Scary Horror Stories by Dr. NoSleep - We Found an Abandoned Oil Rig on the Dark Side of the Moon | Part 3
Episode Date: January 23, 2026On the dark side of the Moon—where no signals reach Earth and no one is supposed to be listening—we discovered an oil rig standing silent against the lunar dust. Its lights were dead, its drills f...rozen mid-bore, and its logs hinted at a crew that vanished without explanation. As we explored deeper into the structure, it became clear the rig wasn’t abandoned because it failed… it was abandoned because something down there didn’t want to be found. Fuel your nightmares with NoSleep Coffee — fresh, same-day roasted beans shipped right to your door. Use code NOSLEEP20 for 20% off your first order: https://nosleepcoffee.com Huge thanks to BetterHelp for sponsoring the show: Sign up now and get 10% off at betterhelp.com/dns. Author: Jake Bible Check out Jake's latest collection of stories, They All Bleed: Ten NoSleep Stories, Volume Two: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0G96H432Y * * * CONTENT DISCLAIMER: This podcast contains explicit content not limited to intense themes, strong language, and depictions of violence intended for adults. Parental guidance is strongly advised for children under the age of 18. Listener discretion is advised. #creepypasta #horrorstories #drnosleep #scarystories Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I see sparks fly from the pile as I climb as fast as my body will allow.
The Absalom operators are firing their carbines at me, and they aren't going easy on their triggers.
I keep waiting for my life to be cut short by the impact of one of the high-speed bullets,
but somehow I continue living.
Then the sparks stop, and I have a feeling one of the operators looked over their shoulder and saw what was coming.
I'd have loved to have seen the looks on their faces when they realized that
Yes, that is a tsunami headed straight for them.
And, yes, it is impossible for a tsunami to be on the moon.
Also, yes, that a tsunami doesn't give a shit where it's supposed to be.
It's coming this way whether it's impossible or not.
Risking a glance down, I see half the operators following me up the ladder,
while the other half try to make a run for their roller,
which sits only a few yards away.
I return my focus to my climb and struggle my exhausted ass back up onto the platform.
When I'm through the hatch, I spin about and almost kick it closed on the operators who are trying to out climb the tsunami.
But when I see one of them lock eyes with me and I recognize the pure fear and confusion in that look,
I step back and let them climb onto the platform.
One of them races at me, grabs me by my suit, and shoves me up against the pile.
His voice screams at me over the comms.
And it's then I truly realize that the entire time I was talking to Carlson,
or any of the dent things. It wasn't through the comms. I could hear them clear as day,
despite my helmet's insulation. The guy stares at me. I shoved the fuming operator away from me.
Guns are out and pointed at my helmet. One of the operators steps forward and sizes me up,
but I have no intention of making things easier on them. Plus, if I do get out of this hell,
and Garner were to find out I ratted to Absalom security, then I might as well walk out on airlock myself,
hands past the asshole in front of me and can see the top of the tsunami still racing straight for us.
I nod at the oncoming wave.
Then I really focus on the guy and look him dead in the eye.
He grabs me by my suit and yanks me over to the railing.
I glanced down and see the other half of the team hop into their roller.
The guy grabs me by my helmet and forces me to look at this tsunami.
I feel hands grab the back of my suit and start to lift me off the platform.
At the wave, getting his helmet right up against the tsunami.
mine so he can look me in the eye before I can answer. A loud banging comes from the hatch
in the platform's floor, the one we just climbed up out of, and it's loud enough for us all to hear
it through our helmets. I laugh, because I have a feeling I know who's knocking. The commander
slams his palm against the railing. He eyes me for a second, then sneers. He smacks my helmet,
then points at the tsunami again. There's a shout from the comms, and the commander looks
over his shoulder. I don't waste a second. I shove him as hard as I can and yank free of the
hands holding me. I'm throwing elbows into exosuits and running down the platform right when the
first screams begin. My heart is beating in my ears like thunder. Then I realize that the sound
isn't my heart. It's the tsunami. I look to the side and see that it's almost on us.
