headlamps, which felt like setting off flares, and scrambled down the bank into the freezing cold creek.
We started half walking, half wading downstream.
It was awful, the rocks were slick.
We were falling, catching ourselves.
The water was soaking our pants, our feet were instantly numb.
But Sarah was right.
The sound of the rushing water was loud.
We couldn't hear anything else, and we hoped neither could he.
We moved like this for maybe 20 minutes.
It felt like hours.
We were bruised, freezing, and terrified.
Finally, I stopped to check the GPS.
The creek is turning, I said.
It's bending back towards the trail.
We have to get out and go cross-country.
We climbed up the opposite bank.
It was steep, covered in rhododendron bushes so thick you had to crawl.
We were back in the quiet zone,
and the second we stopped to catch our breath, we heard it.
Whistle.
A low, tuneless whistle.
It sounded like someone just whistling to themselves.
It was coming from the ridge we'd just left.
Then it stopped.
We ran.
We didn't care about noise.
We crashed through the underbrush, climbing the ridge, desperate to put distance between us.
We got to the top of the ridge.
We were on a small, wooded plateau.
The main trail was somewhere to our left, maybe a quarter mile.
Our car was five miles away.
Okay, I panted.
Okay, we follow this ridge.
It should run parallel to the trail.
We just have to get to the car.
We started walking, fast, headlamps cutting through the total darkness.
Every tree looked like a man.
Every shadow was him.
And then we heard his voice.
It wasn't a yell.
It was calm, conversational, and it came from ahead of us.
You folks are going the wrong way.
We screamed.
Both of us.
We spun around shining our lights.
Nothing.
We pointed our lights ahead, and there, maybe 100 yards up the path, was his flashlight
beam, pointed at the ground, just waiting.
He got ahead of us, Sarah cried.
How did he get ahead of us?
He knew the woods.
This was his ground.
We were just trespassing.
Back, I yelled.
Back the way we came.
We turned and ran back down the ridge, and his light clicked off.
Then, a new sound, running, heavy pounding footsteps behind us.
He wasn't toying with us anymore.
He was chasing us.
I've never been so scared.
It's a primal fear, being hunted.
We ran, blind, crashing through branches that whipped our faces.
Sarah tripped and went down hard.
She screamed.
I spun around, bare spray out, and shine my light.
She was on the ground, holding her ankle.
I can't, she sobbed. Mark, I can't, I twisted it. The running footsteps behind us stopped. Silence.
Get up, I yelled, pulling her to her feet. You have to get up. I put her arm over my shoulder.
She was trying to put weight on it, but she was hurt. We were moving at a pathetic limp. We were done.
He was going to get us. He's gone, she whispered, listening. No, I said. He's waiting. He's waiting.
He's letting us tire ourselves out.
We limped on.
Every few seconds we'd stop and listen.
Nothing.
Just our own ragged breathing and Sarah's quiet sobbing.
This went on for what felt like a lifetime.
We were moving so slowly.
My shoulders ached.
Then we smelled it.
It was a coppery, rotten smell, like old pennies and spoiled meat.
And under it, the smell of wet wool.
It was coming from just off to our right.
I stopped. I shined my light into the trees. Nothing. Just trees. What? Sarah asked. Don't you smell that? She sniffed the air. Oh, God, Mark. And then we heard him. A low, gravelly mumble. He wasn't yelling. He was talking to himself. Need to relocate. High activity area for their safety. Not safe. Need to. Need to relocate the subjects. It was a mantra. A broken record script he was playing.
out in his head. He was 30 feet away, just standing in the dark, watching us. I lost it.
Leave us alone, I screamed, and I emptied the entire can of bear spray in his direction.
The orange fog blasted into the trees, and we heard a hiss, like a gasp and a crash,
as he stumbled back. Run, I yelled. I don't know how she did it. Adrenaline, I guess. Sarah ran. We ran,
full tilt, ankle be damned. We didn't care about the trail, the car, anything. We just ran, downhill.
We fell, we got up, we kept running. We ran until our lungs were on fire and we burst out of the trees
onto the pavement, the park road. We'd hit the road. We fell to our knees on the asphalt.
We were alive. We were out. We looked back. The forest was a black, silent wall. He wasn't there.
The car, I said, it's a mile up the road. It was the longest mile of my life. We limped up the road
jumping at every car that passed, there were only two. Every time the headlights hit us,
I was terrified they would illuminate him, standing on the road behind us. We finally got to the
parking lot. Our car was the only one there. We got in. I locked the doors, click. We sat in the
dark, in the silence, just breathing. We made it, Sarah said. She was crying. We made it. I put the key
in the ignition. The engine turned over. I turned on the headlights, and there he was. He was standing
at the edge of the parking lot right where the trail came out, just standing there, staring at us.
He wasn't angry. He wasn't smiling. He was just blank. The headlights lit him up perfectly,
the stained shirt, the wrong hat, the big dark knife on his belt. I slammed the car into reverse.
