The NoSleep Podcast - S23 Ep1: NoSleep Podcast S23E01
Episode Date: July 6, 2025It's Episode 01 of Season 23. Tune in to WNSP for tales about creepy cryptid creatures."Moulder" written by Em Starr (Story starts around 00:04:15)TRIGGER WARNING!Produced by: Claudius MooreCast: Narr...ator - Ilana Charnelle, Principal West - Jake Benson, Apron Lady - Penny Scott-Andrews"The Limestone Wetsuit" written by Matthew Scott (Story starts around 00:17:30)TRIGGER WARNING!Produced by: Phil MichalskiCast: Alex - Matthew Bradford, Doug - Atticus Jackson"Predator and Prey" written by Izzy Cooper (Story starts around 00:41:35)Produced by: Jeff ClementCast: Claire - Kristen DiMercurio, Thing - Kyle Akers"SEALAB IV" written by Stephen A. Roddewig (Story starts around 00:59:00)Produced by: Phil MichalskiCast: Kelly - Marie Westbrook, Davis - Reagen Tacker, Grayson - Graham Rowat, Tyrone - Atticus Jackson, Operator - Kyle Akers, Geno - Dan Zappulla, Eel - Sarah Thomas, Benjamin J. Nolte - Jesse Cornett"Shobdon Woods" written by Chris Moore (Story starts around 01:20:15)Produced by: Jesse CornettCast: Dean - David Ault, Marek - James Cleveland, Jake - Jake Benson, Fake Jake - Jake Benson, Voice in the Woods #1 - Penny Scott-Andrews, Voice in the Woods #2 - Erika SandersonThis episode is sponsored by:WNSP - Your local source for weather, traffic, and sports, along with the area's most comprehensive up-to-date cryptid sightings.Click here to learn more about The NoSleep Podcast teamClick here to learn more about Stephen A. RoddewigExecutive Producer & Host: David CummingsMusical score composed by: Brandon Boone"SEALAB IV" illustration courtesy of Kelly TurnbullAudio program ©2025 - Creative Reason Media Inc. - All Rights Reserved - No reproduction or use of this content is permitted without the express written consent of Creative Reason Media Inc. The copyrights for each story are held by the respective authors.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
WNSP
You're listening to
Darkness of the Night
WNSP's
overnight programming
DC on the mic
I just got a call from
Tony Kay over at the diner
who phoned in to say there's been another
sighting of the Dober Q down by the lake
that rascal has been dragging people
off the shore to their watery graves
for years
but he's been quiet lately.
Well, it seems he's back for a spell.
So, like we say, for all the cryptids in the area,
don't approach them, don't startle them,
and don't be their next victim.
And be sure to give me a call if you see one
so I can let the town know.
Now, back to our regular segment here on the darkness of the night.
an episode of the No Sleep Podcast.
A rustle of the leaves, a fleeting movement at the edge of your vision.
How often have you walked a forest trail at dusk,
only to feel the unmistakable sensation that something unseen is watching you?
For centuries, humans have populated the darkness with creatures of legend,
whose existence remains unproven, yet whose presence is undeniable.
in the whispered tales of those who dare venture too deep into the wild and wild.
Brace yourself for the No Sleep Podcast.
Welcome to the 23rd season of the No Sleep Podcast.
As always, I'm proud to be your host, David Cummings.
It's nice to have a radio station lead us into our episodes each week for season 23.
WNSP seems like such a caring.
station. Oh, and I should point out that our WNSP is in no way affiliated with a radio station in
Alabama. They're far too real for our fictional tales. Think of our WNSP as existing in the ether
of our sleepless universe. But regardless of all that, I like how our WNSP keeps us warned
and updated about the strange creatures that inhabit their broadcast area. And it
ties in nicely to what we do, because, of course, horror is full of tales about the cryptids
and creatures that may or may not really be out there, watching us from the dark forests,
deep lakes, and endless tunnels and caves that dot the landscape.
This season will be exploring those areas and sharing many tales of those cryptids out there.
So if you decide to spend time outdoors this season, make sure you're aware of your surroundings,
Whether you're hiking in the woods, backpacking the trails, or camping in a certain valley,
we'll make sure you're as safe as possible.
But when it comes right down to it, this is the No Sleep Podcast.
So that might mean you're not very safe at all.
So it's a new season with many terrifying tales ahead.
We're glad you're tagging along for the creepy confluence of cryptids, camping and contention.
concerning chronicles.
Now, tune in, turn on, and brace yourself for our sleepless tales.
In our first tale, we meet a group of students returning to their old school.
A reunion, you ask?
Well, not exactly.
You see, as we'll learn in this tale, shared with us by author M. Star,
40 years ago, the students of the school buried a time capsule.
and now they've returned to see it opened.
Well, most of them have returned.
Performing this tale are Ilana Charnel,
Jake Benson, and Penny Scott Andrews.
So when digging things up from the earth,
you have to expect some decay.
After all, in the ground, they do tend to molder.
It's been 40 winters since they've buried that time capsule
in the out-of-bound zone at Glenroy State School.
And soon, the digging will start.
The day is unseasonably hot for mid-August,
and Principal West is coveting the shade of the welcome sign,
greeting ex-students through a war-walled microphone.
He's making bad taste, jokes, and none of them are landing,
and it feels like 1983 all over again.
He scans the meagre crowd for familiar faces, frog-eyed and nervous.
I could save him the trouble and tell him she's not
coming, but I like to watch him sweat.
