The Dark Somnium - "The Man Who Ate Ghosts" Creepypasta | Scary Stories from The Internet
Episode Date: August 31, 2021This Creepypasta Scary Story is from the Creepypasta website, Written by Michael Paige.--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/darksomnium/message Hosted on Acast. See aca...st.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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The day is all started with the briefing room, a wall-to-wall palette of aged pastels and stark
hospital grayness.
In the center of our little room, an oval-shaped table dominated the space with every seat
filled with a tired nurse.
From one of the windows, a bar of morning light often slipped stubbornly past the shutters.
It was this drab room where we discussed things such as the population of our current patients
and whether to up or down their medications.
In a work environment, prone to shifting each and every day,
such meetings were vital to maintain the facility's pulse.
As I sipped my morning coffee and slid the bitter warmth down my throat,
I could not help but eye the newest face of our staff,
a young man with a sharp, short haircut,
and a stony, unsmiling face.
Alec Barnes, a pest.
Throughout the entirety of our meetings,
he could never just keep quiet.
to sit and listen as we resolved any daily conflicts.
No, he had to chime in every moment he could,
bringing everything to a grinding halt to interject with...
I have to disagree.
Well, where I come from, we did this.
If I could just stop you there...
A pest indeed.
Every clinic had at least one of his sort,
hungry to get out there and feel out the unit they'd soon be running.
We affectionately referred to them as Weisenheimers,
Those who can do no wrong, instant virtuosos of the field.
These people were easy enough to spot, postures tense with self-conviction, nodding impatiently
as you speak to them, as though already knowing what you're about to say and that you are
simply moving too slow for their patience, and you, only you, are the one doing things
wrong.
I can still recall one in particular, a young know-it-all who had become a nuisance during
our labs and clinicals, a chattering.
in on how we'd been doing everything incorrectly and not by the books.
That is, until one day I'd spied the bag of dopamine she'd secured for a patient draining
itself into their sheets.
As the sheets, never faster had I seen one's face flush so red.
And what happens to that self-importance after moments like this?
They are jettisoned out, left to the scorn of those they'd obnoxiously reprimanded.
And you can bet your bottom dollar, Alec Barclay.
arms, we'll get his eventually.
Reality has a way of compressing our egos.
After the meeting had finished and the charge nurse had assigned our patient loads for the
days, I set out to complete my daily tasks.
Within the confines of our 25-bed unit, our patients mostly consisted of those recovering
from injury, whether accidental or purposefully inflicted, and most patients were more of
a danger to themselves than others.
That being said, there were always those we had to be wary of.
In my years as a psychiatric nurse, I'd been kicked, scratched, bitten, punched,
and for the better half of a day, verbally threatened.
Still, I never let it sodden my spirits, no matter how much saliva or curses were hawked
at me.
Contrary to how social media or cinematic horrors may portray them, psychiatric wards are
not twisted places littered with crazies.
There are places of healing, of alleviation, a haven for those physically alive, but internally
tormented.
Yes, some kicked and shrieked in the halls until their throat split, but a good deal held
a much quieter, unseen pain.
That was why I was there to help ease the cold terrors of their futures.
And for the case of our newest arrival, Roland Bull would become my next big project.
It was raining on the night they brought him in.
I spied him rolling by on a stretcher, his cold face wet and dripping, his eyes flickered with
transient consciousness, perhaps barely grasping the shapes and sounds around him.
For a moment, we actually held each other's gaze as he was whisked away to the intensive
care unit.
Ten paper clips, eight marbles, and five drywall nails.
These were the objects removed from Mr. Bull's stomach.
He was diagnosed with PICA, an uncommon disorder in which one has the urge to ingest inedible
objects, though one this severe was especially rare.
Encompassing that fact, he'd also been diagnosed with depressive disorder, severe anxiety,
and post-traumatic stress.
Despite my history in the psychiatric field, I could not help but feel woefully unprepared
for him, if only I had even the slightest clue.
I stopped at Mr. Bull's door, surveyed my notes once more, and carefully let myself inside.
The room was reminiscent of a college dorm with a single window providing a glossy view of the parking lot.
Mr. Bull was awake and currently hunched over his table, a wilderness of hanging, stringy hair covering his face.
His legs were crossed at the ankles, both shoelaces removed.
He appeared to be riding vigorously into a crossword puzzle with one of our eyes.
rubber ballpoint pens.
I knocked lightly towards the door, which prompted him to turn toward me.
Good morning, Mr. Bull.
I smiled as I introduced myself.