I backed out so fast I almost hit a tree. I threw it in drive and we peeled out of that parking lot,
tires squealing. I looked in the rearview mirror. He was still standing there. He watched us go.
He never moved. We drove until we had cell service and called 911. We were transferred to the
Park Service dispatch. We told them everything. They told us to drive to the sugar.
Langerlands Visitor Center, on the Gatlinburg side, and wait for a ranger.
We got there at 2 o'clock in the morning.
A ranger met us.
A real ranger.
His uniform was perfect.
He had a radio.
He had a sidearm.
He was professional and kind.
We told him the story.
We were a mess.
We were covered in mud and scratches.
Sarah's ankle was swelling.
He listened.
He took notes.
His face got tighter and tighter.
When we were done, he just said.
stared at his notepad for a second.
Can you show me on this map?
He said, pulling one out.
Exactly where you were?
I pinpointed our camp.
I showed him where we'd hit the road.
He went pale.
You were in that hollow?
He said.
Yeah, why?
He called his supervisor.
The supervisor drove out to meet us.
We told the whole story again.
The supervisor looked at his partner.
This is the third report this year, he said.
Spring just slid into your DMs.
Grab that boho look for that rooftop dinner,
those sandals that can keep up with you,
and hang some string lights to give your patio a glow up.
Spring's calling.
Ross, work your magic.
What are you talking about?
Sarah asked.
The supervisor sighed.
We've been getting reports.
A man following us.
Someone watching our camp.
A man in a brown hat.
But they're always vague.
You two.
You're the first to have a direct conversation.
And, to be honest, you're the first to report it and be here.
What does that mean? I asked.
Six people, he said, have gone missing from that specific five-mile radius in the last ten years.
Two of them just this past spring.
We find their campsites, neatly packed up, food in the bear bags, tents zipped shut, but no people.
We always assume they got lost.
lost, or it was a bear. He looked at us. You did the right thing. You didn't go with him.
Who is he? I asked. We don't know. We don't have a ranger matching that description. We don't
know who he is, but he's out there. They filed a massive report. A few weeks later, they
officially closed that entire section of the park for aggressive bear management. It's still closed.
We moved to Ohio six months later. We got married. We tried to forget.
We were unpacking our old camping gear last week.
We hadn't touched it since that night.
We'd just thrown it in bins.
Everything was there.
The tent, the packs, the sleeping bags, all caked in two-year-old dried mud.
Wait, Sarah said, holding up the empty stuff sack for her axe.
Where's my axe?
I'd forgotten.
She must have dropped it when she fell, right before I used the bear spray.
It was still out there.
Oh, well, I said.
Good riddance. Then two days ago, a package arrived, a small square cardboard box, no return
address. The postmark was from Gatlinburg in Tennessee. My heart stopped. Don't open it,
Sarah said, but I had to. I cut the tape. Inside was a lot of bubble wrap, and under it was Sarah's
hiking axe. It was perfectly clean. The blade had been sharpened. It was gleaming. Taped to the wooden handle
a small laminated card. It was an old, faded 1970s-era official National Park Service ID. The photo
was of a smiling young man in a ranger uniform. But the eyes, the eyes were the same. Flat,
dead, empty. The name on the card read Thomas L. Vance, and taped to the back of the ID was a small
folded piece of paper. It was a note, written in a shaky, blocky scrawl. It said,
You forgot this. Please relocate. This is a high activity area.
Edit. A few people are asking why we didn't use our satellite messenger. We did.
The second we got to the car, we hit the SOS. The 911 call we made was after the SOS was already pinging.
The ranger who met us said the 911 call actually came in while he was getting the SOS alert,
which only made him drive faster. I need to get this out. I've held onto it for years, and it's eating at me.
My dad and I, we don't talk about it.
We've never talked about it, not really.
Not since that one conversation in the car on the way home.
But I'm older now, and I'm starting to forget the exact shade of the sky that night,
or the specific way the water rippled.
And that scares me more than anything.
Forgetting makes it feel like it wasn't real.
I need to remember.
I need someone to know it was real.
My dad and I have been taking a canoe trip in the Boundary Waters, BWCA, in northern Minnesota every September since I was 13.
It's our thing. My mom and sister call it their smelly boy trip, and they're not wrong.
We go for 10 days, no showers, paddling and portaging, catching walleye, and sleeping under the stars.
My dad is the real deal. He's a lifelong woodsman, the kind of guy who can start a fire in a dead.
downpour and navigate by the stars. He's calm, competent, and quiet. He taught me everything,
how to read a map, how to paddle a J-stroke, how to respect the woods. The woods are his church,
and by extension, they became mine. This was 2019. We were deep in, about as far as you can get.
We'd taken a hard-to-get permit for a remote entry point, and for five days, we'd paddled and
portage north, heading for a string of lakes near the Canadian border. This is the real BWCA,
no cell service for a hundred miles, no weekend warriors. In September, you're lucky if you see
another canoe all day. We were on Kettlestone Lake, not its real name, but that's what I'm calling
it. It was our eighth day. We'd set up camp on a beautiful site, a rocky point covered in tall pines.