I could tell him that many things, the silly old fool,
speak secrets into his ear fluff as he gestures to rows of fold-out chairs in that same
old pit-stained shirt and asks for quiet, please.
I could tell him Bobby Klein will soon be here and he'll ride the gutter of the drop-off
bay in a Commodore with squeaking brakes and scream at his wife for adjusting the rearview
mirror, that Michael C will run late because the train station is so much further than he remembers.
that the Pollard sisters and Trisha Frost just shared a sneaky caraf at their catch-up brunch
and they'll bitch and giggle in the back row like they did at school assembly.
And none of them will ask about the girl who used to play in the dirt.
I could tell him many things, awful things if he'd listen.
But Principal West has never been good at listening.
So I watch him swelter in the midday sun and wait for the sweet scrapings of shovel on soil.
She was friends with the bugs and the crawly things,
and her dirty fingernails stained the chalk,
and that's just one of the reasons nobody wanted to play with her.
Dirty, dirty, dirty, they'd say,
lingering in the canteen line for party pies and sunny boys
and laughing at the loose cling wrap that flapped around her veggie mite sandwich.
She held her breath as she walked by them,
purrying to the garden with air-puffed cheek
so she couldn't smell the pastry and tomato sauce,
exhaling only when she could breathe in the mask of sweet, wet dirt.
She turned the rocks one by one and shared breadcrumbs with the wood lice that crawled underneath.
Pretended she couldn't hear the kids still laughing through their meat pie teeth,
their pockets fat and jingling with lunch money.
At least I have you, she said to the bugs, scooping them up.
Oh, so gently.
At first they curled into armoured balls, little roly-polys in the palm of her hand.
But with patience they always unfurled.
and by the time the lunch bell rang there'd be insects exploring the creases of her heartline, her headline, her lifeline, little grey bugs crawling all over her skin.
Ew, look at Dirty Gertie!
The kids would say, five of them worse than the rest.
And they never let her play Red Rover or swing with them on the monkey bars no matter how much she scrubbed at her fingernails.
Trisha and the Pollard twins named the second last water fountain the Dirty Gertie Bubble.
and nobody drank from it but her.
And Bobby and Michael made puking sounds whenever she did,
so she spent her days dry and parched and longing for hydration
while they laughed and sucked at chocolate milk.
But that all fell away when she played with her pill bugs.
There was comfort in the company of crustaceans and earthworms and microbes.
She sat in the dead leaf mulch and pretended she lived down there in the dirt
with all her terrestrial friends,
where there were no canteens or monkey bars,
and dirty fingernails were the norm.
And I watched her, like a trapdoor spider,
and decided we should be pals.
They're all here now, grouping together on undersized plastic chairs,
like their quintet did four decades ago.
Bobby's wife sits on the outer and prays there'll be no reunion drinks afterwards,
but by the way Jenny Pollard is fingering his shirt collar,
we both know she has bigger problems.
Principal West is tapping at the microphone as if he doesn't notice the feedback.
His sweat stain is spread to his back, the sun far too high in the sky for a Melbourne winter.
I know we're a little early for this, but we're building a new gymnasium on this site next year,
so we've had to bring things forward.
He makes a bad joke about time travelling, receives nothing from his disinterested audience,
and moves on to the ceremonial bureaucracy, the rehashing of school history and school spirit.
Next will be the digging, the unearthing.
Soon they'll be six feet in the ground, ready to assume that old corpse filled with time and paper scraps and, oh, the things they'll find when the trap door is opened.
The whole school burned with time capsule fever for weeks before they buried the thing.
They spent their classroom hours discussing the future, talking about who they wanted to be.
Bobby said he was going to be a heavyweight boxer like Rocky and beat the shit out of his old man.
Michael would be his trainer, not his manager, and the dumb kid went along with it,
even though he wanted to be a butcher.
Trisha made pictures of herself on the young talent time stage,
and Jenny and Jackie dreamed of being gold medal relay runners at the Commonwealth Games,
though neither of them could pass a baton.
Gertie didn't like to think about the future.
40 years was a long time, and her lifeline was short.
She forced her mind forward through the decades,
and as always, her mind returned.
to the cold comfort of dirt and earth.
She refused to write a letter for the time capsule
and wound up in Principal West's office,
where she'd already learn to keep her mouth shut.
He had no interest in water-bubblers and bullies.
He only wondered why she didn't try harder to fit in.
Why do you have to make things so difficult, Gertrude?
Do I need to call your parents again?
And he didn't notice the way she cringed as he reached for the phone,
how pale she turned when he lifted the receiver from its cradle
and threatened to dial.
He held it in the air,
suggested she think about it over lunchtime,
try again, try harder.
She promised she would,
and he hung up the phone.
And wash those fingernails.
They're filthy.
And she scrubbed at those nails
to the skin on her fingers was raw,
confined to the dribbles of the dirty-gurdy-bubbler,
willing herself to think forward,
to span the decades and see what the future held for her.
But all she saw was dirt.
All she craved was.
dirt, and soon she was back in the garden, seeking comfort from salators and mud. She didn't
bring her lunch that day, the last few slices of bread too mouldy to cut away, and the canteen
smelled like sausage rolls and finger buns. She wondered what it was like to have a pocketful
of loose coins and filled her own with dirt to compare. She joined the canteen queue and hoped
the lunch ladies would think it was worth something. Where's your veggie mite sandwich,
Dirty Gertie, they all teased her, but she kept her eyes forward, inching ahead one purchase at a time.
When she finally reached the front of the line, and the apron lady asked to take her order,
she pointed to the pie warmer, belly screaming as the woman reached for tongs in a brown paper bag
and let too many pastry flakes fall to the ground.
