The Dark Somnium - The Forest of The Damned
Episode Date: May 10, 2022This creepypasta scary story is from the creepypasta website, written by William Rayne, make sure to check out the original story and support the author! "The Forest of The Damned" https://www.creepyp...asta.com/in-the-forest-of-the-damned/Thumbnail artwork by Amy Cornelson, check out her amazing work here: ArtStation: https://www.artstation.com/amycornelson/albums/553123Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amy_cornelson/DeviantArt: https://www.deviantart.com/amycornelson--- 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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My sister was not an evil person.
Not before that camping trip anyway.
Yes, she did those horrible things.
I can't deny that, as I was the one who stopped her.
Though it wasn't without something of a cost.
It took a toll on me.
I still can't quite explain.
Left a stain, I cannot clean.
There was a time when she was the most caring and compassionate person you could ever meet.
She would always put others' needs before her own.
phone back then.
The woman who did those horrific things, yes, that was Laney, but at the same time, it wasn't.
Not the Laney I knew anyway.
I'm not making any sense.
Forgive me, if you will.
I'm not the same man I once was either.
Though that trip did change my sister to someone I barely recognized, what came after altered
me as well, both physically and mentally.
It was some weeks ago when we took that ill-fated vacation, but it's only been a day since...
I'm sorry, I'm getting to the point, I promise, just hang in there.
It can be difficult to find the words at times.
It's hard to form the thoughts into something understandable or something that can even be said.
My family was really no different from many others, I suppose.
Mom and dad split when I was young, both remarried, and my sister and I would be stuck in the
middle.
Yep, I would get two Christmases, extra birthday gifts, and all the other stuff children of divorce
used to convince themselves that things are just as okay as they were before.
But I didn't always buy it.
I could twist my mental arm, so to speak, in an effort to believe I was content, but
it was rarely effective.
Leaney was a good seven years older than me, so she was more aware of how dysfunctional our
parents were before they gave up on trying to make it work.
She would try to explain to me what those times were like when I got older, but I could
only imagine what she went through back then, before I came along.
I was around five when they gave up the fight to pretend they were a happy couple, but
I remember crying a lot over those first few months of living with Mom and only seeing Dad
on the weekends.
We got used to it, though.
We always have each other.
Lainey would remind me when I was feeling down, and she was right.
I know none of this backstory may seem all that relevant to what happened, but I just wanted
to illustrate why my sister and I were so close.
I'm sure it's not necessarily hard to believe that siblings can be tight or anything,
but my whole life, Lainey was the only person I could count on.
Our parents were usually so caught up in their own shit they didn't pay us much attention.
They'd bicker when one or the other would drop us off and pick us up, and when they started
seeing other people, they were pretty much focused on the new relationships more than
their kids.
A little after I turned 11, my sister moved out after being unable to take either of our
parent's shit anymore.
I didn't see her for a few years after that day, but I had no doubt she needed her space
for a bit.
Admittedly, she had it a lot harder than I, as both my mother and father practically ignored
her existence.
They didn't exactly lather me with affection either, but after they split up, they would barely
acknowledge her.
It was almost like they blamed her for the divorce, but I couldn't see how she could have
caused that.
Maybe it was simply because she was a good bit older than I, but it still pissed me off
the way they would just brush her to the side.
Regardless of how they treated her, she never took that out on me.
Even though I didn't see her for a while, when she moved back to our hometown, it was
like she'd never been gone.
We have spent a lot of time together since her return, and when I got my learners permit,
we began our regular camping trips.
We would go to a different spot each time we headed out into the wilderness, and I began
to love the peacefulness of it all.
Maybe it was due to my parents' incessant need to bicker and bitch any time they shared
a room together, but I had grown to almost despise being around other people, with the
exception of Lainey, of course.
So, by the time I reached 23, the age I am now, my sister and I had ventured to about every
good camping spot in the state, and many more beyond its borders.
We had saved up some years back and invested in a decent camper, as it had become a very
regular part of our lives.
It was nothing fancy, but it suited our needs just fine.
We would still bring tents along for when we wanted to rough it for a bit, but it was
definitely nice for those rainy nights out in the woods.
While I was doing some research to find a new place for our next day in the many forests
of America, Lainey came bursting into my apartment out of the blue.
She told me about this spot she'd found just outside of an old ghost town, somewhere
practically on the other side of the country.
Though I wasn't all that well-versed in what she did for a living, she would do a lot of
traveling and could sometimes be gone for weeks at a time, so she'd come across a good
many interesting areas and back roads.
I hadn't really come up with any alternatives, so I didn't argue about her recommendation,
as she had grown far more worldly than I.
I was a bit apprehensive, as the old deserted town was a good many miles from where I lived,
but Lainey assured me it would be worth it.
The farthest we'd ever ventured from home in the past had only taken about four hours in the camper to get to,
but this one took us over half a day to reach.
Luckily, she had committed the route to memory, as the city we were seeking out had no name
assigned to it anymore, and as such, I couldn't punch it into my GPS.
We headed out around 8 in the morning, and it was a little after 9 at night when we passed
by what was left of this city limit sign.
Most of the beaten, warped, and buckled sign had been worn off for what could have been decades.
But whatever the name of this town was, it began with an R and ended.
in either an L or an eye, but there wasn't enough left to tell one way or the other.
I could barely see it at first, let alone the thin, single-lane road, as the wild brush and
low-hanging branches of the trees hid behind them. There was absolutely no way I would have even
noticed it if it hadn't been for my sister's guidance. The old city itself looked like it was
once a nice little place, though even when the road widened into dual lanes,
as we entered what was once seemingly the main street, who was covered by just as much greenery
as the thin pavement that led us here.
I stared around at the old place in awe, feeling as though I was gazing into the past.
The crumpled gas station appeared as though it had closed its doors at least thirty or forty
years ago, as did the department's door, with broken boards of splintered and dry, rotted
wood covering where windows once sat in place.
There were lamp-posts bent over, while still erected from the concrete, and others having
toppled to the ground.
Each building that stood to one side or the other of the cracked and pothold road was in their
own state of decomposition.
The ones that didn't have windows boarded had only shards of filthy and foggy glass remaining,
while others had crumpled to their tarnished foundations many years before.
Part of me wanted to get out of the camper and explore what was left of the little.
town that time forgot, but given how rough it was to even drive through the streets, I knew it would
be risky at best to attempt to enter any of the buildings.
Still, it was a strange sensation to be what felt like the only living thing in this town.
Well, aside from Lainey, anyway.
After navigating the lengthy camper around the scattered debris and broken down houses
and stores, we finally cleared the city from years gone by, making our way to another slay.
one-lane road leading up the mountains behind the little town.
Again, the greenery pushed through the splits and the pavement, but that offered little resistance
to the thick and wide tires.
Even though it wasn't the prettiest little house on wheels, I maintained it well, so I knew
what it could and couldn't handle.
I had let it up and down many back roads and trails over the years, and hadn't ever gotten
the old girl stuck, not even once.
the trees on either side of us looked ancient.
Their thick trunks reaching high above, almost farther than I could even see.
Lainey looked out the windows at the beautiful sights with just as much wonder in her eyes
as I had.
She was around thirty now, but I swear she looked just as youthful and glorious as I remember
when we shared my mother's house together so many years ago.
She never changed in my eyes, even now.
Even after the things she did, she'll always be the very.
that beautiful, carefree, and magical spirit who kept me from breaking back then.
We were maybe some miles away from and above the dilapidated little town after the steeply
inclined road finally leveled out.
When Lainey suggested we may have reached our destination, I'd have to say I was thrilled
to finally have a chance to crawl out from behind the wheel, and when I opened the door, the
wonderfully fresh and clean air of the woods we parked beside felt heavenly.
I stretched my back out while Lainey called out into the night to hear her voice echo across
this seemingly empty woods.
As soon as she yelled out, the forest inhabitants suddenly sprung to life, crickets chirped,
feet and hooves both tiny and large scampered across the leaves,
while wings fluttered and flapped against the branches, carrying birds up into the sky.
I couldn't help but laugh at my sister's goofy chuckles as she awoke the creatures of the forest,
accompanied by her wide, enthusiastic grin, but things settled back down after a while.
We didn't do much else for the remainder of that night, aside from chugging down a few beers
and grilling some burgers.
When I woke the following morning, Lainey was already gone.
I was worried at first, but I assumed she had just ventured out into the woods for a bit
to take in the beauty of it all.
I still wished she would have waited for me, but she was often prone to waking at a far more
premature hour than I. Honestly, I didn't mean to sleep in, but I think my body had been exhausted
from the hours of driving. While I was in the middle of making some breakfast, I saw my sister
clearing the tree line with a huge smile on her face. This may be one of the coolest spots we've ever
been to. Yeah? She was practically hopping in place, coming off like a giddy little kid.
Want to go for a hike after you eat? Hell yeah. You hungry?
Nah. Too excited to eat.
She replied with a laugh.
She would get like that sometimes.
She could be easily distracted, and it didn't take much for her to light up like a kid on Christmas morning.
But it still made me smile every time.
She had that infectious kind of happiness.
