The Dark Somnium - Down Here
Episode Date: May 2, 2024This is a Remake of a story i did 6 years ago called Down Here by Michael Whitehouse, make sure to check out the original story and support the author!Special thanks to @DusklightRadio and @RomN...ex for joining me in this!Story: https://www.creepypasta.com/down-here/ Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Down here.
Those were the words my friend whispered to me that night.
And though a year has passed, they fester in my mind, shapeless and meandering like a blinding fog.
When I entered his house, the lights at the front were off.
Outside, the weather was still, the air thick and muggy as if waiting for a breath.
It seemed as though the summer had been building towards that evening, stifled, sweat-drenched,
sleepless nights one after the other.
We just needed a little rain to clear the air.
Forecast warned us that we were in for a lot worse than that,
but they had been wrong so often that many in our little suburb did not listen.
I was one of them.
I had received a phone call from Alia an hour earlier.
It had been a while since we had spoken, a couple of years, in fact.
When I answered the call, there was a momentary silence before she spoke.
Her words trembled with nervousness.
I put this down to anxiety.
She probably thought I would yell at her, considering everything that had happened before,
but now I know there was much more to it than that.
After a brief exchange of reluctant pleasantries, we finally got down to the root of the phone call.
David.
Her voice said quietly.
Eric needs you.
Those were the last words I ever expected her to say.
Two years previous, I had cut both of them out of my life.
Alia and I had been in a relationship, albeit in its early stages.
but I cared for her deeply.
Eric was a close friend.
I need not tell you what went on between them.
It was too painful then, and still is now.
Why would Eric need me?
I asked, feeling the old resentment, the festering betrayal,
still burning a poisoned hole somewhere in the back of my mind.
A slight crackle of interference hummed over the line.
He's sick.
We broke up a few weeks ago and he won't get help.
I've tried to get through to him.
His parents too, but he won't listen to any of us.
And you think he'll listen to me?
What makes you think I'd want to help him anyway?
Please, David, put everything aside for a minute.
If you can't do it for Eric, do it for his parents.
Alia was right.
Eric's parents had always been good to me when I was growing up.
My own parents were pretty cold, but Erics had always welcomed me into their home with open arms, like a surrogate son.
At first, I wasn't sure what help I could be, but from what Alia told me, David had been suffering
from delusions and refused to seek medical help.
It shouldn't have come as a surprise to me.
Eric had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia several years prior.
It had been a tough time for everyone who knew him.
After spending nearly a year in the psychiatric ward, he was released back into the community.
Everyone rallied around him, and in time, with medication, therapy, and support,
his symptoms became manageable.
As long as he stayed away from booze and drugs, it looked like he'd be able to live a normal life.
Things had obviously changed since then.
Alia sounded desperate, and when she finally told me that she had split up with Eric a few weeks earlier, that softened the blow to a degree.
If Eric didn't have her, then at least he could not hold that over me.
I am ashamed to admit it, but where love is involved, pettiness seeps through the morrow.
It gets into your bones.
As it turned out,
Alia had tried to phone Eric earlier that night and check in on him.
Although they were no longer an item,
she still wanted to make sure that he was okay while his family was out of town.
She had promised Eric's parents that she would check in on him a couple of times
while they were away on an important business trip.
When she knocked on his front door, Eric refused to let her in,
his voice sounding manic and confused.
I'm afraid he's going to kill him so.
The pain in her voice was evident.
The fact that she still cared so much for him stuck in my throat like a jagged lump of ice,
and yet I was unable to resist the pain in her voice.
She was asking me for help, and there was a satisfaction in that.
Not something I'm proud of, but there nonetheless.
Bolstered by this, and giving in to what little affection I still had for Eric,
most of it from memories of us playing together as children,
I did as Alia asked and headed over to his parents' house.
The big storm weather forecasters had predicted still had not hit.
We were warned that when it did, we were likely to see a hundred mile per hour winds,
which would bring with it damaged roofs, falling trees, and power cuts.
Driving for ten minutes to Eric's house, I looked at the sky, which was a deep purple red,
with night about to fall.
Above, the clouds moved swiftly like sea foam on a torrent, while down.
at ground level, things were deathly quiet. Pulling up outside Eric's family home, I got out of the
car and was immediately struck by the smell of ozone in the air. I'd always loved that smell,
and the charged feeling only present before a storm. But in the back of my mind, I knew I could not
hang around for too long. Hopefully I would get back to my own place before the storm hit.
When I reached Eric's front door, I expected to knock, but as I raised my hand, the door opened slowly.
There, standing in the light of his hall, was my old friend.
His black hair was longer than I remembered, reaching down to his jawline, which was covered
in stubble, and his eyes were red, as if he'd been up all night or crying, probably both.
His unshaven face stared at me in disbelief for a moment, and before I could so much as muster
a hello, Eric reached out and wrapped both arms around me.
He held me close and let out a short whimper, as if overcome with emotion.
The smell of tobacco and sweat from him was strong and sickening, and immediately those
smells conjured up an image of Eric, awake for several nights, smoking, pacing, and trying to
figure out some hoard delusion.
It's so good to see you, David.
He said, letting go of me and ushering me inside.
I've missed you.
Deep down inside, I still sheltered resentment towards him for stealing Aaliyah from me.