She carried a meat pie back to the counter, tomato sauce and gravy bleeding through the paper bag,
and smiled at Gertie.
One dollar thanks, love.
Goody reached into her pocket, took out a fistful of dirt, plunged it on the counter.
It was crawling with ants and spiders that spilled over the counter and into the kitchen,
and the apron lady screamed, told her to get out of there.
Took back the pie.
Gertie turned away, head down, waited for the jeers to start.
Dirty, Gertie, dirty, dirty.
But they never came.
She looked up, expecting to see the more staring and laughing, but none of the usual taunters were
there. And when she returned the garden, she saw someone had overturned the rocks in her absence
and stomped on all her little friends. She scooped earth over their broken armour, their
roly-poly bodies squashed and squirming, and I whispered condolences to her as she turned the soil.
And I know she heard me because when the lunch bell rang, she took a fresh sheet of paper and
wrote her piece for the time capsule, sealed it with dirt and bug guts, dedicated it to
Bobby and Co. Curses are a beautiful thing, especially when they're unintentional, accidental,
evoked by angry words and innocent minds. When the time capsule was buried, I was already
writhing inside it, hungry and sniffing at paper folds and pencil lead, ready to eat.
They felt me over the years, too, sensed me feeding on the scraps of their dreams,
savoring their lost opportunities like mulled wine and blue cheese.
Delicious.
Each word, each inky hope, devoured in life as I feasted below.
When Bobby lost his punching hand in a factory mincer,
his right hook gone in a flurry of meat and red spray,
and he kept screaming about the shadow that fell.
flicked off the safety switch.
That was me.
When Michael was at the bus stop,
after losing too large on a horse called mud,
and he thought he saw that monster in the reflection,
stooped and sniffing at his hair with a twisted lupine grin.
That was me.
When Trisha Frost fell from her young talent time stage
into studio lights that burned her hair, her face, her career,
and she swore that someone shoved her from behind.
That was me.
When Jenny and Jackie were dismissed from the state team
because they failed the drug test,
and neither of them ever touched a banned substance,
you best believe that was me.
And now they're all here.
And the digging has started, and the best is yet to come.
And when the capsule is pried open,
and they find me coiled amongst the decay and tritis and dead bugs,
they might finally ask where Goody is
as they claw at their faces and scratch at their eyes
and scream her name till their lungs turn ashy
I'll tell them she lives down here with me now
that she likes how the bugs move through her bones
how the worms writh in her eye sockets
how the earth fills her belly
that we love the dirt
She and I, and we are old friends.
Big life events can make a person recollect their past, their regrets, their I shoulda, coulda.
And the man will meet in this tale is Alex.
He's about to be a dad, and he's going to conquer an adventure cut short in the past.
And in this tale, shared with us by author Matthew Scott, Alex's attempt to do some spulunking leaves him
dealing not only with the past, but the very present danger.
Performing this tale are Matthew Bradford and Atticus Jackson.
So be very careful when caving in a tight section known as the limestone wetsuit.
I'm going to leave this here where maybe somebody can find it.
Last words, via notes at.
I'm sure they're looking for me, and maybe they'll send a kid or a contortionist down eventually or something.
But I then I'll have gone on, following the echoes of Doug's voice, plunging further into the system in the hopes of stumbling across another way out.
I guess I'll either find daylight on my own, or my bones will end up decorating some deep natural tomb that no human eyes will ever see.
So, yeah, I'm sorry, first of all.
Sorry to Mom and Dad and Brittany and the little one, and Seth and Mr. York.
He always insisted I go down with a buddy, and I'm beginning to see why.
So mainly, I want them all to know that, yeah, I'm sorry, and I know that I fucked up.
But secondly, I want them all to know what happened.
See, I'd been down the wormhole before on a van trip around the Midwest this summer after college.
Doug and I checked out the entrance to the cave just outside of Echo Bluff State Park in Missouri.
During the day, it was a lightly visited tourist spot with a ticket booth, boardwalk.
and an array of fridge magnets for sale.
Sinkin' Sticks Cave, the sign outside read.
There were too many people about, so we came back at night and jumped the fence.
Then we took a path down the tourist boardwalk to the entrance to the real part of the cave.
It's unassuming, a hole in the wall in an unlit section of the boardwalk measuring around two feet wide and one foot high.
And beyond that, a whole new world.
I'd seen a hand-drawn map online of the cave and saved it to my phone.
After the wormhole was a long near vertical shaft called the Rat Run, which opened up into a chamber they called the elbow room.
Here, the artist had scrawled a crude series of stalactites and stalagmites.
Reaching the elbow room wasn't bad.
The section right after the wormhole was a tight squeeze, which we took feet first.
Then we were descending down a contracted throat of rock for ten feet or so before popping out among the stalagmites.
The elbow room was worthy of tourists.
It was like an enormous mouth with spiked teeth of limestone hanging down and pointed up.
The stone was wet and slippery.
That was already worth a trip, but we weren't about to stop there.
We kept on into the next section of the cave, checking the map at each turn.
Not that there was much in the way of navigatable alternative paths,
we just wanted to see how close we were to that mythical line on the stone floor where the map stopped,
and it could very well be that no human had ever passed.
I let Doug go first.
He was the one who showed me the splonking ropes
and had always been kind of a substitute older brother,
with his misguided white dude dreadlocks
and engineer's ingenuity to exploring new ways of incestine cannabis.
