The Dark Somnium - "It’s Inside Your House" Creepypasta | Scary Stories from the Internet
Episode Date: May 12, 2021This creepypasta scary story is from the creepypasta website, written by Michael Paige.Narration, SFX and Music by The Dark Somnium--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/...darksomnium/message Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. 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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It wakes you.
Not the moan of a withered hag or the fleeting voice of a dead man, but the low trill of
wind slipping past your window, air being pressed into a hushed breath.
The shadows meld themselves back into your bedroom.
You blink.
The blurred, hazy object of your alarm clock focuses back to existence.
248 a.m., the numbers decree.
You don't want to be awake.
You don't even want to keep your eyes open.
Yet here you are.
Outside, the air stirs in utter turmoil, churning up to fifty miles an hour and beating against
your home.
You'd known this was coming.
In fact, you'd known at the moment you'd seen those thunderheads pulling in from the west, lightning
forking within them.
From the storm's down-draft came bursts of pine-laced wind, sharp and deceptively sweet, a destructive
force careening from the Atlantic all the way through the barren.
that large tract of wild, unbroken wilderness.
You've often seen in the distance the tall, stocky pines of its dark woods, shivering in the gales.
What was it you were dreaming about anyway?
Who knows?
The information is already lost to the senseless grumble of thoughts trying to piece the dream back together.
Gone, although an image of falling water still rests vividly in your mind.
Your bladder sends a signal to your brain demanding relief.
Half awake, you mechanically saunter down the short halt.
You flick the lights on.
Too bright.
You rub away the floaters and zigzags from your eyes.
You yawn as your soul scrape over the cold tiles,
and then yawn again as you complete your natural business.
Sweet release.
You flush and lift the faucet handle to wash your hands.
A sound.
Your gaze flicks towards the door.
You listen again.
Silence, save for the occasional squeak and groan of the walls.
Probably from the breeze battering them outside.
Whatever it was, you're too tired to care.
Glass shatters.
Wakefulness spikes through you now as this new sound resonates, crawling up from the dark downstairs.
You pull a sharp inhale down your throat.
Your wet hands flinched soapy pellets over the countertop.
Stop.
Breathe.
Calm yourself.
It could have been anything, like a tree branch or some other debris that got swept up
and propelled through the window.
That's it, you tell yourself, nodding, hoping.
A loud, powerful thud bangs downstairs and hope flees.
Now, muffled movement.
A break-in, a burglar.
Horror films you haven't seen in years.
through your mind like celluloid movie reels. Your reflection in the mirror turns goosey white,
contorted with fear. The police. Your thoughts propose. Call the police. Your eyes trace the room
for your phone. It's still lying on your bed. There's still time. You can rush back there,
barricade the door, and call the police from the closet. How long will it take them to get here?
Doesn't matter. Just call them. You grip the doorknob, ready to sprint straight to your room.
The, on the stairs freezes your limbs.
Something, something fast and large bounds down your hallway just beyond the door.
Something so terrible, so lively that even the deepest folds of your nightmares could never recreate this moment.
Vibrations roll by your toes.
Feet like heavy pegs tromp up to your bedroom door.
It swings open, bashing clumsily against the wall at the forced entry.
You stand there, anchored to the cold tiles of the bathroom.
paralyzed by the shock of it all. The short space to your room fills with thrashing sounds,
bedsheets being ripped and torn asunder, the box spring squeaking and jittering violently.
Your fingers, still welded to the doorknob, refused to twist it an inch further. A few steps
away, something of significant size and savagery guts your mattress, the place you'd been just
moments ago. A cold wash starts at your chest and drips to your groin. Your breathing is now
terse as your heart pumps with a new and sudden weight. Your mouth is dry, your throat, rubber.
Focus. These are the impulses you must hold on to. The hot blood mounting up in your throat.
The intensity dilating your pupils and lacing your eyes red, the lift in your gut from an absolute
freefall. These things hardwired into your system will keep you alive tonight. The thrashing stops.
A rapid cackling emerges. High, scratchy sound.
grow louder as they echo down the hallway, expelling from a mouth you dare not imagine.
The cackles sputter into bleeding, like a goat coughing up mucus.
Not the sound of a burglar.
Not at all.
The thing moves again, its hammer feet pound in chaotic pacing until it finally stops and
settles on something.
A succession of bangs on the closed door.
Why?
Because it thinks that's where you are.
But what is it exactly?
You can't stay here.
You need to leave before it finds you.
The cords in your hand tighten over the handle.
You mentally prepare to enter the hallway.