But seeing him in such a state of distress, I felt the old.
older feelings of care and friendship returning to me, like blood flowing to a limb long gone
to sleep, a tingle, then a surge of emotion. I had forgotten just how much I missed Eric, too.
His parents' home was a good size, a four-bedroom townhouse. Eric's mother had made a tidy
son as a real estate agent, and so the street they lived on was one of the more affluent in the
area. Since Eric's breakdown, he'd been living with his family, but they were away on a business
trip for a few days. I suppose they needed to get on with their lives as much as anyone, and that
had left Eric to delve deeper into his delusions. I followed him down the hallway, and as I did
so, I noticed that the cellar door was open slightly. A solitary light bulb glowed at the foot of a flight
of stairs, burrowing under the house. As I peered down there, Eric turned to me and reacted quickly
to my curiosity. He reached across and pushed the cellar door shut, and as he did so, a draft caught the
light bulb dangling below. It moved slowly like a pendulum, catching wooden beams and boxes with
its light, spreading shadows momentarily before the door clicked shut. How have you been, Herrick?
I asked, walking through the doorway into the living room. Slumping into an armchair, he didn't answer
me at first. He reached up with his hand and rubbed his forehead, pushing his long hair against
his eyes as if in pain. Alephoned me. That was enough to get his attention.
He looked up at me as I sat across from him in a wicker chair, which I knew was once his
grandmothers.
We stared at each other across the tiny space between us.
Outside, the clouds swirled and closed in, visible through a large window which looked down
on a sloping hill.
You know we broke up then?
Eric didn't take his eyes off me for one second, as if he was searching for a tell.
Perhaps he was frightened that I was now entangled with her.
Yeah, I know.
I answered, looking him straight in the eye.
He scratched the stubble on his neck.
Are you to a thing now?
I laughed.
It was a ridiculous question.
After everything she and Eric had put me through,
no, we're not, and won't ever be.
I'm here because I don't want your parents to come back from their trip to find you swinging from a rope.
There was a silence between us.
Eric looked at me through thin strands of hair.
Leah thinks you're suicidal.
Are you?
I took off my jacket, placing it next to me.
I...
The hesitation told all.
Christ, Eric, what are you thinking?
I was getting agitated.
I had hoped that I would come and see him and find that Alia's claims were exaggerated,
but his sullen expression, the fact that he had not washed for days and the look in his eyes,
there was every chance that I would have to phone an ambulance and let a psych ward deal with him.
You don't understand, David.
You can't.
Try me. I moved to the edge of my seat, clasping my hands.
Eric, I'm here for you. Believe me. I wouldn't be here if I didn't have to be.
A sign, Eric rubbed his eyes as if to rid himself of tears or tiredness. Perhaps both.
Just promise me you'll stay away from Alia. I don't think I could cope.
And I could?
You don't understand, David. I'm on the edge here. One push. And I'm finished.
I'm not interested in her.
She left me for you, Eric.
You're best done with her.
We both are.
Now, are you going to tell me what's happening or what?
Have you been taking your medication?
A look fluttered across Eric's face.
Guilt, shame, helplessness.
Take your pick.
There's your answer, then.
I was relieved that there was a solution.
Where are they?
You need to start taking them to help you balance out.
You know that.
It's not the medication, David.
He now gazed across at me intently.
It's...
You won't believe me.
Something then tapped against the window.
Eric recoiled back in his chair, his eyes wide with fear.
What's that?
It was almost dark, and something outside was attracted to a lamp which sat next to the window.
It's just a moth or something.
Is it?
Well, yes, I assured him, as the indistinct shape now moved off.
What else would it be?
Oh, God.
Eric started whimpering.
bringing his hands up to his mouth.
He stared at the rich red carpet at his feet and shuddered as if a great anxiety were trying
to escape from inside.
Seeing Eric like that, I could not help but feel pity for him.
The illness had robbed him of his mind in the past, and now it was threatening to do the
same again.
Eric, please, just tell me what's upsetting you.
Maybe I can help.
At first, he seemed unresponsive, but after fetching him a glass of water, he finally
gave in to my request.
His only stipulation was that I had to be open-minded about what he had to tell me.
Sitting forward on the edge of his chair, the night now in full effect as the wind began to
howl outside, Eric told his tale.
Everything was fine up until a few weeks ago.
Things seemed great with Alia.
My parents were really pleased because we were talking about getting a place together.
I think mum and dad fell.
It's time I try and get back out of my own two feet.
And with Alia, anything seemed possible.
I... I'm sorry, David.
I know it's not fair to go on about her to you.
I just mean that I've been stable for a good while now,
and I was ready to move on with my life.
Every day, I go for a long walk.
It gets the endorphins going.
It helps my mood.
A doctor says exercise is critical for mental health,
and I've really felt that.
It's made a big difference.
I go for a walk and listen to a podcast.
That walk is something I look forward to each and every day.
But on that day, about three weeks ago, it was different.
I just finished listening to something on my phone when I came to my usual spot,
just next to Kings Park train station.
Now, normally, I walk back up past the primary school and up towards home,
but something caught my attention.
I know it sounds weird, but I thought I could see smoke,
coming from the railway bridge,
from the street on top, at least.