We'd spent the whole afternoon fishing a reef on the far side of the lake, just me, my dad, and the
The fishing was incredible. We were catching walleye one after another, that perfect eater size.
You know the one last cast curse? It's real. We stayed out too long. The sun had dipped behind
the black spruce ridge, and the sky was that deep bruised purple that happens just before true
dark. The air was dead calm. The lake was a sheet of black glass, and the only sound was the
drip, drip, drip of our paddles and the buzz of the last mosquitoes of the season. That's when we
smelled it. It wasn't a waft. It was a wall. It hit us so fast it was like we'd paddled into a cloud of it.
The smell of rot, but not lake rot, not swamp gas. This was biological. It smelled like a deer
had been hit by a car, bloated in the sun for a week, and then ripped open. It was so thick and
foul it coated the inside of my mouth. I gagged and my eyes watered. I looked at my dad.
He had stopped paddling.
His head was up, sniffing the air.
His face in the dim light was made of stone.
Dad?
Jesus, what is that?
He didn't answer me.
He just quietly said,
paddle faster, son.
It wasn't a suggestion.
It was a command.
His voice was flat.
All the warmth gone.
I'd never heard him sound like that.
The hair on my arms stood up.
I dug my paddle in, and we started moving.
The campsite was around a rocky point to our left,
maybe half a mile away.
We just had to get around this point.
As we started to round the bend, the smell got worse.
It was so bad I had to pull the neck of my fleece up over my nose.
We were paddling hard now, the canoe cutting quietly through the water.
There, I whispered, pointing with my chin.
I see it, Dad breathed.
On the shore, right at the water's edge, maybe 70 yards away, was a shape.
It was crouched over something dark and lumpy.
At first my brain said bear.
It's the only thing that makes sense up there.
A big black bear.
Probably feeding on a moose or deer carcass.
That would explain the smell.
But it was wrong.
Even in the fading light I could see it wasn't black.
It was pale.
A sick, grayish white like a fish belly.
And it was too skinny.
It was emaciated.
It was squatting.
And its arms.
God, its arms were so long they were braced on the ground in front of it.
like a gorilla's.
But they were wrong too.
Too thin.
They looked like sticks wrapped in wet, gray leather.
My paddle froze in the water.
As if it heard the tiny splash, it stopped what it was doing.
It slowly, slowly raised its head.
Then it stood up.
My dad sucked in a breath so sharp it was like a gasp.
It wasn't a bear.
It wasn't seven feet tall.
It was eight, maybe nine feet.
It unfolded in sections.
It was all bones and tight gray.
skin, stretched so thin you could see the knobs of its spine and the cage of its ribs.
It was a skeleton with skin, and its head.
Oh God, its head.
It wasn't a head.
It was a skull.
It looked like a deer's skull.
Antlers broken off near the base, but it wasn't wearing it.
It was its head.
The long, tapered bone of the muzzle, the empty, hollow-looking sockets.
It turned and looked right at us.
There were no eyes, just deep black pits.
But I felt it see us.
I felt it like a physical pressure.
Time stopped.
I could hear my own heart hammering in my ears.
The world shrank to me, my dad and this thing on the shore.
It let out a sound.
It opened its lipless, bone-toothed maw.
And a noise came out that wasn't a growl and wasn't a scream, but both.
It was a high-pitched, tearing shriek that grated on my bones.
But underneath it was a low, wet growl.
It was the sound of a rabid animal and a dying woman all at once.
Don't look at it!
My dad's yell shattered the moment.
It was pure panic.
He wasn't a woodsman.
He wasn't my dad.
He was just a terrified man.
He dug his paddle into the water with a grunt, and the canoe veered.
Paddle now!
To the sight!
We paddled.
I've never paddled like that.
My arms burned, my lungs were on fire, but I didn't care.
I just pulled.
The canoe felt like it was.
stuck in mud, impossibly slow. The scream followed us. It echoed off the trees on the other
side of the lake, coming back at us from all directions. We hit the rocky landing of our campsite
at full speed. The front of the canoe slammed into a rock with a thud that sent a jolt up my spine.
Get out! Get the gear! All of it! Dad was yelling, already halfway out of the canoe,
splashing through the shallow water. We diddled pack. We threw. We ripped the tents to
out of the ground, the tent still attached. We grabbed the sleeping bags, the food pack, the stove,
just grabbing and throwing it all into the bottom of the canoe. I dropped our water filter.
Leave it, get in. We were back in the canoe in less than two minutes. The whole time my skin was
crawling. I felt a thousand unseen eyes on me from the dark woods behind our sight. The smell
was still there, clinging to us. We paddled out into the lake, in the dark.
No headlamps.
Where are we going? I panted.
Away, dad said his voice shaking.
We're not staying on this lake.
We paddled for two hours in the pitch dark.
My dad navigated by the faint silhouette of the tree line against the stars.
