Scary Horror Stories by Dr. NoSleep - Happy Death Day!
Episode Date: September 22, 2021🎧 The Dr. SCP podcast: https://spoti.fi/3zCFjQc 🎉 Ad-free episodes + bonus episodes: https://www.patreon.com/drnosleep 🎥 YouTube: https://youtube.com/c/DrNoSleep ✅ Advertising Inquirie...s: info@truenativemedia.com DISCLAIMER: This episode contains explicit content. Parental guidance is advised for children under the age of 18. Listen at your own discretion. #drnosleep #scarystories #horrorstories #truescarystories #horrorpodcast #horror Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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bar-oblick
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The Reglements
the Concour
Sapplic.
I died for
the first time
on the 18th of
August, 2006.
It wasn't a
particularly
pleasant death,
nor was it
one that I
expected.
It was simply the random act of violence that destroyed my life, and it came out of nowhere.
We were just relaxing at the pub, enjoying a few drinks after a busy day at work.
It was my turn to buy a round of drinks, so I was trying to get the attention of the bartender.
I felt someone punched me inside.
At first, I thought someone had just hit me, but then I felt the warmth and the rapid stream of blood pouring down my shirt.
I realized then and there that I'd actually gotten stabbed.
As far as I can remember, it wasn't even that.
painful. Still, my legs gave out under me, and I collapsed to the floor. Even then I worried more
about ruining my expensive suit, ignoring the fact that I might be dying. Oncoming death is funny
like that. Everyone thinks they're the exception, that they'll get out from whatever horrible
situation the universe has thrust upon them. At least that's what I thought, as the life drained from
my body. The world around me just faded to black, and before I knew it, I had just died. Then there was
the void. At first, it was little more than darkness, only broken by weird shapes and colors in
the distance. As I regained a sense of surroundings, I was dragged towards a new world, one without pain,
suffering, nor death. All there was were people on a journey to different destinations,
whether they had all died like myself, or if they weren't born yet. I didn't know. All I knew
was that I wasn't afraid anymore. The worries, the anxiety, and all my fears had been left behind.
A light appeared in the distance, endlessly far away.
I knew that would be my final destination, my final purpose and the brief life I'd led.
Unfortunately, I never managed to get that far.
I was jolted awake in my own bed, soaking wet from sweat and shaking like a maniac.
My hand reflectively clutched my side to cover up the wound I'd sustained, but it wasn't there anymore.
In fact, I didn't have a single scratch on me.
Had it all been a dream?
My phone lit up on the bedside table.
I picked it up to find dozens of text messages and missed calls.
Hey man, we're at the pub.
You coming or what?
The first message read, sent at 9.43 p.m.
Hey, Rick, where the hell are you?
The second message read, sent at 10.23 p.m.
There were a couple of phone calls and another message.
I guess you fell asleep.
Or maybe you're getting lucky?
Whatever.
I'll drink another shot in your honor.
Happy birthday, Rick.
Then I had over 20 phone calls and a singular message that
sent shivers down my spine. For fuck's sake, pick up the damn phone. Something happened to Danny.
I immediately called back. My fingers were trembling both from anticipation and from the memory
of what had happened only a night ago. Even if my death had been little more than a nightmare,
I knew for sure that I'd met up with my friends at the pub. The phone rang three times,
then Jake picked up. Rick, is that you? Where the hell are you? Jake asked with a panicked,
tired voice. I don't know what happened. I guess I fell asleep?
I half asked, half stated.
Danny got stabbed last night.
Jake said without listening to my explanation.
Stabbed? How?
I don't know. Some nut job just walked up to him and stabbed him in the side.
I almost dropped my phone in shock.
Danny had been attacked just like myself in exactly the same place.
A thousand thoughts rushed through my mind, but worry quickly became my main concern.
Is he all right?
He's still in surgery.
They're only letting his wife know about.
Wait, here she comes.
Jake put his phone down, but I could see.
still hear the muffled sound of their discussion. Danny's wife seemed upset, but I couldn't make
out the words. Jake? I asked. He's, he's dead. Danny's dead. The next few moments turned into
a blurry haze of information. We'd all known Danny since we were kids, and now he was just gone.