I mean, you ever looked at a road on a hot day
and you see that haze coming off of it?
Well, it was like that,
but there was a kind of black fuzziness to it.
Like some of it was transparent and the rest?
Not.
I thought something was burning,
so I walked across Kings Park Avenue
and ended up standing at one end of the bridge.
When I got closer,
I couldn't believe what I was seeing.
There was no traffic around that time, but I swear to you, David, I saw this black haze in the middle of the road.
There was no fire.
It was just sitting there on the top of the road service about three feet high.
Looking around, I was alone with it on the bridge.
I started to walk towards it, and as I did, things got stranger.
I could hear my footsteps, but they sounded sort of muddied.
deeper and stifled somehow.
No echo or nothing.
Like I'd walked into a small room.
I looked up and the sun blinded me for a second.
It was brighter than before, but I swear.
It was like I was looking at everything through water.
You know how it bends light?
Then the black haze, smoke, whatever it was, it started moving off to the side.
It mounted the pavement and then reached the wall above the top of the top.
train station, it started moving. I swear to God, David, it started moving like a person or an animal
or something like it had hands. It climbed over the wall and disappeared over the edge of the bridge.
There was another silence. I guess that Eric was waiting for me to react, but I didn't know
what to say, except, Eric, you were hallucinating again. That's all it was. You need to take your
medication. Eric looked at me with bleeding eyes.
No, it wasn't a hallucination, I swear. It was real.
And this is what's been on your mind. Eric calmed for the moment and sank back into a story.
As soon as it disappeared under the bridge, everything went back to normal, and I ran home in a panic.
I thought just like you do now, I thought it was a hallucination. But David, I was still
taking my medication then?
That made things worse.
If Eric's medication was wearing off or he was relapsing, there was no telling how bad he would get.
I had seen him at his worst years before.
It took him and his family years to get over it.
Eric, I said, not sure what I was going to say next.
Let me finish.
I need to get this off my chest.
I wish I'd been able to leave what I saw at the back of my mind.
but over the next couple of days
I started to obsess about what I'd seen
I'm not doing a very good job of putting it into words
but I kept thinking about the haze
coming off the ground and the black smoke inside
worse
I couldn't stop thinking about how it climbed over the wall
like it had arms
you went back
I asked knowing the answer before I'd even asked
the question
something tapped against the window again
Eric looked at the sheet of glass, his face drained of color.
The outside world was now a deep, abyssal black, orange streetlights from the city beyond the only reprieve.
Sweat dripped from my friend's forehead, and his mouth began to tremble.
Eric, look, I said standing up.
I walked over to the side and pulled the tall lampstand over to the glass.
There, a large moth bumped against the glass, feverishly trying to reach the light.
See, it's just a moth.
Nothing to worry about.
Can you be sure?
Said Eric, slumping back into his chair, looking exhausted.
Moving back to my chair, I sat down, ready to continue the conversation.
What happened when you went back to the bridge?
I couldn't help myself.
I had to see if it had just been all in my head.
What did you see?
Nothing.
I saw nothing.
Well, there you go, Eric.
It was just a one-off incident.
I'm sure when you were.
Once you take your...
I saw nothing, but I heard something.
The delusion had obviously taken full hold of my old friend, and I worried that it was becoming
more likely, as the storm closed in, that I would have to phone an ambulance to have him committed
or sectioned.
What did you hear?
I said, hoping that by talking through it, I could persuade him out of his obsession.
I got to the bridge.
It was raining, but not too heavy.
There was nothing there.
Just a couple of park cars and someone was.
walking with an umbrella on the other side of the street.
Part of me was delighted that I couldn't see anything.
But another part, it wanted to know more about that strange thing on the road.
When I reached the section of the wall where the thing had climbed over,
I hesitated for a second.
The wall was too high to peer straight over,
but it was just above one of the arches where the train line runs through.
I stood there for a moment, waiting.
Just as I'd convince myself that it was all in my mind,
I felt that strange, oppressive atmosphere again, like the sounds of the world had been deadened.
Then I heard a voice.
It came from under the bridge and said in a horrid whisper,
Down.
I was terrified.
I can't convey how sinister it was, but I felt a strange compulsion to do just as it said or asked.
I'm not sure if it was a commander or a request.
What did it mean?
Was it telling me there was something under the bridge which I had to see?
Or was it whispering that phrase for some other purpose?
I struggled against the urge to follow,
knowing that to give into a hallucination would be such a huge step back for me.
It would jeopardise my state of mind, letting the illness back in.
So I came home.
But with each step towards my mum and dad's house,
the thought that it wasn't a hallucination tugged at me,
that I'd witnessed and heard,
something incredible.
Those thoughts wouldn't leave me.
And so by the next day I knew I'd have to return.
I'd have to find out what it was without facing it,
without putting myself in danger.
I hoped that I would find nothing.
And so then I could be sure that it was all in my head.
Rain now joined the window outside,
tapping the glass furiously like a thousand unseen fingernails.
Looks like that storm arrived.
My heart sank a little.
I had hoped to avoid driving home
it, especially given the weather warnings.
I knew I would have to leave soon, but I was gripped by Eric's account of his hallucination.
I wanted to be sure that he would not do anything silly once I had left.
Just a little longer, I thought.