It was terrifying.
One wrong move, one submerged rock we didn't see, and we'd be in the water.
The water in September is lethally cold.
You've got minutes.
We didn't talk.
The only sound was our paddles.
in our breathing, and one other sound. About an hour in, from the shore to our right, we heard a
whoop. It was a perfect imitation of a loon call. Woop, whoo, woo. But it was wrong. It was too loud,
too, guttural, and it was September. The loons are mostly quiet by then. My dad's paddlestroke
faltered. Don't stop, he whispered. A minute later from the shore.
Whoop, whoop, woo, it was closer. Then we heard it.
it, the sound of something huge moving through the woods. It wasn't a deer. It was crashing through
the underbrush, snapping branches the size of my arm. It was pacing us. We paddled harder.
We found a narrow channel, a side passageway that led to a different smaller lake. We poured all
our remaining strength into getting down that channel. The crashing faded behind us. We didn't find
a campsite. We found a sheer rock face that had a small, 10-foot ledge. It was experienced.
We pulled the canoe all the way out of the water, dragging it up onto the rock.
We turned it over and huddled underneath it, still in our wet clothes, our PFDs still on.
My dad got the food pack, which had the camp hatchet tied to it.
He sat with his back to the canoe, the hatchet in his lap, and stared out into the dark.
Try to sleep, he said.
I didn't sleep, neither did he.
We sat there all night shivering, listening to every snap.
every ripple. The wind changed, and for a horrible hour, I could smell it again, faint on the breeze,
like it was quartering the lake, hunting. The sun has never felt as good as it did when it first
hit my face. That cold, gray morning light. The world looked normal again. The birds were singing,
but it wasn't normal. We looked at each other. We were both pale, with dark circles under our eyes.
We're going home, Dad said.
That's two days, Dad.
We'll do it in one.
We were five portages and four lakes from the entry point.
A two-day paddle, easy.
We did it in ten hours.
We didn't stop.
We didn't eat.
We just paddled until our arms were jelly.
And then we portaged.
A portage is the most vulnerable time.
You're on land, loud, and carrying 50 pounds of gear.
You can't move fast and you can't see.
Every portage was agony.
My head was on a swivel.
Every dark shadow in the woods was it.
Every rustle of a squirrel was it.
At the third portage, the longest one, we found it, a drag mark.
Something heavy, dragged from the water.
And at the landing, where you put the canoe back in, a marker.
Three flat rocks stacked on top of each other.
But the top rock wasn't a rock.
It was a deer vertebra, bleached white.
Dad saw it, and his face went white.
He grabbed my shoulder. Don't look. Keep moving. We made it to the entry point just as the sun was setting.
We threw the gear in the back of the truck. We strapped the canoe on in record time. We got in
and Dad locked the doors. He sat there for a long minute, just breathing, his hands shaking on the
steering wheel. We didn't talk. We drove for an hour, back down the gravel logging roads
until we hit the paved highway.
We didn't talk until we were back in Ely, the first real town,
sitting at a gas station under the buzzing fluorescent lights.
We were in the car, and I was drinking the world's best-tasting Coke.
Dad, I said, what was that?
He stared out the windshield. He looked, older, beaten.
It's a Wendigo, he said.
His voice was so quiet I could barely hear him.
Uh, like the stories?
The stories are stories, Sam.
He said. Their warnings. His grandfather, my great-grandfather, was a gibway. He used to tell stories,
said they were spirits, the spirit of the hungry woods, the spirit of the long winter.
He said they're born from men who eat men, from desperation and hunger. He looked at me. His eyes were
haunted. He said they're mimics. They can sound like a loon. They can sound like a woman crying,
anything to draw you in, and they're always hungry, always. They're just empty, and the hunger makes
them rot. He took a long, shuddering breath. He said you never, ever look at one. He said they're
not all the way here. They're in between. And if you look at them, if you really look at them,
they get a hook in you, they can follow. We drove the rest of the way home to the Twin Cities in
silence. We got home. My mom was all, how was it? We just said good, tiring, we got cold.
My dad put the canoe in the garage. The next weekend he sold it. He told my mom he'd pulled a
muscle in his back and couldn't handle the portages anymore. He, the man who lived for the woods,
hasn't been north of Duluth since. He fishes on the Mississippi now, from a bass boat. It's been
five years. I'm 26. I still have nightmares, not the screaming kind. The
quiet kind, where I'm in a canoe on a glass black lake, and the smell of rot is rolling in.
I wake up, and I can smell it in my room. I'm writing this all down because I just bought a new canoe,
a lightweight Kevlar one. I've got a permit for a solo trip in three weeks, not to that lake,
never again to that lake. But I have to go back. I have to know if it was real. I have to know
if I can still go, if I can still be in my church, or I have to know if I'm broken, like my dad.
And I'm posting this here because, if I don't come back, I want someone to know why.
I want someone to have the real story. So, if you're ever up in the BWCA, near the border,
and the sun starts to set, and you smell something, don't be a hero, don't be curious, just paddle
faster and don't ever look at the shore.