I figured it was he who would best be able to pick a manageable path into the labyrinth,
plus he had broader shoulders than I,
so if he could make it through a squeeze, I was certain I could.
We made it a little further,
down the log flume into the poop deck,
and then into a cramped warrant of tunnels
called the Swiss cheese squeeze
that could just only fit Doug's frame.
We were nearing the edge of the map,
and I was just getting excited
about getting to name the next section of the cave
when Doug lost it.
He was sandwiched in between a ceiling and floor
of unyielding limestone,
and all I could see of him was wagging legs.
His voice was spookly muffled
by an unknowable weight of earth,
but I could make out mounting panic.
What's up, Doug?
I'm stuck, bro.
I'm stuck!
No, you are not.
If you got in there, you can get out.
I said that.
But at the same time, I had a flash of the nutty-puddy incident
where some dude around our age had fallen head-first
into a deep subterranean fissure and found himself firmly stuck.
He spent 27 hours with his head pulling with blood
and rescuers scratching their heads as to how to free him from the earth.
They never got him out.
Instead, they concreted over the mouth of the cave and told everyone to stay away forever.
But this wasn't nutty-puddy.
I grabbed it one of Doug's legs and gave it a good yank.
That didn't seem to help.
Okay, man, just breathe.
You're going to need to exhale as much as you can.
That won't help.
It's my arm.
It's pinned up against my fucking body, Alex.
I remember feeling my own heart start to race.
It was Doug who talked.
me what to do if I felt like I was stuck in the first place. There's really stuck, and then there's
just stuck up there, I remembered him saying as he pointed to his forehead, and one is a lot more
common than the other. I tried to cycle through all the advice he'd given me if I found myself
stopped and seemingly unable to go on. The main piece was understanding that once panic set in,
the body tended to make itself larger and make the feeling of stuck even worse. Hyperventilating
pushed the chest out, and scrambling around in the little space you had,
made it feel like it was closing in on you.
Breathe, Doug.
I grabbed his ankle firmly and gave it a squeeze.
You're okay.
Pretty soon after that, he slid back out with his shirt torn all to hell,
and the skin on its right forearm ripped to shreds.
He was red-faced, but laughing a little.
I need to get out of here, Alex.
As we tramped back to the van, we agreed never to speak of this moment again.
Years went by, and Doug and I floated.
along in different directions and the winds we were pulled in. I kept on caving where I could,
but the years of snowboarding all winter and rock climbing all summer were behind me. The clincher
came when Brittany came home with a positive pregnancy test. I realized my REI job probably wasn't
going to cut it in about a year or so. Still, there was time for one last hurrah. I packed the
van and set out west, following the same route Doug and I taken back in those simpler years.
I tried to recreate the feeling of freedom I had back then, smoking a join at a lookout,
drinking dive bars in little towns and sleeping out under the stars.
But I felt slightly numb through all of it.
Like that living electricity receiving limb I once had had dropped off and left me sometime in my early 20s.
Maybe down in that hole where Doug and I had panicked in the dark.
So I came back for him as much as for me.
To the best of my knowledge, this was the only hole in the ground.
ground that had ever bested him, and I wasn't going to let the same be true for me.
The amazing thing about a cave is how little it changes. It's already been there for thousands
of years, so a few years makes absolutely zilch difference in the geological sense.
Societies can transform and the world can burn up around it, but Sinkin' Sticks Cave remained
indifferent. For all times' sake, I came by night and left the fence. I initially hadn't planned
to go all the way back down to the swish-tees' house.
squeeze, but by the time I was face-to-face with a wormhole, I knew it had me. I put my headlamp on
and slipped in. Like I said, the first feeling was deja vu. While traveling across the country had been
just a dim echo of that vibrant first time, going underground still carried that chilling frisone of fear
mingled with excitement. In the dark, there was still magic. I made it through to the first chamber
at a good pace and cast the light of my headlamp over the stone tines jutting from the floor and
ceiling. It was just as I remembered it, bar some new graffiti-staining formations that took centuries
to take shape. Then back down the log flume over the cylindrical crevices of the poop deck,
and I was there, the narrow tubes of the Swiss cheese squeeze. Rainwater over the year had carved
out a natural sewer system of several smoothly worn tunnels, but only one of them looked spacious
enough to accommodate me. It was the same one that had beaten Doug. I pushed me. I pushed
my pack through ahead of me and stretched.
Doug had always been a bigger guy, but I wondered if the pounds I'd put on in the intervening years
would see me stuck just as fast.
It didn't matter.
I guess those pounds did nothing to broaden my shoulders.
And after a few deep exhalations, I was able to inch through the gap.
It continued in the form of a tunnel not much wider, and I scraped the hell out of my knees
coming through, cursing myself for not packing my pants.
It opened up a little bit on the other side, and I shone the light around to get my
bearings. On the map, it was called the antechamber, and it was the last named feature. After that,
were a few wide enough-looking tunnels, and then it was totally uncharted territory. I knew I should
have turned back then. This was stupid. I'd set out alone with minimal equipment in the middle of the night,
and nobody knew where I was. I was breaking all the cardinal rules of caving, but the lure of being
the first to go off the map was too enticing. I promised myself I'd push forward for another half
hour or so. And if I hadn't found a tunnel to take me off the map part of the cave, I'd turn back.
It didn't take that long to hit a wall. The tunnel I was following appeared to be a dead end at first,
and I felt my heart sank. I'd have to turn around. There's literally no more space for excuses.
But then my lamplight brushed over an ink-black pot-hole in the floor, just below the corridor's end.
It was a small hole dug by rainwater running through the cisterns of rock.