And just when I thought I'd hit my quota of impossible sights for the day, I see the
Absalom roller tumbling and spinning up the surface of the massive wave until it's at the top,
cresting the water, surfing, like it's a tourist at the beach. But that somewhat funny image only
lasts a brief moment. The roller does one more spin, then is swallowed whole by the giant wave,
gone from sight in the blink of an eye. I need cover, and I need it now. Turning left,
I race down a walkway to a central structure with a single door. My gloves slap at the long handle.
I pull, I twist, I yank hard.
It refuses to move even a millimeter.
The commander's shoulders into me, and we both grab onto the handle.
My gloves are cheap and bulky, while his are sleek and streamlined.
One of his gloves is probably worth more than my entire exosuit.
We twist our bodies and pull up on the handle,
straining as hard as we can until there is a loud thunk and the door swings open.
I hold it open while he ducks inside.
I check behind us, but there's a loud thunk as we can.
no one there. The walkway is empty. I follow him into the dark space. He doesn't answer.
I switch my halogens to wide spectrum and stand at the open door, searching the platform
for signs that more operators are coming. He sounds utterly defeated. It's no skin off my
nose for a couple of Absalom security operators to go missing. I mean, I did warn them. So I slammed
the door closed and pulled the inside handle down until it locks in place. Now I just
I just pray the door stays closed when the tsunami hits.
I shine my lights on him, and he winces, shielding his faceplate with his hand.
I scoff at the sight of his exosuit.
Mine is huge.
You could probably fit two of me in it.
His?
It's form fitting, probably tailored for his body only.
And it is armored like nothing I've ever seen.
I think of the pistol in my kit and highly doubt the bullets would even pierce his suit.
I get close, and he takes a step back.
Since he's the guy with the carbine in his hands,
I do as he says and stay where I am.
My hands raised at chest level.
That was a tsunami, that answers that question.
There's a banging at the door, and we both look that way.
He warns me off by making sure the barrel of his carbine is aimed directly at me.
I don't know if it's Carlson.
That, and there's a tsunami headed straight for the rig.
The banging rings out again.
then silence.
It rings out a third time, then silence.
I look around the space.
It's filled with equipment and tools,
none looking younger than maybe mid-20th century.
It's all analog, from what I can tell.
I cock my helmet and listen hard,
but don't hear anything.
Then I keep listening, realizing something is missing.
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As he shouts at me, I walk over to the door.
I lean against it, but can't hear anything.
And it's not like I can take my helmet off and put my bare ear to the metal.
But even with my helmet on, I should hear something, anything.
There's a damn tsunami coming for us.
Except it should have hit by now.
I grabbed the door's handle, but before I can pull on it, I'm slammed inside.
My arm's pinwheel as I try to stay upright, but I feel.
fail and stumble back, tripping over my own boots and go down hard.
All I see is the barrel of a carbine in front of my biser.
I look past that to the commander's enraged face.
Tsunami should have hit by him.
He glares down at me, then blinks and looks around.
Before I can answer, there's a polite knocking from the other side of the door.
Mr. Tauper, are you in there?
If so, could you come out now?
Your friend would like to say something to you.
Who the hell is that?
The commander spins and takes aim at the door.
Ignoring him, I get back to my feet.
Then I ease by him and grab the handle.
Or any time he wants.
Without waiting to see if I'm going to be shot,
I pull the handle up and shove the door open.
The marked man and some of his nasties are standing there.
One of them shoves a body forward.
It's Carlson, just as rotted and gross as the others.
They're like they were when we first stepped onto the rig.
Sorry, man, we tried.
A piece of Carlson's bottom lip falls off and plops onto the deck.
He goes to bend down to pick it up, but hands grab him and keep him upright.
Then one of the jerks kicks the lip off the walkway, like how his hands are shaking as he holds his carbine.
From what I can tell, he's five seconds from completely losing his shit.
I'd rather not be standing close when he does.
Wave?
The marked man looks over his shoulder, then back at the commander.
What wave is that, Commander Silo?
