Lighthouse Horror Podcast - From Out of the Storm: A Ouija Story | Scary Stories
Episode Date: June 19, 2024This is why you should never play with a Ouija Board... Story from GhostBeezer Make sure to check out more of their work at u/GhostBeezer Cover Art from Milkshaketragedy Original Post: From Out o...f the Storm: A Ouija Story : r/nosleep Original YouTube link: From Out of the Storm: A Ouija Story Merch: lighthousehorror.shop For more stories like this one, check out my YouTube channel: Lighthouse Horror | YouTube Patreon: Lighthouse Horror | Patreon Sound Effects: Freesound Zapsplat Music: Lucas King - YouTube Myuu - YouTube Incompetech Thank you for listening to this scary story! If you enjoyed this new creepypasta story, please check out some of my other horror stories. We'll be uploading new episodes every week, featuring ghost stories, haunted encounters, mysteries, true stories, creepypasta, and anything supernatural and paranormal. Don't miss out on the thrill and suspense that await you in each episode!
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My family hasn't been closely knit, not for a very long time, particularly on my father's
side. Until just the last few years, I hadn't seen any of my cousins or aunts or uncles
from that side of the family since I was probably about 10 years old, almost 20 years ago.
Over the last few years, however, my father has become heavily involved in researching
our family's history.
Out of that endeavor has sprung an annual family reunion, which we have had at a very early family
have had every year for the last two or three. I'd be lying if I said the first couple of times
were anything short of awkward. As I said, I haven't seen any of them since I was a child.
Now, as a grown adult, I was thrown back into the mix with family that I barely knew. In a few cases,
I still can't even get their name straight, had nothing in common with, and nothing with which
to talk about. My cousin Davy was probably the single exception to this, but even he was a
was a completely different person from the kid I'd known, as was I to he, no doubt. So for the
first two years, I mostly stuck with my immediate family, near the alcohol, and sat in uncomfortable
silence. A few weeks ago, we had what I think was our third annual reunion, this time, probably
in large part thanks to my recent pension, for dragging up long-forgotten memories from what has become
a rather fuzzy childhood. And then sharing those recollections with you, dear readers, I made
a deliberate effort to establish communication with my cousin Dave. The alcohol may have played
a small hand as well. Who can say? This conversation turned out to be easy, satisfying,
and much more enlightening than I could have hoped. We discussed shared childhood events,
including those detailed in the dead children of Camp Redwood, ghouls in the graveyard,
and eyes from beyond, as well as others. Several events came up over the course of this discussion
and in the further discussions we've had in our continued communications since that I'd almost
completely forgotten about. That is to say, that I had completely forgotten, until he brought them
up. Then it all came flooding back. I'd like to share some of those stories with you here.
This first story takes place around the time of my Camp Redwood story, in a house within
which, as I look back now, I always felt unsafe.
I don't know if I blocked out most of my memories from that house, or what?
What I do know is that I had not thought of it in a very long time.
But over the last few weeks, speaking with my cousin Dave has opened a floodgate of memories,
some absolutely horrifying, as well as possibly having a little bit of the last few weeks.
having opened a floodgate of paranormal activity.
The night on which the following events occurred started off as quiet.
It was a summer evening in the turbulent era that followed my parents' divorce.
My mother had gotten the house, a rather large old house, which sat in a small thicket
of woods in a fairly populous suburban area.
The area was by no means remote, but by comparison to the others in the neighborhood,
My house sort of was. My father was off in his new apartment and my mother was constantly working
into the wee hours of the morning, doing her best to support the family. My oldest sister was
rarely home and my other, also older sister, was living on her own with her boyfriend. That left
my brother and I, both very young, alone in the house almost every night. On this occasion,
Being midsummer, we'd managed to round up some company. My cousin Dave and one of my brother's
friends named Jesse had come over and were hanging out deciding what they wanted to do.
Eventually they decided they were going to walk up to our old neighborhood to see some friends
leaving me behind as my older brother didn't want me tagging along. So they left. I was alone
a lot as a kid, but only in this particular house do I remember every feeling the need to round
I'd have been wound up an arsenal of weaponry with which to protect myself.