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I don't know how to format these.
so I'll just tell it straight, and you can believe me or not.
I'm not here for karma.
I'm here because, for the first time in my life,
I left a tag unfilled, and I'm okay with that.
And that means something happened.
I can't square with the kind of guy I've always been.
This was late October, mule deer season in the Uinta Basin.
If you don't know the area,
picture wide shelves of sage and rabbit brush
giving way to broken ridges,
fingers of dark timber hanging in the folds like wet hair.
We were on public land not for,
far from the reservation boundary. I'm going to keep the drainage name out of this out of respect,
and because I don't want some curious kid wandering in there with a head full of YouTube lore and a
pocketful of cheap calls. It was me and my cousin. Let's call him Dave because that's his name,
who I've hunted with since we were old enough to carry 22 caliber rifles for jackrabbits.
We grew up under the same roof half our lives. Same grandpa, same rules. Grandpa taught us to
glass slow, to treat every ridge like its hiding eyes, to pack out what you pack in, to never
joke about the things the old folks didn't joke about. He had a way of whistling a dumb little
tune from an old TV show when he was fixing fence or cleaning fish. You hear a thousand small
background sounds growing up and forget most of them, but some lodge in your bones. That whistle
was one of them. We'd scouted the weekend before. We knew a buck was betting on a north-facing
slope with just enough blowdown to give him confidence and just enough gaps to give us a shot if we
were patient. The plan was simple. Climmed to the high spine in the dark, wait for first light,
glass the benches, and if we saw him, one of us would push a little, while the other held
the escape route. Nothing cowboy. This wasn't our first season. We know how fast a bad decision
can turn a ridge into a rescue. We were in orange, radios clipped to the street. We were in orange, radios clipped to
the straps, extra batteries in a zip bag, we've learned that lesson too. It had dusted snow a
couple days earlier, and the shaded spots held a cold rhyme that made the sageheads crunch
like sugar when you brush them. The wind was lazy but steady, quartering down the draw.
We set a meeting time on the main ridge, four in the afternoon. No excuses, no hero moves.
I can hear Grandpa even now. Hunt hard, but don't hunt dumb. By mid-afternoon, I was posted on a
knob with a good angle into the valley. I had the spotting scope on the tripod, and my rifle
laid in the notch of a juniper. I'd been picking apart shadow and brush for an hour, taking
those slow breaths that turn minutes into molasses. My watch ticked toward 3.30. That's when I heard it.
Hey, over here, I need help. It was my cousin's voice, not just the words, but the way he shoves a little
breath on the last syllable when he's excited. It came from a patch of dark pines off my
left shoulder, down slope, close enough to raise the hair on my forearms. I lifted my head out of
the glass and turned. The trees swallowed whatever made the sound. Where are you? I called back without
thinking, because you don't think when family yells help like that. You answer like you've been
shot yourself. Right here, hurry! The exact same voice came from the other side of the clearing,
behind me, up slope and farther away than the first. I pivoted so fast that the same, the same,
tripod legs skittered, and I put my hand out to catch it before it tipped. I didn't shout
again. You know those tiny moments when your brain pulls the emergency break and your body
coasts a foot forward in silence. That was me. There's nothing in the hills that can move its
lungs from one pocket of timber to the other in two seconds, not with that kind of distance
and that kind of clarity. My throat went dry so fast it felt like I'd swallowed the crust off
a cast-iron pan. I reached for the radio with fingers that didn't feel quite attached.
Dave, where are you? I said. I kept my voice calm, or I tried to. The sound came out thin and high,
like it had been filtered through a straw. Static. Then the little pop our radios make before the
signal hooks up solid, and his voice, my cousin's voice, but the real one, with the tiredness I knew
would be in it after a day on steep ground. I'm on the main ridge where we were supposed to meet,
he said. Where are you? As he was saying where, the other voice came again from the trees in front of me,
not 30 yards into the shadow line, pitch soft like a stage whisper trying to be a secret between
friends. He's lying to you, it said, I'm Dave, come here. I didn't yell. I didn't charge in there
like an idiot. I put the scope back in my pack in one motion, slung it over,
a shoulder that felt like someone else's, shouldered my rifle, and started backing uphill
slow. Don't break the ground with your heels when you're backing out of trouble,
grandpa used to say. It's how you end up snowballing backward into something worse. Place your feet
heel to toe and keep your eyes on the shadow. So I did. As soon as I moved, something in the trees
moved with me. Not loud, not crashing, not the way a deer busts or a bear rips. It tracked me just
inside the darkness line, where every twig and dead branch would have shouted a man's clumsiness
to the sky, and it didn't make noise, not really. The sound it did make was like the suggestion
of motion, a hinted weight on rotten sticks, and it was drowned beneath a thing I can't make
you hear on a screen, a tune being whistled, thin, and almost right, not quite on key, but close
enough to snag a memory you didn't know you still had. Grandpa's tune played a hair too
fast, like whoever was making it wanted to sound casual and didn't know how. There are times you
don't realize you're praying under your breath until you catch a word and feel embarrassed,
like you just got caught talking to the mirror. I remember the feel of my tongue touching the roof
of my mouth to form the tea in don't and the pee in pleas, the way you shape words quietly so they
land heavy in your chest instead of hanging in the air where any ear could snatch them. The sun had
slid behind a bank of clouds, and the light went from warm to tin in seconds. That's when movement on
the ridge, real movement, human movement, snapped my eye. A figure stepped out, orange vest bright as a
campfire. He raised an arm and waved with a motion I knew like my own. That was my cousin. I don't
care what anybody says about caution. There's a physical relief that hits like medicine when you
see your partner for real, in a place where you thought you might be alone with something else.