It was almost impossible not to share her inherent joy and love of life.
So, I finished up making my food, scarfed it down, and grabbed my pack to head out into the wild with my sister.
It was absolutely beautiful behind the tree line and quite spacious within.
There was no trail to speak of, but the terrain wasn't particularly bumpy either.
I got the feeling that ours were the first human feet to walk between these trees in some time,
though the squirrels, deer, and other occupants did not seem especially alarmed by our presence.
If anything, they appeared more friendly than those of many other force we'd spent time in over the years.
A curious doe even walked directly up to me at one point, allowing me to run my fingers across the soft fur of her back.
Lainey and I just smiled at each other before she sprinted back over the mound she had trotted around at first.
After walking in varying directions for some hours, we settled down in a wide clearing with a slender stream running through its center.
It was a glistening pond, not far from where we parked.
Sometime later that day, we'd head back to the camper to grab our tea.
tents, chairs, portable grill, and fishing poles to camp out in that lovely open space, as it
was just too good to resist.
I truly wish that we could have spent days in those woods, with each being as wonderful as
that one.
As I grilled the fish I caught in the pond, while Lainey danced the music echoing from my little
Bluetooth speaker, I felt more content than I ever had before.
I suppose that happiness was just too good to last.
The sound that pulled me from my sleep sometime during the night was unlike anything I'd ever heard before.
It was something like a wailing that would accompany someone hysterically crying, combined with something mechanical almost.
It wasn't like rusty sprockets turning or chains rattling against gears, but more like a slipping belt squeaking or worn brake pads scraping against the rotor.
It's hard to explain, really, because it wasn't exactly similar.
to anything I was familiar with.
I know it sounds like I'm just babbling, but that's how it, I guess, felt more than sounded.
I sat straight up in my sleeping bag, which made me feel like some sort of bug attempting to
escape its cocoon.
I unzipped my tent, peeking my head through like a freaked-out kid, afraid of a potential
monster in the closet, or perhaps nestled under the bed.
When I saw that Laney's tent was open too, I practically ran out of mine.
in replacing my fear of what may be lurking in the darkness with concern from my sister.
It was freezing outside, far more so than it had been when I laid down.
I pulled my jacket and flashlight from my backpack and headed out into the night after confirming
her tent was indeed vacant.
I had no way of knowing which way she'd gone, but she was always more curious than I,
so I had little doubt she was seeking out the source of that sound that was still echoing
from somewhere in the distance.
It was a good deal softer than it had been when it caused me to jerk awake, but loud enough
to be able to trace what direction it was coming from.
I don't know if it was the cold or just how eerie the trees looked through the beam of
my flashlight that was making me shiver, but I could barely hold the damn thing straight.
The fog that blew from my mouth when I exhaled didn't help things appear any less creepy
either.
As the sound increased in volume, I hoped it was because it was because it was.
was getting closer and not whatever was causing it to grow more, I don't know, agitated.
Lainey!
I called out, not quite whispering, but not especially loud.
My brain hadn't yet decided if it thought the noises belonged to anything living, but it hadn't
ruled out the possibility.
Either way, it wouldn't allow my voice to fully expose me.
Sis, where are you?
I heard my name echoing from somewhere beyond the trees ahead.
It didn't entirely sound like my sister's voice.
Similar, but not quite right, if that makes sense.
It was enough to allow me to assume I was going the right direction, but it was also enough
to cause me to slow down a little.
I could feel the pulse throbbing in my neck as well as my chest beating against the
fabric of my shirt.
The bizarre sound now combined with the beating of my heart on the inner lining of my ears, causing
me to feel even more on edge. The plumes I breathed began to combine with the subtle mist
that caressed the forest floor, made even more unnerving by a subtle light emanating from
somewhere ahead. My surroundings grew more visible, but it was more like I could just see
more clearly. Things didn't appear to be especially illuminated by the dim light, but I could
make out that the trees around me were rotting and dead. Their blackened barks were split with a dark
ooze leaking from them. The leaves I could make out that lined the ground beneath the sporadic
fog all looked to be as lifeless and discolored as everything else around me. Every branch
was bare and each bled the same thick pus. When I finally cleared rows and rows of deceased
trees, I came to another clearing, large but much smaller than the one we had set up our tents in.
My sister was in the very center of the almost perfectly circular area, with her arms outstretched
from the body, which appeared to float above the mist, which had grown far thicker than it had
in the forest of the dead I left behind.
There was nothing else around her, though she still moaned her words in that borderline, foreign
voice.
It's so goddamn beautiful, Ryan.
What's beautiful, Lane?
I could make out nothing I would consider even remotely pleasing to the eye, nor could I figure
out what caused my sister to hover a foot or two from the ground.
As I approached her, that disturbing sound now surrounded me.
When I turned my head to each side, seeking the source of the noise, I screamed out, horrified
by the hands which reached out from the trees that lined the circumference of the clearing.
There were more of them than I took the time to count, each with...
darkened flesh that looked as rotten as the bark and branches they reached through.
As I watched on, slender, almost skeletal legs stepped out, followed by sunken, emaciated
torsos and abnormally small spherical heads with orange glowing eyes peering through.
Each of the creatures slowly broke free of the tree line in jerky, staggered movements.
I could hear bones shift and crackle as the scrawny arms and legs sliced through the fog.
That sound emanated from what I would assume to be their mouths, though I can make out
no openings in those tiny, round heads, only the bright, beady eyes glaring towards where
my sister floated.
Lane, we gotta go!
She didn't respond, only continued to moan and whimper, which contrasted with the sound
of the blackened creatures to form noises which almost made me sick to my stomach.
Goddammit, Lane, snap out of it!
I yelled at my sister, wrapping my hand around her right wrist, turning to face her.
Jesus Christ!
I stuttered when I looked upon the light, breaching out from somewhere within her head, beaming
through her eyes, nose, and mouth.
Those things were getting closer, regardless of how slowly their staggered movements pushed
them forward.
Their wails were so much louder now, causing a thin stream of blood to leak from my ears.
It was practically deafening by this point, inspiring me to scream out just to make sure
I still had a voice while yelling my sister's name as hard as I could.
Lainey, snap out of it!
Though it made my chest hurt, I slapped my hand across her face as hard as I could.
As her head jerked to the side, the light shining through her, beamed across the creatures
to her left, showing me a better glimpse of the sunken cheeks and withered flesh before
it snuffed out, blinking her eyes back to the real world.
Fucking ouch, Bri!
She said, not even noticing when her feet made contact with the ground.
Are you here?
What?
Of course I...
She screamed, finally noticing the approaching horde.
I don't know, Lane, but we have to get away from here.
Are you with me?
Her whole body shook while she rapidly nodded her head, darting her eyes all around her.
We were surrounded by those things, and they were edging closer by the second.
But there was space between them.
If we ran fast enough, I was sure we could get through.
We gotta run, sis, as fast as we can, okay?
She nodded again, and I wrapped my trembling fingers around her shivering hand.
I hoped I spun to face us in the right direction, but I planned to just keep running until
we got back to the camper.
I didn't care about the tents, nor any of the other shit we had left in the clearing.
I just wanted to get the hell away from here as fast as I could.
We ran between two of those things, though they were closer together than I had hoped.
I pushed one back, feeling its rough and cushioned tissue give way against my palm, before the other
reached out to grab Lainey by the wrist.
She screamed out, attempting to pull away from it, but the grip was tight.
Another was moving in from the other side, giving us little time to get her loose.
I just punched at that rotten flesh of its arm while kicking at its withered knees.
It sounds bellowed in an angered screech, causing my sister and I to both share an equally loud scream,
before I slug the thing in the face over and over again, finally causing it to let Lainey's
arm slip from its grasp.
Giving the rest of the jerkily approaching mob no chance to get any closer, as soon as Lane
was free, we hauled ass, hopefully back the way we came.
I could still both feel and hear that echoing chorus of haunting howls behind us, causing
my head to spin, damn near sending me to the ground, but it was Lainey who kept me on my feet this
time.
Hand in hand, we plundered onwards, breaking free of the forest of the blackened and deceased trees,
back into the clearing where our tents still stood in place.
We were almost to the other side of that clearing before I realized my keys were still in the tent.
I told Lainey to continue on to the camper while I spun in place to see the creatures already
breaking through the tree line.
Keep going!
I called to my sister as I sprinted back to the tent, with those things moving considerably
more quickly than they had before.
which, given the fact their movements were still incredibly staggered and jerky, made the
whole scene look even more bizarre.
I yanked my pants, which held my keys in their pocket from the floor of the tent, with
the rotted figures closing the gap between us more and more by the second.
I pulled three of my tent while three of the things reached out towards me, but I leapt away
from them before they could make contact.
Lainey still stood where I had left her, visibly shaking from head to toe, but I locked my finger
around hers once more when I got alongside her as we resumed our effort to escape.
The whimpering metallic shrieks from behind us combined now with the scampering of their feet,
crackling against the dried leaves lining the forest floor.
As I looked back to see how close they were, I noticed anything living around them was growing
as blackened and lifeless as they appeared as they passed between and through the trees.
