The Dark Somnium - Lost in The Woods | Scary Stories from The Internet | Creepypasta
Episode Date: February 7, 2023This creepypasta scary story is from the creepypasta website and was written by William Rayne, make sure to check out the original story and support the author! "Lost in the woods" https://w...ww.creepypasta.com/lost-in-the-woods/ Special thanks to Big Daddy Stone for joining me in this, check out his channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@UCJd5mMcHaEi1TTPXU6ExuVA--- 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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Lost in the woods was a phrase my father used a lot.
When I was young, should we be out in the world and witness someone acting out in a way,
he'd say, that boy's lost in the woods, shaking his head in that parental disappointment sort of way,
even if they weren't his child.
When I reached my early teens, struggling to find my place amongst my peers,
you're lost in the woods, kid.
He'd say, in a far more sympathetic and compassionate manner.
I endured some hard times over the years, while I tried to find where I belonged in the
world, but my dad was always there for me.
Though I wasn't exactly an outdoorsy type, his words were always reassuring, even if I hoped
to never be caught dead in a forest, let alone lost in one.
We would inevitably talk about my problems after he would diagnose my symptoms in his own
special way, but I learned to understand how the same saying would read differently depending
on the situation.
Even during those last few weeks, he battled against the cancer and devouring him from the
inside out.
He too was lost in the woods.
I like to think that when he passed, when his suffering reached its end, he finally saw what
lay beyond the trees.
I suppose it was only fitting that it was as I drive home from his funeral that I found
myself in a far more literal version of his all-purpose metaphor. Over that time, I became certain I
would be joining my old man outside the borders of the forest, so soon after he made the trip himself.
I had chosen not to ride with my mom and stepfather, Dale, as I wanted to be alone with my thoughts.
I didn't have a problem with my mother's husband. He had always treated me well enough.
My parents had remained close after the divorce, as they both agreed they were always better
friends than lovers. Dad got along with his replacement better than most under such circumstances,
but it always felt like Dale tried a little too hard when my old man was around. It may have been
nothing more than the inherent jealousy of man feels towards his significant other's ex. Maybe he
had some insecurities about the situation, but Pop and I would laugh about it when we were alone.
I was always cool with my dad, far more than anyone else in my life, with him being the one I would
turned to when I needed to talk, I wanted to be alone on this one. I think I needed to. Had I ridden
with my mom, Dale would have likely tried his damnedest to get me to talk about how I was feeling,
which I was not remotely ready to do. Even when the rain began to pour down from above, I was
mostly mentally checked out as I guided my car from one road to the next. The spot in which
my dad wanted to be buried was some miles into the next stayed over, the one he grew up in before
relocating back in the day. While the path I traversed that day was somewhat unfamiliar, my subconscious
was able to focus on the road while my mind drifted beyond the confines of my old Chevy. I suppose
that's why it took me a moment to register the truck ahead of me, sharply veering into the other lane.
By the time I noticed where the road had split, opening a wide fissure in the tarmac, I didn't
have a chance to miss it. The collision, or lack of a better term, for skidding into a large gap in the
pavement, happened so quickly that I was only vaguely aware of what was happening before everything
went black.
The heavy rainfall we had been experiencing, on and off for weeks, had led to a few of these fissures
forming across the state, be it from poorly maintained roads or simply years of water
seeping between the cracks, I couldn't say.
It wasn't exactly my area of expertise or anything.
I remember my dad saying some time over that previous month or so that the cities would
be buried beside him by the time the dust settled. Maybe it was the medication talking, but he feared
that hell itself may be reaching through the cracks, stretching its tendrils through the very
foundation of reality, to claim this world for its own, one stretch of road at a time. When my eyes
blink back to awareness, my dramatic shift in surroundings caught me off guard at first. While I had
been at the helm of my old Chevy when I blacked out, the fact I found myself laying, splayed out on the
ground of an unfamiliar forest took me a moment to fully grasp. The rain had stopped, leading me to
believe I must have been out there for a while, but when I pressed my palms to the ground,
I found it wasn't even damp. I began to question my own sanity. You're lost in the woods, kid.
I heard echoing from the back of my mind as I hesitantly raised from the dirt to trembling,
weakened legs. Attempting to rationalize my relocation while I slept, I assumed that someone must have
pulled me out from my likely crumpled car before dragging me into the middle of the woods
that stood beside the road I was traversing.
Why anyone would do this, I couldn't fathom.
Maybe, I thought.
More cracks opened up, so someone carried me in here?