I started walking faster, not running, but I felt my calves twitch to do it, and I had to tell them no like they were dogs at heel.
It followed. I didn't look at the trees again. I didn't need to. The whistling kept pace.
I hate that I can write this next part and hear it at the same time. Halfway to the ridge,
the whistling shifted, like it realized it had the tune slightly wrong and fixed it.
That was worse than any voice it used, and it had used my cousin's voice exactly.
except for the part where you feel the person inside the voice.
This had no inside to it.
It was like someone holding a mask in front of a flashlight.
I topped out on the spine and my cousin was right there,
and I knew it was him before he spoke because his face was red from the climb,
and there were two smeared spots of black from where he'd rubbed sweat with dirty gloves.
He doesn't stop to wipe first, just smears it in a rush.
You can't fake that kind of detail.
You hear it?
He said, not wasting that.
any English on hello. I nodded. He must have heard my radio call and seen me moving and put
it together. We didn't touch each other, didn't make any big show of reunion. We just stood
shoulder to shoulder a beat longer than normal. The way we always do when something is out there,
we can't quite put inside a familiar outline. The whistling went quiet.
I heard you, he said, down in the timber asking where I was. Except you didn't key up,
except I was answering you on the radio at the same time you were yelling in the trees.
Except, he rubbed his mouth with the back of his glove.
Except nothing, I guess.
Four o'clock meet time, I said, because it mattered to say a rule out loud when other things weren't obeying rules.
Four o'clock, he said back.
We didn't stay on the ridge like we'd planned.
The light was slipping and I was emptied out in some way that made the next half hour of hunting feel like a dumb dare.
We move together, little words.
The kind you use when you know making noise is safer than going quiet.
Step.
Stop.
Wind.
Hold.
Nobody said name.
Funny what your mouth knows before your mind catches up.
When we dropped off the spine toward the truck, we took a different finger than the one I'd come up.
The slope was littered with calf-brusing basalt lumps and hides of crusted snow in the shadows.
Halfway down I saw prints.
Not boot prints.
bare feet. I'm not joking. No arch, no heel cup, just a flattened oval with toes too long and
too evenly spaced, like they'd been arranged by someone carving a print block. The stride was wrong.
They didn't sink at the toe. Each step pressed straight down, like the weight wasn't moving
forward, or like the ground didn't matter. They crossed the slope at a diagonal nobody uses
because it burns your ankles. They'd been laid since morning. There was a sprinkle of new dust,
on top of my tracks and no dust on them.
That's a detail you can feel in your teeth when you say it out loud.
We didn't take pictures.
The idea of trying to capture that on a screen made my stomach roll.
Sometimes you don't bring a thing into your pocket, if that makes sense.
We reached a thin ribbon of two-track and followed it toward the truck.
The world had that dry, bright quiet it gets right before the sky gives up the last of its color.
As we turned the last shoulder and the hood came in the head.
into view, my cousin grabbed my sleeve hard enough to pinch muscle. Don't say anything, he said.
I looked. There was something on the hood. For a second it looked like pine needles, or maybe chaff,
but the shapes resolved and my brain decided on hair. It had that kink to it, that variegated brown
that isn't fur from a pelt, but hair from something that had been lying on the sheet metal.
And there were prints on the fender, not handprints, not paw pads. The same thing. The same thing,
same long-toed ovals melted a little where the day's thin sun warmed the metal. One of them was
can'ted like whatever it was had stood with a knee against the grill and leaned over to realign the
rear-view mirror. The mirror was pointed down, catching sage. I don't know why that detail
still needles me. It's stupid. You can bump a mirror with a sleeve. Our doors were locked.
I reached for my keys slow, like a movie cop. It felt performative and useless, but the
the body likes rituals. We got in. The cab smelled exactly the way a truck cab should smell after
two men have been sweating in the hills all day. Salt, oil, a ghost of last week's gas spill on a jerry
can. The fake vanilla of the cracked air freshener we keep swearing will throw away. It did not
smell like anything else. That mattered. We checked the back seat. We checked the bed. We checked
the spare behind the wheel well. We did these things without saying we were doing them.
sat and let the quiet settle. That wasn't me, my cousin said finally, and that was when I realized
he had been as glued to the thought as I had, down below, and it wasn't you. No, I said, but it knows
your voice. He flinched like I'd thrown cold water, and it knows grandpa's whistle, he said.