They were maybe 15 feet from our backs, but that just inspired me to run fast.
faster, practically pulling my sister along.
Finally, I could make out the moonlight reflecting off the windows of the camper ahead.
I hope to God and everything I held wholly that I left the damn thing unlocked, which, to my surprise,
I had as my sister pulled the side door open, with me jumping in after her.
I slammed it shut, sliding the simple lock to the side, before hopping into the driver's
seat and putting the key in the ignition.
As I heard the engine roar to life, it was accompanied by the sound of pounding in
scraping on the walls of the camper.
I slammed my foot on the gas as the camper shuddered, and we sped down the road away from that
forest.
Even with the roar of the engine, I could still hear their crackling movements as they fought
to chase us down, but I wouldn't let up.
Though I was incredibly unfamiliar with this winding and bumpy road, the wheels violently
bounced in and out of cracks and holes in the pavement.
Lainey was still whimpering and screaming out with every jump and skid, but I wouldn't break
my focus. The whales from behind us were fading more as we approached the town lost to the past,
but I still pressed the gas as hard as I could. I only slowed down once I began to see life
outside of the ghost town and the forest of the damned behind it, before pulling into the 24-hour
truck stop close to the exit to the interstate. Lainey said, while I examined where the blackened
and frigid fingers had wrapped around her wrist. She was bordering on tears while I gently turned her arm over
in an attempt to see how bad it was under the flickering fluorescent lights of the gas station
restroom.
The imprint of a slender hand appeared to be almost burned into her flesh, along with five
little pinprick holes, each oozing thin streams of dark blood.
I tried to wash her wounds as well as I could, but even the slightest pressure I applied
with the moistest paper towels caused her to wince and practically buckle from the pain.
Being both untrained and unable to do anything to actually treat the damaged her skin, I grabbed
some ibuprofen, antibiotic cream, and gauze from the truck stop.
I applied the ointment to the inside of the gauze before wrapping her arm to avoid causing
her more pain than necessary.
I wanted to take her to the emergency room, but she wouldn't have it.
I made her promise she would go have it checked out if it either got any worse or didn't
show any signs of improvement after a few days had passed, but she still seemed reluctant.
She was never one to seek out medical assistance, as she was both somewhat untrusting of doctors
and a bit grossed out by hospitals in general.
She had always been a bit of a germaphobe, but that would never keep her from exploring
the darker and more gritty places of the world.
It did seem a bit contradictory to me, but I'm sure I have my own share of oddball aspects
to my personality to her and just about anyone else.
So I wouldn't hold it against her anything.
Still, I was worried about this one.
God knows what sort of fungus those, whatever the hell they were, had pasted to their
rancid flesh.
Regardless of how late the hour had grown, nor how far from home we were at this point,
Lainey begged me to get back on the road, to head back home.
I had tried to suggest a hotel for the night, but I couldn't blame her for wanting to get
as far away from that mountain as possible.
Of course, I was far beyond exhausted at that point, not to mention,
growing more worried about my sister by the moment, but I did what she asked.
If nothing else, I would be able to keep an eye on her to make sure the marks on her wrist
didn't spread, or somehow worsen her condition to something more than just being tired
and freaked out.
My mind was still reeling from what we'd seen out there, but I still had no idea what
she had been through before I awoke.
The eerie little creatures were one thing, but I wanted so badly to ask her what left her
floating above the ground, bordering on some sort of catatonic ecstasy or whatever the hell
that was.
I had already tried to ask her a few times, but whenever I brought it up, she would begin
to shiver and cry again.
She had seemed in such awe and wonder while she hovered only feet above the foggy forest floor,
but whatever it was that she saw only brought fear back to the forefront of her mind.
As much as I wanted answers to what truly happened out in those woods, upon the
that mountain behind the town that time forgot, I would have to wait until she was ready.
Of course, I didn't realize at the time that my nightmare had only just begun.
It felt as though it took twice as long to get back home than it did to make our
way out to the mysterious ghost town in the first place.
That may have been simply the fact that both the camper and I were running on fumes
when we arrived back onto my street.
Lainey had calmed down considerably, especially since she's
slept for over half the trip.
I would have loved to have been able to pass out for a bit myself, but I was certain she needed
it far more than I.
Yes, I hadn't exactly enjoyed much of a rest for the portion of the night I spent in my sleeping
bag, but I still had no idea how long she had been awake before I showed up.
I hated to think what could have happened had I not arrived before those things
came staggering through the trees.
Given the marks on her wrist that still look quite fresh, I could only imagine what they
were capable of if they had more time to spend with their victims.
My sister agreed to stay at my place for a few days, as we had already planned on being
out of town for at least a long weekend.
She still refused to see a doctor, but she didn't resist my insistence that I had to
be allowed to keep an eye on her.
Of course, I wouldn't be able to do much until I got some much needed rest myself.
Before I hit the sack, I ordered some pizza, as neither of us had eaten much over the previous
24 hours.
Once my stomach was content, I passed out as soon as my head hit the pillow.
My dreams took me back to that foggy clearing in the woods.
I won't say it wasn't exactly a nightmare or anything, but it wasn't enough to cause me
to jerk awake in a cold sweat or anything either.
I've always had a bit of clarity in a dream state, finding even the most horrific ones to
be a bit too far-fetched to believe to be taking place in the waking world.
I'm not a lucid dreamer or anything.
I like to think I just generally have enough awareness to know what's real and what isn't.
It had been about five in the afternoon when we arrived home, and when I finally woke up, it
was nearing seven in the morning.
I hadn't been paying much attention to what time it had been when I crashed for the night,
but my body felt pretty content from the longer than normal rest, albeit a bit sore from
lying in one place for so long.
Well, worth the price, I thought, as I dragged my eyes.
heels to the shower, where I stayed for a good half hour at least.
When I finally strolled back into my living room, I saw no trace of Lainey, causing my heartbeat
to quicken as soon as I stood, staring at the vacant blanket and pillow on my couch.
In a way, I wasn't surprised, but I had still been hopeful she would stick around like she
promised.
She has always been a free spirit, though.
Even while she maintained eye contact when she gave me her word, she wouldn't go anywhere
without me for a few days.
I think I knew she was full of shit.
Maybe I was just too damn beat to read too much into it at the time.
I still took a compulsory look around my home, along with the camper, parked outside,
to make sure she wasn't just hiding out.
I thought she may have also experienced some nightmares about the events that still seemed
barely believable at the time.
Of course, she wasn't around, but I could only hope she was all right.
I considered calling my mom to see if she had heard from Laney, but they hadn't really been
on speaking terms since my sister moved out.
Honestly, I think they had barely talked since before the divorce, but I can't speak to the
times I wasn't around.
I can't necessarily say if it was some sort of grudge between my parents and sister.
Any time I brought her up to either of my folks, they would just act like they didn't want
to talk about it.
We weren't exactly a close-knit family, but I did long for the more sense.
simple times on occasion, back when I was a kid.
Two more days went by, and I still hadn't heard anything from Laney, nor could I even
get in contact with her.
I was growing more and more worried by the day, leading me to call around the hospitals
in the area to see if anyone matching her description had been admitted.
It set my mind a little more at ease when none showed any records of anyone by my sister's
name or appearance.
She was often prone to just being gone for extended periods of time over the years, but I was
still spooked by the events that led us to cut our trip short.
After yet another day passed with no sign of my sister, I finally gave in and decided to
reach out to my folks.
I didn't want to talk about any of this on the phone, so I hopped in the car and headed
to my dad's place first.
I could see my sister being far more likely to talk to him than our mom, and he was
most certainly the more understanding and open-minded of my folks, but, like I said, neither
of them were particularly open to the topic.
be told, I didn't talk much with my parents anymore either, as they had grown so self-consumed
and distant over the years.
This was not a situation I needed to leave alone, though.
I still highly doubted Laney would ever think about getting in contact with either of them,
but I had to give it a shot.
As I drew closer to the house my father shared with my stepmother, I realized that in my haste
to get here, I hadn't even remembered to give him a call to see if he would even be home.
I was already within the last few minutes of my journey, so when I received no reply from
the call, I didn't immediately turn back.
I thought I may be able to at least wait for him for a bit if he wasn't home.
When I pulled into his driveway, next to my dad's glossy black expedition, I noticed
the garage door was open.
Assuming he may indeed be home after all, I headed to the front door and knocked, inadvertently
pushing at a jar as it was apparently unlatched.
I called out for my father, while nudging the door further over.
I was open, peering my head around the side.
I stepped forward and my foot landed in something wet.
I searched around in the darkness on the wall next to me for the light switch.
Flipping it, I froze when my eyes met the bloodied mess across the living room.
I couldn't remotely convince my own limbs to move as I stood, frozen in place, glaring at
what appeared to have once been my father.
I couldn't even fathom what could have done this to him, but my thoughts were not nearly
focused enough to make any sort of clear judgment at the time.
His left arm looked as though it had been pulled from the socket, as the bone protruding
from the discarded limb was not jagged, but rounded.
There were deep gashes across his chest and remaining arm.
Both eyes were replaced by dark and meaty scarlet globes, and his jaw had been torn from
the skull on the left side, leaving it hanging loosely from grizzled strips of tissue.