Perhaps they thought the road wasn't safe, so they dropped me off before going for help.
Not the most likely rationalization, but it was something.
While I gazed around my newfound surroundings, seeking out any indication,
of which direction would lead me back to the road, I became more aware of the unsettling silence.
Being the middle of winter, the bare, skeletal trees, and dead leaves lining the forest floor
didn't feel out of place, but I could find no evidence of anything else alive out there.
Glancing upward, the blank and gray sky appeared as lifeless as the world around me.
I couldn't even feel a breeze.
While I still wore the suit I dawned for my father's funeral, one that wasn't exactly,
made for winter weather, it wasn't as chilly as I would have expected. It wasn't warm either,
mind you, but everything felt wrong somehow. The colors looked muted in a way. The bark of the
trees was an almost sickly grayish brown. The discarded leaves scattered across the ground
were more yellowed and diseased looking than what I would have expected. Even the drab sky felt
more like a ceiling over the woods than a vast emptiness, adding a strange sense of claustrophobia
to my already scattered senses.
While all I could hear was my heartbeat against the inner walls of my ears, the crunching beneath
my feet when I finally took a step almost caused me to recoil, being out in the wilderness, surrounded
by such emptiness and quiet was far more unsettling to me than how I ended up here in the
first place.
I was in a daze when I trudged upward in no particular direction, with only more stripped-down
trees being all I could make out in any direction.
I had no way of knowing which potential path would be the right one.
Regardless of my uncertainty, I knew I had to keep moving.
I couldn't put my finger on it, but I had the strangest sense of urgency,
assuring me that I must reach the border of this forest as quickly as possible.
The scenery remained unchanged, even after walking for what felt like a few hours.
At the beginning of my stroll, I'd fished my phone out of my pocket,
only to see the broken screen and absence of any backlight or life behind the shattered glass.
Given that the last thing I remembered before waking up in this place was crashing into a hole,
it wasn't the hardest to accept that my device had not survived, even if my body was somehow
unscathed.
I had no idea how much time passed when the humming sound began.
That's about the best way I can describe it.
A hum that started soft, growing steadily louder, as if something was approaching.
Had it not been for the almost suffocating quiet of my surroundings, I likely wouldn't even have
noticed it until it engulfed me, if that was indeed its intent.
For all I knew, the unsettling vibration that accompanied it was something good,
something I should approach rather than run from.
Ultimately, I wasted no time deliberating the options, opting to transform my stroll
into an outright sprint for my life.
With the noise originating from behind me, I could only hope that speeding away,
from it was the right call. To fully illustrate where my head was at the time, I think I assumed
that I had landed in some sort of purgatory, somewhere between life and death after the accident.
Being that I saw no sign of the road I had quite literally crashed into, it seemed a reasonable
assumption. With that working theory that I must escape these woods to reclaim my mortal shell,
my immediate fear was that the sound belonged to that which would send me to whatever afterlife
awaited me. That, or it was something far more sinister, perhaps intent on leading me to the
gates of hell itself. When a subtle mist joined the ambient and elevating hum, gently caressing the
forest floor beneath my quickly tiring legs, I grew far more certain I had to escape whatever was
happening. While I ached from head to toe, something that somewhat contradicted my theory of being
absent of living flesh at the time, my frenzied thoughts were interrupted by the ground shifting to a steep
downward slant. For the briefest moment, I felt weightless as my feet found nothing to land on,
slipping on the dried leaves when they finally did make contact. I was so caught off guard,
having been otherwise occupied by both my surroundings and the oncoming storm, my mind fought
as much as my flailing limbs while I stumbled towards more uncertainty. If nothing else, when my fall
came to an end with my body splayed out, faced down on another unfamiliar bed of dried leaves,
The humming vibrations felt further off again.
My mind fought to remain conscious as the dizziness of my quickly-paced descent caused the world
to spin around me, but I cannot allow myself to pass out here, not with whatever was pursuing
me.
As I pushed my palms against the ground, struggling to get somewhat upright before the darkness
could swallow me whole, something happened that most certainly brought my wavering consciousness
back to my dire circumstances.
Stay down, friend.
The stranger, who seemingly appeared out of nowhere, said, pushing me back down by the shoulder.
Regardless of his encouragement, I landed hard, having completely lost my footing, being surprised by the unexpected touch.
What? Who the—sh!
He said, crouching down beside where I now sat.
Just let it drift on by.
I followed his gaze back up the steep hill I had tumbled down to see that dense, white fog lining the woods above like a cloud.
