AS – 79b Original Story (Dystopian Novel Teaser)

The following tale is one I began as a writing exercise a while back. Since I haven’t uploaded anything for a while I thought it was just good enough to share as a teaser. Hope you enjoy. Any feedback is appreciated.

Carter

Jesus.

It was cold.

So cold.

The door.

It wasn’t far now.

Just a few hundred sloshing paces ahead.

A harsh whistle and the metallic ping of projectile impact.

Carter broke into a run.

How had they caught up so fast?

No time to think about it now.

“Fucking serpentine dipshit!”  Lauren’s voice blasted tinny across the plane.

He zigged. He zagged. He slid.

He was at the door.

The card. Where was the fucking keycard…?

His fumbling seemed eternal.

Another whistle.

A searing pain in his ear.

Had they hit him?

No time. No time.

Relief washed over as he’d finally dislodged the card from his cargo pocket.

He wouldn’t  get the chance to use it.

There was a hiss, a clang, and two strong arms that nearly dislocated his shoulders as he was pulled into the station.

The rough rescue had caused him to flip on his ass. The new vantage affording a final glimpse of forest.

A chill ran up his spine as he registered the outline of the Nagant wielding, green hooded, figure standing deathly still at the edge of the treeline. Indifferent to the cold rain.  

The door hissed closed and the magnetic lock engaged.

Fuck.

Inside

“That was dumb.”

“How else are we going to eat?”

“You stayed out too long.”

“Hey. If you’re such a pro. Why don’t you go next time.”

The low light was exhausting. Barely illuminating the utilitarian briefing room. There was coffee but it wasn’t enough.

“I’m the only one that can do repairs.”

Carter laughed. She was actually telling him he was expendable.

“You really live up to the stereotype.”

“What do you mean?”

“Germans are grating.”

Lauren rolled her eyes.

“Look. It has nothing to do with you or me or anybody. I have a role. You have a role. If either of us dies then the chances of survival significantly decrease.”

“You don’t have to spell it out.”

“Yes. I. Do.” Lauren slammed a fist onto the table.

“Javohl, mein herr.”

Lauren sighed.

“Look. When I say you have fifteen minutes. That means fifteen minutes. Not twenty. Not even fifteen and a half.”

“Try finding a spot for a beacon in fifteen minuts. If it’s not too much canopy, then it’s too conspicuous, if it’s neither, then it’s too close to the shelter, or too far from the shelter, or too close to an old beacon.”

“Again. It’s about survival. Not the beacon.”

“If I hadn’t placed it you would say the same thing.”

“No. I. Wouldn’t. I need you alive.”

“Yes, and alive means I need food. And without the beacon there is no food. So if I played it safe. You’d be here telling me fifteen minutes was just an estimate. There is no neat way to survive Lauren.”

“I can see them on the thermals Carter. I know their patterns, their paths, their habits. There are opportunities enough without heroics.”

“That’s not what the pantry says.”

Lauren stood up, glared, and stiffly strode away.

That was fine. He was tired.

The beacon was set.

Food would come.

He guzzled the remainder of the acrid coffee and headed for the bunks.

The shelter was a maze of corridors, stairwells, rooms, and rooms within rooms.

He’d spent half a decade here and still managed to get lost at least once a week.

But he knew the bunks well enough.

The walls displayed alternating scenes of the old life. Cities, forest, transit, things that soothed, that gave a sense of normality.

Or at least they used to.

Now it was just row upon row of blank screens. And that slumber inducing low light.

Power conservation.

That was exactly Carters plan as well.

He fell asleep as soon as his head hit the pillow five stories beneath the earth.

The Dash

The trucks were housed in a cavernous garage just beneath the field.

Carter, Borowski, Schubert, Johnson, and Reid were making the grim march there.

Mossbergs, Berettas, Gerbers, and active camoflouge was a weird way to pickup the groceries.

That dim light was all pervasive. It was a site wide policy.

That’s why Johnson almost shot Rand.

“Hey..” Rand began as he rolled out from under the truck.

Only to have his words cut short by the audible click of a safety.

“Jesus..watch where you point that thing asshole.”

“Ain’t smart to surprise us like that.”

“Lauren didn’t tell you I was down here.”

Johnson shook his head.

“Of course the techie doesn’t think the mechanic matters.”

“Is there something wrong with the truck?” Borowski asked.

“Not anymore.”

“That’s reassuring.”

“Can’t exactly go to Auto Zone.”

“Auto Zone?”

“Nevermind kid.”

“Ok.”

“You guys need to go NOW.” Lauren’s tinny voice blasted through the PA.