I would empty virtually the entire contents of the silverware drawer onto the couch next to me.
Forks, steak knives, butter knives, shish kebab skewers, with which I made Wolverine Clause.
But all of this is neither here nor there.
I'd gone about this same ritual on this very night and sat down with my Wolverine Clause prepared
to watch some television.
files, I think, back when it was scary. Before long, the peaceful summer night turned into a raging
storm. The rain beat on the roof like a stampede of infinite horses as the sound of distant thunder
grew louder. The power started to flicker, threatening to throw me into a world of darkness,
and I huddled closer to my stockpile of murderous butter knives. Suddenly there came a furious
pounding on the front door. I was frightened.
Not knowing who could possibly be at the door, but at the same time the thought of being alone
in the house scared me so much that I didn't care.
I ran to the window, creeping up slowly as I neared it in order not to be seen.
I slipped the curtain aside carefully and looked through the window.
It was pouring outside, however, and a sheet of rain roared across the glass, collecting
here and there in thick rivulets so that I couldn't see anything outside.
The darkness of the night and the surrounding trees did their part to impede my vision as well.
Suddenly, a blinding flash of light illuminated the world outside, through the flowing water,
I was able to make out the shape of two figures standing on my porch crouched low to the ground.
I watched as they swayed back and forth just outside the door.
They looked like trolls or garden gnomes.
The knocking came again, this time a bit angrier.
Let us in.
A voice growled from outside of the door.
I clenched my wolverine claw-wielding fist.
Matt, let me in or I'll kill you.
It only took a moment for me to recognize my brother's voice and another moment to let him
in the house, along with Dave and Jesse.
In another moment still, I was being pelted with wet fist.
Why didn't you open the door?
They said, I, uh, I thought you were garden gnomes.
Time ticked by, with all of us sat inside the house, me happy to have some company and
them unhappy to be back home.
The power wavered once more, and even the older boys held their breath.
The storm was vicious and showed no signs of letting up.
Oh man, you guys, Dave said suddenly, jumping to his feet.
I have a great idea.
We all turned our attention towards him.
Let's play with the Ouija board.
Of course, as was almost always the case with Dave, this idea was both terribly bad yet
well received.
We all ran around in excitement, gathering up candles, blankets, pillows, and of course the
Ouija board.
Allow me to set the stage a little before we get too far in.
We'll be back on track shortly, but to add to the picture, as well as not to slow down
the pacing later, I think it's important that we get it out of the way.
When you first walked into the front door, there was a wide and open landing area, just before
the stairs that led up to the second floor. To the left, through a wide archway was the dining
room. Through the dining room on the right was the door to the long, narrow kitchen,
which had a door on the left leading outside, and on the right a door down into the basement.
Back at the main entrance, if you made a right, through another wide archway, you would enter
the living room. As you entered on your right was a large window, the one I'd looked out earlier
in the story, in front of which sat the TV I'd been watching. On the left, across from the TV,
was a long sofa, one of its three cushions supporting a pile of kitchen cutlery and eating
utensils. Behind the sofa was a small area of the living room that was sort of sectioned off. It was about
eight feet from the back of the couch to the back wall of the living room where another large
window looked out on the backyard. Also in this section, on the wall to the left was a closet,
which was where the Ouija board had been kept. It was in this little nook behind the couch,
in front of the closet and below the backyard window that we'd set up the board. We laid down
a thick, comfy quilt and lined it with some pillows. Then we lit the candles around us,
In a crude circle before turning off the lights, with the thunder rumbling in the heavens, shaking
the house upon its foundations, and the rain continuing its assault upon the roof, we began
our session with the Ouija board.
Due to limited finger space on the planchette, I was left out of the actual communication
attempt and reduced to simply a spectator, but that was fine with me.
I sat on my pillow, blanket wrapped about my shoulders, and watched as the others began their
efforts to communicate with the dead.
If there are any spirits here with us tonight, we'd like to try and speak with you," said
my cousin Dave, with his fingertips gently caressing the white plastic plan shut.
Nothing happened.
At first.
For several minutes, similar statements were made and various questions were asked,
All of which evoked no response from the spirit board.
More minutes passed, and the excitement had begun to fade as still nothing appeared to be happening.