While I had assumed the unusual mist was something chasing after me, the full weight of that
irrational thought didn't sink in until I watched it shift directions, some 30 feet above.
While it was so thick, it almost resembled an enormous, sentient cottonball.
It had ripples throughout, like waves running against the direction of a stream, spiraling endlessly
as it hovered in place.
It was somewhat confusing to look upon, the way it jerked one way with the bizarre rapids,
flowing backwards, but it was clear that some sort of consciousness guided it. After it pulled
to the left and right, swaying this way and that, it finally came to a halt, spinning around
and around, as if waiting for something or someone in this case. While I didn't know whether
or not I should trust my new companion, his reassuring grip on my shoulder helped me more than I could
understand at the time. Though I hadn't looked at him yet, just having someone by my side after hours
of solitude trudging through this seemingly never-ending forest encouraged me to remain as still
as possible.
We both continued to glare upwards, even after the fog began to dissipate, before drifting back
the way it came.
For some moments after its retreat, I was scared to move a muscle, even after the stranger let
his grip on my shoulder slip free.
Should be okay.
For now, anyway.
He said, lifting himself back from the ground.
What was that?
I asked, getting to my feet.
Finally, having the opportunity to take in the appearance of this man, I felt a little more
at ease, noticing the uniform he was wearing.
It was similar to a police outfit, but one I recognized as more of a park ranger garb.
I hadn't spent a lot of time in such places over the years, but I was certain that's
what it was.
Plus, it fit, considering our location.
He looked a little older than me, but in decent shape.
He pulled his wide brim hat from his short brown hair.
typing his sweating brow with the back of his forearm.
He had a neatly trimmed beard, a few shades darker than his hair, and stood a couple of inches
taller than me.
Nothing you want to get caught up in.
He said, placing the hat back in place.
That's a fact.
He looked back at me, giving me a small smile.
It was then that I noticed that his eyes were an almost translucent sky blue.
Though I assumed he was likely wearing some sort of novelty contacts or something, they were
still almost mesmerizing.
Of course, given the fact that everything around us was so lifeless, drowned in mute,
depressing colors, it may have been nothing more than the stark contrast of something so lively
amid everything else appearing so lifeless and cold.
Maxwell Tucker, he said, holding out a hand.
Ranger talk around these parts.
Nathan Solomon.
Well, I'm Nate.
I replied, shaking his hand.
Nice to meet you, Nate.
Let's get moving, yeah.
Yeah.
The more we talked as we walked onward, continuing in the direction I was going, something
I wasn't entirely sure of, considering that my tumble had potentially altered my trajectory,
the more I felt comfortable with the guy.
His voice had a friendly tone.
There was something warm and inviting about it, like I was chatting with an old friend,
rather than someone I had only just met.
He spoke of strange occurrences in these woods.
Woods I had apparently been alongside when the road swallowed my car.
While I didn't want to get into said strange occurrences, being that I was already freaked out by everything,
I still couldn't figure out how I ended up here, so far away from my likely totaled Chevy.
Likely.
Ranger Tuck said,
It dragged you in here, deep in the heart of it.
Wouldn't be the first time.
It?
What do you mean?
Folks around here just call it the gray.
Seems to enjoy messing with.
folks, the ones that don't finish off right away anyway.
Wait, I said, stopping in place.
So some guy screws with people, leaves them for dead, or just straight out kills them?
He just tilted his head with a shrug.
And that's okay?
Like, the police won't do anything about it?
You Rangers just let it continue?
Some sick bastard is loose out here, and you guys...
Never said it was a man.
It ain't exactly something that fits in the normal conversation, you know?
Nah, friend, this ain't nothing natural.
sneaking through the cracks.
Can't say what it is, but it ain't bound by our laws.
Okay, I said, attempting to push aside my disbelief for the time.
Why all this then?
Why drag me?
God knows how far into this damn place only to leave me to wander around.
It likes games for whatever reason.
It enjoys the hunt, the chase.
We've been able to save some, but most end up the same way.
Whether it does it right off the bat or after making,
them think they got a chance.
Suppose it depends on what kind of mood it's in at the time.
Could be you just got lucky.
Lucky?
Are you serious?
I crashed my car, ended up in the middle of the dismal freaking forest and damn near broke
my legs running from a cloud, which I can't even believe I'm saying with a straight face.
What the hell should I feel lucky about?
You found me?
He said with a smirk and a wink.
So, you ready to get out of here or what?