“Guess it’s gonna have to do.”

“It’ll do.” Rand said picking up his toolkit.  

Carter was always struck by the size of these machines.

The tracks reached chest height and the cabin stood eight feet off the ground.

Borowski slid open the door and made his way to cockpit.

Carter rode shotgun.

The others buckled themselves to the bench.

The engine roared to life with a low rumble.

Borowski’s ability to pull these behemoths from between each other never failed to impress.

It was a football field and a half before they hit the incline leading to the bay door.

Twilight pervaded.

The stillness was palpable. Even from within the hull of the motorized behemoth the liminal eeriness went bone deep.

“Three miles to the dropsite.” Lauren’s voice came crisply through the coms.

“Any bogies?”

“Negative.”

Three miles in this all terrain monstrosity was reasonably quick. Reasonable wasn’t quick enough. There was no quick with something that heavy.

That didn’t stop Carter from wishing for speed. Everybody did.

The tension of being outside, in any capacity, vehicular or otherwise was all pervasive.

“You’re still good guys.”

They were thankful for the update. Thankful that somebody had aerials and an eagle eye.

The enemy was fast. The enemy was silent. The enemy had EMPs that would stop them dead in their tracks.

That would spell catastrophe. Not only the loss of a vehicle but the unsavory prospect of fighting their way back to shelter. Fighting their way back to shelter without food.

The drop off points had to be moved constantly. Otherwise the enemy would anticipate the drop.

They were smart. So smart that the drop points had to be as random as possible. Which was a thorny problem. They had to be close enough for a quick pickup and clear of trees.

79b was nestled in the Appalachian woods.

Thorny.

Carter had a constant eye on the thermals and noise meter.

This part of Kentucky had not been rewilded.

There was no fauna.

Not since the event.

Any signature that wasn’t wind or that was louder than the creaking timber and falling leaves was suspicious.

He knew that trusting the tech was a bad idea.

All clear on aerials, all clear on thermals, and all clear on sonic meant nothing. So he’d swivel around the  360 degree cylindrical protrusion that served as the cockpit. Gazing out at the eerie surrounds through a bulletproof windshield that ran the circumference.

Nothing. Nothing. Good. Good.

The outside never failed to make six minutes seem like six hours.

“There’s dinner.” Borowski said in his laconic midwestern patois.  

He drove past it. Then backed.

Without looking up he flicked an overhead switch.

“Cargo bay opening. Stand clear. Cargo bay opening. Stand clear.” A business like female voice informed them.

“Stations.” Carter said.

There was some rocking and commotion below as the rest of the team manned the various SAW machine guns. 

Borowski flicked another switch.

“Cargo detected.”

Another flick in the sequence.

“Tractor engaged.”

This was the most vulnerable part of the operation.

It took a full minute and a half for the arms to mate with the two ton armored refrigerator. It took two more to pull it into the bay.

That was nearly four minutes of being sitting ducks.

“You’re all clear.” Lauren’s voice informed.

“Thermals clear. Sonic clear. Visual clear.” Carter said.

He swore that the sound of his teeth grinding was audible through the comm.

“Gunners. Give immediate report of hostiles. Do not. I repeat do not. I repeat DO NOT open fire until either I or your commanding officer authenticate.”

There was a three man round of, “Copy.”

Another minute dragged on.

“Mating complete.”

Nobody laughed at the odd word choice.

Another overhead switch made friends with Borowski’s index finger.

“Tractor engaged.”

‘Ah, the two minutes of hell.’ Carter mused grimly as the cargo began its tedious journey into the bay.

The biggest fear on everyone’s mind during this moment was never the enemy.

It was mechanical failure.

It was the one thing worse than the wait. An actual bodily presence on the outside was as appealing as jumping into shark infested waters.

The bizarre reality of the earth itself becoming so foreign, so dreadful, was something that the elders often remarked on. The green grass, the blue sky, the bright sun, the summer rain, all these instinctual pleasures now held a shadow an otherness.

If the tractor failed then that would begin a round of troubleshooting that could last up to an hour.

An hour on Earth. Earth the hostile planet.

The enemy snipers were good. Preternaturally  good.

79b had learned this the hard way.

Fast, nearly imperceptible with anything less than thermals, firing from in between trees and branches They would reposition in utter silence. Even from mere steps away you wouldn’t hear theirs.

Carters’ squad was the sixth.

He had no intention of making room for a lucky number seven.

It was rare that the gunners would spot a bogie before he did.

He did not engage the enemy unless a complication that involved exposure arose.

The enemy did not waste bullets.