How are you doing today?
From out of the mesh of hair, a thin face stared back at me, giving a look I'd describe
only as a tight-lipped vacancy.
Eyes wide as possible, but not quite focused.
He appeared somewhere north of his 50s.
From across his chin and up his cheeks, a scattering of scars.
was etched into his features.
Possible self-harm, my thoughts mused.
I continued my greeting.
My name is Jason, and I'm one of the registered nurses here to ensure everything is all right
and that your time with us is a good one.
Is there anything I can help you with?
His eyes held tired water behind them, inspecting me up and down, trying to get a read on me
as I was him.
His mouth then pulled into a small grin, which rumpled the stretch marks.
You have piano fingers?"
I'm sorry?
I asked, caught off guard by his statement.
He lifted his hand and flexed his fingers.
Piano fingers.
Father had them too.
He used to play all the time in his office, mostly the gymnopades and a tad of Chopin.
Do you play it all?
Despite his craggy appearance, his voice carried a genuine playfulness behind it.
Not at all, I chuckled.
My mother had one of her friends give me lessons.
when I was younger, but unfortunately, none of them stuck.
Yes, Mrs. Brown was an avid teacher of the arts, but now I can only remember the reek of
bone broth carrying her breath.
Anyhow, it was nice officially meeting you.
Please don't hesitate to let me know if you need anything.
We'll do everything we can to help.
Of course, he answered, rubbing a finger along his scar-fringed chin.
It was not long before we realized the true extent that Mr. Bull needed to be marked.
monitored.
From the television room, he'd plucked out the power button, as well as both volume buttons
from the remote and swallowed their small plastic bodies.
From his bathroom, he'd twisted the cap off of one of the soap dispensers and negotiated it
down his throat, and, before we could catch it, he'd already swallowed the flexipan we'd
given him for crosswords.
As arrangements were made to have them removed, we mold over different treatment options
for his condition.
In most cases, PICA was caused by an
iron deficiency in the body, leaving it craving something to replenish the lacking minerals.
Therefore, we prescribed him an iron supplement. After a few weeks of the dosage, two tablets
a day, and an iron-rich diet, his pining for non-food items had considerably lessened.
I was ecstatic about the progress, thoroughly convinced that before long, his symptoms would be gone
entirely. Unfortunately, I would come to find out we were only scratching the surface of Roland Bull.
As far as the supplements had taken him, we'd soon discover that his hospital bracelet had gone
missing, not so mysteriously.
I'd come to find that he stopped taking the tablets completely, hiding them under his tongue
only to spit them out later.
On top of that, he'd entirely stopped eating anything we provided him.
The next evening, I stopped by his room to once again check on him.
Roland was yet again seated at his writing desk, his spine stiffly straight and his neck bent
towards the window. A tray of food sat on the bed next to him, cold and uneaten.
I scooped it up for him.
You really should eat something, Mr. Bull.
Otherwise, they'll have us give you a feeding tube.
The food is much better, trust me.
He didn't acknowledge me, merely holding that gaze toward the grayish smear of asphalt
outside.
Protests like this weren't out of the ordinary, especially for patients coping with anxiety
and severe depression.
As I turned to report back on his state, a thin, withered voice crept out of him.
It's coming.
His lips were shaking.
What do you mean?
I asked, trying to dissect what he just said.
What is coming?
But it was no use.
He'd returned to silence, maintaining the glazed stare out the window.
Evidently, our conversation had ended.
That same evening, a scream resonated down the halls.
It was coming from Mr. Bull's room.
I was the first to arrive, quickly bursting through the door and witnessing him flailing in his sheets.
His hands clawed and grasped at nothing while his thick heels kicked helplessly about.
Assessing the situation, I tried talking him down first to calm his nerves behind the frenzied cries.
He was unresponsive, lips curled back from his gums and his eyes squirming wildly in their sockets.
Then, in a quick motion, his thrashing hands converged and closed around his throat,
locking into a death grip.
I moved to pry his hands off him,
trying to carefully break the chokehold he had on himself.
Even with his throat being wrung in his own grip,
a press scream still squeezed its way out.
As his grip started to slacken,
the howling was suddenly stopped and replaced by
the tell-tale sign of someone about to wretch.
Not wanting him to vomit flat on his back,
I moved to push his body to the side,
all the while looking eagerly towards the doorway
to see if more help had arrived.
But as I turned back toward him, everything stopped.
My heart increased to a dreadful acceleration.
I tried to take a breath, but couldn't.
There was something so dark and different when an unspeakable shock hits you.