While I can't say this especially put me at ease,
his carefree expression did make me feel a bit better about things.
Yes, it would seem I was only one of many to fall victim to the gray,
whatever the hell that was,
but Ranger Tuck had seemingly witnessed what this thing was capable of
and lived to tell the tale.
I had to believe I was in good hands.
I still didn't speak much as we plundered onward,
but I did feel hopeful that I would see the other side of this,
given that neither the accident nor the tumble down the hill
left me as beaten and bruised as they could have. Maybe my wandering companion was right. Perhaps I was
lucky. That was when I began to believe anyway, right before the fear took hold of me once more.
Run.
Tuck said, having noticed the approaching fog before I did. When I grew aware of that humming sound
once more, my heart beat quickened faster than my feet at first. Though we did as he demanded,
both of us sprinting as hard as our legs were capable of, those smoky tendrils
began to wrap around our surroundings, weaving between and around the trees on both sides.
It almost felt as though it was attempting to flank us, to force us forward rather than allowing
us to veer or separate.
Don't slow down.
The ranger called out, noticing the power behind my strides dwindling.
I was doing everything I could to force one leg in front of the other, but when the sound
of thick bark cracking and splitting reached my ears, it took everything I had to remain upright,
let alone continue charging forward.
I felt the fingers of my companion wrapping around my wrist as he pulled me alongside him.
How he still had so much strength in his extremities, I had no clue,
but his encouragement and support succeeded,
filling me with more purpose and drive to keep charging toward the hope of freedom.
Don't let up.
He said, not as much as glancing from the path ahead.
We can make it just keep pushing.
You can rest when we get out of here.
Regardless of his determination, the side of the side of the way.
Those wispy tendrils, now weaving themselves around the trees ahead, assured me that our options were running out.
As the misty fingers entwined before us, sealing the path ahead shut, we both practically skidded to a halt,
falling back to the forest floor. The white smog formed a dense, misty wall in a circle around where we lay,
leaving only the ground and sky free of its grasp. It was over. Whatever game it had been playing
had reached its conclusion. The time had come for it to claim its prize.
There was nowhere to go, not unless the ranger, who already saved me once, had a set of wings,
or a fast-acting shovel he hadn't informed me about.
I'm sorry, friend.
He said, glancing back at me as we lifted ourselves from the ground, preparing to meet our shared fate.
As the flowing rapids within that ivory smoke continued to spiral around us,
I felt my heart racing so quickly I feared I may pass out any second.
While the idea of not being conscious to experience whatever was to happen next did seem
an almost welcome sensation, my mind and body were scattered to the four winds at that point.
It's not your fault, Tucker, I said, attempting to fend off the trembling in my voice.
If it wasn't for you, I'd be dead already.
The cylinder of dense fog began to shrink, closing in on us from every angle, stopping its
approach only feet from where we stood.
You're not following me.
He said, slowly drifting his head all around.
It looked as though wispy feet were stepping from the fog, as though a ghostly army was hidden
away within.
More mist flooded upwards, forming some sort of spiderweb dome above us.
As legs began to trail out, followed by almost translucent bodies, the smoke peeled away
between each one, like cotton candy being separated.
That ain't what I'm sorry about.
As the arms reached from each misty torso,
Every one of them, with elongated fingers, ready to snatch us up from where we stood.
My companion moved so quickly, my mind hadn't a chance to understand what was happening.
I'm sorry, I can't go no further with you.
He said, gripping my shoulder in his hands.
Just keep running, and don't look back.
Before I had a chance to protest or otherwise argue against it, I felt my feet lifting from the dried leaves.
As my body was launched through the gap ahead, tearing through the already torn strips
of dense, stringy fog.
I heard screaming out from the strange ball of wispy energy as a light began to illuminate
from within.
While I wanted to fight back to free the one who had thrown me to freedom, I wouldn't
even know where to start.
While the ripples of smoke encased him, the high-pitched shrill squeak that accompanied
the vibrant glow damn near turned my hair white.
His now almost tortured voice shrieked once more, sounding as though he was experiencing a pain
I could barely fathom, whether it was simply my desire to escape that inspired me to do as he
command, to get off my ass and run even harder than I had before, or just that I knew there
was nothing I could do to help him.
I can't say, but I was ashamed of my actions nonetheless.
Not only had he saved me twice by that point, but I had to believe he was sacrificing
himself to save me.
Given the tortured howl that wailed out from behind me, as I sped onward in search of safety,
I was certain this was the fate met by those other poor souls who encountered the gray.