We didn't start the truck. That's the part I keep kicking myself for. We should have turned the key
and let the engine put a wall between us and the thinking. Instead, we sat and listened. At first,
I thought I was hearing the wind find the broken places in the sage and make that dry hiss it does
in the evening. Then I realized there was repetition in it. You only catch repetition after you've
counted it twice. The first ten seconds were just noise. He's lying to you, it said from the slope.
the same phrase, the same cadence. It didn't bother with our names now. It stuck to the line that
had made me look over my shoulder in the first place, sanding off everything extra until it was
just those four words. The direction of the sound wandered, not in a circle, but like someone
testing the echo of the hill, finding the sweet spots where the land throws your voice down into
a bowl. My cousin reached over, flipped the radio volume down to zero, and then,
with his free hand, touched the wooden rosary he keeps hanging off his turn signal stalk.
He isn't the religious one in the family.
That made my throat thickened.
We'd planned to camp on BLM that night, 30 minutes away by Washboard Road.
We'd plan to hot-tinted in the little wall tent, eat elk brats, and go over the plan for the next morning.
I know how this sounds, but the idea of unrolling fabric and creating a temporary house,
and then closing our eyes inside that thing while something's
walked around out there, felt like stepping off the ledge of a mine shaft, and hoping the black
meant water instead of air. Duchessne Motel, I said. Duchenne Motel, he said, he turned the key.
The engine started with that Ford shutter, and I have never loved a mechanical sound more.
Headlights ate a tunnel into the slope. For an instant, I thought I saw a thin shape stand up
from behind a greasewood and walk with a bone light stride into the line of pines. And you can say
that was nerves, and you can say that was shadow, and I will nod because that's saner than what I'd
tell you, which is that it moved like a man who had learned to be a deer, which is wrong in the way
two correct notes feel wrong when you play them on the wrong instrument. We drove out, not fast,
because fast on that road means a tire sidewall torn by a rock you didn't see, but steady,
like the gas pedal was a prayer. My cousin didn't touch the radio again. We didn't speak, not for
a mile, not for five. And then, around the bend where the red dirt turns to gray, and the
willows toss their ragged hair over the two-track, something hit the tailgate, not a rock kicked
by a tire, a weight, a slap with shape. The truck jolted like a big dog had leapt at it.
The bed camera we use when we're hauling gear is angled poorly for anything behind us, so don't
ask. We both breathed out at the same time, a laugh without humor. The body's simple
way of emptying bad air. We hit pavement and did something I never do. We went left toward town
instead of right toward where the team would quarter their animals and trade lies by someone's
fire. We checked into the kind of motel where the front desk guy has the TV turned up too loud,
and his voice is a murmur beneath the game. Our room smelled like bleach and old cigarettes.
It might as well have been a cathedral. I didn't sleep. Neither did he. We tried, but sleep
is a door you have to walk through, and every time I closed my eyes, the whistled tune started in the
dark of my head. Just a hair fast, just a hair wrong, like it was learning something about me and getting
it almost perfect. At one in the morning I got up and ran the shower until the steam made clouds in the
bathroom, and the mirror smeared with ghost fingerprints. At three, I found the Gideon Bible in the drawer,
and read from it without really seeing the words. At four,
I sat on the edge of my bed and stared at my boots and thought about mourning,
and how morning makes liars out of fear.
At six, we were driving back toward the drainage with our plan in our mouths like a hard candy
we didn't want to bite.
We were going to pick up camp, check our mark points for sign, and then make an adult
decision about staying or pulling stakes.
When we topped out on the ridge, the world looked exactly like itself, gray blue light.
The frost turned to lace in the bottoms, crows like punctuation marks.
marks along the fence line. Our truck hood was clean, no hair. The mirror was where we left it.
My cousin rested a hand on the fender like he was greeting a horse. We climbed the spine with the
intent of two men who know how to do a job despite their nerves. When we hit the notch where I'd
backed away the day before, we stopped, not for any reason I can write without sounding mystical,
but because the ground looked wrong, not a lot wrong, just a little. The kind of wrong that
happens when deer bed in a spot, and you can tell by the lay of the grass and the shape of the
crushed sage that there were bodies there earlier. There were small mounds of debris, neat as
promised gifts, like something had pulled together offerings for a child, a blue jay feather,
a ratty chunk of deer hide, a twist of scrub oak leaves braided together by hands or teeth.
The braided thing had a thread in it. The thread was bright orange. The exact color of the duct
tape we use to flag our route in the dark. We didn't touch any of it. Let's go, my cousin said,
his voice steady, the kind of steady that is made in a workshop and nailed together with focus.