I sensed the other's enthusiasm, beginning to falter and feared that the mood of the evening
was about to be ruined.
Suddenly my brother's friend Jesse shouted at the top of his voice,
Speak!
At that moment the planchette leapt into the air about three inches off of the board.
I recall now that I could plain me see the space between the board and the plastic piece.
It was clearly airborne.
Dave was on my left, and my brother on my right, with both of their fingers completely visible
to me.
Jesse sat across from me, however, with his back to the closet door.
I couldn't see his fingers, and as he had been the one to shout, I was suspicious that
he might have been behind the plan-shed sudden burst of activity.
I kept my mouth shut, however, in an effort to sustain the atmosphere.
The others had reeled back in fright in response to the sudden movement.
Eventually, with an abundance of hesitance, the three resumed their prior position.
Is there someone here with us?
Dave asked.
The board did not respond.
My brother looked towards Jesse.
You try, he said.
Jesse looked at him nervously, mouth agape.
But, without argument, he turned his face back towards the board, closing his slack jaw
to swallow the lump in his throat.
Is anyone here with us?
Jesse asked.
I watched in awe as the planchette slowly began to move, creeping along towards the top
of the board, which was in front of my brother.
Near the edge of the board, just before sliding off onto the quilt, it stopped,
the circular window embedded into the white plastic, the word yes could be read.
My brother's head quickly snapped up and looked towards Jesse, with a dubious expression on his
face, as if to say, you'd better not be doing this.
In return, Jesse shook his head, a look of fright spread across his own face, as if to
say it's not me, I swear.
Still, I had my suspicions.
So the scared excitement had returned.
Keep going, Dave said to Jesse.
Uh, do you have a name?
He asked.
The plastic fang again began to creep along, shuffling across the board on its felt shoes.
It only moved this time in a small circle before coming to rest once more on the word
yes.
Dave smirked.
Smartass, he said.
Well, Jesse began.
What is?
The planchette suddenly lurched across the board, stopping briefly on the letter U, then slid off quickly
to the letter N.
Finally, at a pace much swifter than it had moved in answering the previous questions,
it zipped over to the letter O.
There it came to rest.
We all cast nervous glances at one another before the inevitable accent.
The accusations began.
Jesse, come on, man, I know you're doing this, offered my brother.
I threw my hat into the ring behind him, as I did agree.
Jesse shook his head.
No, man, I swear.
All I know is that it isn't me, said Dave.
So it's definitely one of you two.
How come it's only answering to Jesse?
Brandon, my brother asked.
Come on, Dave.
He's got to be doing it.
Steve looked towards Jesse.
I swear, it's not me, guys.
Jesse said his voice cracking.
He was visibly shaken.
I don't know, dude, said Dave.
Look at him.
He's terrified.
I am, Jesse admitted.
I am terrified.
I think we should stop.
No way, the other three of us agreed in unison.
So, after a timidly fought uphill battle against my brother.
and Dave, Jesse resumed communication.
So, uh, your name is Uno?
He asked.
The plant shed hurtled furiously across the board, again towards my brother.
With such speed it caused him to rock backwards a bit.
No, it responded.
It then began another circuit of the board, racing hurriedly, angrily, from letter to letter.
Once more indicating the cryptic letters, U.N.O.
This time, it didn't stop, however.
It continued on.
U.N. O.
Racing back and forth repeatedly.
U.N. O.
Hissing and scraping across the board.
U.N.O.
Outside, the storm raged, and the sky was torn open with a ferocious roar.
Or Jesse could take no more.
Stop it!
He screamed at the top of his lungs.
And to my astonishment, the planchette stopped, coming to rest upon the O, so that through
the circular window, it appeared as an eyeball, staring us down maliciously.
I felt suddenly very uneasy, now afraid that Jesse was in fact not behind this activity.
He was either a very good actor or something more was going on here.
The others seemed to share my apprehension.
I watched Dave and my brother communicate wordlessly, both coming to the agreement that
maybe this had gone far enough.
At least that's what I thought they'd agreed upon.
They never got the chance to express it.