All I see is dust and rocks.
He points the carbine directly at the marked man's head.
Start talking or I start shooting.
Oh, wait.
I'm sorry.
Did I say all I see are rocks and dust?
My mistake.
What I really see is a vast, endless ocean.
Don't you, Commander Silo?
The moonscape ripples and morphs into the endless ocean again.
As the landscape changes, so do the marked man
and his gang. Their clothes become whole, as do most of their bodies, although a couple of them
are still showing some rot, which is interesting. That hadn't happened before. There's a loud
gasp in my comms, and I see Commander Silo's carbine slowly dip until it's just dangling in his grip.
The barrel aimed at the deck. Real is irrelevant here. I turned my attention from the commander
to the marked man. And I think, so are you. The marked man cocks his
nasty head. Oh, and that was that? I reach out and grab Carlson's arm, yanking him into the space.
Then I slammed the door closed and throw the handle. He shakes his head and wobbles on his feet.
You think it, Topper. I told you that. The commander's carbine is back up and aimed at Carlson.
A zombie? A dead husk? Not the handsome stud you see now? Carlson and I look at each other and
both laugh. The commander surges forward and jams the carbons.
The
Carlson's barrel against Carlson's forehead.
Fists bang on the door.
The commander whips the carbine in that direction and pulls the trigger.
Even with my helmet on, the noise is nearly deafening.
Bullets ricochet in every direction.
And I throw myself at the ground, trying to make my bulk as flat as possible.
The gunfire has stopped.
fire has stopped, and I roll onto my back, then angle my helmet to the side. Carlson has his hands
around the commander's collar and is lifting him high into the air. A pool of black blood grows at
Carlson's feet. Dead doesn't mean I can't be killed, or hurt, or feel pain. He throws the commander
across the space. The Absalom man slams into what looks like an oversized jackhammer and crumples
to the floor. He doesn't move. Carlson picks up the carbine, takes aim at the fallen command,
The commander puts his finger inside the trigger guard and squeezes.
Nothing happens.
Carlson tosses the carbine to the side.
Damn, biometric lack.
The fists keep banging on the door.
Carlson looks that way and frowns.
Why aren't they getting inside?
How should I know?
Before he can answer, the commander stirs.
He rolls over onto his back.
Inside his helmet, blood pours from a gash on his forehead.
I walk over and stand over him.
His eyes flutter, and he tries to focus on me.
But a swift kick to the temple of his helmet knocks his head into the other side,
and those eyes close fast.
We'll leave him behind.
Alive.
Carlson shakes his head.
Not the best idea.
Do you think he can navigate this hell?
Good point.
There's a door at the far side of the space, and I point at it.
Where does that go?
Carlson grins.
Where do you want it to go?
Home would be nice, but I'll take anywhere,
anywhere but here then let's have a look leaving commander silo behind we walk to the
door look at each other then nod and both grab the long handle we each almost lose our
balance as the handle moves easily like it has been recently greased i shoved the door open and we
stare at the new scene that's different on the other side of the door is a meadow and not just any
Meadow. It's one close to where I grew up, before my life went to shit, and I ended up in the
foster system. Without waiting, I walk through the door. Carlson follows, and both of us step into
the tall grass and long-stemmed wildflowers. I look behind me and gasp. The oil rig looms off in the
distance, but the door we came through is right here, close enough to touch.
Back in! I step back through the door. Carlson lingers.
and I have to reach out and pull him in with me.
Then I close the door, count a three, and open it again.
There are people milling about, hurrying from task to task, or just sitting and talking.
That's the Hartwood Lounge, the one on the top level of NBC.
A woman is about to put a bite of muffin in her mouth, then freezes, the pastry halfway to her lips.
Her eyes go wide, and the bite and muffin tumble from her grip.
Her companion glances over his shoulder at us and gapes.
They can see us.
I slammed the door closed and grabbed Carlson by the upper arms, giving him a shake.
They can see us, Carlson.
Whoa, whoa, easy there. I'm not as solid as I'd like.