At first it appeared to be nothing special.
The place was full of little drainage holes in the rock.
Looking more closely, however, I realized that this hole didn't stop or constrict into a tiny plug-hole after a foot or two like so many of the others.
This hole was possible.
I stood there for a while thinking about it, but probably not long enough.
It was tight, for sure.
There was a good chance I wouldn't be able to fit through.
What worried me more was how directly vertical it was.
If I went feet first, I wouldn't be able to see to navigate the slight curves of the shaft.
But at the same time, going head first straight down into the dark like that was a strict no-no.
It was the thought of Doug that spurred me on.
He'd been so eager to get down here and give a fresh tunnel a name of his choosing.
He'd been tossing around the ideas in the van,
each more sophomoric and scatological than the last.
After he'd chickened out, we hadn't mentioned it.
As we drove off that night, I remember seeing the downcast look in his eyes.
So I crouched down for a closer look,
and then wrap my bag strap around my foot,
before lowering myself headfirst into the tight abyss.
The walls were wet and almost slippery,
which made for a quick going for the first few feet.
All I needed to do was swivel my shoulders in just the right way,
and gravity would help pull me down,
scraping through my t-shirt as it did so.
But I could feel the walls closing in.
I had no idea how far down I was
due to the dual realities of being unable to turn my neck
and my body obscuring the view back up the shaft.
I mean, it could have been the halfway point, or it could have been 5% of the way to comparative freedom.
Don't worry about that, I told myself.
My voice sounding flat and lifeless and sedimentary confines.
It's not going to let you go just because you're near the end of the tunnel.
I slowed my breathing and exhaled as much as I could.
My torso began to slip further in, and I could feel one of my shoes catching on the edge of the shaft.
I kicked each of them off and felt the cool air through my wet soft.
I just needed to push myself off one of the slightly extruding granulations on the wall.
My arms were out ahead of me in a Superman pose and unable to grasp on the wet rock below,
but with my feet newly freed, maybe I could wrap a toe around the edge of the wall above me.
I pushed hard with a big toe on my right foot, and at the same time exhaling, twisting my shoulders.
The heavy feeling of blood beginning to pool I began to set in.
The rock was resisting.
I was like trying to get out of a wetsuit made of limestone.
stone. Then, just as I was about to stop pushing, I felt the walls around me shift up an inch.
It was working. I inched my way down through the crack an inch at a time, driven almost wholly by
my big toe. I had never been so thoroughly encased in the immovable. I briefly wondered if
anybody had. Peering down ahead of me, I could see the shaft begin to open up, from a space
around a size and shape of the inside shape of a coat hanger to a round space that could probably
the accommodated basketball.
I gave a whoop, which vanished into the blackness with barely an echo.
My headlamp must have been working its way off my head that whole time, and it took that
moment to slide off my sweaty forehead.
I watched the spinning light illuminate the rest of the jagged shaft for a split second,
and then it was gone, down into what appeared to be a chamber below.
It had clattered on the floor, and now sat there lighting up a featureless stretch of rocky floor.
I swore to myself and kept shuffling downwards at a tidal pace,
swapping between each set of toes to keep pushing.
Then, suddenly, my torso was clear of the worst of the squeeze and I was falling downwards.
I yelled out loud and raised my arms out in front of my face to protect myself from the quickly
approaching ground.
I'm not sure how far I fell.
It wasn't enough to break any bones, but still far enough to knock all of the wind out of me.
I felt like I'd taken a bus to the chest as I scrambled around for the headlamp,
shining it around the chamber and trying to catch my breath.
I realized I was on a sort of ledge jutting out above a tunnel
that sloped off into the murk at a gradient I could probably scramble down.
My bag had gotten loose at some point and must have fallen down after me.
Luckily, I found it just on the lip of the edge.
I sat there for a little while drinking some water and catching my breath.
I had a steadily sinking feeling as I squinted back up towards the darkness I'd just fallen through.
Without ropes, I wasn't sure how I was going to get back up there.
I hadn't counted on the shaft opening up to a wider space beneath.
I kept my breathing deep and steady and staggered to my feet to try and reach the ceiling with my outstretched hands.
If I stood on the tips of my toes, I could just barely brush my fingers along the roof of rock.
It wasn't going to be easy, but surely I could find a way to scramble up the side and get some kind of purchase at the opening of the shaft.
Part of me knew that was wishful thinking the whole time.
It was the kind of thing Brittany was always harrying me about, plunging forward into a reckless situation without thinking it through,
and then complaining bitterly when faced with the consequences.
I mean, that's what happened with the pregnancy.
I grumbled when she'd leveled those accusations at me.
but some part of me knew the contours of this flaw of mine even better than she did.
I mean, I'd lived with it all my life.
I carried it like the scar on my chin I'd received
after speed wobbles took me off my skateboard
halfway down an overly ambitious hill in the neighborhood.
But I think this is the first time that I've actually come to terms with that fact.
I sat there for a while in the dark,
thinking about all of that,
and felt my eyes prickle at the idea of Brittany and the kid.
She was sitting back home waiting for me to get back
so we could get on with all of the expected baby stuff.
Buying cribs, prenatal classes, baby showers.
Look like I'm going to be much help with that.
Eventually, I turned off the light.
On more light-hearted trips, I love turning off the light
and feeling the unbelievably total blanket of darkness.
This time, it had more to do with battery conservation.
I had an extra meg light in my pack and my phones light and a few glowsticks.
But the headlamp was the brightest, most comforting source of illumination on this side of the topsoil,
and I didn't want to use it all up at once.