When the agonized scream bled into an explosion, sounding as though it fragmented those trees
surrounding where the ranger made his final stand, the shockwave tossed me back to the forest
floor like a ragdoll.
As I lay there, feeling my consciousness slipping back into the black, I couldn't tell
what sort of condition I was in.
My mind slipping, I tried to push from the dirt and dead leaves, but that concussion
had drained every ounce of strength I had left. Before my eyes closed, dropping me back into
almost blissful darkness, I heard a familiar voice, one that was almost surprising enough to
keep me from drifting away.
You're going to be all right now. See you around, friend.
The hospital bed I awoken felt heavenly after passing out in the woods, or so I thought
anyway. When my mom came running up to my bedside, with Dale smiling down at me by her side,
I was still out of it.
Be it from whatever they fed into my veins to take the edge off the pounding in my head
or simply whatever damage lay beneath the gauze around my scalp and forehead, I had no clue.
We talked a little while we awaited the doctor,
my mom trying to fight back the tears that streamed down her face,
and my stepfather's arm wrapped around her midsection,
though what she told me didn't quite match up with my recollection of things,
That it took the firefighters and paramedics some time to pull me from the wrecked car,
halfway swallowed up by the fissure in the road.
I didn't fully register the implications at the time.
When my doctor arrived, stating he was confident the surgery performed on my cracked skull had been a success,
I still assumed the injury had been caused by the shockwave throwing me to the forest floor.
The cast around my left leg, as well as the bandages around my left wrist in both hands,
would take less time to heal than my fractured dome, but he felt certain I would make a full recovery
in due time.
Over the months that followed my short stay in the hospital, I went through a good deal of
work to retrain my broken body and mind, once I had healed enough to do so.
Before long, I was cleared to return to work, having made a full recovery from my injuries.
The three-inch scar across my hairline isn't too noticeable, and neither are those across my wrist,
but the marks on my hand from the mincemeat left in the wake of my windshield crashing down on it
stand out like a literal sore thumb.
Still, some battle scars are a small price to pay, all things considered.
Once life returned to normal, I took a short trip one weekend,
back to the woods I had crashed alongside.
It took me a while to locate the ranger station,
but I had to find out if Maxwell Tucker was real or just a figment of my fractured mind.
While I hoped this could provide some answers about what I truly experienced that day,
I also wanted to be able to thank him for what he did for me.
When I pulled up beside the quiet, lovely cabin that appeared to house the rangers of this slice of the forest,
while I thought about beginning with Small Talk, as I climbed out of my dad's old truck
to approach the two wearing friendly smiles, I thought it best to just get right to the point.
Hey, I said, tipping the brim of my baseball cap.
Would you happen to know if Ranger Tucker is around?
Tucker.
The tall, broad-shouldered guy asked, glancing at his associate.
The woman who looked to be in her mid-30s or early 40s,
with her dark hair tied into a ponytail beneath her wide-brimmed hat,
formed a strange sort of a scowl as she blinked from her colleague to me.
Only Tucker we had around these parts ain't around anymore.
She said, squinting her eyes as she studied me.
Oh, Maxwell Tucker?
is that him, Ranger Tuck?
Uh-huh.
She said, giving me a very strange look.
He used to work with us, some 15 years back.
Oh, wow, I could have sworn he was around my age.
I said, with an awkward laugh.
Do you know where he is now?
Same place he's been for a decade and a half, son.
She said, gesturing to the left with a tilt of the head.
When I turned to see the small cemetery up the hill,
I felt all the blood drained from my face.
My legs giving out beneath me.
Whoa now!
The woman called out.
She and her partner catching me before I hit the ground.
After they carried me inside, laying me on a lumpy yet comfortable couch, the tall man fetched me some water,
while the others laid a wet towel across my brow.
After my heartbeat regulated, Ranger Angie Temple, who had helped me inside, accompanied me on a stroll up to the old bone yard.
We talked a good deal over the hours that followed, while I was hesitant.
To tell her how I met Ranger Tucker, she told me a good deal about the man who consequently
saved both our lives.
She was still green around the gills back then, with Tuck being her trainer.
One day, some six months after she joined the Rangers, they responded to a call about an
attack out in the woods, those that ran alongside the road that swallowed my car.
Assuming it to be a bear or some other wildlife, having jumped some innocent campers,
they headed out to the scene, armed and prepared.
I felt like my damn heart was about to burst through my chest.