As far as experience showed they did not possess any heavy weapons. Nothing armor piercing. They wouldn’t fire unless they had an almost certain chance of killing personnel.

Repairs were made with alternating runs preceded by suppressive fire.

The one wildcard in all this was the EMPs.

While the enemies’ access to EMPs in this sector was not particularly robust, prior teams had been hit on occasion.

Extraction was costly.

Carter had no intention of being extracted.

EMPs that produced a pulse powerful enough to break through the armor, electronic shielding, and neutralize a vehicle of this size were unwieldy.

That’s why it was so important to select drop sites where the enemy had little room for cover. Or be given any advance notice that allowed EMPs to be placed near a dropsite.

The spot was good. The meadowland was open. There was no tall grass or geological formations.

He’d see them coming. Or the drone would.

This was one of sixteen dropsites that had been used.

Thus far they had never used a dropsite more than once a season.

This would be the second time they use this one.

So, despite the enemies’ severely limited capacity for ambush Carter remained exceedingly tense.

Best practices could be bested.

Despite their diligent efforts to randomize he wasn’t sure the enemy wouldn’t find a pattern.  

Fortunately, the process was nearly complete.

“Cargo acquired. Securing in progress.”

The worst part of the two minutes of hell was over.

The remaining half minute came and went.

“Cargo Secured. Ready for transport.”

There was a loud thump as the sloping bay door came to a close.

“Haul ass.”

“Copy.”

Forty miles an hour, that was hauling ass.

Everyone was fixated on the surroundings. Watching for any little motion. Any little thing out of place.

Everybody’s jaws ached. Everyone’s shoulders were taught with angst.

The earth opened up just a few hundred yards away.

Like a yawning mouth full of dim lights.

They were home free.

Whiskey

             

The break room wasn’t much different from the briefing room. Spartan, utilitarian, furnished with essentials only, it had a decidedly clinical feel. There wasn’t a soul that would find the business-like upholstery cozy.

              Souls were something they’d let go long ago. So, while it wasn’t the Ritz Carlton. It was cozy enough.

Without a hint of ceremony Carter slid four tin tumblers to their respective squad members. He then proceded to pour each man a shot from a flask full of bourbon.

The science said that alcohol was a poor palliative for nerves. Just a temporary hit to the cerebellum. Some relaxed muscles and dampened alertness did not address the deeper physiological and cognitive effects of stress.

Screw the science.

              Carter pulled the cork so the thump was as exegeratted as possible and poured each man a drink.

              Everyone downed their shot in a single unceremonious gulp.

              Carter repeated the process till just over half the bottle was empty.


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Featured

The Cottage – Narrations

A death in the family takes Jim Cleary from Boston to Appalachia. There amid the grey and green Kentucky hills sits the Cottage his great-grandfather built. The rustic calm gives little hint of what lies beneath the stars that hang so silent, cold, and bright.

If you prefer reading: https://thefractaljournal.com/2023/01/31/the-cottage-2019-story-excerpt/

Note: This narration contains music. Some of which may not fit the mood the story has you in. Difficult to have good production values on a limited budget of time and funds. So, I also uploaded without music:


Alex Weir – January 2023

Plinth – A Night Drive Story – Creepypasta Original


Hey, everybody sorry for the huge lag in uploads. Life is life as the Laibach song goes. My schedule is all topsy turvy, night is day, day is night, and I’m still in a bloody hotel.

Whinging aside I’m rather happy to bring you a story I wrote earlier this morning.

Here’s the story via my website in case you prefer to read it: https://fractaljournal.com/2020/07/19/plinth-a-night-drive-story/

As for the video it’s a “creepypasta” style narration with some stock footage in case you chance to glance at the screen and need to see something pretty while you listen.

All the music that really brings this story to life is provided via the creative commons license by the wonderful Kevin McLeod.  You’ll find an attribution to the songs used in order of appearance at the bottom of this description.
Thanks so much for listening and best wishes.

 

-Alex Weir


 

Join me on Minds – https://www.minds.com/alexweir/

Software is expensive and I need to eat: paypal.me/fractalforce


Music Attributions

 

Water Lily by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4609-water-lily

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 

Past The Edge by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4997-past-the-edge

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 

Night of Chaos by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4127-night-of-chaos

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 

Thunder Dreams by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4526-thunder-dreams

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 

Dark Fog by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3605-dark-fog

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 

Plaint by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4224-plaint

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 

Hidden Agenda by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3872-hidden-agenda

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 

Floating Cities by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3765-floating-cities

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 

Magic Forest by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4012-magic-forest

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 

Mesmerize by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4994-mesmerize

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 

 

 

The Walls (Creepypasta Original)

Library of victorian mansion free transparent library png files ...


