The Dark Somnium - The Skinwalker | Scary Stories From The Internet
Episode Date: March 15, 2026Special thanks to Big Daddy Stone, for joining me ion this video, make sure to check out his channel! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJd5mMcHaEi1TTPXU6ExuVA This Creepypasta scary story is from the... creepypasta website, written by Max Minton, check out the original story here: "The Skinwalker" https://www.creepypasta.com/skinwalker/ Thumbnail artwork by Boris Groh, Check out their work here: https://www.artstation.com/borisgroh Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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My father told me a story once.
I'll never forget it for a few reasons.
I think it's the first story he ever told me as a child.
It's also the story of how my grandfather died, but honestly that isn't the reason.
You hear stories on TV, or sometimes you overhear something in a public place.
People talk about ghosts and aliens, and you think to yourself, that ain't real, they're making
it up, or they're mistaken, or they're crazy, or something like that.
You just can't believe it.
That is, until something happens, something that brings it all together, connects the dots
in a way you didn't think of before.
Maybe it happens to you, or maybe you hear the same story again and again from different people.
It doesn't take long for the world to become a lot bigger than you thought it was.
As I said, this is a story my father told me, but I never believed it, even though he swore
up and down it was true.
It wasn't until I started clicking around on the internet that I started to believe.
I started to hear other stories just like the one my father told me.
It didn't take me long to believe after that.
That's not what my father called it, of course.
He's never used the internet in his life.
You wouldn't know what the online community had taken to calling it.
When he chose to call it something other than it or that thing, he called it a skinwalker.
an old Cherokee tale his grandfather told him. But this is the story that he told me.
We were out hunting one night in the woods surrounding the dairy farm in Ohio where we lived
at the time. We were tracking coyotes. We'd kill them for 50 bucks of skin. They'd kill calves
sometimes. We'd do it every night because we needed the money. And sometimes while we were
out, we'd come on a deer and kill it. Our landlord didn't mind and
It could feed our family for a few nights and save us some money.
Anyway, we were done making our rounds and heading home,
walking because we didn't have a car or a four-wheeler back then.
We'd cut through the woods.
That's when we came upon it.
Blood.
Everywhere.
Splattered on the trees, in the grass, in the creek.
Everywhere.
At first, we figured it was a pack of coyotes.
We'd seen how sometimes when they weren't able to scavenge for whatever reason, they'd start hunting deer or cattle out of desperation.
The worst was when they bred with feral dogs.
But this wasn't like that.
You see, when a pack of dogs, wolves, or coyotes attack something, they do it right.
They'll pick off one that's weak, sick, or old, or just small.
They'll hunt it.
Draw it into a corner.
someplace it can't get out of, and they'll run it right to the biggest one, the alpha.
And that deer will never see that alpha.
It might hear it, but it won't see it.
All of a sudden its throat will be torn out, and it'll drop dead.
It's quick, and it's clean.
That wasn't what happened here.
Something had come upon a group of deer.
Coyotes won't attack a group.
Wolves wouldn't either.
They'd get too much of a fight.
There were three, I think.
Three bodies just torn apart.
You'd see a head or a torso here, a leg there.
Predators don't do that.
They don't leave scraps behind.
Whatever had done this hadn't done it for food.
It had done it for fun.
But we didn't know that at the time, of course.
We just saw a bunch of carcasses and figured
it's something we had to take care of.
I remember my dad telling me to go home
that he thought it was the work of a pack of feral dogs.
But I wasn't leaving him.
And I damn sure wasn't hiking through two miles of woods alone
in the dark, with nothing but a 22 and a pocket knife.
I was only 13 at the time.
So a 22 rifle was the only gun I could reliably use.
Dad had a shotgun.
I wasn't going anywhere without it or him.
It took me a while to convince him.
But finally we began tracking whatever did that.
It wasn't hard either.
We just followed the blood.
Either that thing bled a deer before he got away,
or I dragged one for a mile.
I don't know.
What I do know is that I'd never seen my dad scare.
Before that night,
we started hearing the most horrible sounds.
Now, I've been in a lot of woods in my life, and I've been all over the world.
But I ain't never heard noises like I heard that night.
I heard things screaming.
I heard deer, fox, rabbits, raccoons and birds, all of them afraid of something and
high-tailing it.
Keep in mind, this is maybe 12 or 1 o'clock in the morning, except for the fox and some birds.
Nothing was supposed to be awake at that hour.
But they weren't just awake, mind you.
They were on the run.
That night, I saw flocks of birds flying straight into trees
trying to escape something.
We came upon a pack of coyotes
and nearly shot a couple thinking they had their eyes on us.