The murderer never even made it out of the pub. Apparently he got shot by one of the patrons as he
tried to attack another guest. Still, I couldn't shake the feeling that I was supposed to die
that night. Regardless of what happened, time marched on without answers. Some of our co-workers quit
after Danny's death, trying to hopelessly move on. I didn't blame them. I also needed some distance.
I never even told them what I experienced that night. It wouldn't have helped them anyway.
A year passed, and I hardly spoke to any of my friends. I started to get semblance of normalcy in the
wake of Danny's death, but that would all come to an end on the 18th of August, 2007. My birth
they had arrived yet again, and I had absolutely no intention of celebrating it. Instead,
I called in sick to work, bought a bottle of whiskey, and spent the day playing video games.
By the time Day had given way to night, I'd almost finished the bottle. Even as a rather
large guy, the alcohol had hit me hard. At around 9 o'clock, I just passed out in bed,
awaiting a horrible hangover in the morning. I only awoke around midnight when I heard the front
door forcefully break open, followed by footsteps and whispers. I tried to get up, still
drowsy from the alcohol. As I took one step out from my bed, I slipped and came tumbling down onto the
floor. It produced a massive crash, loud enough to alert whichever intruders had broken in.
I thought you said no one would be home, a man stated angrily. Don't worry about it. I'll go deal
with them. The footsteps moved quickly in my direction. I tried to lock the door, but they were
too fast, kicking it open and knocking me back to the ground. A masked man entered my room,
holding onto a gun. He only spoke a single sentence to me before pointing the weapon at me,
pulling the trigger. You should have stayed quiet. Unfortunately, the man was a horrible shot.
He'd aimed at my head, but had hit me in my throat instead. There I lay, drowning in my own
blood as I desperately gasped for air. I couldn't crawl away, and I couldn't call for help.
I died on my bedroom floor, on my own birthday, just as I had a year earlier. Once the life finally
drained from my body and the god-awful pain ceased, I was back in the world beyond. I walked
through the same colorful dimension that lay just on the edge of life. I admired the shapes and
colors as they passed. In the distance, I saw a tree with branches stretching endlessly far from
its trunk. From each branch dangled a person, real but not existing in our world. I wanted to visit
them, but that wasn't my destination, because just like before, I would awake in my own bed, unharmed
by the events from the previous night. My phone buzzed, and I was filled with unfathomable dread. I still
couldn't quite believe it, but I started to understand that someone would take my place in death.
Hello? I knew what was coming next, but I had to ask. How? What happened? The police say it was
a burglar's working late. I should have been there. The discussion trailed off from there. My dad
was distraught and could barely form coherent sentences. He blamed himself for not being there,
but I knew the truth. It was my fault. During the next two months, he fell into deep depression. I
couldn't blame him. He just lost the love of his life. I moved in with him just to help him pick up
the pieces. He put on a strong face, trying his best to keep the ship afloat. But I could tell how close he
was to just breaking down. If only I'd been there. It wasn't your fault, Dad. Had you been there,
you might be gone too. You don't know that. But I did know, because the burglars weren't ever
supposed to visit my parents' house. They were supposed to kill me. I had to come clean. I had to let
him know the truth, but how could I? Half a year passed, and the secret ate at me. After everything
that had happened, I still didn't know how to explain it. Still, I decided it was time to share my curse.
Dad, can we talk? Yeah, what's going on? He asked with a worried expression on his face. He knew me well,
and he could tell a heavy burden was weighing me down. I started by telling him about my first death,
down to the smallest detail. Of course, it matched everything that people had with.
witnessed in the pub that night, even the location of the stab wound. I told him Danny had taken
my place in death and that I felt guilty. Naturally, he was skeptical at first. But then I told him
about my mother. I didn't spare him any details. I told him where I'd gotten shot, that the door
had been broken down and that there were two robbers. Every detail matched perfectly down to the letter.
I'm so sorry, Dad. It was my fault. I killed her. He just sat there in silence, processing what I just
told him. It wasn't your fault. I was confused. There wasn't a single ounce of anger in his words,
only overwhelming empathy. How can you say that? She didn't have to die. He mulled over his next
words carefully before speaking. You didn't do anything wrong, Rick. You just went about your life.
And these things happened to you. I don't know why you've been brought back, or even how.