His legs were spayed in opposing directions, with shards of bones splitting through the flesh
of his thighs and shins, and blood still seeping out from within, as well as having sprayed
across each and every wall in the room.
I couldn't think or speak.
All I could do was fall to my knees in my father's blood and stare at his mangled corpse.
Then someone entered the house behind me.
I couldn't process everything that was happening.
It all went by in a blur.
I was only vaguely aware of the cold metal of the house.
handcuffs snapping around each wrist.
I was still in that mentally vacant state over the course of the ride to the police station,
finally coming back to awareness, sitting straight up in a drab, gray, concrete-walled room.
Why did you do it, you piece of shit?
The middle-aged, balding man in a wrinkled suit said, breaking me from my catatonic state.
Answer me!
What?
No, I didn't.
Bullshit!
That cool it, Jerry.
The taller man next to him said.
Their demeanor reminded me of the whole good cop bad cop routine.
Why don't you tell us what happened, yeah?
Good cop asked.
I don't know.
I just got there and saw him like that.
Bullshit!
Bad cop said, pounding the table with this fist.
We know you killed him!
What?
You didn't get what you wanted for Christmas?
We didn't love you enough?
Just tell the goddamn truth!
Jerry, you're not helping.
Let the kid tell us his side of the story.
We already know his side!
brutally murdered his old man.
Did you see what he did to the guy?
I ain't ever seen shit like that.
I didn't do it.
I swear to Christ, I didn't.
I just went to see him and found him like that.
I said, practically begging them to listen.
Before I knew it, bad cop was up in my face about two inches away.
You're a fucking murderer, you piece of shit.
Admit it!
He said through gritted teeth.
I didn't do it, I swear!
I said, still trying to catch my breath.
While good cop pulled the portly guy off me, I fell to the ground.
Buckled over, still gasping.
Bad cop pushed good cop away after they exchanged some heated words before heading for the door.
He pounded on it to get the attention of the guard posted on the other side.
I gathered myself up while the thin man with salt and pepper hair helped me to my feet.
Sorry, kid, he's a little heated.
I swear, I didn't.
Okay, just take a seat.
I'll give you a few minutes to cool off.
You want something to drink?
Yeah, yeah, thanks.
I appreciate that.
Once he was gone, I was left alone to attempt to process everything, which was no easy task.
I just sat there.
The sight of what was the left of my dad was practically etched into my brain.
I had absolutely no clue as to how the hell I was going to get out of this.
Yes, I knew I was innocent, but as long as they were focused on me for the crime, they would
not have a chance to track down whoever or whatever did that to my old man.
I couldn't even imagine what could be capable of inflicting such horrendous brutality.
After a while, good cop walked back in, accompanied by a younger guy in a nice suit, who was
revealed to be a lawyer my mother had contacted to help me.
He looked to be maybe a few years older than me, with perfectly styled, dirty blonde hair,
and a tidy beard.
He introduced himself as Derek MacArthur.
He assured me I was in good hands, and they planned to have me released within a few hours,
the evidence was circumstantial at best, regardless of the fact that my shoes and pants
were covered in my father's blood.
Before I would be permitted to leave, I had to allow them to take possession of my clothing,
as well as providing DNA samples, along with giving a statement of my account of the day's
events.
Bad cop still stared knives at me from the other side of the table, while Good Cop continued
to play the part of my best buddy.
Both looked quite unhappy when MacArthur stuck a fork in the discussion before leading me
out of the police station, wearing some fresh clothes my mom had brought me.
Though I was beyond relieved to feel the fresh air hitting my face again, I was still stunned
by everything that had occurred that day.
The following days blended together, during which I repeated the story I told police numerous
times, as well as to my mother and her husband Carl and my stepmother, Brianne.
It wasn't easy to recount what I had seen, especially.
to Brianne, but I suppose they needed to know what I knew, which wasn't much, truth be told.
MacArthur was still content with the notion that I had nothing to worry about, but I was still
terrified.
Maybe two weeks later, I was returning home around mid-afternoon, after having to attend yet
another meeting with my attorney.
I'd grown exhausted from this situation, but it wasn't in my hands to put an end to it.
Yes, I knew myself to be innocent, as did MacArthur, or so he called.
claimed anyway, but it felt as though we were making no progress, as the only evidence that
had been found pointed to me.
I was far more than stressed and quite mentally checked out while I drove the far too familiar
roads to reach the solitude of my house that I didn't even notice my guest when I arrived.
I was paying little attention to anything around me.
After I swung my door open, I just strolled over to my favorite chair, flopped down into
it and flipped on the television.
It wasn't until I heard the voice from behind me that I realized I wasn't alone.
Hey, little brother.
Jesus Christ!
I yelled, almost falling out of my chair.
Lane?
Where the hell have you been?
I got up and walked over to where she stood at the back of the room, but she held her hand out.
Stay back, kiddo.
I don't know if it's contagious.
That's when I noticed the charred handprint on her wrist, now branching out into darkened veins.
Oh my God!
Oh my god, Lane, we need to get you to a doctor.
I can't.
They'll lock me away.
She now waved both arms in front of her, looking downright terrified at the thought of facing
possible involvement from the authorities.
Lane, that does not look good.
I mean, it looks like it's infected or something.
If we don't get you to the emergency room, you may end up losing the hand.
It may already be too far gone.
It doesn't matter what happens to me.
I've done.
She started crying while covering her face.
What have you done, Lane?
I almost didn't want to ask, but I feared I already knew the answer.
I didn't mean to.
I couldn't stop it.
I didn't even realize what I was doing until there was so much blood, Bri.
I don't.
She dropped to the floor.
I walked to her, wanting to console her, but she wouldn't allow it.
Stay back!
She screamed, getting to her feet and running for the back door.
Lainie!
I called out, chasing after her, but she was too fast.
I had never seen anyone move like that before.
For a moment, I had entertained the idea that she was transforming into one of those things
from the woods, as those blackened veins were almost reminiscent of their rotted flesh,
but they had barely even moved in any human manner,
while she now seemed as though she could outrun my car with little to no effort.
I still made an attempt to chase her down, but I knew it was pointless before I even reached
the end of the backyard, as she was barely visible by that point.
I still tried, though.
I kept running the direction she had fled towards, even after I could no longer see her.
After a solid ten minutes at least, I finally gave in to the splitting in my side, gasping
for breath while almost buckling to the concrete.
I knew I wouldn't be able to find her now, but I still returned to my car after my head
stopped spinning to drive out in hopes of being able to maybe find some trace of where she
had gone. I spent hours speeding from one neighborhood to the next, up and down the back roads,
and even out towards the interstate, but I couldn't see any sign of her. When I finally returned to my
house, I allowed the gravity of what she had told me to set in.
It was so much blood, Briya! She had said. Those words bounced around in my head for some
time, until I allowed the truth to break through the wall my own denial had begun to build
around itself.
She killed him.
I said aloud, finally accepting it, admitting to myself that my own beloved sister was the
one who killed our father with such brutality.
I just sat in my living room, glaring at the nothingness behind my TV.
What concerned me at the moment was that I needed to get my sister some help.
I couldn't allow her to be taken into custody for something I knew she never would have done
had she not been, I don't know, altered.
That alone made her more innocent.
it in my eyes.
The person who had done this to our father wasn't my sister, not entirely anyway.
At that moment, I thought of my mother and panic shot through me.
Jumping to my feet, I ran to my bedroom to fetch my phone from the charger before it dawned
on me that it was still in my damn pocket.
I placed the call to my mom as soon as I was able, feeling my heart slammed against the inner
wall of my chest.
Pick up, pick up, pick up!
I rambled over and over, while every beat of the dial tone caused my breathes.
to grow more erratic.
Come on, pick up!
Oh, shit!
I yelled, jogging towards the front door, while placing the call for a second time, knowing
full well it would result in the same thing.
Before I knew it, I was speeding much faster than I knew I should have, but I had to get
to my mom's place.
I had to be sure she was safe.
With the knowledge of who had actually murdered my father, I knew I had to intervene before
my sister inflicted the same thing on my mom.
Whatever that thing was that it grabbed her by the wrist had infected her with something, I
I had no doubt about that, but I couldn't help her if she wouldn't allow me to.
The only thing I hoped I could do was stop her from what I had little doubt she was planning.
My tires tore into the front lawn of my mother's house, halfway into the driveway and halfway
onto the grass.
I ran from the car to her front door, leaving the engine running as I wanted to waste as little
time as possible.
As soon as I knocked my fist against the wood, the door swung open to reveal Carl, my stepfather,
standing behind it.
"'What's up, kid?'
He asked, with a puzzled and somewhat annoyed expression, made even more aggravated after
his eyes met when my tires had torn into the grass.
"'Carl!
Hi!
Is this mom around?'
I was panting as I spoke, still gasping for the breath that had not seemed to fill my lungs
since I chased after Lainey.
She stepped out for a few.
Care to wait for her inside?
He pulled the door open further before cutting his eyes back to the shredded lawn.
He clenched his jaw, but still spoke in a friendly tone, though I could make out the underlying
annoyance underneath.