But then we saw they were running in from someone.
Nothing toward us.
They didn't even notice us.
went right past
then some deer did the same
then some rabbits
squirrels and foxes
even a couple of wild
hogs these critters
were supposed to be hunting each other
and the only thing they cared about
was getting as far away from there as
possible we should have put
two and two together
that maybe whatever we were tracking wasn't something
we were supposed to see
and wasn't something we could kill
to this day I don't know
why we didn't just go home.
I guess we were curious.
I think that was my dad's nature.
To go toward trouble,
to fight,
and being aware of the things my father did during the war,
I figured it was best to stay by his side.
We finally reached an open valley.
It was normally a soy field,
but it wasn't in season,
so it was just flat dirt.
That's when we saw the tracks.
Animals fleeing the forest
had leveled everything in their path.
But where that deer blood was,
nothing had taken a single step.
It was like whatever was responsible
had left it for us to find.
The tracks were shallow.
Whatever it was couldn't have weighed
more than 100 pounds,
but that didn't mean much.
A bobcat weighing 40 pounds,
soaking wet, can tear out your throat
if you ain't careful.
The fact this thing was on the lighter side
just meant it was probably quick
and was going to be tough to hit.
So we followed the tracks, and it didn't take us long to find out where they led.
There's an old schoolhouse that sits on the top of a hill.
Half of it had been ripped out by a tornado, but nobody lived there, not for a long time.
Sometimes we caught homeless people in there or drug addicts looking for a safe place to shoot up.
We figured maybe that was it.
Maybe it was some sick kid riding a high, but we didn't think that for long.
When we got within 50 yards, we heard a noise, a sort of screech made up of two different sounds.
One was high-pitched, and the other was a low growl.
I was making both sounds at the same time, if that makes any sense.
We approached within 20 yards, and we heard another sound different this time.
I remember thinking that it sounded like paper being torn apart while someone was swinging water back.
and forth in a bucket. Dad looked at me, knelt down and whispered. He told me I had to stay behind him
because we're about to corner our prey. Any animal will fight when it's cornered, especially a predator,
but we can tell by the tracks that there's only one. He tells me it's probably a single feral dog,
most likely rabid. The plan he said was to sneak up on it while it was eating, shoot it,
and then keep shooting till it didn't move anymore,
then slit its throat.
And if it got to Dad,
it was my job to shoot or stab it to get it off him.
So he walked up with me right behind him,
just a tad to his side,
so I can see what it is.
I wish to this day that I hadn't.
It was leaning over a carcass tearing off its flesh,
throwing what it didn't nibble at the side.
There was blood all over the.
brick, glistening in the moonlight. It was pale white and looked a little like a man, but not quite human.
It had arms and legs like ours, but it sat like a monkey, punched over, and its hands weren't normal.
It had long fingers with claws at the end. So we saw that, and my dad hesitated. It wasn't about to fire at a person, so he cleared his throat to try.
to get it to turn around. I swear to God Almighty, all the noise just ceased in an instant. I never
heard true silence before that, and never again afterward. But for two seconds, nothing made any noise.
And I mean nothing. This made it all the louder when that thing turned around, made this shrill
fry, and pounced on Dad. He got a shot off. I think he missed.
If he hit it, it didn't phase the thing at all, but it was on him, tearing entire parts of him off.
I started shooting it with the 22 point-blank, but the thing barely bled at all.
I got off five rounds, and then I started hitting it with the butt of the gun.
It didn't budge, or even register that I was there.
It was clawing at my dad, removing whole chunks of his flesh.
It started on his torso, peeling off the skin on his chest.
And then it moved up.
It tore out his throat, ripped his nose clean off, gouged out his eyes.
Then it scalped him, started digging in.
I stood there, helpless, as it ripped off the bottom half of his jaw,
little bones and that tube in his neck, and then his ribs.
I don't exactly remember what happened, but somehow my dad's knife ended up in this thing's shoulder.
And my dad, what was left of him?
that is, ended up on my back.
I was running. By God, I was going faster than I'd ever run before or after.
And it was following me.
I ended up back in the forest opposite the woods we started in.
I was heading towards my landlord's house because it was the closest thing to help nearby.
But even that was half a mile away.
All the while, I could hear the thing screeching and moaning.
I heard branches cracking and getting thrown around.
It was cracking so loud and often
that it sounded like someone was taking an axe to every single tree that I passed.
But I never looked back.
Not once.
The thought didn't even cross my mind.
Finally, I tripped and fell into some gravel.
I looked up to see my landlord and a bunch of his buddies drinking around the campfire.