I expected to see what you normally see when you turn the lights off deep underground,
absolutely nothing.
Instead, there was a dim red glow to the walls further down the tunnel.
I headed as close as I dared to the edge of the ledge
and stared down into the soft, almost pinkish glow
coming from further into the earth.
The walls here were smooth and looked wet,
almost spongy,
and the floor was similar,
devoid of the limestone detritus
that covered the rest of the tunnels further up in the system.
I tried to piece together what could be causing the glow,
some kind of bioluminescent fungi,
firefly urine.
My mind flicked.
through all the limited file of scientific knowledge I had about life in the deep dark,
but nothing seemed to fit just right.
I mean, there was one possibility that my mind kept returning to, however.
Maybe this was the refracted flicker of the sun,
sent through the system from some not too distant second opening into the outside world.
My rational mind knew that I was grasping at straws,
but I couldn't shut up that voice deep down within me that wouldn't let it go.
It spurred me on,
down the tunnel and into the red.
The cave was different here.
I could make my way refreshingly easy
down this section of the cave,
with my head just brushing the ceiling at points
and the floor as free and clear as an urban sidewalk.
The width of the passage was just as if I reached out
with both my arms, I could brush the walls with my fingertips,
walls that were sweating, warm and soft
from what I figured was some kind of stygian fungi.
I hadn't even turned on my headlamp,
but the rosate bruise of the walls was enough to light the way.
It was as if the tunnel was made for me.
I must have followed it for half an hour or so before it seemed to level out.
The walls widened steadily until I found myself in a chamber ringed by twin sets of stone formations,
protruding from the ceiling and the floor and nearly meeting in the middle.
They'd reminded me of the formations I'd seen back in the elbow room,
but rather than the fang spikes of stalagmites and stalactites,
these were blunted tablets of stone.
Each was probably the size of a trash can,
and even in the strange red light I could see that the color was off.
Rather than the pale gray of limestone further up in the cave,
these looked almost like they were carved from ivory.
I pulled myself over the two central stones in the bottom set,
while lowering my head right down to avoid bumping it on their upper counterparts.
On the other side, the floor yielded beneath my feet like wet cushion.
I gazed around at the smooth walls.
Here a kind of deeper vermilion, veined with a shade approaching purple.
And at the far end, the way forward, it was a tight aperture, nearly a sphincter, the color of sun-dried apple skin.
I could feel a warm breeze coming from it, a good sign.
But along with that breeze came a sweet, cloying smell, like raw meat.
and honey. I'd smelled it before, hiking out in the woods. It was the kind of smell that brings
vultures and coyotes and other creatures partial to carrion. I felt a strong urge then to turn back
and was about to. I saw something that ticked my fighter flight over to the static option. It looked
like it was moving. A pendulum-like formation above the tunnel's entrance seemed to droop down further
into the fetid wind, before recoiling up back to its former position.
That didn't look like it was made of rock to me.
I wanted to retreat then to the relative comfort of my cell at the bottom of the vertical shaft,
or at least I could feel the familiar limestone in the cool of a deep cave.
But it was then when I heard him, calling my name.
At first it was just the two syllables of my name, echoing out from the bowels of the earth.
Alex
I didn't recognize Doug's voice at first
My first instinct was to think I'd imagined it
That the stress of the situation
It pushed my brain into manufacturing external voices
To what comfort me
But then there it was again
Alex
It didn't sound like me
I imagine my own brain would talk to me in my own voice
Although I could be wrong
But it did sound familiar
This way Alex
That's when it hit me.
That was, Doug, calling me on into the depths.
My brain was whirring too fast to run through all the impossibilities the world would have to vault for that to be true.
And I called back out to the voice.
Doug?
My voice sounded muted and quiet in that strange chamber.
Come on, Alex.
There's fresh air down here.
There's light.
So, yeah, I'm...
back here, at the bottom of the vertical shaft, thumbing all of this at a frenetic pace into my phone.
Please excuse any typos or spelling mistakes. Please accept my apologies. I was profoundly idiotic
in coming down here alone, but now with my light running out in this phone battery's percentage
in the single digits, I'd better make my goodbyes. I don't see much of a choice as to what to do
next. I heard Doug down there, past the teeth and tongue, calling up from what looked for the life
of me like the opening of some gargantuan esophagus. Okay, I know I can't really be him. I know Doug died two
years ago from a fentanyl overdose in Portland when he was just trying to have a few bumps in the
shitty bathroom of some dive bar. But it sounds just like him. I'd like to see him again,
just one last time and talk about the old days when we were free and alive out on the road.
And more than that, I'd like just one little last taste of daylight and fresh air.
Look, camping can be something fun to do, but if this podcast has taught you anything,
it's that there are things out there that just don't like you in their home.
Claire knows what I mean.
And in this tale, shared with us by author Izzy Cooper, we've seen.
find Claire isn't doing too well after a fall. But don't worry, she's not alone out there. Oh,
actually, that's the reason Claire should be very worried indeed. Performing this tale are Kristen
DeMecurio and Kyle Akers. So make sure you understand your place in the food chain as you consider
what's predator and prey. I huddle in my tent against the cold.
As my teeth chatter, there's a dull pain in my left arm as I hug it tight to my chest in its makeshift splint.
My legs feel stiff.
I must have been sitting here a while, but I can't tell exactly how long.
I broke both my watch and my arm when I slipped and fell down the side of a small ravine five days ago.
My phone is dead.
The portable battery we packed, sapped by the cold.