But Tuck looked just as calm as if he was walking to the kitchen to fetch a snack.
And she said with a chuckle, running her hand across the tombstone bearing his name.
When they arrived to see a large, shaggy-haired man with a pistol trained on the crying teenage girl he held
and a butane torch in the hand wrapped around her, she was uncertain if this was something they could handle.
The boy around her age laying on the ground, bleeding upon the leaves, looked like he was long.
gone, but all of this was enough for the fear to almost paralyze her where she stood.
Again, Tuck still wore that carefree smile as he tried to calm the situation, attempting to
convince the disturbed man to release his hostage.
For a second there, I thought he was going to pull it off.
Angie said, a tear leaking from her right eye.
But when the big guy raised the gun, pointing it right at me, pushing the girl he held
to the ground, I knew I was done for.
She lowered her head, still caressing the gravestone like a dear friend.
The sadness etched into her gaze almost inspired my own eyes to leak as hers did.
But I tried to fight them back.
As soon as he raised that pistol to me, tuck jumped right in front of me, knocking me out of the way.
How he knew he didn't have time to get a shot off before the gun on me discharged.
I'll never know.
But it all played out in seconds right in front of me.
When the bullet dropped him to the ground beside me, I'd already fired off three rounds myself.
At least one of the shots hit the canister, bastard held, blown it apart and lightened him up like Joan of Arc in seconds.
He still tried to fire off the shots he had left, while he screamed out from the well-deserved pain.
I jumped towards the girl to pull her away before she got caught up in the flames or the gunfire, but it was too late for Tuck.
He was gone before he hit the grass.
We stood in silence for a moment, both of us staring down at the headstone.
When she spoke again, I once more found myself lost for words, bewildered by everything she shared with me.
The man we took down that day turned out to be one foul, son of a bitch.
Seems he'd been killing folks for years until Tuck and I putting in to him.
With nothing else, I take some solace and knowing that Tuck was the last victim.
of Jeremiah Gray.
Gray, I said, almost more to myself.
Yep.
She said, crouching down to wipe some dirt from the tombstone.
Won't see no gray for him, though.
Don't know what they did with what was left of him after the fire died down.
I don't give too much of a damn either.
He took tuck away from us, and he deserved that agonizing end.
When the law arrived, all that was left was a crispy frame.
billowing plumes of thick white smoke.
According to Stacy, the girl we saved that day,
Gray had kidnapped her about a week before.
He tortured her some over that time,
finally setting her loose in those woods.
He told her he'd let her go free if she got to safety.
But if he caught up to her, he'd put her through hell.
The boy bleeding on the grass was the one who called it in,
having witnessed what was happening while he was taking a hike.
Poor kid didn't know what hit him when Gray got there before we did.
I never told her the full story about how I came to meet Maxwell Tucker,
nor the implications of what or who we perhaps both faced between those trees.
We talk a lot since I joined the Rangers soon after that meeting.
We still talk about Tuck as well.
While I may have never had the opportunity to really get to know the man
who saved me from a potentially grim fate that day, those who knew him in life have shared
with me a great deal about him.
Over the years that followed the deaths of both Maxwell Tucker and Jeremiah Gray, there had apparently
been some strange occurrences out in that forest.
Someone would go missing from time to time.
Others would turn up dead.
Now and then, though, one of those presumed dead would turn back up, confused about what
happened.
Even after they closed that section of the woods to the public, it wasn't easy to keep
those curious enough to enter from sneaking in. A forest isn't something easily blocked off
completely, but they did what they could. While those who survived these strange occurrences
had no recollection of how they made it out alive, I know how they reached safety, or who led them
to it anyway. Whatever the case, ever since my encounter with the gray, these unsettling events
seem to have come to an end. I like to think that Tuck finally finished them off for good that
day. While I want to believe that this may have allowed him to move on to whatever lies beyond
this world, I have a feeling he's still out there, watching out for us. I spend a lot of time
out in those woods. It's a strange sensation, how vibrant and alive everything appears to be
on this side of the looking glass. Still, should I ever have the opportunity to thank Maxwell Tucker
for what he did for me, my best chance would be out there. Plus, if he is still out there, it's only
fair that I keep an eye on this side, just in case our old friend returns. I still miss my dad.
I suppose I likely always will. That's the nature of loss, after all. Now that I feel like I
finally found a place in this world, I just wish I could tell him, you know? I wish I could let him
know that his son is no longer lost in the woods, but found where he belongs within them.
I doubt that either of us could have predicted that one.