I screamed and cried and they came over.
I told them to call an ambulance and my landlord looked at me
and said something I'll never forget.
What is that on your back?
He asked me.
Just as the words left his mouth,
dawned on him without my saying a word,
it was one of those god-awful flannel shirts my dad wore everywhere,
he realized.
And it was damn near all that was left of my dad,
aside from a bit of my father's head and torso.
That's all there was.
Absolutely nothing below the waist.
suddenly we heard it
a screeching
my landlord grabbed me
causing me to drop what's left
with dad on the ground
and I was fighting him
crying
because I thought we could still save him
somehow
but the truth is
my dad had been gone well
before I ever picked him up
and all I'd done
was carry a corpse back home
my landlord had to pick me up
and throw me inside
before I would go with him
and his buddies
all of us went inside
together and they locked the doors and got their guns.
The landlord asked me, what happened, what happened?
But I didn't know what to tell him.
He pieced enough of it together to understand that there was something dangerous out there.
All the lights in the house were on.
And someone called the cops.
They would get there as soon as they could, they said.
But that meant in 15 minutes.
We looked outside and saw it walk in front of the fire they'd made.
No one knew what it was.
One of them said it looked like an ape.
Suddenly, something came crashing through the window.
We all fired at it, but quickly realized it wasn't the thing.
No, it was my landlord's dog.
Well, his body anyway.
His head and legs were missing.
We just started pushing things in front of doors and windows to form a barricade when we heard something in the garage.
I remember one of his friends saying that,
the doors were open.
We heard metal and glass being ripped and smashed.
We dragged the couch and the TV in front of the door to the garage, for added measure.
It banged around some more, but then it got quiet.
Not silent, like it was before.
We could hear it move around some.
The guys were talking, making sure their guns were ready.
Someone handed me a pistol.
No sooner had I cocked the hammerback when we heard something shattering.
upstairs. Then we heard it screech again, except this time it was louder, and it didn't echo
and fade out, because it was inside. We all rushed to the one door that led upstairs, and we got to it
just as that thing did. It opened it just a bit, and four or five men slammed into it. It managed to
get its hand through. Someone with a shotgun took care of that, let the barrel right up to its
wrist and pulled the trigger, blew its hand clean off. That only pissed it off, though. It started
shoving that door, clawing. We were on one side, pushing as best we could, and it was on the other,
doing the same. The wood wasn't going to hold, so someone told us to keep our heads down.
Suddenly, the top half of that door was gone, and my ears were ringing. There were splinters
everywhere. Two or three of them had just unloaded on the top of the door. I don't really know where it
went after that. The police got there. I was still glued to what was left at the door. The sun was up
before they pried me loose. It put me in a hospital for a while. While I was there, a whole lot of
people talked to me, but I didn't respond. Not for a long, long time. When I got back home,
I got a job for the landlord working on the farm.
We didn't talk much.
Not about the thing.
But I signed up for the army when I was 19,
and he sat me down to drink some scotch as a send-off.
I asked him right away what the police told him.
The story they went with was that it was a wild animal,
probably a wolf, maybe a bear that had migrated north.
I asked him how they could say that when they had the hand.
He looked at me, stunned.
He told me that the hand never made it back to the station.
The cop who had it in his car got into a wreck, drove into a tree, died on impact.
The hand was never found, likely taken by an animal.
The cops, when they would acknowledge the hand existed at all, said it was simply the paw
but bear that resembled a man's.
I never talked to the landlord again.
He went missing while I was in basic training.
No one ever saw him again.
There were rumors that he owed some people, some money, and skipped town, but I don't think
it was that simple.
As for me, I never went back to those woods.
I wouldn't even if I had the whole goddamn U.S. Army at my back.
That was the extent of what my father told me about the incident in the woods.
There's just one problem, however.
My father lied.
When my mother died, I don't think my father felt he had anything left, and that he might as
well settle old scores.
He returned to the woods and never came back either.
The FBI was called, and they came and put on a show for everyone involved, but I know
they weren't really looking.
I had to get an agent drunk and slip him a few 50s before he finally told me that they
got a few calls about those woods every year, about someone up and vanishing.
That was all he wanted to tell me.
Before he got up and left with the rest of his team, he wrote the name they'd given the
creature on a napkin.
Of course, I didn't realize that's what it was at first.
It wasn't until I looked up the words online that I understood what they meant.
Honestly, I would have rather not known.
As it turns out, there are hundreds of stories just like my father's, as well as photos
and drawings of the thing.
And though the details vary, everyone who has encountered it agrees on.
on one thing. It's still out there, and there isn't a man on earth that can stop it.