There was no fear then. The shadows that the trees cast as night fell held no terror. It was comfortable to watch the world grow dark.

Now the inky shadows that bleed from the closet induce panic.

How did I regress to such a childish state?

Long sessions on the shrink’s couch are unnecessary. I remember the year, the day, the very hour.

It was late noon. I stood with Rex on the cracked drive of my budget apartment.

We made an odd pair. My uncle and I could not have been more different. He stood at six feet four inches and I at a much less imposing five-eleven. His broad shoulders were always at attention while mine drooped into my concave chest.

The only hint that this wasn’t a drug bust about to end poorly for the scruffy scarecrow facing the squalor of Yates street, was the eyes.

That really was the only family resemblance. The Jarvis eyes, they are peculiar, grey, smoky, and deep-set. I’ve never seen them outside our kin.

Rex was a man of few words. He dangled the copper-colored key and extended it.

“Hope this helps.” He said as I silently accepted the gift.

And with the sporty sound of his departing cherry red RX-7, I unwittingly found myself at the threshold of horror.


Uncle Rex had earned many friends. Among them was real estate mogul Taylor Gern. Though he wasn’t the most scrupulous of men. I suppose he did not deserve blackmail.

Rex’s work as a veteran detective for the Cambridge Police put an end to that.

Gern was so grateful that he gave my outdoorsman uncle a cabin among an impressive tract of land in the wilds of Purgatory Chasm.

I really don’t want to go into specifics since I’m dead set the place be forgotten.

My taciturn uncle was doing a favor for my father. I’d failed to publish anything since May and my landlord had had enough. My father was keen on neither seeing me homeless nor dwelling under his roof.

So, he implored his brother to lend me the place for the autumn, explaining the scenery and isolation would get my pen and thus my bank account moving again.

Rex only cared for the place in spring, so he had no reason to decline a family request.


I still remember how the crunch of gravel beneath my battered Honda broke the placid evening.

It was classic Massachusetts chill. I had no time to muse on the eerie shadows cast by the evening’s trees. I grabbed my duffels from the musty trunk and double-timed it to the door.

What a door it was. The thing was oak and sturdier than most walls. It swung into a magnificent wood-paneled parlor. I felt a twinge of shame.

It was failure and not success that saw me thrown however briefly into the lap of luxury. Though I did not care for the tacky dark green wallpaper or the Tiffany lamps I certainly didn’t deserve this.

My self-flagellation was short-lived. The need for warmth overwhelmed me. It was colder here than in the city. I felt it permeate the walls and breach my turtleneck.

Those walls, they were so well-kept. As the combination of central heat, woodfire, and coffee stirred my cold addled brains to action I realized what a truly remarkable thing that was.

The place was ancient. Based on the décor and material it had to have been built at the turn of the century – Victorian times.

I decided to break the romance by watching some Rick and Morty before bed.

Waking up alone in an old and empty house in the middle of the woods becomes amazingly normal after a few days.

But, not so normal that I could maintain my bad habits for long.

It was Friday that the fat dykish looking lady with a thick brogue dropped off one of those weekly meal kits. I remember this cause it was after I’d stuffed myself with some sort of yummy chowder that the first itch to write struck.

I no longer needed to knock myself unconscious with a constant stream of digital stimulation. No longer needed to quell the internal cries of plot hole, idiot, cliché, with reruns of South Park. Hell, I no longer could.


The only thing left to do was write. It’s not like I was about to go wandering round the woods.

Having spent most of my time on the pavement of Boston, I was suspicious of so many trees gathering in one place, all at once.

So, I wrapped myself in a flannel blanket, spiked the coffee, and clickity clacked away.

I won’t bore you with the details of my novel. That’s entirely beside the point.

What is noteworthy however is how easy it flowed.

This isolation thing really did work. Place and setting as McKenna termed it. Yeah, that was it.

That is until I no longer felt isolated.

With time my distrust of the wild began to fade. I’d stretch my legs on the various game trails round the cabin. Making sure to keep all my city slicker friends updated on my brave forays with Instagram uploads.

I was really hoping that Alice, my ex, would notice. That I could lure her out here. Bring back the good times. She was wacky for this woodland shit.

Besides, one casual ‘jelly’ comment, she never bit. Though there was no social media evidence of a new beau I was pretty sure she had moved on. And so should I.

And I did. I sort of fell in love with the woods. With the schedule of birdsong varying from morning to evening.