I glanced back at my car before giving Carl an apologetic shrug.
Let me adjust my parking real quick.
I'm sorry about the lawn.
I let out a pitiful chuckle before heading back over to my vehicle.
Just come in when you're done, he said, wearing a facsimile of a grin.
In all honesty, I had never much cared for Carl.
a feeling that I was certain to be mutual.
He wasn't a bad guy overall.
He just always had that, my shit don't stink, look on his face, and had a tendency to kind
of look down his nose at me.
I don't think he had ever even met Lainey since she didn't come around anyone but me since
the divorce, but I'm sure he would have treated her the same way if he had.
It took far longer than necessary to fix the parking of my car, but I was in no rush to
share my mom's place with her husband for any longer than I had to.
Somewhere in the back of my mind, I think I was hoping that she'd pull in behind me before
I would have to drag my heels into the house.
Unfortunately, it appeared I would have little choice but to just bite down and deal
with Carl for the time being.
He was sitting in the recliner when I let myself in, staring at his phone while barely
acknowledging my entry.
Is it cool if I grab a drink?
I asked reluctantly.
Though this was the house I grew up and something about it felt foreign to me these days.
It could be no more the fact that I no longer lived here, or just the fact that good old
Carl appeared right at home in it.
He just nodded his head to my request, so I strolled into the kitchen, wholly planning
on grabbing myself a drink and sitting at the dining table to avoid the man as much as I could.
That was my intention, anyway, before the scream caused me to drop the beer, shattering the
bottle into both thick and fine shards of reflective green glass, while the liquid within
splashed across the floor.
By the time my short sprint brought me back to the living room, blood had already sprayed across
the dark wood of the coffee table, as well as the front door and the wall.
It still dripped from Lainey's fingers, which had only just pulled themselves free from
our stepdad's throat when I entered.
She didn't even look at me.
There was nothing especially deformed or maliciously expressive in her eyes as she grabbed
both of his arms before thrusting her heel against his chest to pull his limbs free
from his torso.
She still wore my sister's kind face, her warm smile and almost childlike eyes, with globs of crimson
and chunks of grizzled meat slapped across her own body.
As Carl's spewing shoulders gave way, I was paralyzed and rooted to the spot as I watched
her rip him apart.
Somewhere within the chaos of my frenzied and shell-shocked mind, I wondered why she kept tearing
her fingers through his flesh.
As it appeared, her initial attack had put an end to his life, but she just wouldn't stop.
Regardless of the light-hearted glint in her eye, as though she were doing nothing more
than messily preparing a meal, I had to put an end to this.
After what she had done to our father, I had no reason to believe she would stop after this.
I loved my sister more than anyone else in this world, but I could not allow her to go on
this way.
The real Laney died on that mountain.
Whatever I brought back with me could not be permitted to live in her place.
Finally convincing my shuddering limbs to function again, I charged that my sister,
connecting my tightly bald fist to the side of her face.
Blood sprayed across my knuckles,
but I couldn't tell if it was hers or just some of my stepfathers,
as she was currently soaked from head to toe in it.
She fell back onto the floor before gazing at me with a look of shock on her face,
an expression of one who had been betrayed by the only person they loved.
I felt tears well up in my eyes as we stared at each other.
What the fuck, Brie?
She asked, her own eyes glassy and trembling.
Look what you did, Lane.
I replied.
Her mouth dropped as she looked upon what she had done to Carl.
She blinked from his remains to her blood-soaked hands and back to me, holding my fist
out before me like a shield.
She began shaking her head, pushing herself across the floor away from the bloodied heap
of our stepfather.
No.
She gazed back into my eyes.
Hers now flowing tears down her reddened cheeks.
Blaine, I saw you.
I watched it happen.
You have to stop.
Right.
What?
I mean, I could.
But you did! You killed Dad, too!
No, no, no, I wouldn't. I...
Lane, he told me earlier today. You remember coming to my place?
No, I... How did I get here? What's going on?
We just stared at each other for a time. I knew she wasn't in control while she did those awful things,
but I couldn't allow this to continue, even if I dreaded the thought of what I would have to do
to put an end to her murderous rampage. When she got back to her feet,
There was a look of resolve on her face, one that I believed I also shared.
She walked around the dismembered body of our mother's husband, trying as much as she could
to avoid stepping another foot into the thick scarlet fluids, which still spurted from his many grievous
wounds. After the gap between us was closed and we stood face to face, I felt my chest heaving
while my heart sank to the pit of my stomach.
You know what I have to do, Bray?
Lainey said, with her lips forming a quivering smile, I can't, Lane, don't make me.
I was sweating, my fingers were trembling and felt cold and absent of blood.
You have to, brother.
She said, placing her hand on the side of my face, allowing me to feel the warmth of her
skin upon my frigid cheek.
After gazing at one another for more time than I can say, she once more lowered her hand,
wrapping her fingers around mine.
We walked side by side as she guided.
me to the kitchen where the remains of the shattered bottle still lined the floor.
She did not break her eyes from mine as she reached for the rack of knives perched on the
marble countertop.
She never broke her stare while she lay the hilt of the long blade in my hand before lifting
it to her own throat.
Please.
She said, sounding more calm and accepting than I was even remotely capable of, as my
hand shuddered so violently I could barely keep the knife grip between my fingers and palm.
Don't make me!
I pleaded, knowing she was certain this was necessary.
You love me, right?
Of course.
Then let me die as me.
Not as what did that.
She said, pointing towards the oozing corpse in the living room.
I tried to fight against her grip as she guided the blade I held into the flesh of her neck,
instantly causing blood to stream from around where the cold metal pierced.
I cried out, allowing the hopelessness to consume me,
Letting the tears spill into a veritable storm, soaking the fabric of my shirt while blending
with the warm spray erupting from her throat.
After the life began to leave the hands she still held in place around mine, they dropped
to her side.
I pulled the knife from her neck, tossing it to the floor to wrap my arms around her.
The gargling from both her open, gushing throat and her gaping mouth did not distract
from the childlike beauty of her eyes as we continued to look upon each other.
Her mouth twitched as she fought to form her lips into a smile, and I attempted to return
the sentiment, though my racing heart was slowly fragmenting.
Her body became heavier when the final sparks of life left her, and I allowed myself
to sink to the floor, with my arms still clutching her tightly.
I could barely form a rational thought over the course of what felt like hours of crouching
on the tile, staring down into her wide, blank eyes.
Some time later, I was vaguely aware of the first of the feeling.
front door creaking open, followed by a horrified squeal that finally broke my pensive stare
from that of my sister.
My mother was still screaming when she saw me perched on her kitchen floor as she ran towards
me, rubbing her hands across my face and arms.
Who did this?
Are you hurt?
She yelled, still searching my body for injuries.
I had to stop her.
I didn't want to.
It's not her fault.
Who?
You had to stop who?
It was Lainee, Mom.
She killed him.
Dad, too.
It wasn't her, though.
Not really.
Brian.
She said, pulling her hands off me as she backed away from where I sat, still holding the corpse of my beloved sister.
You.
What?
No, Mom.
It was Lainey.
My senses were returning, though my mind was still reeling.
She was infected with something in the woods.
It made her bad, I think.
It wasn't her fault.
What the fuck are you talking about, Brian?
We went to some mountain behind an old ghost town.
There were these things up there.
They touched her, and I think they infected her with...
Jesus Christ, Brian!
Your sister has been dead for 13 years!
You know that, right?
What the hell is wrong with you?
What?
No, she's...
I look down to see nothing but my own blood-stained jeans.
I darted my eyes around the room, searching for any sign of my sister, but there wasn't even a trace.
I saw the knife lying on the floor, but it was clean.
Besides the residual...
blood around its hilt. I began to lift myself up from the floor, causing my mother to jump,
screaming out once more.
What the fuck have you done, Broughton?
No, I didn't. It was...
I finally got to my feet, attempting to wipe off the dried blood which had soaked into the
skin of my hands, still seeing absolutely no trace of my sister.
I felt my stomach churn as an endless stream of questions attacked my frenzied mind.
Stay back!
My mother screamed, pulling a gun from her purse before outstretching it towards me in
shaking hand.
I'm calling the police.
She still held the gun trained on me, as much as she could with her very erratic aim
at the time, while placing a call with her other hand.
Mom, I didn't!
She stuttered into the phone.
I shook my head from side to side, backing away from the woman who had already determined
me to be the killer.
I knew I hadn't heard anyone.
Well, anyone besides my sister, but she made me do that.
I knew I would never hurt anyone, but she just couldn't see it.
I couldn't understand how she could believe me.
capable of such a thing, but I couldn't wait around to be thrown into a prison cell when
I could never prove my innocence if I were locked away.
Without giving it a second thought, I ran for the back door.
Two shots rang out from behind me, along with another terror-filled whale from my own mother,
who I could barely believe had actually tried to shoot me.
I didn't waste any time checking myself to see if any bullets hit their mark, as I just wanted
to get as far away from there as I could.
I don't know if my mom attempted to chase after me or what, but
But once I busted through the back door, I circled the house back to my car and sped away
in a hurry.