In your periphery, your bleached reflection in the mirror verifies your struggle with that simple action.
But still, the hope of escape eases the gritty feelings of leaving this small space.
You turn the knob fully now.
The door opens, thankfully, without a creak.
You move quietly down the hall, light on the balls of your room.
feet, the walls grown again as another giraffe clamors over them.
The windows flash.
The lightning is so close you can hear the crackling particles.
You peer back towards your bedroom to make sure its attention hasn't left the closet.
Another pound against it signals back, much louder out here.
You continue, each measured step as slow as possible.
Just one sound, one small little thump in the carpet, that's all it will take to alert
something truly horrible.
As you draw closer to the stairs, a sullen urgency pushes you to move just a little faster.
You have the screaming urge to run, to barrel down the stairs and leap out of the front door
in nothing but your underwear, but you resist.
Judging by how quickly it had closed the gap from the stairs to your bed, you have no difficulty
guessing who would win in a mad scramble, not without a head start at least.
A terrible crash reverberates behind you.
The closet has been freed from its hinges.
Heavy feet start moving again.
It's coming.
You kick off from your heels and practically vault the rest of the way.
You round the stairs and take the first few steps.
The grandfather clock that you had kept in the entryway has toppled on its face and now blocks
the front doorway.
No, not toppled.
Pushed.
Chunks of glass riddle the floor from the broken window in the living room.
You could push the clock out of the way, open the door just enough to slide through and get out,
but there's no time.
The range chatters moved down the hall.
way behind you.
It's closing in fast.
Your bare souls clap down the stairs.
You reach the bottom and wind around to the living room.
Pain jolts up your leg.
A sharp bit of glass has pricked into your toe.
The shard crunches and embeds itself deeper into the nerve.
Desperate, you fall towards the coffee table and roll beneath it.
Heavy stumps now bang all the way down to the bottom step.
You put a hand over your mouth.
You squeeze your eyes shut.
Another sickish bleat croaks out of the thing.
It wanders the room, wind whips through the broken window, kicking up the drapes.
The steps are loud, like the hard heel of a dress shoe, as it clacks against the hardwood.
Different scents now trace your nose, a scent you can almost recognize, something sharp
and green like being outside.
It's that eulish scent of pine needles again, now blended with a thick, manurey musk, the
smell of the dark woods.
hard steps sends tremors through you.
Don't look.
Don't even take a breath.
Don't think of what it'll do if it finds you.
How vivid those thoughts teeming with horrors are.
How quickly your screams will be silenced by teeth.
How great the amount of blood that will pull out of your newly opened flesh, ripped and
tattered like your bed sheets.
Do not look.
But of course you look.
Your eyes negotiate with the
surrounding darkness, you immediately regret looking. The deep sting in your foot no longer reaches
you. The shock numbs the bulking fear welling up in your chest. Long black legs canter near you,
teared with fur. They're like the legs of a winter skinny deer capped with bony, cloven hooves.
Behind them snakes of forked leathery tail. A mouth you cannot see clicks its cuspids. The thing whoops
loudly and then cackles like a hyena.
No, your thoughts murmured.
Like the devil, bony feet circle around and vanish into the black gap of the kitchen.
A chair scoots as though brushed involuntarily.
A clatter of things clang into the floor, pots and pans falling from their racks.
You cautiously adjust your placement beneath the table.
The pain in your soul sharpens again.
Are you bleeding?
Will it be able to smell the blood to taste it lingering in the air?
No, if that were the case, it would have found you by now.
A vision you don't feed for very long.
Perhaps you can wait it out, stay hidden until it gives up and moves on.
A vain hope.
It heard you run down the stairs.
It knows you're still in here somewhere.
You allow yourself to swallow, feeling unhinged by it all.
This isn't your house anymore.
It is somewhere else, some dark side of some distant planet you don't belong on.
A place where something, something with hooves, is stalking the halls looking for you.
The back door, maybe?
No.
You recall how the rollers were starting to stick and squeak lately, far too loud.
And even if you did manage to squeeze through in time, the thought of having to outrun the thing fills you with immense dread.
You look to the broken window.
The frame is spiked with shards waiting to slice through an artery, not to mention all the scattered fragments your feet would surely.
find again, running would be impossible then. An idea suddenly clicks. The car keys. You'd left them
on the kitchen counter. They should still be there, mockingly close. If you can just reach them and sneak
into the garage, you can get out of here. That, you reflect, sounds like a good plan. The thing migrates
from the kitchen and moves down the hall. Its cloven feet thumped down more stairs, the basement.
It must think you've gone there. That will buy you some.
time, not very much though.