As everyone sat around stunned, the planchette began to move once more at its original.
anal achingly slow pace. I watched, as it slid out from under Jesse's fingers, clearly he was not
the culprit. Seeing this, my brother then let go, followed by Dave. The planchette, however,
kept moving. We looked on in disbelief, watching the plastic fang move along of its own accord,
aided not by human hands. The eye revealed to us the following letter.
D-I-G. Again it began a circuit of the board. D-I-G, D-I-G, D-I-G, D-I-G. Jesse slammed his hand down upon the plastic plank, halting its movement,
then instantly yanked his hand away with a cry of pain, wincing, and with tears beginning to
stream down his face. He drew his hand to his mouth and sucked on the fingers.
My hand, he shouted. It burned me. On the board, in between the four of us, the planchette began to bounce violently, back and forth from leg to leg at a rapid pace, making a sound like a spinning quarter beginning to falter. Outside, there came a tremendous boom coupled with the searing light from an intense blast of lightning. On my right, just above eye level, the curtain. The curtain was a tremendous boom coupled with the searing light from an intense blast of lightning. On my right, just above eye level, the curtain. The curtain, the curtain,
The hardened window to the backyard was a lit, a bluish square of bright fuzzy light, casting
shadows about the darkened room.
In that moment of brief illumination, from the corner of my eye, I could see the figure
of someone standing in the backyard, just outside the window.
Dave, who sat with his back against the rear of the couch, facing the window, saw the image
entirely.
Holy shit!
He sprang to his feet and vaulted over the couch behind him, while Jesse, who had also
seen the figure, fell backwards into the corner of the couch and closet with a whimper, sucking
on his burned fingers.
Dave sped towards the lamp, just beside the couch, and hurriedly clicked it on.
Only it didn't come on.
Now knowing that what I thought I'd seen from the corner of my eye,
had actually been there. I too jumped to my feet, ran around the couch and into the main
area of the living room.
What the heck, guys? Brandon shouted. He'd been seated with his back to the window and
thus didn't see the figure standing outside in the storm illuminated against the backdrop
of night. I myself continued running through the living room past Dave, still trying to
click on the lamp and into the entry hall. There, I flipped.
the switch to the light in the entryway, and the light in the dining room on my left, neither
of which came on. Apparently, with the lights already off in order to enhance our candle-lit
session with the Ouija board, we'd miss the fact that the power had died.
Oh my god, you guys, I said, peeking my head back into the living room.
The power's out.
As I looked into the living room to inform the others of our dilemma, the back window
once more flared with that electrical glow. I was now completely facing the window and could see,
clear as day, the woman standing in our backyard just outside the window. Her hair was done up,
nice and neat, in a style similar to something from an old-style TV show. She wore a white shirt
or blouse with what appeared to be a blue apron over top. In that brief moment,
moment in which she was lit up, I couldn't make out her facial features through the rain-streaked
window. Her face instead appeared all smeared and blurry.
Oh my God, I said again, pointing with a trembling hand towards the window. At the same time,
I could hear a whimper come from behind the couch, one that I was sure had been issued from
Jesse's finger-sucking lips. Now standing upright, my brother took notice of the house. My brother took notice
of my indication of the rear window and finally turned to see what all the fuss was about.
Though I could no longer see the woman from where I was, Brandon, being much closer to the window,
apparently could. For when he turned to see what it was that I was pointing at,
with such a look of terror spread across my face, he immediately jumped to his right,
away from the window, with a surprised shriek. Oh, crap, oh crap!
He shouted, as he tore towards me through the living room.
Who is that?
Don't leave me, Jesse screamed from behind the couch.
Get up, you idiot!
Dave yelled as he made his way into the entry hall with my brother and I.
Quick, my brother said, suddenly, we have to lock the doors.
Instantly, I jumped towards the front door and slammed on the bolt.
Brandon took off through the dining room and into the kitchen to lock the door out to the side yard.
tripping and knocking over chairs along the way. Dave had run back into the living room to grab
a couple of the candles and was shouting for Jesse to follow. He'd finally come out from behind the
couch, shaking and in tears. After a few moments passed, and my brother had not come back,
the other three of us left the entryway and headed towards the kitchen to find him and see what
was going on. There we found Brandon, leaning over the sink,
Above which was a small pair of windows looking out into the backyard.