I’d grown so comfortable with it that I’d often sit for hours on the porch step in the cold dark watching the stars blink little morse code assurances above the treeline.

Well, it seemed the feeling was mutual.

The house grew familiar with me.

At first, it came in vague realizations. Just how it had sort of blossomed from the verdant soil, a part of the valley, and a part of the England that had carried this orchid hither.

How much had it seen in the interplay of dark and light, in the leaf-dappled centuries, how much of time had crystallized within these well kept, venerable, walls?

The house was a part of the soil, and the soil and the house were a part of the flux.

An angel singing in the chorus of eternity.

It tapped me on the shoulder.

I wheeled round.

There was nothing there save the open door, bleeding precious heat into the autumn night.

I got up and shut the door. Writing this off as a subconscious guilt-pang for the environment and my uncle’s pocketbook; I returned to my favorite step and began extracting a Pall-Mall from the pack.

I was cut short however by the feeling of a soft hand resting on my shoulder. A sensation very closely followed by the feeling of what can only be described as a gentle kiss on the crown of my head. A kiss that sent ripples of the oddest electric pleasure through my wiry frame.

I shot up to my feet and once again wheeled round. There was nothing.

By now I was so thoroughly unsettled that I no longer felt the urge to smoke.

I hastily retreated back indoors.


I sat dumbstruck on the couch for what must have been hours.

It was around two forty-five in the AM that exhaustion finally began to kick in and I groggily made my way to the guest bedroom.

My sleep was fitful, my dreams shockingly detailed, and always there was this ardent desire.

I longed. I longed for something that could not be. It was something that was…something that is…but something that cannot be…you see the madness this stream of illogic would induce if deeply felt?

The walls. The walls that led down. The walls that led down into the ground. These walls that hummed that sang with the wistful melody of centuries.

For weeks I wrote the most fantastic things, for weeks I barely slept but watched, notebook in hand, the edge of the wood from my favorite step.

The house dictated what I saw there, described it to me, I swear that I fathomed existence, its mystery, its essence.

What’s best. I had it in writing. Or so I thought.

Down, down, down. I wanted to be down to the very soil.

I descended the stairs and found a solitary chair sitting in the center of the cellar.

Unperturbed by this peculiar bit of whimsy I ventured forth and sat.

I did not mind the dark, the must, in fact, I found it wholesome.

As wholesome as the warmth that the gentle tap on my shoulder induced.

And so I sat…as the gossamer sleeves of some dark dress wrapped round me in a backward embrace. A single strand of fair hair fell from the face I felt less than an inch from my own. Though I did not see the lips, I knew that they were beautiful, only those lips could have given me such a transcendent kiss.

And now they whispered. They whispered a word, a foreign word, a word that still permeates my conscience to this very day.

“Hey! What the hell are ya doin…Jeezuz it’s wicked dahk down here!”


It was then that I felt awful. My mouth was drier than mothballs, every joint ached, and my ass may as well have been fused to the chair.

“You found him!?” An unfamiliar voice called from some forgotten world.

“Yeah, he’s in the damned basement…fuckin druggies wacha gonna do?”

“Shit, better call an ambulance.” A gruff voice suggested.

The hand that now rested on my shoulder was neither feminine nor delicate.

“Hey, buddy, this is Officer Joe Corvi, we got called here to do a wellne….O Jesus he reeks!”

I couldn’t answer him even if I wanted to.

At some point, I was moved, folded, and transported like some kinda mannequin to an ambulance.

Then I found myself playing pincushion in a bright hospital room.

“Severe dehydration…”

“Just found him sittin there….half dead…”

“No drugs…”

“You sure…”

“Yeah, he’s clean….”

Days elapsed with various visitors and attendants. I remained comatose.

At one point Alice came and hugged me. But, she didn’t stay long at all. That bitch. It hurt.

The pain was useful though. It’s what made me begin to reach for my Pall Malls.

My hand was stiff but it was moving, ever so slowly, towards….my naked leg beneath a hospital gown.

“Fuwck.” I cursed with my thick retarded tongue.

Some hours later, or maybe it was minutes, or maybe days two men in labcoats burst into the room.

“How the hell did you miss this spike?” The older one demanded…

“I..I…”

“Nevermind.” Said the voice belonging to the bearded face that now shone a bright light in my eyes.

“Son, can you hear me…?” He inquired.

“Fwuckin bwight…fuooff…” I said trying to raise my wooden arm to shield my face from the luminous assault.

“Holy shit.” The voice standing behind the man muttered.

I was shocked to discover the ordeal that I’d been through.