Like every nerve in your body, every sensory input to the outside world has suddenly
been cut.
Your voice is too brittle to speak.
Your eyes are too afraid to close.
Things, perhaps semblances of thoughts.
beat desperately toward your brain, only to drown before reaching its surface.
It had happened so quickly I could only barely process the ghostly outline of Roland's face
or the sudden misshapen lump in his throat.
Fingers, long, wet fingers were gleaming between his teeth,
reaching outward from the dark, pink depths.
They were bruised with blackish, purple colors,
strings of shiny spittle stretched and snapped between their wriggling joints,
A pungent, bacterial odor reeked from their gangrene tips.
Roland's eyes rolled upward as his body heaved and let out a wretched gargle.
The fingers bent forward, curling over his face like a spider on its backside and began to tug at his jaws, trying to pull them wider.
Their jagged, split nails scraped across his chin, his cheeks, his nose, digging grooves into his flesh.
The sound of footsteps entering the room brought me back.
Another nurse had arrived.
I peered once again at Roland's face, coated now in a webwork of fresh, bleeding wheels.
No fingers, none at all.
Together, the other nurse and I restrained Roland and safely injected him with a dose of B-52,
2-migram Ativan, and 5-mogram haldahl in one needle, 50-migram Benadryl and the other.
With the collective effort of three different drugs coursing through his system, the struggles finally ceased.
A lot of damage.
The other nurse commented, surveying the marks on his face.
We should have put him under long before this.
I realized then that the help was none other than Alec Barnes, the Weisenheimer.
Whatever he said next never reached me.
I had already left to get some ointments for Roland's cuts.
I didn't sleep while that night, dozing in and out without any hope of catching a dream.
Before long I was awake and standing over the sink of the bathroom, both hands against
the porcelain.
Amidst the rubble of my thoughts, my brain was scavenging for answers, something that could explain
what had transpired.
But the answers came up short.
There wasn't enough substance to it, not enough material to grasp on to.
I could only imagine those fingers, their rotting pores, their twitching knuckles, jutting out
of a man's mouth, trying to hoist an even larger something out of the tube of his throat.
The image made my insides feel wretched and rolled a brief nausea round my belly.
Absurd.
I snapped back at the disgusting thoughts.
Ludacris.
Disgusting.
Get a hold of yourself.
To give such a thing credence was unacceptable.
It was a stressful moment, a fabrication of a rattled mind in a stressful situation.
That is the end of the matter, no further discussion required.
I gargled some mouthwash, clapped both hands against my heart.
cheeks and returned to bed, repeating the same determined tempo.
But when I did finally fall asleep, there was no protecting my dreams.
I was back there again, standing in Roland's room while his blurry shapes screamed and writhed
in the sheets.
I tried to restrain him before he could harm himself, only to have my arms reel back on
their own and grasp my throat instead.
The last wisps of breath pulled out of me.
In the pit of my gullet, something begins to move.
of clawing its way upward.
I lurched forward, squeezing my eyes open and closed rapidly, trying to wake myself up.
But it was no use.
I could only retch desperately as my head flops back, and the thing inside my throat forces
its arrival.
My eye finds the wall just as my shadow spouts a new bouquet of spidery horrors.
The next time I saw Roland in person, it was during his supervised access to the outdoor patio.
It was to give patience an airy reprieve outside the ward.
Flower pots hung from the fence that enclosed the space, along with a wall painted into a mural
and a few basketball hoops.
Mr. Bull was adamant that I was the one to supervise him that day.
The new scratches etched into his face had healed, breaking off into faded, fractal patterns.
He took a seat at one of the diamond-blue benches and sucked in a deep breath of air.
Rain's on its way.
You can smell it.
Hopefully not before my drive home, I sighed, catching a whiff of it myself, the freshness
just before a storm.
Hmm.
He hummed passively, and after a short pause between us, popped the question.
You saw it, didn't you?
The question sent a jolt up my spine, and, if only for a moment, flashed on my face.
He took notice of this, the liveliness in his voice kicking up an octave.
You did, didn't you?
What are you referring to?
I asked, rolling my shoulders back.
He leaned against the thermoplastic backrest of the bench.
You're scared to admit it.
I get it, I do.
But neither of us can be so lucky to deny it.
My eyes wandered the patio, looking rather self-consciously for anyone else around.
We were alone.
You're going to have to be more specific for me.
I'm not quite following you.
His tired, watery eyes focused on me.
I had to wait for you to see them before I could say anything.
Otherwise, you'd never believe me.