Eric looked out at the water, dripping down the outside of the glass.
You should go, David, before this gets worse.
It's okay, Eric.
Please, at least tell me the rest of your story, and then we can chat about how to get you back on the right track.
I went back to the bridge the following day, but this time I took a camera with me, my DSLR.
I wanted to see if I could capture an image of whatever that thing was.
So, I waited until about 2pm.
The place is always quiet at that time.
No school kids running around with their lunch break and no one else coming and going from their work.
I got to the bridge and...
He trailed off for a moment, turning his attention to the window,
where the rain now lashed against the house outside.
side. There was a look on his face, just a flicker as if he thought he saw something, before
shaking his head slightly and whispering a few words to himself. I never heard what it was, but
it had all the hallmarks of someone reassuring themselves that all was well in the world, even
though trouble clearly brewed. Composing himself, he continued.
At first, I stood where the thing had climbed over the wall, just waiting to see if anything
was said.
but all I heard was a train moving underneath and stopping at the station
before heading off to Glasgow Central.
So, I walked down the station stairs and took a couple of shots of the stone arches from about halfway down.
I'd never been afraid of that place before.
We used to play around there as kids, remember?
I mean, Kingsbark train station can be a little isolated, but apart from that.
In fact, I'd always enjoyed getting the Newton train on my way home from town.
But something was different about it.
Looking at the stone arches, I could see where the trains passed under the bridge.
But I realized then that that was not where the haze would have hidden.
On the embankment, directly beneath that part of the wall, was another half arch which was covered by overgrown form bushes.
There's no train line through that.
You know what I'm talking about?
We climbed down there a couple times when we were kids, remember?
I laughed.
That was something I had long forgotten about, but it was true.
We had climbed down there once.
I remember being egged on to run across the train tracks.
When we had gotten to the half arch, we found it filled mostly with soil, but there was a pretty
big space inside.
It was dark and spanned the width of the street above.
Once inside, you could stand up.
It felt like another world in some ways.
When Eric and I had been kids, we had built countless dens around King's Park and found several
places away from prying eyes.
Those were secret places where.
we would visit, our crowd of friends feeling like a group of bandits in their hideout.
That thought was exciting, but we didn't frequent the half-arch under the bridge very often.
It was too dark, too cold and damp.
I think we were about twelve at the time, and I remember we found some smudges in the soil,
which our friend Stuart swore were footprints.
I guess we only went back once or twice after that.
And when we found more markings in the ground, we decided we didn't want to run into the owner
down there in the dark, away from the world. That, and when the trains passed through the main
archway, which we were about a foot of solid stone away from, the place vibrated like hell.
The noise was deafening. I remember thinking I could feel my insides moving as the trains
passed. It was not a pleasant sensation. Did you see anything in the half arch?
Not at first. Eric scratched the stubble under his chin.
I took two pictures and checked them on my DSLR.
I could only snap the opening of the half arch, as it's further away on the other side of the train tracks.
There was nothing unusual about the photos, so I turned to walk all the way onto the platform to see if I could get a better view.
The trade station was empty.
Again, I took a few pictures on the edge of the platform, but all I got was the blackness of the opening under the bridge.
A train neared, and I heard the high-pitched wine on the tracks before it reached me.
When it stopped, a few people got off, but not many.
Then, the train continued on its way far down the line towards Glasgow Central.
When I turned to look at the archway once more, I was struck by what I saw.
A form of some kind, peeking out, glaring at me from the archway.
A transparent haze with something black like smoke or mould at its centre.
Quickly, I raised my camera and took a picture as it moved back under the bridge.
And then it was gone.
Let me guess.
When you looked at the picture, there was nothing there.
A wry smile crept across Eric's face as the storm, wind, rain, and all was now in full effect outside.
He stood up excitedly and rushed out of the room.
Moments later, he returned, a camera in hand.
With a click, the camera powered on and a dull glow emanated from the LCD screen,
uplighting Eric's face like a macabregoal as he smiled down at his work.
Here, take a look for yourself.
Handing me the camera, he sat back down in his chair.
The excitement in his face now diminishing, replaced once more with worry.
I looked down at the LCD screen.
It was indeed a picture of the half arch under the station bridge.
At first glance, I could see nothing.
But as I zoomed in, sure enough, there it was.
A shape of some description cast in shadow.
It was difficult to make out.
it could have been almost anything.
This is your ghost?
Ha!
A ghost!
Who knows?
Maybe that's exactly what it is.
Maybe it isn't.
Maybe it's something we're not meant to see, and for some reason I was unlucky enough to cross paths with it on that day.
Something which usually stays at a sight.
Now it doesn't want me to go on telling people about it.
You're putting far too much weight on a blurry image, Eric.
It could be dirt on the lens or an insect moving quickly in front of the camera.
No!
Eric was getting angry.
Look at it!
He stood up and practically leapt over to me.
Look at the shadow cast across it.
That's from the bridge.
Whatever it is, it was there, and it's under the half archway.
The wind battered against the window, the glass reverberating, and with it a flash of lightning across the sky.
Eric turned to it for a moment, then returned his gaze to mine, standing above me.
You should go.
You don't believe me, and this storm is only going to get worse.
It's not that I don't believe you saw something, Eric, but look at it objectively.