He carefully plucks my fingers from his arms.
And that was probably just a trick.
This place messes with you, Tapper, remember?
Yeah, well, let's see about that.
I pull the door open once more and I met with the screaming wind.
and a thousand creatures made of fur and teeth,
racing toward us as a blizzard rages around them.
Carlson and I have to use all of our strength to get the door closed again.
A few snowflakes flutter about us, then subtle on the deck.
I've never seen it do this before.
The locations have always been something related to this oil rig.
This is new.
How would you know?
You've only been here a few hours.
He turns slowly and stares at me and says,
Infinite is the horror.
Forever is the nightmare.
Then he shakes his head and frowns.
I wish what you said was true, Topper.
But I have been here a lot longer than a few hours.
Feels like I've always been here.
He looks down at his feet.
Like I'll always be here.
Don't worry, man.
We'll figure away.
The door is ripped open, and a thousand tentacles grabbed me,
pulling me past Carlson and into a deep void.
I scream for help and reach for the doorframe,
but I'm already meters, then kilometers,
away from the open door before I can even raise my arms.
All I see is a small spot of light.
Then it winks out,
and I'm plunged into a blackness that feels more impossible
than the raging ocean or the charging tsunami
or any of the madness I've witnessed.
Complete and total sensory deprivation is my new reality.
I am drowning in the absence of everything,
consumed by the infinite nothing.
Then these words escape my lips
and my feeling of falling, flying,
being thrown, being pulled, being devoured, and swallowed, suddenly ceases.
Infinite is the horror. Forever is the nightmare.
As soon as the words have been uttered, I shake my head and mutter over and over.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Yes!
stops beating, and my mind goes completely blank.
Then there is an explosion, as if light has been just invented, and the darkness is pushed back.
In its place is an undulating, squirming, twisting, and wriggling thing.
Yes.
What it is.
I don't ask who it is.
I don't really care.
I'm way past those questions.
And I realize I'm way past all questions.
All I know is...
Infinite is the horror.
Forever is the nightmare.
Yes.
I stare straight into the wriggling mass.
You are the horror.
You are the nightmare.
Yes.
And so am I.
Yeah.
Feeling of deep longing and painful regret fills my insides.
There's no way out of this.
There never was.
While I haven't met the same fate as Carlson,
I have met a fate, my fate.
And it is an undulating, squirming,
twisting, and wriggling thing.
Infinite is the horror.
Forever is the nightmare.
I reach up and place my hands on my collar.
A tentacle slides.
from the mass and wraps about my wrist.
Not yet.
No explanation is needed.
I nod and lower my hands.
The tentacle withdraws back into the mass
after whispering a name to me.
Then it feels like I have been shot out of a rocket at 100 G's.
I scream as a small dot of light grows and grows and grows.
And I see Carlson standing at the door.
Then he's jumping to the side,
and I'm flying through the doorway, my exosuit,
straining to stay intact.
Not that I need it anymore.
I collide with a piece of machinery,
bounce off, and skid across the floor
until I'm right by the first door.
Slowly, I push up onto my hands and knees,
glancing at Carlson on the opposite side of the space
as he picks himself up.
What the shit was that?
The next order when clang shut,
and the one next to me slowly opens.
Mr. Topper, that was rude to shut me out like that.
The marked man throws a kick into my midsection, and I oof as I am sent rolling.
When I bump up against Commander Silo's body, I feel him shift a little.
That's good. Very good.
I grab onto the huge jackhammer thing and pull myself to my feet.
I spin and see the wrench coming from my helmet, and am just barely able to duck in time.
While I keep my helmet visor from being shattered, I can't stop the same outcome from happening with my shoulder.
The wrench comes down so hard that my arm.
entire left side goes numb. It must have hit a major nerve. So sad, Mr. Topper. You could have
joined us. Could have helped me rule forever. With my good arm, I hang on to the jackhammer,
using it to keep me upright. Then I give the man a big grin. For a dead man, you've got quite a
swing. Who says I am dead? I'm not dead. I'm more alive than I have ever been. I look past him,
hoping to see what I think I'll see. I do.