I know you wouldn't.
Then his split lip curled into a smile.
But if you don't listen now, you won't know what you saw, and you'll always be left to wonder.
I didn't answer, but perhaps it was the absorbed look on my face that had queued for him to
continue.
It started with ice.
He said, pausing as if to mull over that fact, I loved the texture of it.
the feeling of crunching it between my teeth in tiny, crackling bits.
It was one of the few things that could quell my anxiety, and when that wasn't enough, I turned
to chewing on paint chips and sucking on coins for a good while.
I was a very anxious boy, you see.
A gust of wind whistled through the fence and bobbed the hanging flowers.
His tongue lapped between his lips.
I grew up in a wealthy home with wealthy parents.
One of them as sweet as can be, while the other was emotionally aloof.
Can you guess which one father was?
He asked with a grin.
The stereotypical provider, who considered the financial support to our family enough of a bond
between us.
Naturally, we weren't very close, and as my tendencies intensified, he and mother were thoroughly
convinced it was merely a phase.
Don't ask me why it wasn't.
I couldn't tell you.
All I knew was that my cravings for the indigestible only grew worse as I got older.
I stayed silent and listened, not daring to say anything else to throw him off point.
I felt a responsibility to understand him.
He'd finally opened up, no longer disappearing behind that flat stare out the window.
Answers were best found during the low tide, after all.
Surprisingly enough, I wasn't the only one with compulsions in our household.
Roland chuckled.
Father was a collector, not for coins or old dusty vinyl.
He dabbed in other things.
A canteen once slung over the shoulder of a dead soldier.
A worn noose used to break necks in the nineteenth century, even an ancient skull with half its
dome cleaved by some horrible means of torture.
These were the things that interested him, much to my mother's dismay.
Little pieces of the dark he enjoyed finding.
I'm not even sure where he got his antique piano, but I know that every so often I'd hear
the same two keys get struck in the middle of the night.
So one day, while he and mother were away on a business trip, I'd snuck into his studio to
look at the private collection myself.
One of them caught my eye, a piece of jewelry that once belonged to a dead woman, said to have
cursed her with an early death.
I felt drawn to it like an impulse.
had compelled me to believe that somehow it was mine, that it belonged to me.
So I swallowed it.
A look of distress crossed him.
I was scared that night, absolutely petrified that he'd come back to find the ring missing
out of his collection.
Then the following night it had passed through me.
I fished it out of my waist, cleaned it intensely, and returned it back to the collection
unharmed.
My father was none the wiser.
Soon enough, I did it again, this time with the bone of a black cat used in a witch's hex.
It had started to feel like a game, but soon became more of a ritual between us.
He'd bring something home, I'd swallow it, even if it was just a piece of it, wash off the
blood and stool as I passed it and place it back there.
Sure, there may have been some pain and slight discoloring here and there, but never enough
for him to notice.
It felt good, celestial even.
Father and I finally found something in common.
We both had a liking for objects.
His face then fell, becoming ghostly stoic as his voice lost its shape.
When it came time for me to move out and on with my life, I had to put an end to our little
game.
He never did find out what I'd been doing to his collection, and I wouldn't have it any other
way.
I'd managed, or so I thought, to wean myself off of them.
But as time passed, I began to have strange thoughts about all those cursed, haunted things,
like how they felt suddenly different in my hands after I passed them.
Almost like the energy they once held was no longer there, like it had been left behind somewhere
inside me.
And what if all that energy, or whatever it was they had, was then left to brew and then left to
brew and ferment over the years, until it justated into something else.
He rubbed a pale hand over his cheek, something that finally wants out.
As his voice finally trailed off into silence, I spoke up.
What do you mean by wants out exactly?
The glaze over his eyes had returned.
I'd like to go back inside now, please.
That was the last and longest conversation we ever had together, and he was done sharing
that day. I tried to stray my thoughts away from that conversation. It was too much to digest.
For the rest of that day, I no longer felt like myself inside the ward, almost like the weight there
had become too crushing, like something were about to crest over the rise and all I could
do was brace for an impact I couldn't see. What happened next occurred on a late Sunday evening,
three days after Roland Bull's unshakable silence. I was making my usual
rounds in the ward and stopped by to check on him. I knocked three times, opened his door, and stepped
routinely inside. Roland was not in his bed or stationed at his usual spot at the writing desk.
The door to his bathroom was inch slightly open, the sound of a sink running coming from inside.
Hey, Mr. Bull, just here to check on you. Is everything all right? I called. There was no answer.