In his hand was a flashlight, turned off, which he had apparently acquired from the kitchen
junk drawer.
We all gathered in the long, narrow kitchen and waited silently for him to report what
he saw outside.
I don't see anything out there, guys.
He said after a few moments of gazing through the glass.
I know I saw her, I said.
Her?
Asked Dave.
Yeah, her, replied my brother.
I saw her too.
He turned and looked back out the window.
But I don't see her now.
We stayed in the kitchen, huddled closely together, shadow shifting with a dancing candlelight, just waiting.
Waiting for something to happen.
anything, for the power to come on, for my mother to come home, unlikely, not for a few more
hours, or maybe for one of my sisters to pay a visit. None of those things happened. Instead,
just barely audible over the rain drumming across the roof and the continuous rumble of thunder,
we heard a long, drawn-out, squeaky wine, like that of a rusty hinge, coming from someone
somewhere outside. It was followed shortly by a loud metallic bang.
What the heck was that? Dave asked.
I don't know. My brother answered him.
Oh, God, you guys? Jesse groaned. This isn't right. It's all wrong.
Yeah, guys, I don't like this, I said, voicing my concerns. There was a feeling of impending doom that was slowly building.
Gaining momentum, spreading like a disease through the air, infecting us.
We all could feel it.
A creeping fear, stronger than that by which each and every one of us had already been
seized.
We weren't in the clear.
Something more was about to happen.
From below our feet, there arose a clatter, accompanied by another metallic boom.
Oh, no, my brother said.
What? What? What is it? I asked.
The storm cellar, he replied.
We had forgotten about the storm cellar.
A pair of green metal doors which sat just outside into the left of the living room window
at which the woman had been standing and led downward into the basement.
On my right, standing narrowly ajar, was the door that led from our kitchen down into
the dank, dark cellar.
Was it open?
Dave asked nervously.
We have to lock it, he said, without waiting for a reply.
Impulsively, Dave pushed his way by me, snatched the flashlight from Brandon's hand, and
headed for the basement door.
No, my brother and I both yelled, knowing that in all likelihood it was already too late
to secure the basement.
Dave flicked on the torch, swung open the door, and aimed the beam of light into the passage,
then froze, staring open mouth into the darkness at something down the basement stairs.
My brother jumped forward, knocking Jesse to the ground, clutched Dave by the shoulders
and yanked him away from the top of the steps. The sudden action caused Dave to drop the flashlight,
which came to rest at the top of the stairs. As my brother pulled Dave away, I sprang towards
the door to shut it. At my feet, the dropped flashlight, still emitting its beam, pointed straight
ahead into the pitch black of the cellar. I couldn't help, but look. Directly ahead, the light refracted
refracted off of the steeply descending ceiling, illuminating faintly, the damp wooden stairs
below.
At the bottom of the basement stairs, in a black puddle of trembling water, stood the woman.
Water rolled off of her wet skin and soaked clothes, falling into the black puddle to cause
ripples that sped away towards the puddle's edge in circles of reflected light. It was
hypnotic. I watched in horror as the woman slowly leaned forward farther and farther until her face
was little more than a foot away from the stairs. No human being could possibly lean forward
at such a dramatic angle in a twitchy and spastic motion.
the woman's head lifted so that she was staring directly at me.
It was now her face that caught my attention, or rather the lack thereof.
It was blank, blurry, and yet shifting as though I were still viewing it through a rainy window.
The woman, still leaning forward, hovering parallel to the steps, then began to haltingly float
upward towards me.
The blue fabric from the apron she wore hung limp, dragging along the steps with a disquieting
whisper.
As she got closer, her feet dragging behind her, thumped and scraped along with each and every step
she passed.
I could hear her toenails as they scratched slowly across the old, warped wood.
The dripping faceless woman crept towards me, getting closer by the second.
from out of the deeply shadowed cellar behind her stepped two children standing side by side.
On the left, a boy dressed in a suit stood up staring at me, with his hands perfectly
straight on his sides.
Next to him was a little girl of equal height, dressed like the woman who was now halfway
up the stairs.