And I'm glad I'm already grinning, or I'd give it all away.
The marked man rolls his eyes at my widening grin.
But if you're looking for a dead man, then you can look in the mirror.
He lifts the wrench high over his head.
I don't think so, Asher.
My words stop him mid-lift.
The confident madness from only a millisecond ago slipped some.
What did you call me?
Where did you hear that name?
It doesn't matter.
Not something you need to know.
Tell me, why did you hear that name?
The wrench wobbles in his grip as he tries to lift it higher.
But I can see that's never going to happen.
His strength, his power is going, draining from him before my eyes.
What is this?
The marked man, a person known eons ago as Asher Postulius, begins to tremble uncontrollably.
What is happening?
I straighten up and shuffle to the side,
well out of range of the dangerously unstable wrench.
Then I look over at the marked man's guise and see some of them trembling also,
while their bodies begin to rapidly deteriorate from the semi-normal-looking workers
to the undead, rotted workers I first witnessed.
The ones who aren't trembling and falling apart take several hurried steps to the side,
away from the others.
And loyalties will reveal themselves.
I look over and see Carlson staring at me.
I nod.
He nods.
Then I move in close to the marked man and press my eyes.
visor against his ear. He's barely able to withstand the pressure and almost topples over.
The wrench wobbles and nearly slips from his shaky grip. The marked man recoils, then his
eyes go wide. No, you can't have those words. They are mine. They were promised to me.
Not anymore. Taking a step back, I put my gloves to my collar and undo the clasps.
Topper, no! I ignore Carlson and twist my helmet, then lift it up over my head,
letting it fall to the ground.
I take a deep breath,
tasting the impossibility everywhere on my tongue.
The marked man gasps and falls to his knees.
He loses his grip on the wrench,
and it clatters to the deck beside him.
When he looks up at me,
his sunken and almost hidden eyes are filled with confusion,
pain and betrayal.
It said I was the one.
It lied.
Then I slowly take my gloves off as the marked man,
Asher, Postulius,
watches me. His gaze communicating his complete and utter defeat.
This was my dominion. I was to rule. I unzip my kit and pull out the pistol.
With my gloves off, my finger fits perfectly in the trigger guard. I placed the barrel of
the gun to Asher's temple. Yeah, well, infinite is the horror. Forever is the nightmare, asshole.
I squeezed the trigger. His head explodes, and everything around me spins. I'm no longer standing
in some equipment storage room on an oil rig now.
I'm standing on the edge of a volcano on some distant planet.
Then I'm falling through sulfurous clouds.
I'm buried deep inside a crystal mine.
I'm floating on the edge of a nebula.
I'm digging through blood-colored sand.
I'm laughing with a Yeti.
I'm screaming at a behemoth with a trillion eyes.
I'm sipping wine with a room full of cats.
I'm eating apples, but they aren't apples.
I'm singing a song that hasn't been sung before.
Then I'm back on the oil rig, and Carlson is standing before me, pointing at the open door.
I think that's for you.
There's a scene I recognize instantly beyond the doorframe.
So far, no one is looking this way.
Thanks.
I pat his shoulder as I hand him the pistol.
Then I walk past him, heading straight for the door.
I don't pause at the threshold.
I just keep going until I'm on the other side.
It takes a moment before I'm noticed.
When I am, people scream and scramble out of their seats.
Some climb over their desks, trying to get away from me as fast as they can.
Security personnel shout for me to put my hands up, for me to get down on my knees, for me not to move.
They rush me, and a hundred carbines are aimed in my direction.
I take a deep breath.
Infinite is the horror.
Forever is the nightmare.
The guards jolt.
The niche puts the barrel of their carbines under their chins.
Not yet.
They freeze in place.
Then I look at the terrified faces all around the huge assembly area.
Ladies and gentlemen of the United Nations, I am here to tell you that you have made a big mistake.
Mouths hang open and eyes bug out.
The dark side of the moon is not open, and it never will be.