The only way I can get a sense of what time it might be
is by the position of the sun, barely peeking through the clouds
and the fact that the thing that's trapped us here is still waiting outside.
Still alive in there?
I think I hear you shivering.
I look next to me at the body of my friend, Anna.
She slipped away sometime in the night
after we first set up camp at the dead end of this ravine.
She hit her head when we both fell down here.
She seemed okay at first, bleeding but still conscious and aware.
But the next morning she wouldn't wake up.
I guess that can happen with head injuries.
The day it happened, we were at the end of our trip.
I wanted to set up camp one last time as the sun was setting,
but Hannah thought we should push forward a little longer.
She said she wanted to at least make it back to a river we passed on the way in.
Then it would only be a few hours.
hike back to the park entrance. I should have insisted, but I didn't. And we didn't see that
ledge as well as we could have, thanks to both the snow and the receding sunlight.
Your friend behind for me? Or are you waiting to join?
I still don't know how it knows my name. I look at the closed tent flap, with the
thing's emaciated silhouette stretched tall by the fading sun before I turn my gaze back to Hannah.
I know it's a grim thing, sitting next to a dead body in a tent, but I don't want to do the alternative.
If I move her outside, the thing will eat her.
It told me so.
It offered to give me a head start if I let it.
But I've known Hannah since we were kids, and I know she's dead, but I can't stand the thought of leaving her behind to get ripped apart and devoured.
Before the thing showed up, I promised I would send someone back to get her to bring her home.
That morning I cried until my eyes got red and puffy.
I shook her, kept trying to tell myself she was just asleep.
But Hannah never got up.
After some time, I packed up, held her cold hand one last time, and made that promise.
I was going to leave her in the tent just for a little while, and to bring someone back.
for her. But I didn't make it far. I walked along the ravine, past a turn in the rock walls,
and then saw it crouching ahead of me. I thought it was a person at first, so I called out,
and I got a better look at it. The thing was small and gaunt, with clawed hands and oddly mismatched
arms, the left one shorter and stubbier, almost swollen looking, clutching something bloody
that it was gnawing at.
It turned to me and smiled needle-like teeth
through a curtain of unkempt hair.
I had heard some urban legends about this park before.
Nothing notable.
Just your typical, creepy, not quite human creatures
that every set of woods seemed to have lurking inside it.
I never really believed in stories like that.
Not when there are very real dangers out there.
Like bears, mountain lions, or the like.
Maybe that's why I froze at first.
It was like my brain was trying to process what it was seeing.
I remember thinking maybe it was a costume,
despite the gore in its mouth and the absurdity of that scenario.
In a flash of movement, it dropped to all fours and sprinted for me.
I nearly slipped as I turned around and ran.
I felt its claws hit my backpack,
and the force of the blow sent me sprawling.
A searing pain shooting up my broken arm when I hit the ground.
ground. I scrambled for my knife, and the second I gripped the handle in my good hand, I swung the
blade in a wide arc. I slashed across the thing's arm, red blood splattering the snow. It shrieked
and stumbled back. That gave me enough time to push myself up and make it back to the tent.
I fumbled with the zipper, my cold fingers feeling numb. Thinking back, it must have given up the chase,
at least temporarily.
It knew I had nowhere to go.
He's talked to me.
Screw you.
Oh, so you are still alive.
Aren't you tired?
Freezing to death is such a slow way to go.
I can make it quick, you know.
Or just let me take your friend.
Why go through all this trouble for a corpse?
I could see the sun.
starting to set again. For whatever reason, the thing didn't stick around at night. But that didn't
give me a chance to get away either. I found that out the second night. After it left the first time,
I waited for what felt like hours listening for any sounds of it still being close. Eventually,
I quietly climbed out of the tent and slowly zipped up the flap. I wished I had something to prevent
the thing from just opening it and getting to Hannah, but I figured there wasn't much
I could do if it just decided to tear open the tent with its claws anyway. I slowly made my way
to the mouth of the winding ravine, since climbing wasn't an option thanks to my arm. Based on our map,
the fastest way towards help and civilization would be to head due north from the end of the ravine,
through the trees and off any path. It'd be a rough hike, and that made me hesitate. But it was
the quickest way out. And at least our compass hadn't broken in the fall.
so I could still navigate.
Past the trees, I'd be able to find the country road we took to get here,
maybe flagged down a car,
or head east towards a gas station we had passed.
I made it to the mouth of the ravine before I saw it,
twirling a stick in its claws.
Hello again.
Out kind of late, aren't we?
I froze.
Oh, I'll leave you alone if you head back.
If you try to pass me on the other hand,
Why are you doing this?
Why?
Because I'm hungry.
Then why let me go back?
I had said it without thinking.
Just leave, you idiot.
Don't tempt it.
Because this is more fun.
And you have nowhere else to go.
It grinned its needle-filled maw at me.