Mr. Poole, are you all right? Still nothing. Only the steady drawl of running water.
Without warning, the bathroom door swung open, rebounding off the rubber stop, and then
rebounding again off Roland Bull's body.
He had blundered out backwards on his heels, both hands locked around his neck.
His face was flushed into a darkish plum color, heaps of foam dribbled out of his mouth,
rolling over his lips, which had gone blue.
Tears streamed out of his eyes, which bulged from their sockets.
A single sound emerged from him, the gargled note of air trapped in his throat.
Choking, my thought screamed.
He's choking!
I grabbed him, spinning his body around as both of my arms locked around his waist.
Never in my life had I performed the heimlich, but in that moment it was do or die.
I pressed hard into his abdomen with a quick upward thrust, practically lifting him off his feet.
His body jerked back, but there was no luck dislodging whatever was inside his throat.
The door opened. Someone else had heard the commotion.
I looked feverishly toward them while administering a moment.
another ineffective thrust.
The other person was none other than Alec Barnes.
Even amid a panic, I despised his presence there greatly.
What's wrong?
What's happening?
He asked, which only infuriated me.
Choking!
I snapped, yanking Mr. Bull back yet again.
Hot blood coursed through my arms.
I forced down a swallow, trying to wet my dry mouth.
But in that same moment, with both my arms fastened around him, I had felt something peculiar.
A sudden shift of his insides.
an almost tumbling motion, far too pronounced to ignore.
The Weisenheimer stepped back into my peripheral.
Let me do it.
I can—I've got it!
I hissed at him, hoisting Mr. Bull's body upward again, harder than I ever thought I could.
His chest heaved as more strained gasps came out of it.
Bits of his spittle slopped over my arms.
He then lurched forward in my grasp.
It felt as though his insides had all decompressed at once, like an airtight container being popped off.
His throat opened.
He let out a watery scream of pain and retching.
Somewhere near us, Alec made a noise.
Something that sounded like...
Oh, God!
Dear God!
Something heavy hit the floor.
Roland Bull went limp in my arms.
Alec Barnes let out a scream.
Rantic movement skittered around the room like the sound of a fish flopping about a deck,
followed by something being torn out of a wall.
My eyes raced around, like the slew of everything.
At once had sucked all the blood from my brain, flushing its data.
I checked on Roland, who had slumped over like a puppet in my arms.
He was unresponsive, with his eyes staring blankly forward and lips hanging loosely open.
I checked for his pulse and found no rhythm.
Lying him on the ground, I lined both hands on top of the other and pumped until the strings
in my wrist burned.
Then I pinched his nose and forced air down his windpipe.
It wasn't working.
As I did this, my eyes traced the floor, following the thin film of blood and bile that trailed
away from us.
First to the bathroom, and then to the vanity, where the air vent below it now hung open.
The right side of its grill pulled entirely out of place.
Alec Barnes was frozen in his spot.
The shock that distorted his face was almost too vivid to be real, and even as more staff
arrived, he still remained there, stricken with fear.
Boland Bull was pronounced dead by our medical examiner, the manner of death and esophical rupture.
Several tears had perforated the walls of his throat, along with a dislocated jaw entirely
unhinged from his skull.
We weren't yet sure what caused the rupture, as nothing could be traced other than the aftermath
of ruined tissue.
Rumors had floated around between staff of possible causes, but did not hold much water to them.
To be told, not many of us knew how to handle the loss of a patient, not otherwise terminal.
As for what came of Alex Barnes, he'd quit spontaneously and left without further notice.
Tried as I did to pry information out of him, he dismissed me, shaking his head and repeating
that he'd seen nothing.
End of story.
I could see the panic in his eyes, held back by two thin sacks threatening to tear at any moment.
Not a single particle of self-importance left.
Perhaps I've even felt the same way, that perhaps I did catch a glimpse of something that
day, a gray sleek of a shape pulling itself through the opened air duct, member-ness, slug-like.
But I must avert those thoughts, sort them out properly, dissect them one by one,
that is the only way I can keep myself together.
Yet despite all these, the strangeness around our ward has continued to circulate.
have been claiming to hear something in the walls. Even some of our staff have reported it
as well, a quick, insipid scratching coming from the ducks to the point where they believe
an animal is trapped in there. As many times as we've had the vents checked, there is no proof
for such a claim. I've heard it myself from time to time, sometimes even awfully close by,
just on the other side of the duck's cover. But I do not peer inside. I do not even risk what I may see.
The source of the noises.
The ward's newest arrival.