Apparently, Neave O’Hara the dykey delivery lady had noticed I’d left my food untouched. At first, she thought it was just a weird artist being a weird artist. When this activity was repeated for a second week, she got worried and called for a wellness check.

She’d been the one to find me in the basement as the police searched the attic and the shed.

I’d been there for two weeks.

The doctor’s said I was essentially dead. With only the most rudimentary biological functions intact. The paramedics discovered that my heart was beating at the glacial pace of 22 beats a minute.

I suppose that those that believe my strange story think me fortunate. The novel they found made me a fortune. Though I’m not sure I wrote it. Because I never wrote again.

Despite this, I was now on an equal financial footing with Gern due to television appearances and speaking engagements.

All things that I was loathe to do but did anyway because it was my long-suffering family’s wish.

In that regard, it is perhaps worth it.

Alice tried to come back to me. But, I’d have none of it. Not only did she leave me when I needed companionship the most, not only was this a cynical ploy for a comfortable life, but I could only love the angel of the house.

It is because of her that I am now a broken child of a man quivering at shadows in the closet. Fearing and longing their embrace.

For every house is a sentinel, an eardrum, that catches the stardust and keeps it. Some that have heard enough catch an angel. And angels grow lonely for wisdom is heavy.

What will call to you from the shadows to share in its strange knowledge?

Will she hold you in the space between life and death and teach strange utterances…ah…d…ah….g….ee….t…..a…

Selah.


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Tea for One (Short Story/Creepypasta/Original)

Walking through an eerily quiet forest after a rain. Vermont. [OC ...


I felt the chill. Let it sink in. Now that the drunken shouts and laughter had decayed into murmurs, I was beginning to feel the night.

My fire provided warmth enough for the kettle that swung on a hook above it. I however was cold. And that is what I wanted.

Cold animates. It promotes alertness. I had cause for that.

The simmering had grown sufficient fierce and I brewed a tea blacker than any coffee.

It was as acrid and bitter as the Vermont chill.

I wished to explore the night. To cross that strange threshold that lies atop the stairs of darkness, solitude, and silence.

Yes, I was one of those odballs you and your frigthened friends would see strolling through the inky forest murk as if it were their living room.

As you see, I do get a touch smug about my ability to master our ancestral fears. Darkness, shadows, snapping branches, and loneliness these to me had become friends.

It was you I feared. You and your prosiness. The tidy severing of your nervous system from the stars. How you had forgotten to pine for things that the damp earth sings. How decayed your limbs, how soft your skin, how dull your senses had grown from burying through corpses of information.

To me the giddy laughter and cheerful bants of distant tents were but the squirming of so many maggots. Who were too content to feast on the great reeking suburban carrion that they called home to ever enoble themselves to become flies.

I apologize. I’m getting self righteous again. It’s just that it’s so bloody hard to find companions with my idiosyncracies. And I really am terrified of becoming a corporate orchid.


Despite my loathing I did not wish for that to happen. The Unsolved Disappearances of Vermont's Own “Bermuda Triangle ...

What I witnessed that night was a fate I wouldn’t wish on my ex-wife much less innocent braindead leafers.

It was just past midnight that, sufficiently caffeinated, I let the cold bear me into the depths of the Glastenbury wilderness.

An hours hike had me craving some Cavendish. So, leaning on an oak I set about lighting my pipe.

Of course that’s when the leafers came.

I heard them from a mile away.

Some of you may be wondering why such a crumudgeon makes use of trails at all. You obviously don’t know Glastenbury. This is not the place to test ones orienteering. Though at the time I didn’t know just to what wild extent that sentiment rang true.

Sure, I’d heard the stories. But it was freaks, freakier than me, in lonely meth soaked cabins that I feared. Not some, well, I still don’t know.

“Oh, my God! Joey…you said you knew the way…” the shrill cadence of a Jersey shrew drilled itself into my brain.

There were some indistinct deeper murmurrings of protest.

“Hey! Do you guys smell that…” An older female with a southern drawl had caught the scent of my tobacco.

“Ah shit, yea someone’s smokin.”

“Maybe they know the way.” Jersey again.

‘Christ.’ I did not feel like playing tour guide to lost city slickers.

Of course they didn’t have the good grace to cross my path after my tobacco was spent.

‘Can’t even finish a smoke in the woods.’ I shook my head.

“Excuse me sir.” A stocky Italian who I assumed was Joey addressed me.

“Uhuh….”

“We’re lost….” Came the drawl as what I could only describe as a Waffle House waitress ran around Rocky Balboa to face me.