The children's faces were grotesque.
Almost cartoonish. Eyes far too big for their heads bulged from their tiny sockets, while below,
their mouse were stretched into impossibly wide, maniacal grins, exposing equally unlikely teeth.
Their skin was a pale, frigid tint of blue. The children remained at the bottom, just outside of the shadows,
while the mother continued her as the woman got closer. I vaguely remember thinking that I could
faintly hear her humming a lazy tune. Matt, what are you doing? I heard my brother shout out on my
right. Then suddenly there was a clatter and the flashlight went spinning away, throwing the
basement and the beings that occupied it back into unseen darkness. My brother had
stepped in front of me, ininvertedly kicking the flashlight, in the process of taking me by the
arm and pulling me away from the doorway. I recall feeling dazed. And now, as I write this,
I suppose I must have been in some sort of trance. Throwing me out of the way, my brother spun back
towards the door and slammed it shut. He then quickly slid the chain on the door into place,
hopefully securing the basement. What did you guys see? Brandon asked, turning back towards Dave and
I. A woman, Dave said. And kids, I added. Dave shot a quizzical look towards me. It hit me then
what I'd just seen. Oh my God, Brandon. We have to get out of here. My brother seemed prepared to argue,
until with a final loud snap the basement door popped open.
Luckily, the chain held, and in that moment, the four of us scrambled over one another in a dash
for the front door.
On our way through the dining room, disoriented and shrouded in darkness, we clearly heard
another loud snap, followed by the bang of the basement door crashing into the kitchen
wall the chain had given out.
My brother, my cousin Dave, Jesse and I, spilled out of the house into the pouring rain,
the roaring thunder and the crackling lightning.
We ran down our long wooded driveway out onto the street and then ran some more.
We finally stopped running once we made it to a brightly lit intersection, an oasis in the
dark of night, where a nearby gas station offered shelter from the storm and hopefully
a chance to find help? From there, we called my sister, told her we had seen someone in the house,
and asked her to pick us up, which she did. She took the four of us back to her apartment,
and though we argued, knowing that we'd not just been victims of a family break-in, she called
the police. They checked our house out, discovered signs of a possible break-in, but no perps.
The only things they found to verify our story at all was water trailing from the storm cellar
doors through the basement, up the steps, and to the basement door with the busted chain.
However, they also encountered our Ouija board setup, which only helped to cast further
doubt upon the reality of our story in the minds of the officers.
The rest of that summer ticked by slowly, my brother and I taking it one day at a time,
each of us unwilling to be left alone in that house.
Eventually, though, once it was apparent that there would be no further activity, we were able
to get back into a normal lifestyle.
Nothing else of this magnitude ever happened in that house, and for years we had no answers.
Was it a ghost we'd summoned through the Ouija board that was now set loose?
on the world. That was our best guess, but we had no clue, until a few years later, that is.
It turns out that Jesse had known the whole time who these spirits were, where they had
come from, and what they wanted. He'd seen them before, you see, many times, his whole life,
in fact. Now, we didn't know it at the time, and wouldn't find out until my
brother entered middle school, but Jesse and his family were thought of around town as weirdos.
They were thought of as outcast.
This was due entirely to Jesse's grandfather, who had once murdered a family in cold blood,
a mother and her two children, a boy and a girl.
The bodies had never been recovered.
Jesse's grandfather had been tried and sentenced to death, but apparently, his punishment paled
in comparison to what his family had gone through for years, constant torment from the unrestful
spirits of the family slain by the grandfather's hands. Around town, it was just a story,
one that the school kids told to scare each other and whispered about whenever Jesse walked down
the hall, a family, haunted for eternity by vengeful spirits. But when Dave and my brother first
heard it and then related it to me, we knew that it was no story. I never saw Jesse again.
He kept his distance from my brother after that, and they rarely spoke again, if ever. According
to Dave, Jesse and his family moved away a few years after the incident. No doubt.
doubt taking the spirits with them, the bodies of the slain family, however, stayed behind,
where they were eventually discovered, buried on the property of Jesse's old house, a house
that once belonged to his grandfather.
I don't know for sure, but I think, I hope, that maybe two families finally found rest that
day.