He didn't turn. He backed away like I had done the day before. I matched him. We hadn't gone
20 steps when the radio crackled, volume turned low because we'd never turned it back up after the
truck, a little burst of static. Then my own voice, clear as though I were standing behind my
myself. Don't be a baby, it said. Come on. Hearing my voice say, baby, made something boil behind
my eyes because I don't use that word, not out loud. Not since a night fight in high school
when I spit it at a kid I should have left alone. Words are habits and my habits don't include
that one. I don't know if that makes sense to anybody, but it mattered to me. I thumbed my
radio to transmit and kept my voice level. We're leaving, I said. We're not saying. We're not
any names, follow if you want, but it'll be a long walk. The radio popped again, the same voice,
mine, except from a little distance, quieter like I was turning my head away as I talked.
I'll come, it said. Then a soft whistle, almost inaudible beneath the wind. We didn't look back.
At the truck, my cousin did something he'd laugh at if you asked him on a normal day. He pulled the
wooden cross off his rear view and put it in his pocket. He has never done that before.
Not for a car wash, not for a mechanic.
We drove to the station in town, filled up, bought a roll of electrical tape in two black sharpies,
then sat in the cab like men about to sign a document.
I don't know the right way to do this, he said finally,
but I know we shouldn't go home with our mouths just flapping around these sounds.
We each wrote our first names on a strip of tape and stuck it on the inside lid of our ammo boxes.
Then we each wrote a word we wouldn't use.
not even as a joke if we were in the hills and weren't sure what was listening.
I don't know why that felt like a rule instead of a superstition.
I don't know why rules comfort us when superstition feels like begging.
Maybe rules put you on the hook to act.
Begging puts you on the floor.
And then we went to the tribal police.
I'm not going to name the officer at the desk.
He listened without smiling.
That alone softened something in me.
He asked practical questions.
landmarker details, directions, how long, what times.
He didn't let us wander into campfire territory.
When we finished, he stood with us in the doorway,
and looked at the sky like he was making a decision, and finally said,
This is border country.
There are things here that copy to draw.
Don't say each other's names out there, unless you can touch the man you're naming.
Don't whistle for what you want.
Don't answer the same question twice.
It fit like a key and a lock I didn't know was behind my ribs, not because it was mystical,
because it was a rule.
He said a thing we could do.
He didn't act like we'd brought him fairy dust and asked him to bless it.
We turned our tags in.
There's no graceful way to write that for the hunters reading this.
It burned, yes.
I worked to save for that tag.
I scouted.
I had a buck patterned.
But there are other seasons in other hills, and if you'd seen those preysed,
and heard that tune, and watched your own words get thrown back at you and a voice without a person
in it, you'd have turned them in, too. The lady at the desk didn't ask why. She just ran the form,
and slid the paper back and said, You boys be safe. Sometimes that's enough. At home, I took my
boots out behind the shed and knocked the dirt out with a rubber mallet. I burned the braided scrap
of orange tape I found looped around one boot islet, even though I couldn't swear. I was
hadn't been there before. I hung Grandpa's whistle, the actual one, a cheap tin thing we found in his
tackle box after he passed, on a nail next to the door, and told my cousin we don't whistle in the
hills anymore. He agreed, it's been a year, I'm not going to pretend nothing strange has
happened since. Every once in a while I'll wake in the middle of the night thinking I heard
someone in the back lot testing the hasp on the shed door. Last week my radio crackled in the garage.
even though the battery was out. I was soldering a trailer wire and must have brushed the contacts.
It made the same hollow pop our radios make on connection, and for one cold second my mouth formed
the start of my cousin's name before I shut it like I had bitten my own tongue. But here's the part
you probably want, the ending that isn't a coy horror story winking at you from the dark.
We went back to the mountains for elk in November, but we hunted the other side of the county,
the side that drains west and wears a different face.
We stayed together.
We used hand signals Grandpa taught us when we were kids,
and your world is small enough to fit two people in it.
We never set each other's names, not once,
not even when we were shoulder to shoulder pulling a hind quarter over a deadfall.
We didn't whistle, we didn't answer the same question twice.
We brought meat home.
We put it in the freezer.
The house smells like iron and spice when we were.
we grill, and my little girl says Deerberger, even when it's elk, and I don't correct
her because that's a fight for a day that isn't today. I don't have a picture of a track
for you. I don't have a recording for you. I don't have proof that would stand in a court
that accepts only what can be weighed or measured or sold. I have my word, and I have a set
of rules written on the underside of two ammo box lids, and I have a tune I will never
whistle again as long as I live. If you go out there,
If you must, go like a man who knows names have weight, and voices can be hollow, and that
something in those dark timber pockets likes to borrow a shape to make you step where it wants
you.
If somebody you love calls to you from two directions at once, meet him where you can put your
hand on his shoulder.
And when the ridge time you agreed on comes, keep it.
That kept us.
We didn't go back to that drainage.
We didn't fill our mule deer tags.
We drove home the long way, stopping at the overlook where the wind combs the cheat grass into grain,
and the basin rolls out like old hide.
We watched the light leave.
We put the truck in gear, and then we left.
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