I was a good ways up the road when I heard sirens in the distance, presumably heading
for my mom's place, but I did not stop driving until I got back home.
I gathered up as many things as I could, loaded up the camper, and got back on the road
before giving the authorities a chance to catch up with me.
I couldn't risk staying at a hotel, so I hoped to keep my camper under the radar until
I could clear this shit up.
I don't know what's real anymore.
I know what I saw, I know what I've lived through, but any information I can find on
my sister claims she died before my parents even divorced.
I've known her my whole life.
I've spent more time in Lainey's company than anyone else's on this goddamn planet.
She was the only person I could ever count on, and it was my hands that put an end to her life.
I know that.
I still feel the guilt of having to kill the only person I truly loved in this world, as well
as the memories of all the good times we shared growing up.
I'm slowly making my way across the country, hopeful that I can make it back to the town
that time forgot before the police catch up with me.
I swear my sister was not a monster, but I also know I didn't kill anybody.
Unfortunately, I can't prove either of those facts to anyone, or that Laney was even
real until I truly understand what's going on myself.
I'm terrified at even the thought of going back up that mountain, but I think it's the only choice
I have left. I have to find answers as to what made her do those horrific things, as well as
why nobody remembers her but me. Well, remembers her to be alive anyway. I don't know if those
things in the woods changed reality in some way, or maybe even sent me somewhere else, but I know
they did this. I know all this insanity is connected to them, whatever the hell they are. I'll try
to pick up some sort of weapon before I get back to that mountain, and I'll get the truth to all of it.
Even if I have to gut a few of those creatures in the process, I'll set this right.
I'll make everyone see it one way or another.
It took me a few days to make that cross-country trip back to the broken-down old city,
as I only traveled at night.
I dyed my hair, mudded up my license plate, and even painted my camper a little bit,
and to try and evade detection, I could only keep my fingers crossed that my meager attempt
at a makeshift camouflage color scheme would be enough to not warrant any second glances
for many police cars I may have inadvertently passed by.
It wasn't pretty, but it did help a little when nesting the old girl behind whatever
trees I found to hide out before sunrise.
Even though I'd spent a good deal of my life since moving out of my mother's house on
my own, I still felt almost cripplingly lonesome, especially on those long days hiding
in my camper.
I would take some chances here and there, walking to local fast food joints and various stores
for food and the like.
But I always kept my head down and spoke as little as possible.
Most of my gas stops were at night, and I would only use cash for my transactions.
I pulled every cent I had out of the bank before giving the authorities a chance to lock me out,
so I was sure I had enough to cover whatever I may need.
Since Laney had done the majority of the navigating from the passenger seat,
I wasn't entirely certain I was going the right direction when I neared the border of the state that housed the ghost town.
I ended up backtracking quite a few times, basically getting myself more lost.
I didn't recognize anything the closer I got.
I was sure I was at least in the neighborhood, but I'd gotten so turned around I had to find
a new hiding spot for the day before I'd be able to continue after nightfall.
I was yelling and cursing while I searched for a good place to park, feeling my face
burned from the frustration of being so close yet so far.
When I finally found the day's resting area, I cut the engine off and just sat there.
feeling as though my ears were billowing thick plumes of smoke while fighting against the urge
to beat the hell out of my steering wheel.
I stared through the windshield, focusing on calming my breathing while gazing upon yet another
series of trees beyond the glass.
I was growing incredibly tired of this whole ordeal, but I had little choice but to plunder
on and just hope to God I could find a way to fix the train wreck my life had become.
You're not far off now, Bri.
Lainey said from the passenger seat,
Shit, I can't tell.
I feel like I've been driving in circles for the last few hours.
Somehow I had felt her with me this whole time, and somewhere in my chaotic mind, I knew she couldn't be.
But I didn't question it when she spoke from beside me.
Perhaps I just wanted her to still be alive so badly.
Her sudden appearance was simply my own way to deal with everything.
I can help you find your way back there, if you want.
She said, giving me her classic, playful smile.
Hell yes, I'm only getting myself more lost by the man.
minute.
Want to get going then?
Nah, I can't risk it in the daytime.
Can't fix this if I'm behind bars, you know?
We talked for a bit, just like we always did.
No particular topic, just one pointless subject led to the other.
We laughed and joked about all the craziness of the last few days, though it felt quite the
grim discussion to be making light of.
Still, it felt amazing to have her by my side again, and her being there made me far
more confident that I may actually be able to pull this off.
After a while, we took a stroll to find a place to grab something to eat.
She was still as bouncy and enthusiastic as she had been when we first parked that old camper
beside those very woods we were headed back to, and her joy was just as contagious as always.
By the time we found a local diner, just off the road a mile or two from where we parked,
I had almost forgotten how terrified I was about what lay ahead.
I got some strange looks from the waitress and the guy behind the counter flipping burgers,
as it would seem they could not see the person I was talking to, but the food tasted amazing
nonetheless.
After I noticed their erratic glances, I slid out of the seat to join my sister on the
other side with my back to the staff of the small roadside cafe.
Lainey chuckled, joking about how crazy I must have looked to them, but I attempted to keep
my words and laughs to a minimum.
As unusual a situation as it was, I think Lane and I were both aware that she wasn't exactly
there, but it didn't bother us. In some ways, I think I just saw the girl whose company I shared
as the restless spirit of my beloved sister, more so than a manifestation of my messed-up mind.
I generally didn't believe in such things, but not too long ago, I didn't believe in creepy little
skeleton creatures capable of altering people or reality either. Once my meal was done, I got up to
pay. When I saw the cook was now on the phone, cutting his eyes back at me on occasion,
I felt my chest heaving again, with the realization that the man may have recognized me,
perhaps from the news or something.
I just grabbed my change from the waitress and took off out the door.
We may want to run, Lane, I said, already quickening my pace.
She looked as nervous as I felt, so we gunned it back in the direction of the camper.
I'd hoped to get a little rest before heading back towards the ghost town, but I just knew
we had to get back on the road as soon as possible.
I threw the door to the camper open, climbing inside and locking it behind me.
Lainey was already in the passenger seat when I slid into my spot at the helm, and I cranked her right up.
We're close, Bray. We can be there within an hour if you follow my lead.
We're that close? I was sure.
Just go! Get back on the highway and take the first right you see.
I thought I heard sirens off in the distance, but I hoped to God I was just imagining it.
Once I backed out of the trail between the trees, I floored it to get back to the highway.
It should only be a few miles from where I was, but I could still make out what could have
possibly been the approaching horde of officers, as if they were not far behind us.
I felt the tires bounced in and out of the cracks and splits in the neglected road, before
the tarmac smoothed out once I pulled onto the highway.
Just as Laney yelled out, pointing towards the right turn we had to get on, the sirens grew
significantly louder and were now accompanied by strobing lights from a ways behind us.
"'Shit!' I said, darting my eyes to my sister, who looked as worried as I.
"'Don't let up, baby brother!'
She barked directions from one road to the next, and things were beginning to feel familiar
to me again.
We were close, maybe only a few more miles to go, but I could now make out the front bumpers
of our pursuers.
I pressed the pedal as far as it would go, but there wouldn't be the slightest chance of
escaping a police car and a rusty old camper, no matter how well I maintained her.
I knew the road wasn't far ahead now, as though I could feel it.
All of the trees to our right were overgrown and unkempt, just like the ones that covered
the buckled city limit sign, but I highly doubted I could even hope to lose the cops chasing
us down.
My sister looked over her shoulder, out the back window, before glancing back at me.
I could feel the tightened skin of my knuckles as though the bones were about to tear through
the flesh.
Just a little further.
Lini said, with a certain intensity in her voice.
Keep going, Brian.
She was right beside me, having apparently gotten out of her seat to talk directly into my ear.
You know the turn now, right?
Yeah, Lane, I got this.
All right, kiddo, you hit that turn as soon as you get to it.
And don't stop until you get to the other side.
You got it?
Yeah, Lane.
I'll see you there, okay?
Lane?
She just gave me a wink before running to the back of the camper and through the window,
passing through the glass as though it weren't even there.
Almost as soon as I saw the small gap in the trees ahead,
with the slightest rim of the corner edge of the once green city limit sign, I pressed down
the brake pedal while cutting the wheels to the right.
While I faced sideways in the road for maybe a second or two at most, I saw my sister
slam into the police car closest to me, causing the driver to lose control.
It quickly veered to the other side of the road, flipping onto its roof and over, as the
one behind it screeched its tires to a halt before careening into the side of the other.
I could still hear the slamming and crushing of metal against metal as I sped to.
down the slender, single-lane road towards the city.
I breathed a heavy sigh after assuring myself that I was alone on the bumpy and pothold
pavement, with my pursuers having somehow been removed from the equation through the efforts
of my deceased sister.
It didn't make a damn bit of rational sense, but I didn't give it a second thought at
the time.