I slowly walked backwards,
stumbling a few times before turning and running the rest of the way.
back. I was carrying my knife in my good hand at the time. Maybe I should have tried to fight,
but it was fast and its claws tore up my backpack before. It could have easily killed me out there
in the open. So I've retreated, and now I'm trapped. The thing leaves at night, but only as far as
the ravine entrance, letting me wander so long as I don't try to go past it. During that time,
I gather what I can find for a small fire to warm up a little, before trying to get some
sleep. Not that I get much. I can't find anything to eat either. I'm out of the food and water we
packed. The only fresh water I get comes from melting snow over each meager fire, but I'm running out
of things to burn while my empty stomach feels like a hollow void inside me. I know I can't keep this
up. I'm sore, tired, hungry, and getting weaker. By now, people have to know we're missing. But even if
rescue is coming, how long will it take to find us here? Even if I let the thing take Hannah,
I have a feeling it will just go after me the second I let my guard down. I can practically
hear it salivating each time it talks to me. And it's a predator. It probably prefers fresh,
warm meat to a dead cold meal. I also don't know how much longer it'll be before it finally
gets bored and just claws open the tent. But it doesn't like
risking a fight either. That's something people don't often realize about predator species. They don't
always attack prey if the risk of getting injured while the prey fights back is too great. An injury in the
wild can spell death after all. It's one reason why trying to make yourself look big and aggressive
can sometimes save you. You make yourself look like too big of a risk to make the food worth it.
I think it's waiting for me to get too weak to fight back, knife or not. My time is
running out. And we both know that. I shiver again as my empty stomach churns. I have to do something.
I look back at Hannah's body. The only nice thing about the cold is that I think it's keeping Hannah from
decomposing, so at least there isn't an awful smell in the tent. I feel tears welling up again.
This is your fault. I told you we should have set up camp earlier.
Sun's setting again, Claire.
I'll see you in the morning.
Its footsteps crunch against the frozen ground
as it goes back to its usual nightly station.
I hate you.
We could have at least waited for spring
or taken a different trail in or anything else
but you always have to have things your way.
Warm tears start falling down my cold face.
And then you're,
go and die on me. Leave me with this thing. I hate you. Anna remains silent. The lack of sleep and food
makes my head pound. I feel gross, having not bathed in longer than I had anticipated. My hair
feels matted despite being pulled back and stuffed into my hat. My broken, swollen arm throbs as my
stomach growls in the quiet. This is your fault. I should just leave you to that thing.
I stand up
and in a moment of pent up anger
I almost kick Hannah's body
I catch myself in time
I realize what I almost did
and I sob louder
What do I do
I curl up in a ball
on my torn sleeping bag
and cry
Then I feel anger rising again
Screw that
I'm doing something
I don't want to die
here. I don't want to die sitting here. I don't want to die starving and cold. I don't want to die
lying next to the corpse of the person that got me stuck here in the first place. I take a deep breath,
wipe my face, and get ready for morning. Hours later, the world outside the tent brightens. I hear
the thing's footsteps approaching. Are you? Oh. I can hear its delight at seeing the open tent.
He said
You'd make it quick
There's a pause
Then laughter
Oh,
Oh, don't worry, Claire,
I will, I promise
You just said tight
It has to crouch
To crawl into the tent
Did it get bigger?
I can't quite tell as my back is too much
with my head turned slightly to watch it out of the corner of my eye.
It pauses.
It must see Hannah's body, now laid out on the floor of the tent,
stripped of her puffy winter coat.
It tilts his head.
I strike with the knife clutched tight in my good hand.
It shrieks, stumbling back.
The knife misses, and the thing tries to swipe at me.
But its claws can't strike all the way through the layers of both mine
and Hannah's heavy coats.
I sink the knife into its stomach.
It screams and snarls.
It lunges at me, teeth bared and aimed at my throat.
Another shock of pain shoots up my broken arm as I brace it between us.
Your eye to eye.
I let go of the knife and grab a fistful of its disgusting, matted hair.
I yank it back and I lunge forward.
I sink my own teeth into its throat.
It shrieks again.
It claws at me.
But I'm too numb.
I bite down and taste warm copper.
I clamp my jaws and pull meat away.
It gurgles and chokes.
It tries to claw it in my head,
but only pulls my hat off,
my hair loose and wild.
I scream, bear my teeth,
I pin the thing down,
and I bash its awful head against the ground.
It claws.
I blink, and the thing is Hannah now.
Her eyes alive and wide with terror.
I shriek and smash her head against the ground.
ground. It's the thing again. I slam its head against the ground. Dead. Her body bloated and eyes cloudy.
I hull her up and smash her skull wetly against the ground. Its eyes losing focus, blood pooling
from its neck and head, which I slam into the ground once more. I do it again. And again, and again,
I scream. I bite. The next morning, I pick the last of the meat off the bones with my teeth.
Not enough left to light a fire to cook it, but meat is meat.
I gather what's left of my things and crawl out of the open tent.
I follow the ravine, past the entrance and into the woods.
I walk for hours, due north on my compass.
I find the road but see no cars.
I turn east and see the gas station in the distance.
I reach down, take a handful of snow, use it to walk.
wipe the dried blood and dirt from my face,
pull my hair back and under my hat,
and walk towards it.
Tales may be over, but they are still out there.
Be sure to join us next week so you can stay safe,
stay secure, and stay sleepless.
The No Sleep podcast is presented by Creative Reason Media.
The musical score was composed by Brandon Boone.
Our production team is
Phil Mikulski, Jeff Clement, Jesse Cornett, and Claudius Moore.
Our editorial team is Jessica McAvoy, Ashley McAnally, Ollie A. White, and Kristen Samito.
To discover how you can get even more sleepless horror stories from us, just visit
sleepless.com to learn about the sleepless sanctuary.
Add free extended episodes each week
and lots of bonus content for the dark hours,
all for one low monthly price.
On behalf of everyone at the No Sleep Podcast,
we thank you for joining us and seeking safety
from the things that stalk us in the night.
This audio program is copyright 2025 by Creative Reason Media Inc.
All rights reserved.
Copyrights for each story are held by the respective authors.
No duplication or reproduction of this audio program is permitted
without the written consent of Creative Reason Media, Inc.