Out you go from the coffee table, you breathe softly, small jitters rattling your lungs.
You pause a moment to brush a few fingers across your foot to get the glass out.
It works some, but you'll need tweezers to get the rest of those evil bits.
In the kitchen, you glance about for your keys.
Some pans in a dirty skillet litter the floor.
The spice rack has toppled, and a feathery art piece of garlic powder has formed on the porcelain.
You move forward toward the counter with cautious steps.
From the lower level, a muted crash rises up.
Something else has been shoved forcefully over.
Hurry!
You spot the keys.
You stretch out your blood-speckled fingers and curl around them,
carefully lifting them as to not let them jingle in your grip.
Another thought dawns on you and leads your hand next to the cutlery drawer.
Sharp metal things rattle inside as you open it, much too loud for comfort.
But you find and grab the sharpest knife.
There, so the noise is well worth it. A calculated risk. Having both the keys and the knife
in your hands offers a small dose of victory, but you still need to make it down the hall,
past the basement stairwell and into the garage. You peer down the corridor and hug the wall
as you walk it. You pass by the basement quickly, imagining, just for a moment, something ready
to screech its way out of the pitch. But in just a few paces, you've reached the doorway to the garage.
You grab the doorknob and pull the door open.
A new sound reaches you from behind.
A wet, acknowledging grunt.
You turn.
From out of the unseen stairwell, a long, muscular neck twists towards you.
Its hooves scrape into the hall.
The house flashes with another strobe of lightning.
Its jagged horns extend outward, coiled back in a goadish curl.
Leathery skin hangs down from its thick-haired body,
hitting its backside and wrinkled folds. Eyes the color of muddy water. Eyes that have finally found you.
And reaching out of the mottled fur, a skinless, hoarsy face composed of yellowed, still living bone.
It clicks its teeth together, sharp, waiting. Your hand does not move from the door handle.
It clenches almost as tightly as the other hand does around the knife, both trembling. The blade is no more than a paperclip compared to
the thing before you, twitching its talons. One of your feet is already out of the door, squeezed
into the small crack of the garage, but there was never going to be a clean escape. It would never
allow such a thing. The fear now settles in your legs, grasping the inside of them. It seeps into
your joints, turning them into mulch. Thoughts cease altogether. In the next instant, you force yourself
to move as everything else moves in rapid order. The door pulling open, hooves beating closer,
A high, shrillish cackle.
You squeeze into the garage, chased by hot, beastial breath brushing up your neck and down your shoulder.
You move to sweep the door closed, but three hellish claws slip through the gap.
They hook into the thin wood, propping the entry open against their leathery skin.
It moves on the other end, tugging angrily at the panel.
You pull against it with every cord, every tentant burning in your forearm.
You jam the key ring into your mouth, while the other hand struggles to keep hold of the knife.
The thing yips loudly on the other end, its thick stench cleans to your face, it is strong,
and as the pressure from its grasp continues to climb, you know that it is winning.
In one quick motion, you plunge the knife deep into the webbing of its talons.
A horrible sound, much like the owl of a gray, dying cat, brazed from the other side of the door,
dark crimson blood runs down the steel that drips off in red tears.
The claws retract, taking the handle with them, has the be able to be able to be.
door finally closes. You climb into your car, unwilling to take another breath until the keys
finally find the slot. The engine roars to life, and all the symbols on the dash light up in green
and amber. You yank the gear stick into reverse and nearly back the trunk straight into the garage
door, thankfully catching yourself and clicking the opener just above your head. The door pulls open
with a squeal of the rollers and hinges. Even before the metal sheet comes to a stop overhead,
You back out and slope down the street.
Hands still shaking, you simultaneously switch the gear to drive and slam a hurt foot over the
gas pedal.
The car peels down the road, revving higher and higher until your house and street are out
of sight completely.
You look to the rear view, partially anticipating to see it back there, standing tall and upright
beneath a street lamp.
But there's nothing.
You've done it.
You've escaped.
Your wide, vainy eyes find the road again.
Then, as a spasm of wind nearly knocks you off course.
It doesn't matter where you're going.
Not right now, anyway.
All that matters is getting as far away as possible.
A thin laugh shivers out of you, perhaps jovial, perhaps a little bit manic.
You slow down a little, finally allowing some calmness to penetrate through the panic.
The wind still howls and sweeps over your vehicle, but as it quiets, a different sound rises behind it, like two heavy tarps.
flapping about. You look at the side mirrors and again at the rear view. Did you just see something?
A thud sounds on the roof. You take another breath and depress the accelerator.