I hadn't had a chance to look upon the city with the sun shining down the last time we
were here, but it strangely felt more ominous than it did after dark.
it was simply the fact that I can make out the destruction of the little place in more vivid detail
in the daylight. Perhaps it was nothing more than the reason I was here that led to the inherent
foreboding in the recesses of my mind. Whatever the case, my hands were already beginning to
tremble as I let off the gas a bit. I told myself I was just slowing my pace to more easily
navigate the camper through the streets filled with rubble and debris, but I knew exactly
what it was that caused me to no longer find myself in a rush.
I could see the mountain ahead, looming over the burgh like a feral beast preparing to pounce.
No matter what I may be facing, this was not a choice I had much control over.
It was this, or faced the authorities, and paid for the crimes I knew myself not to have committed,
regardless of the facts that were handed to me.
Maybe my sister did die when I was a kid, and my fragile and immature mind couldn't handle it,
cracking under the weight of it, not unlike the tarnished pavement my wheels bounced across.
Perhaps there was something else at play here, though, something I could potentially look upon
very soon.
It had been early when I got myself turned around and lost, so as I guided the old girl back
onto this steeply inclined, slender and rough road behind the ghost town, and saw the world
falling into darkness around me, I couldn't help but find myself a bit more unsettled than I already
was.
I knew it wasn't long after leveling back out that we pulled over the last time I was here, but
When I saw my own tire marks from our rapidly paced escape, I knew I had reached my destination.
I sat in place, just glaring out into the trees for some time, unsure whether I was ready
to venture out into the diseased and rotting trees.
A good half hour or so of staring down the tree line, I lifted myself from the driver's
seat, reached for my flashlight, and the machete I had been able to pick up from the department
store some miles back, and walked out of the RV.
My initial footsteps were reluctant ones, but once I walked into the grass, still lined
with the blackened leaves left in the wake of those who had chased us, I felt my pulse
quickening again.
It was then that I became aware of the noises, though they were somewhat more subdued than
they were when they pulled me from my sleep what felt like both long ago and only yesterday
at the same time.
With my blade in one hand and my guiding light in the other, I took a deep breath and forced
one leg in front of the other once more.
As I wandered onwards, towards the escalating sound, I noticed the blackened bark of the trees
surrounding me, oozing that same dark pus.
I walked into the wide clearing, recalling the woods falling lifeless as those creatures chased
after us.
Everything around the now deflated tents was as sickeningly diseased as the things I headed
in search of as the mist gently caressed the forest floor.
I continued onward towards the sound, which only grew louder and louder.
It wasn't until I stepped from within the woods back into that circular clearing that
I found myself stunned, unable to move my feet from the ground.
The rotten and skeletal creatures all stood, sat or perched in the center of the clearing,
maybe fifteen of them altogether, though I didn't exactly waste time counting them.
Each and every one of them had at least one hand gripped tightly onto my sister, who hovered
above the ground as she had before. The flickering, flame-like orange lights of the things
now shone brightly, somehow mimicking the light breaching from Lainey's mouth, nostrils,
and eyes. They all looked as though they were in something of a trance as their glows
carved through the darkness in varying directions, spilling across the fog and blackened bark
surrounding them. I noticed my sister's skin appeared charred around where the seemingly
endless bony fingers grasped, but she did not look in any way.
sort of pain, as her gleeful expression would imply she was beyond content.
My mind fought to regain its composure, to figure out what to do next.
I still held my flashlight and machete, but my limbs ignored my pleas to do any more than
to hang limply at my sides.
Move, God damn it!
I commanded out loud, momentarily afraid I would prematurely gain the attention of the decayed
little critters.
I felt my left foot break free from the sticky ground, closely followed by my
right. My arms still were not responding, but I would worry about that when I got closer to
my goal. Those initial steps were slight, but each one gained more momentum than the last,
finally garnering the aid of my arms. My mind was clearing more and more as my legs pursued
each other. Right, left, right, left, one after the other, until I could pick up the stench
of those grotesque little creatures. Before I could allow myself to give it a second thought, I soft
carefully carved the blade into the throat of one of those things that lay sprawled out on the ground,
with one hand wrapped around my sister's ankle.
It didn't do so much as twitch as its voice left its sibling's chorus of madness before
the flickering flames of its eyes went dark.
As its hand slipped away from Lainey's legs, leaving only the scarring left by its grasp,
I noticed how thin and malmarish she appeared.
It wasn't easy to get a clear look at her through the creatures gathered around where she hovered,
But it looked as though the life force was being drained from her.
I could only assume that these things were somehow feeding on her or being intoxicated by what they stole from her.
But I would be damned if I was about to allow them to continue.
But the realization that she had somehow been here, possibly this whole time, I was prepared to do whatever it took to get her back, to really get her back this time.
I tried to keep my actions as controlled as possible as I guided the blade into the decaying flesh of the grossness.
protest creatures with my shivering hands.
I could only hope to not alert those still entranced as I left one after the other, oozing
their noxious, milky fluids onto the ground from their lifeless skeletal bodies.
As I worked my way up to those hanging onto her arms, it was growing more difficult to keep
my assault somewhat silent.
The higher up they were, the farther they had to fall, landing with a nasty slapping sound
onto their fallen comrades.
I still carried on, slicing throats and carving fatal wounds onto the brittle and hardened meat.
Each of them sprang that creamy and foul-smelling pus across my clothes.
As the chorus of their horrendous howls were growing softer from more voices falling silent,
I sped my movements, pulling my blade from one and almost instantly slicing into another.
I found I was now having to step over the mounds of corpses that lined the ground beneath me,
causing me to take far more care with my jabs and cuts as to not inadvertently slice into
Lainey.
I finally had to take something of a step back to clear some of the heat from the path.
I was somewhat distracted while heaving the gruesome sacks of rotten flesh away from
my sister's feet, audibly gagging more than once.
By the time I realized my shadow was being cast across the bodies I had already moved, I didn't
have a chance to escape the blackened hands which latched onto my arms as soon as I turned around.
All ten of the remaining flickering eyes gazed into mine while my skin began to burn.
I screamed as I attempted to move my arms, but I couldn't so much as break free from
the tight grip.
Two of them held on to me with one hand each, but they were insanely strong for having such
a seemingly weak and fragile frame.
I kicked at their knees, causing them to shriek in a much more aggravated version of their
maddening wails, but they still wouldn't release me.
I continued to smack my heels against the bones on their legs while trying every
everything I could to pull away from them.
The other three were bearing down on me now, each moving in those staggered and jerky motions.
Finally, I got my left arm free.
I frantically felt around for the machete I had stabbed into the ground while I made my efforts
to clear a pathway, as another wrapped its fingers around my right arm, just below where the other
hand still grasped tightly.
I felt my thumb brush against the hilt of my blade.
I gave another loud yell, both from the incredible pain of my scorched flesh, and I was
as well as the anguished desire to reach my weapon.
I stretched my body as much as I could, grabbing onto the rubbery textured hand, while another
burning hand grasped the upper thigh of my right leg.
Finally, I freed the blade from the dead grass and dirt, before swatting it down upon
each of the arms of the creatures who held me in place.
Their shared squeals blended with my own as the skeletal forearms separated from the hands
which still held me tight.
I leapt back as the quintet bore down on me, now revealing haggard and gaping me.
mouths, with more of that fiery aura glowing from within.
Their stuttering movements quickened as they staggered at me, but I kept swinging my machete
from one side to the other while I gathered my bearings.
As I felt both of my feet secure themselves to the ground beneath me, I prepared to make
my stand, no longer retreating.
When the nearest one closed the gap between us, I sliced my blade across its midsection.
The anguished howl erupted from its orifice again.
It grasped at its stomach, attempting to hold in the meaty, intanguiting.
cords that spilled from behind the opening I made before one last swat from my gore-lined weapon
silenced it for good.
I leapt towards the next two, which staggered side by side towards me, until I carved deep
into the chest of the one on the left before hacking a ditch into the neck of the other.
When they fell to the ground, I struck them both again, just to be sure the deed was done.
Only two remained, each of whom had begun to back away from me.
But I would be damned if I was about to let them escape their shared fate.
I dug the machete right through the upper torso of the next in line, before rearing back
with all my might to separate the head from the spewing neck of the last.
I stood there, heaving deep and exhausted breaths, while continuing to slice through the
meat and tissue of each and every one of my victims until I was damn sure that they would never
grip their bony tendrils around anyone else ever again.
I gripped at my side while buckling over, retching across the widely strewn mounds of gore I had
scattered across the forest floor.
I gasped for breath as my erratic lungs begged for me to take control and regulate my frenzied
heartbeat.
I gazed across the darkened area as the glowing from my sister was now the only thing
illuminating the circular clearing.
I looked around for my flashlight, but realized it was more than likely buried under the mass
of rotten meat and bone, something I was not about to root through.
I finally stepped toward my sister, not remotely hesitating before the same.
throwing my arms around her, pulling her close, while begging her to awaken from her catatonic
state.
As I held her, I couldn't tell if my own feet were lifting from the ground or if she was descending
to where I stood.
But when the darkened forest dissolved before my eyes, I suddenly didn't care one way or
the other.
My entire body, no, my entire being was filled with such ecstasy as I had never even imagined
possible.
It felt as though I had escaped the body which imprisoned me, allowing me to soar above reality
itself.