So please do us all a favor and let it go.
Just walk away.
No expeditions, no corporate interference, no crime bosses.
The dark side of the moon is permanently on.
off limits. Am I understood? The mouths hanging open slowly close. The bugged-out eyes
returned to normal, and brows furrow over them. Hands fall away from cheeks and go to wrist-coms.
A thousand angry voices erupt as one and assail me. I sigh and shake my head. I didn't think
you'd understand. The delegates of Earth's nations continued to shout at me. They wave fists,
and some even throw things like pencils and coffee mugs.
Nothing reaches me.
Anything even close bounces off the backs
and shoulders of the frozen security guards
standing in front of me.
Their carbines still pressed under their chins.
People like you never do understand.
You think of your houses and your riches and your status
and your corporate earnings and your petty power plays,
but you never look beyond to see what is truly at the center of all of this.
I spread my arms wide.
Infinite is this horror. Forever is this nightmare.
The guard's carbines go off at once.
Blood and brains and bone shoot high into the air like a grotesque confetti cannon.
The United Nations General Assembly goes silent, and I savor the absence of noise.
But it is short-lived as pure panic sets in, and everyone rushes for the assembly room's exit doors.
I let them flee, I let them panic, I let them leave.
Turning on my heel, I walk back through the door.
It slams closed behind me.
That was something.
Carlson eyes me wearily.
Um, yeah, Carlson?
What are you?
I'm everything and nothing.
A shot rings out, and I look down at my suit.
A smoking hole is dead center.
I look back up and see Commander Silo standing across the room,
his carbine to his shoulder.
I stick a finger in the hole and withdraw it.
No blood.
I hold the finger up and shake my head.
That may have worked a few minutes ago, Commander, but you lost your window.
I nodded the men who used to belong to Asher Pustulius,
the ones who aren't piles of dust and rags on the ground, that is.
Bring him.
Before the commander can turn his carbine on them, they have him in their grasp.
His weapon clatters to the deck, and he is dragged to a spot only inch.
from me. I'll be honest, Commander. I'm still figuring all this out. But there's one thing you should know.
What's that? I pat his cheek, and he recoils at my touch. I don't blame him. The skin on my hand is
mottled and marred. I stare at it for a moment. Then I reach up and undo the zippers and clasps,
holding my exosuit on. I yank the top half of my suit up over my head, tossing it to the ground at
the commander's feet. He tries to step back, but my men keep him in place. The cool air feels
delightful on my skin, cooling me through my sweat-soaked t-shirt. I look at my arms and see the
sigils and scars and burns and cuts, but there's no pus, no rod. I slip out of the exosuit's
legs and kick them aside. Then I get close to the commander's face again. Tell them that the old
ways are over. Tell them that if they want to hold on to what little power they still have,
they'll never cross the shuttle line again. This, this is madness. Then he clears his throat
and straightens his spine. I don't know how you are doing this, but I know it's all bullshit.
When I tell my superiors about this place, they'll bring everything they have and wipe you off
the face of the moon. They'll try. They'll fail. I nodded my men, and they dragged the
commander away. Take him to his roller. It should still be out there with what's left of his team.
Might be a little banged up, but it'll get them back to MCB. The commander kicks and fights and
curses the entire time he's dragged across the deck by my men. His tantrum is unbelievably
annoying, so I'm glad when he's finally pulled from the equipment space and out onto the walkway.
A quick glance tells me that outside, there is no impossible ocean or massive tsunami. There is only
the dark side of the moon. When the door closes, I turn and look around me. We should move that
chair in here. This is a much better space than that stinky tomb of a room Asher was using.
Topper? Yeah, Carlson? What the fuck, man? I shrug. Good question. He looks toward the closed door
and then back at me. You know he's right. They're going to send everything they have at this place.
Let them come.
I smile.
There's a new marked man in charge now.
And you know what, Carlson?
What?
Infinite is the horror.
Forever is the nightmare.
He nods with understanding.
We both do.
It's going to feel good being in charge for a change.
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