Either you saw something otherworldly that can't be explained or you hallucinated, which has
happened to you before when your medication needed tweaking.
Which seems more likely?
It's nothing to do with my schizophrenia.
It has everything to do with that thing under the bridge.
His voice trailed off for a moment, as if a distant threat made itself.
known in his mind. David, it spoke to me. It said, down here. It wants me to go somewhere. I can feel it.
Have you been back to the bridge since you took the photo? He shook his head. No, but I have no need to.
What do you mean? I asked, worried. I don't think I've ever been alone since the day I took
its picture. Not truly. You mean you've seen it elsewhere? Not exactly.
A look of frustration swept across his face.
He started pacing up and down, wringing his hands as he spoke.
It hides.
It hides in the dark.
I don't think it can last long in the light.
I think the day I saw it in the sun and the haze around it,
I think it might have been burning.
Burning?
Come on, Eric.
Snap out of it.
Let me prove it to you, David.
Come with me to the bridge tomorrow once the storm has passed.
If there's nothing there,
then I'll concede it's in my mind.
And if there's something, then maybe we'll be the first to come face to face with...
I don't know what exactly, but it could be monumental.
When someone is caught in such a delusion, trying to persuade them out of it can be a thankless task.
I had to change my strategy.
Okay, Eric, tomorrow we'll go to the bridge, on one condition.
Name it.
You start taking your medication right now.
Eric reluctantly agreed to my terms, and I watched as he took.
took his medication pill by pill. I knew how the drugs worked. It would be some time, perhaps
even weeks before they would start to affect his system and bring him back to Earth. But the earlier
he took them, the sooner he'd be back to his usual self. After that, he assured me that he would
be okay. My promise of going to the bridge the next day seemed to have lessened his feverish behavior.
He actually thanked me. Now he did not feel so alone. After that, he then walked me to the front door,
and we set our goodbyes.
Tomorrow we would see what we would see.
I hoped that it would be reason.
Outside, the complexion of the night had changed markedly.
The storm was now rampant, and so I hurried out onto the street and to my car, pulling
my jacket around me.
Thunder roared overhead, up in the black clouds, and the wind raged against it in return,
nearly knocking me off my feet as I reached the door of my car.
And as I sat in the driver's seat, even with my windshield wipers on, I was
staring through a sheet of water which warped the world and all of its shadows. What had been
a simple drive earlier in the night was now going to be fraught with danger. Above, the lightning
sparked, and soon after, the thunder clapped like gods waging war in the sky. I was taken back
to being a child on a caravan holiday. I remembered the thunder sounding like it was just above
where I slept, roaring so loud that I imagined my bones shaking. It was the first time I realized that
man is powerless when faced with the will of nature.
This is crazy, I said to myself, commenting on both the ferocity of the storm and my foolish attempt
to travel home during it.
But I felt I had already done my bit and did not want to spend more time with Eric than I had to.
I wanted to help, but our friendship was far from mended, and the thought of spending the night
in his company was something for which I was not ready.
The car grumbled to life, and I waited for a moment to see if the rain would be.
subside enough for me to see better. The windshield wipers flashed back and forth over the glass
in excited motion, barely providing a split second of good visibility through every movement.
The lightning and thunder screeched once more. It felt closer that time. And as I looked around me,
two trees further along the road were being shoved around, bending and leaning in the wind,
so much so that they looked like they could give in at any moment. Another flash of lightning,
This time forked, cutting across the sky like a bloodied scar, peeking through the dark clouds.
Just as I concluded that the weather was not going to get any better, in fact, it looked like it was getting worse, I turned my attention to Eric's house again.
The lights were off. The storm must have caused a power outage, as the other houses in the street were also now bathed in darkness, and the streetlights were no longer working.
He's an adult, I said to myself.
I can take care of himself.
Then I thought about something he had said earlier in the evening.
It hides.
It hides in the dark.
I berated myself for even considering it.
No.
Whatever he saw that day under the bridge was a hallucination, but now, stuck in the dark, I had
an image of Eric in my mind, besieged by his own illness, seeing and hearing things that
were not there.
Frustrated with myself that I could not just drive away, I opened my car door to the elements
and headed back towards Eric's house.
The street was in complete darkness, the only light source the increasing cracks of lightning,
which drew hideous caricatures of the world around me in shadow.
Taking out my phone, I turned on the flashlight and used the underpowered narrow beam
to light my footsteps as best I could.
A gust of wind blew towards me, and in it I found it difficult to breathe.
I walked at an angle against it, passing a tree which groaned under the weight of the wind,
which itself swirled around everything.
consuming it in an elemental roar.
Quickly, I moved down the garden path, and finally, I reached Eric's front door.
I was expecting to have to knock, go in and make sure he was okay, perhaps even reluctantly
spend the night until the power came back on.
But when I reached the front door, it was lying open.
The wind now carried the rain into the open doorway.
All I could see was the blackness therein, and presented with it, I felt nervous about stepping
inside. Eric, it's David. Are you okay? I shouted, trying my best to be heard over the storm,
but nothing was said in return. Moving inside, I was cautious of where I was stepping in the dark.
The house was a mere image of the world outside. The ferocity inverted. The space was still and
lifeless. Eric? I shouted again. The door creaked along the hallway from me, and so, phone in hand,
I made my way towards the living room where we had spoken before.