But you're not to blame for what is done to you. So you believe me? I asked. He nodded.
and embraced me in a hug. Suddenly I wasn't alone in the world anymore. Someone knew what was happening to me.
What if it happens again? Then we'll go through it together. He stood by these words,
even as my next birthday rolled around. The death was more tame. I just slipped in the shower and
broke my neck. The last thought that went through my mind as I left the world for a third time was,
how fucking cliche. Once again, I awoke in my bed. I called out for my dad, making sure he was still alive,
horrified that he might have taken my place. I couldn't even breathe until he came rushing to my
side, asking what had happened. I broke my neck, but I'm fine, I think. It took a while before I figured
out who had taken my place that time. But once I heard that my boss had died, something broke inside me.
He was the kindest man I'd ever met. And just like myself, he'd slipped and broken his neck. That was the
final straw. It wasn't some bizarre coincidence I could brush off, nor a premonition. I decided then and
there that I couldn't live with a responsibility. I had to put a stop to it, even if it meant
giving up my own life. I figured that if I took control over my own fate and killed myself
outside of my own birthday, maybe I could prevent more people from dying. First, I left behind
a long letter to my father, explaining why I had chosen to leave. I couldn't face him in person.
I knew he'd just tried to talk me out of it, but it was something I had to do. I couldn't allow
any more people to die on my behalf. Alas, fate is a fickle bitch. No matter how hard I tried,
I just couldn't end my own life. I tried hanging, but the road broke. Then I tried to shoot myself,
but the gun jammed. When that failed, I tried to drive my car into a tree, but I somehow survived
that as well. Any attempt was met with failure. All I could do was to wait for my next birthday
and let someone die in my place. No matter how many times I tried, I couldn't die. I was a slave to
destiny, and it was destroying me. In 2009, I was hit by a drunk driver, and my girlfriend took
my place. In 2010, I drowned, and my kind neighbor had to go through that death. In 2011, I died
from a brain aneurysm, which ended up killing my aunt, and so on, and so on. Each year,
I'd die, and a person close to me would take my place. I kept trying to find a way out,
but fate wouldn't have it. Years went by, and on the 18th,
of August, 2019, I would die for the 14th time. I'd already fallen sick a week earlier,
much to the doctor's confusion. According to each and every laboratory test, I was fine,
yet I kept getting sicker. My father and I both knew my time was near, but we also knew I'd be
forcefully brought back. Then, at midnight on my birthday, my heart just gave out. I was jolted
awake in my own bed, and the sickness was little more than a distant memory. Dad? I called out. No
I got out of bed and called his name again.
I was met with silence.
I didn't have to call out a third time.
I already knew what had happened.
I carefully walked into his room, horrified at what I knew would come.
He was dead, just gone from a heart attack.
He'd taken my place, and I could do nothing to save him.
The funeral came and went in a blur.
The only noticeable thing was the missing seats from the people who had passed before him.
Some of them had lived their own lives and died as nature intended, but a number of them were supposed to live on.
Instead, they'd just taken my place in death.
I inherited a number of things for my father.
Among them, I found a letter addressed to me.
It looked rather worn, so I could tell he'd written it a long time ago.
Dear Richard, today is your birthday, and it has officially been a year since your mother passed.
While I miss her greatly, I'm thankful to still have you around.
I know that if she was given the choice, she would want you to live.
I feel the same way.
We both know that I might one day take your place in death.
Never doubt that I would happily give my life if it means that you may live.
You didn't choose this curse, so never blame yourself.
Just do what every person is supposed to.
Appreciate the people around you because you never know which day might be their last.
I love you, Dad.
Since I read that letter, I've been looking for a way out.
My father might want me to stay behind, but how can I live on, knowing that I'm taking someone's
place? I've long since left town, living by myself in a cabin somewhere away from people.
Hopefully, if I have no one left that cares for me, people will stop dying.
At least until I can figure out not only how to die, but how to actually stay dead.
I'm sorry.
Thank you so much for tuning in.
Be sure to check out my new podcast called Dr. S.C. for more interesting stories.
It's 100% inspired by the SCP Foundation.
If you'd like to check it out, just search Dr.SCP in the search bar on Spotify or Apple Podcasts.