“Well…I said…” drawing on my pipe for an extra laconic ‘fuck you’ effect…”ya ain’t very good at it, missus.”

“Huh!”

“Funny thing about trails…they go places….”

“Yeah…but….”

I cut her off by jerking my thumb in the direction I’d come from. “Trailhead…” I puffed.

“No, fucking way…” Joey exclaimed, as the women rolled their eyes.

“I told you.” Said the shrew.

I smirked with schadenfreude.

“No…no…something went on back there….they rerouted shit…I’ve been out here a thousand times with Roger.”

They hadn’t rerouted shit for years. This was Vermont, they had money, and they loved their woods, the trails were well kept, and well mapped. But, despite being a prick I wasn’t prick enough to feed Joey to his shrew.

“Hmm…could be…” I mused taking a swig of Bourbon to complement the leaves.

“You’re sure the trailhead’s that way…” Joey asked.

“As sure as I am that I didn’t just drop outta the sky.”

Joey exhaled an exasperated sigh. “All right Marisa let’s go.”

I was relieved that they didn’t stop to make smalltalk.

The dwindling sound of their conversation was music to my ears.

I picked up my ruck, wondering what the hell Jersey greaseballs were doing playing leafer, and ventured deeper.


Just as sufficient duration of quiet occurred for me to once again become one with the night. Yes, just as I was regaining the trust of the trees…I hear the shrew.

‘Unbelievable.’ And I meant it…there was no way for them to approach me from the same direction they’d come before. There were no side trails, and there was no way they had enough woodcraft to stealth their way past me through unmarked wilderness, in the span of a couple of hours…and why…

“It’s him!” The waitress cried.

I was dumbfounded.

Joey got uncomfortably close…and looked as if he was about to say something accusatory when he burst into tears.

“Woah.” I said. It was all I could say. I wasn’t being sarcastic. Woah, was right. The Mystery of the Bennington Triangle - Heather Sutfin - Medium

I handed my flask to the weeping dago and waited for him to regain his composure.

“I…I…told you…all of you..” he said wheeling around in a dramatic arc. “Something’s not right.”

Now I mentioned that it was cold. That that’s what I was looking for. But, now…this was downright meatlocker level.

He was right. There was something very wrong here.

The women looked terrified.

The waitress started mumbling some Baptist prayer in between incoherencies about shadows.

I did what I always do when I’m getting freaked. I began to finger the silver cross that my dad had said was blessed by the Pope when some distant ancestor of ours marched toward Jerusalem.

I really to this day cannot tell you what transpired.

Something black, shadowy, and amorphous rose from the ground. Glinting obsidian in the moonlight it charged at Joey and pulled him into the very earth.

“Come on!” I yelled motioning for the women to follow as Joey’s head disappeared beneath the leaf strewn soil.

The older woman was slow. I heard her rustic cries of panic as whatever…the hell…pulled her down.

“Sarah!” The shrew cried out.

I yanked her wrist so hard that I swear I dislocated it. But, she did get the message and we continued running.

We didn’t get very far though. Because, just as we rounded a corner one of those shadow clouds popped into view…and we passed right through it…

The taste was metallic, and the flashes of weird suggestions among the inky, tugging, tingling mass was beyond any sane description.

I said…we passed…but that is not correct.

I passed.

The shrew like her companions had been drug to whatever netherworld those things had emerged from.


A hiker found me the following morning clutching my dad’s heirloom. No one had seen the Jersey leafers. And the following weeks saw no reports of missing persons. It was as if they never existed.

All this could have been some sort of whiskey dream. But, I am not of an imaginative bent…

Did that bit of metal really save my ass?

And if nothing really strange had happened. How did I suddenly pick up French?

Fleur De Lis Drawing by Lee Gray


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Teatime, CreepyPasta Love, and Global Warming 2.0


Lot’s of madness brewing so I brewed some tea. Over which I have a bit of a ramble as regards CreepyPasta, and the tragically overshadowed problem of nitrification.

My Favorite CreepyPasta Narrators:

CreepyGhostStories: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnK36WwcJDTEhyS7w3SQntg (CGS is also a prolific writer! Highly recommended.)

NaturesTemper: https://www.youtube.com/user/NaturesTemper (Fantastic voiceactor.)

Dr. Creepen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcZ_-5180OBED8NBkZgkRmQ (Great original music and tension builder.)

CreepsMcPasta: https://www.youtube.com/user/CreepsMcPasta (Very pleasant voice and a great eye for stories.)


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Delivery – Short Story

Image result for lamashtu


Band stickers, college parking passes, crumpled bits of fast food wrappers… ‘Good.’