The two chairs in which we sat now lay empty.
The glass of water Eric had drunk from when taking his pills lay on its side, the remnants of the water dripping onto the floor.
I was about to shout Eric's name for the third time, but something stayed on my tongue.
A feeling that someone was watching me.
Footsteps now quickly sounded behind me.
They rushed down the hallway and then were accompanied by the sound of a door opening up.
Turning to the hallway, I cannot see anyone there, but now something had changed.
A door halfway along the wall now lay open.
Eric?
I whispered under my breath, almost scared by the idea of what might answer.
I cannot explain the irrational thoughts which were running through my mind, clamoring for images
and forms while surrounded by the nothingness of night, mentally filling the void with something
tangible.
Walking towards the door slowly, I peered around it and saw that it led down into the
to the cellar. A steep set of wooden stairs delved deep below the house.
Eric, are you there? I finally said, my voice louder this time. I thought I heard an almost
inaudible creek below, but it was quickly drowned out by another crash of thunder.
The wind howled like a banshee, finding cracks in the building through which to seep,
and I was gripped by uncertainty. I could have run, or at the very least, stayed upstairs.
Perhaps I should have.
But the gnawing, cowering, terrified below, was enough to shake me into action.
I resented him for what he had done to me, for taking Alea from me.
But I knew how debilitating his illness was, and I could not in good conscience leave him to it,
or it to him.
Wharily, I descended the stairs, knocking the dust from them as I did so.
They were evidently rarely trodden, but there was no doubt that Eric had used them recently.
perhaps just moments before, as I could see large smudges in patches of dust which looked like
footprints on each step. My own footsteps sounded like dim remnants of the thunder outside,
with a dark storm of unknown waiting for me at the foot of the stairs. Lightning clattered
near the house again, the momentary spark shining through a small vent near the roof of the cellar.
The light from my phone was not enough to illuminate the entirety of the room, but from what I could
see, I was amazed at how empty it was. The floor was like powdered concrete, the occasional
cardboard box sitting upon it, filled with childhood memories and toys. A thick layer of dust
covered the little that was there. It was clear then that the cellar had never been converted
into a habitable part of the house. There should have been no one down there, good or bad,
but the sight of a darkened doorway in front of me filled me with dread no less.
Ducking underneath, I found myself in another empty room.
The walls made from old redden brick, but the color was dampened by the dust.
The cellar was a copy of the house above, like a dark twin.
The same layout, the same rooms, the same hallway at its center.
But while the house above was filled with the things of the living, the cellar was filled
with their absence.
Eric!
I whispered now.
I'm not sure why.
I've never been one to be frightened by the dark, not since.
I was a child, but down there in the darkness, while lightning crackled up high in the atmosphere,
I felt justified in my caution. The sound of a foot scuffling the powdered concrete floor
sent a cold shiver through my veins. Apprehension took hold of me, and a deep desire to go back
upstairs threatened to overthrow any notion of finding or helping Eric, a self-preservation which,
like the dust hanging in the air, blanketed my emotions. My heart raced, my breathing rasped as I
I inhaled the dust, moving in a panic, I headed back to the stairs.
At least that was my intention.
For a moment, caught in the grip of anxiety, I became disoriented.
Turning, I could see two doorways, and I was unsure which one I had come through.
Staring at them anxiously, I tried to set my thinking on a more sensible course.
All I had to do was walk through one of the doorways.
If I then found myself in an unfamiliar part of the cellar, I would turn back and go through
the other door. Then it felt as though the air became charged, like the tense warning before lightning
strike. My skin turned to goosebumps, and, reaching up, I could feel the hair on the back of my head
standing on end from the static electricity. My attention momentarily distracted from the two
doorways. It was quickly brought back into focus when, from one of the rooms ahead, I heard
it. A voice, in a barely audible whisper, where I could hear more breath and saliva in the
mouth than speech, someone spoke two words. But they were so indistinct that I could not be sure
what they were, nor even if they had been a figment of my imagination, a product of my strange
surroundings. Whether it was because of Eric's story or not, I cannot say, but the only phrase I
could fit to those two whispered sounds was, down here. A cold sweat clung to my
my body and a nervousness gripped me as my hand began to shake while holding the phone. The light
from it vibrated in return, and I stood for what felt like a lifetime, staring at the two doorways.
Which one contained the voice? Which one contained my path to freedom?
Excitement then grew as I remembered the powdered concrete at my feet.
Looking down, the blue light from my phone dimly lit smudged markings on the floor, which I was
certain were my own. They led back through the doorway on the right.
Feeling courage return, I stepped through, and in a moment of utter shock, I realized that
the markings were not made by me.
I found myself in an unfamiliar part of the cellar and turned immediately to leave.
When I did so, it all happened so fast.
My light caught something in front of me, a person or form.
It moved past me and headed through another doorway.
Then I heard the scream.
Eric's scream.
It's here!
He shrieked, manic, clearly in the throat.
rose of his delusion. I followed quickly, then heard panicked footsteps accompany the cries, which
now turned to a plea, a direct plea to me.