Within what seemed to be no more than seconds, I watched my life play out before what I could only
assume to be my mind's eye.
I saw the child who would grow to be the man I could be, being brought into this world
before taking my first steps, my first run, my first kiss, and my first love.
I just watched on as though I were living a movie.
I married the amazing woman I had known since junior high.
I viewed the travels we would share together along with the heartache of the struggles
we would endure, but even the tears filled me with such awe.
I could barely rationalize my thoughts.
As one life ended, another began, as though I were switching the channels of a television
tuned to a realm of possibilities.
When I would come across a life I didn't care for, I found I could simply fast forward
to the next.
I saw myself go through so many trials and hardships, yet so many more wonders that showed
me hope that pure and exhilarated joy can truly exist.
It's so goddamn beautiful.
I heard myself whisper, but it was far removed from where I was.
As I gazed into the endless wonders of what could be, I was vaguely aware of the moans
and whimpers as they left my mouth, but that was not where I lived anymore.
My body was little more than a dream I no longer cared to take the moment.
pardon. It was an old, beaten-down car that I saw no reason not to leave deserted on the side of the
road. Even when I became aware of fingers tightly wrapping themselves around my arms, I did not care.
Let them have it, I thought. I didn't especially want it anymore. I felt the sensation of the
vessel I once occupied being shaken with something of a jarring that threatened to send me falling
back into it. My grip on the wonders I viewed and somehow lived all at once began to slain to
slip, causing the experience to fragment slightly.
I fought to maintain my connection with my soul practically begging not to be pulled away.
A voice called out from miles away, somewhere beyond the realm I struggled to remain in.
There was a sudden and somewhat alarming pain that shot across what was once my face,
causing my awareness to falter.
The distant voice screamed from much closer than before.
Something inside me became heavy.
A weight I was once familiar with, something tangible that I began to crave ever so slightly.
It was a hunger, almost, though I didn't know if that was the right word.
Another sharp and more shocking pain pulled me from the glorious oasis of the place beyond reality.
I felt my body toppling back to the ground, momentarily confused as to what I was looking at.
My eyes burned, feeling as though I hadn't used them in years.
I was struggling to remember how to function within my body when I finally looked into the kind
and loving eyes of my sister, which practically thrusted my mind back to the awareness of what led
me here in the first place.
The tears spilled down her sunken cheeks while her lips quivered in a strained attempt to smile.
I wrapped my arms around her and thought I could feel her ribs right below the surface,
her heart rapidly beating against my own, causing a warmth to spread through me I never thought
I would feel again.
After a while like that, we helped each other back to the camper and that still rested
next to those ancient trees.
I could already see signs of life returning to the forest behind us, assuring me that I had indeed
put an end to those creatures who fed on my sister's bliss like a drug.
As I guided the camper through the streets of the city from times long gone, I was quite reluctant
at what we may be facing back in the real world.
Yes, I had retrieved my sister, something I hadn't believed possible, but I still hadn't
actually changed anything.
Or so I thought at the time.
I pulled out of the slender road and back onto the highway next to the tarnished and warped
city limit sign, seeing no sign of any wreckage that could have potentially been left by
the police cars that chased after me.
There weren't even any tire marks on the road from where I knew at least one of my pursuers
had screeched onto the tarmac.
I pulled up to a 24-hour diner just as the sun was beginning to rise.
Lainey had been sleeping for the last hour or so, but I had to get some food into her incredibly
malnourished body, didn't wake up until I returned with some burgers and fries for us, and,
though she was quite groggy at first, she enthusiastically wolfed the meal down like
it was the first thing she'd eaten in weeks.
I didn't give her a choice about heading to the first emergency room I could find.
Well, the first one far enough from the old ghost town anyway.
Even if I was confident our nightmare may be reaching its end, I still wanted to be nowhere near
that damn place by the time we stopped for the night.
She actually didn't resist my recommendation, and given her weakened state, the nurse didn't
waste any time getting her back to see a doctor.
I also had to be treated for the hand-shaped burn marks on my arms, but while mine bore
the oozing pinpricks, Lainees did not this time.
I could only assume that whatever infected her before was now coursing through my veins, but the
hospital staff managed to get it under control before any blackened veins began to spider web
from within.
Lainey was kept in the hospital for a good week while she regained her strength, during which time
I made some calls and checked online to see what I may still be facing.
I reluctantly reached out to my mom, which was a conversation that did not at all go down
like I was expecting.
She assured me that she and her husband, my father, had lost their son when he was only
a child, and the prank I was playing was nothing short of cruel.
The more I insisted that I was who I claimed to be, the more in rage she grew, threatening
to call the police.
I hung up the phone, shocked by the revelation that I apparently did not belong here.
I attempted to reach out to a few of my other contacts, but the numbers that still led
to who I expected didn't know me either.
Lainey and I talked a good deal about this, but she assured me that she still had my back,
no matter what.
When she was ready to be released from the hospital, we resumed our cross-country trek
back to the town I no longer had a place in, but at least I had my sister, the only person
I could ever count on.
Over the course of the journey back home, I began to feel an almost overpowering weakness,
forcing me to yield the responsibility of driving the old camper to Lainey.
Given the fact that she was far healthier than I had found her behind those ancient trees,
she took no hesitation in accepting the task.
Yes, she was still quite withered and was slowly recovering her strength,
but her scars were almost completely faded,
and she was already back to that energetic and youthful woman I had always loved.
By the time our road trip came to its close,
I could barely keep my eyes open for more than a few minutes at a time.
Lainey insisted I let her take me to a hospital,
but I had a feeling I knew what was happening.
I didn't belong in this world, just as she had not belonged in the one that left me labeled
a murderer.
I have no regrets, all things considered.
I think this is still a better outcome than being walked away for the rest of my life, or
even being put to death for the crimes I did not commit.
I just hope that Lainey will get through this.
She's the best person I've ever known, and I'm just grateful I was able to get her back home,
if it's one I cannot join her in.
It would seem this is the end of my story, but I thank you for hearing me out.
I don't think I can record anymore now.
It's getting harder to focus by the second.
The name is Lainey Renee Harris, and it would seem, until recently, I had a brother.
I don't remember him well since he died when I was around nine years old, but I know it hit
mom and dad pretty hard.
He was like two, I think, when we lost him.
But I can't say I really knew him, you know.
He had a lot of medical issues, so he had to be kept in a sterile environment.
I was always made to stay away from him, but only for his own good.
I still felt bad when it got the better of him, though.
I'm 30 now, and I'm part of a sort of think tank group of paranormal researchers.
We were looking into this old ghost town that was a little bit of a sort of think tank group of paranormal researchers.
We were looking into this old ghost town that was.
apparently once called Rimrose Fall. But it took us a lot of work to even get that much information.
My colleagues wanted to do some more looking into it before checking it out. But I think my curiosity
got the better of me, and I headed across the country to see it for myself. But I think my curiosity
got the better of me, and I headed across the country to see it for myself. When I got there,
even though I was immediately intoxicated by the melancholy beauty of the broken-down old place.
Something, I guess, called to me from the mountain that stood behind it.
I know that sounds like some crazy, psychic cat lady shit,
but that's the best way I can describe it.
Before I knew it, I was weaving through the streets in my hand-me-down camper
and speeding up the steep hillside road.
Somewhere along the line, I sort of blacked out and didn't even come out of it until I just fell to the ground in the middle of an open space in the woods.
I don't remember much.
There was a boy there, sort of floating above the ground.
I know it sounds nuts, right?
That's not even the weirdest part, though.
At the time, I, like, knew him.
Not just that, but I...
I knew him as my brother, like totally forgetting that he died when I was a kid.
I snapped him out of the trance he was in, and we booked it back to the camper.
But it was our camper, not just mine.
Crazy, right?
So even though it had only been a little while from my perspective,
I was all skin and bones, like I hadn't eaten for a month or something.
And I had these burn marks all over my body and legs.
Brian, my brother, got me to a hospital, and it took a week or so for me to get back on my feet.
But by the time we headed back home, he was in bad shape.
He asked me to finish what he was writing and posted online.
But when I read it, I couldn't even believe what I was seeing, you know?
I guess I was already myself again by the time he just vanished.
That's right.
I took the luggage back into my house, came back out, and he knew.
He was just gone.
Anyway, even though I didn't see him as my brother after I got my mind right, I know he helped
me.
So finishing his story and posting it is the least I can do.
It does make me a bit sad if everything he had written was true because it doesn't sound
like we would have been pretty close if my brother had survived.
It's weird because even though I know who I am and what my life has been, I miss him, you
know?
I feel like we'd only just met, but I'd known him for years at the same time.
I do wonder where he is now, though.
Maybe I'll never know, but I hope it's somewhere happy.
I think he deserves that.
I think he deserves that.
For some reason, I'm crying right now.
Like, I feel as if my heart is breaking.
It's like I've lost a part of me.
I never knew I had.
If that makes sense at all, I'm not sure if I'll ever really come to grips with everything that happened.
But I hope I will.
Maybe my kid brother is still out there somewhere, in some magical place beyond the walls of reality.
Of course, it's very possible that I'm still there, too.