Follow it, David, it's here! The footsteps now ran up the staircase, and as they did,
I noticed that the charged feeling in the atmosphere had dissipated. The lightning must have
struck elsewhere. The feeling of dread lifted, and was then replaced with a kind of anxiety.
Up above, I heard Eric run down his hallway and out into the night, screaming.
I see it!
Clammering through the cellar, I finally found the staircase, and, relieved that I was leaving
that dark place behind, rushed up them in pursuit of my friend.
I gave chase, headed out into the night.
The rain was coming down in sheets, and above the lightning and thunder coerced each other
into terrifying displays of combined might.
But there was no sign of Eric in the garden.
The water streamed down my face, making it difficult to see as the wind battered me from left and right,
a swirling invisible force intent on leaving no stone unturned.
Rushing out to the street, I looked again.
At the top of the hill, some way away, I saw him.
Eric was running through the night.
He had too much of a head start, and in any case was faster.
I would never catch him on my feet.
A gust of wind and rain buffeted me around before I finally reached my night.
car and got inside, turning the ignition. The engine burst to life, growling as if threatened
by the storm. Putting my foot down, I drove up the street in his direction. It would only take
me seconds to catch up to him, even in that damned weather. But the night had other plans for me.
I was gaining, but just as I reached within a few feet of him, ready to stop and pull him into
my car, a painful creek shrieked nearby. The groan of a life ending. A tree which had stood for at least
A hundred years fell, smashing in front of it.
Instinctively, my foot slammed onto the brakes.
I felt a thump as the front of my car smashed into the tree trunk lying before me.
A large branch shut it out, and as I crashed, it smashed through the windshield.
I saw it only a second before and hid under the dashboard, my heart pounding.
The glass shattered over me, and the wind and rain broke into the car like a swarm of rats.
Disoriented, I opened the door to my right and fell face first on the ground.
the road. The concrete surface gushed with water, carrying with it leaves and dirt. As I hit the ground,
the water splashed up into my mouth, and I gasped and coughed as some of it stuck in my windpipe.
Lightning shattered the sky in the thunder raged as I caught my breath. Pulling myself to my feet,
I looked at the car. It was caught in the clutches of the fallen tree, the branches enveloping it.
Steam rose from somewhere, and the engine answered my cough with one of its own. It would take
Take some effort to get the car out, and even then I was not sure it could be salvaged.
Any feelings of grief from my car were quickly wiped away, as a squall of wind wrenched at the garden fence across from me.
It tore several wood slats from the housing and launched them further down the street.
A lamp post above rattled in the wind, its light still extinguished, and I feared that it too would topple, crushing me in the process.
It was too dangerous.
I had to get back to Eric's house and out of the storm.
I guess I felt more for Eric than I could admit to myself that night, even after everything he had done to me.
I saw up ahead through the storm, the rain lashing against my eyes and blurring my vision.
I saw the distinct figure of Eric, not much further along the street, heading deeper into the storm.
Something indistinct then flew through the air, carried on the wind.
At least it appeared that way.
Perhaps it was a plastic bag?
No, a piece of cloth?
Whatever it was, it weaved and darted through the rain, and I watched as Eric waved his hands
above him, trying to batter it away.
The object must have carried more weight than I thought, as it struck Eric on the head.
He fell to the ground, and the object continued on its way, carried by the fierceness of the
night.
I could not leave him lying on the road, so I climbed over the fallen tree and ran along the street
towards him.
The wind blew in my face, and as it did so, I found it almost impossible to breathe.
turning my head to the side just to inhale barely enough air to continue.
As I approached Eric in the dim light of my phone, I saw a cut on his unconscious head, blood trickling from it.
Leaning down, I reached out in an attempt to wake him, but as I did so, he opened his eyes and let out a hideous scream.
A sort of panicked cry, like a child seeing something awful under its bed.
His arms flailed as he pushed me back.
Eric, it's me, David!
I yelled, but the thunder drowned out my voice.
Eric, we need to get you back to the house.
I could barely hear my own voice, and I imagine that for Eric, it was a nightmarish scene,
waking up disoriented, seeing your friend above you, the lightning illuminating his face,
and his mouth opening and shutting without apparently conveying any meaning.
He lashed out, striking me on the nose.
I fell to my knees for a moment, dazed, as he climbed to his feet and dashed off into the night.
Eric, no!
It was madness.
It was madness, madness which had gripped him, madness to follow.
But follow I did.
I ran down the street as the hill now descended on the other side.
Then through a small forest across from the primary school we had both attended as children.
Finally I struggled across King's Park Avenue, a long street, usually bustling with traffic,
now doused in darkness, rain and dread.
And there we were, on Station Road, the bridge which crossed above Kroft.
King's Park train station, that innocuous little place where all this had begun.
Eric stopped for a moment, in the middle of the empty road.
Whether it was terror or confusion, I could not really tell, but it was as if he was waiting
for something to happen, perhaps hoping for evidence of the thing under the bridge which he
believed had been hounding him.
I saw nothing but the raging storm.
Tilting his head, as if he heard something, as if you could in that storm, he suddenly ran
to the staircase which led steeply down to the station. I followed as quickly as I could, still
gasping for air, fighting the wind which threw itself with all its might against me.
Reaching the stairs, I saw Eric below me on the platform, peering across the train line to
the half archway under the bridge.
I screamed again. This time, a momentary lapse of thunder allowed my voice to be heard.
He looked up at me, looked up, and pointed across the tracks to the half tunnel. I shook
my head. No, Eric, please, we need to get out of here. But he paid no heed to my words, if he heard
them at all. He dashed across the platform, running to the bottom of the stairs. I was helpless to stop
him. By the time I reached the platform, he had already climbed down it onto the tracks and was
making his way across the underside of the bridge. Above the line, the power cable swayed aggressively
in the wind like necrotic veins, and a cold feeling now passed through my body. How I was,
wished I had rushed across the tracks to stop my friend immediately, but I could not. Something
gripped me, a fear like no other, something primal, like the terror which spiders and snakes
Alyssa automatically, even from those who have never encountered such creatures. It felt as though we
were not alone, and that whatever accompanied us was something which should not have been.
Eric pushed on. I watched as he reached the other side of the tracks. Standing there before him
was the half tunnel, its mouth gaping and dark. Yes, that was it. That place was darker than everything
around it, a place not fit for people, perhaps fit for something else, something inhuman. That irrational
thought finally spurred me into action. Jumping from the platform, I peered down the train line,
which continued for miles vacantly. Then I rushed across them to my friend. The thunder and lightning
coalesced once more, and as it did so, Eric stepped into the half tunnel. I moved forward, the gaping
ma of it seeming bigger somehow than I remembered. Once again, the paralysis of that strange fear.
That uncanny feeling of otherness took me, and so I stood for a moment, waiting. My only company,
the howling wind and seething trees on the side of the tracks, as they spasmed rhythmically with
the storm. I could not see inside, nor could I see any trace of Eric.
It was as if he had entered into another plain, another place, and vanished, to a stygian abyss
into which human beings were not meant to wander.
I tried desperately to free myself from Eric's own delusion as I stared at the nothingness of
the half-archway, but I cannot help but question.
What was meant by the two words which had started all this?
Down here.
A hand reached out from the darkness and grabbed hold of me.
Eric's drawn face appeared too, and he pushed me down the embankment.
I tumbled and fell onto my back, my chin and shoulders crushing against the cold wet metal
in the train track.
Above me, Eric stood, his eyes wide and bright, but his face etched in terror.
He said something, and the elements covered it like a shroud.
What?
I said, standing up, feeling blood gushing from my chin.
He spoke again, this time more fervently, but again I could not hear him for the storm.
rushing forward, he pushed me away again, pointing up the stairs to the road above.
He screamed and yelled, his arms flailing, glancing back several times to the mouth of the
half tunnel, but I could not hear him. All I could see was the fear in his face.
For the last time, he pointed back to the half archway. Lightning cracked, and did I see
something inside? Was it illuminated by the lightning? Just for a moment, a shape, a shableness.
I cannot be certain. Something cracked nearby. The sound of wood splintering,
Eric pushed me out of the way as a large tree from the embankment above us gave way.
Falling several feet from him, I watched in horror as the tree cut through the power lines above,
cut through them in sparks of electric blue, and then swallowed Eric hole. I saw it, the main
trunk hitting him, crushing him into the ground. The power lines flailed around, thousands of volts
emanating from them. The electricity like an enraged prisoner unleashed. If they touched me, I was dead.
Instinctively, I pulled myself quickly back onto the platform and fell onto my hands and knees,
scrambling away. Turning back, I watched as the power line smoked and growled. Somewhere under
it all, Eric's body lay. I called for an ambulance, and for the fire department. I guess they were
busy that night with the storm and the havoc it was causing around the city. It took nearly an hour for
them to arrive. By that time, the wind and rain were calming. The thunder and lightning still
sounded, but now miles away on the horizon, like a ferocious animal moving off, well-fed
and sated. After the power lines had been shot off, I watched as the firefighters sifted
through the smoking embers of the tree, watched as they finally lifted the tree trunk off the line,
and discovered the pulverized body of Eric. He had been burnt to a crisp from the electricity,
Whether it was that which had finished him off or the impact from the tree, I do not know.
All I do know is that now he's gone.
My whole friend.
I often tell people that it was his illness that killed him,
that the hallucinations were too much for anyone to cope with.
They believe me, though I wonder sometimes if I believe myself.
I'll conclude my account by simply saying this.
Sanity is a fleeting, temporary condition.
We all have our delusion.
are ideas of how the world works and what constitutes reality, but such things are not concrete.
They are merely interpretations of what the world truly is, a shadow of the universe, an echo of
what is really there, a facsimile put together by our brains, collecting data from our unreliable
senses.
In this way, we are always removed from the truth, staring out from behind the warped glass
of our own eyes.
Who knows what the world is actually made of?
and what is contained within it.
For Eric, whatever he heard, whatever he saw, it was real for him, real enough to make him believe
in something far removed from the ordinary, something most people are not meant to see.
For myself, I truly hope that such a revelation is kept far away and that the world remains
understood, calculated, and known.
I choose to believe that what Eric saw was not objectively real, despite his belief,
I have never visited the station at King's Park since that night, for in my weaker moments,
I fear that I may hear those same two words, those two words real or imagined which led my
friend to the dark recesses of the human mind, where our own personal monsters lie in wait,
ravenous, and ready to make themselves known.