I was relieved.

“One more minute and I woulda left without you.” The driver joked.

“It’s not as bad as it seems…by the looks of the cars…they’re just students…who probably rented the place cause it was dirt cheap.”

“Not a bad place to get loaded either.” The driver chuckled as we pulled away down the tree lined dirt road and back out onto a country highway.

“How many more stops?”

“More stops than my bladder can take…”

As I returned from the corner station with a coffee in hand I found that Rick, the driver, had already returned from the restroom and was cursing profusely.

“What’s wrong now…” I sighed, the problems on this muggy July day were as incessant as the hum of cicadas.

“Just got a call from dispatch. Looks like that package we couldn’t find for the last address was on Sam’s truck.”

I sighed again.

“This means that we’ll be going back to that Deliverance/Amyttiville shack come evening time.”

“O good.”

“Yep…”

“Well, hey…look on the bright side maybe it’s some college cutie renting that place…maybe a redhead…maybe I’ll get her number…maybe she has friends….so we both win…”

Rick snorted derisively. “You’re dreamin’…I still say that place was voodoo…methlab shit…those ‘college cars’ were probably stolen and if not…then it’s a buncha dweebs playin videogames and getting drunk on Pabst.”

“You’re such a pessimist.”

“And you’re goin to be a PISSamist if you keep drinkin that…” He said. “I ain’t got time for any more bathroom breaks either.”

“I’ve been up since three AM. It’s the only thing keeping me going.”

“Speakin of goin…” The engine roared to life and we were back on the route.

The remaining four hours were exhausting. As a helper it was my job to run the packages to the door. We normally rode along on days when volume was too high for the drivers to handle alone. Which meant we were doing a second job on top of loading the trucks in the morning.

As we met Sam’s truck in the twilight I realized that I was mildly delirious. Stuck in that zone between sleeping and waking that happens when you’ve been up too long. The kind where your inner world is louder than reality. Where every action you perform is done on autopilot through muscle memories.

Along with the missing package we took on twenty others…adding five new stops to our route. This happened so we could relieve Sam who didn’t have a helper that day.

“Please tell me that we’re gonna hit the spooky place before it gets completely dark.”

Rick smirked sadistically. “Nope. It’s gonna be deadlast.”

“Why?”

“It’s just the way the route is.”

I sighed.

“Who’s the pessimist now?”

As I briskly made my way  to each remaining door I kept a tally.

One for the condo, two for the townhouse, three for the McMansion, four for the apartment, by the time I got to the fifth stop my apprehension had grown to a ridiculous degree. I tried to write it off as a result of sleep deprivation. But, I couldn’t. There really had been something weird about that place.

“Ready to lose anal integrity?” Rick quipped as he hummed the deliverance theme.

“Eh, fuck you.”

“I’m not the one about to be fucked here.” He chuckled.

“I’m bettin ya it’s fine. That there’s gonna be some hipster hottie smokin American Spirits and I’m gonna come up all sweaty and manly and be like I got a package for ya maam. And then I’m gonna score. He he he yea score….” I trailed off into a Beavis and Butthead impersonation.

“That’s a really C grade porno my friend.”

“At least it’s not gay like your rapey redneck fetish.”

“I’m just being realistic.” He said as we pulled onto that recently familiar country highway that was a few dark tree lined miles away from that lonesome dirt road.


The sound of the cicadas was deafening in the woods. It didn’t subside even slightly as the wheels of our monstrous square homage to commerce turned up soft dirt.

If you’ve ever seen us on the road you know that we drive with the doors open. Especially in the summer. That’s because there is no air conditioning. Yet right now despite the heat I wanted nothing more than for those doors, however flimsy they may be, to be firmly shut. I didn’t like the way the woods pressed in on either side.

“This time I’m givin you a minute…scratch that forty five seconds…or I’m leaving without you.” Rick said.

“More pussy for me.” I said mustering up my courage. Which was something I desperately needed to traverse the absurdly large expanse of land, thorns, and fencing that seperated the crude driveway from the crumbling house.

“Pussy don’t live where the lights ain’t on.” Rick called as I ventured into the darkness.

He was right. I didn’t see any lights at all in any of the windows. A slight chill ran up my spine.

‘Well,’ I reasoned with myself. ‘It is a Friday night. Maybe they’re out.’

“Shit.” I muttered under my breath. ‘It’s a Thursday.’

Then suddenly I felt ridiculous. What were the actual chances of something happening. This was a registered address and killing a delivery guy would be too stupid even for the thickest rednecks.

The chill returned ever so slightly when the shapes of the cars came into view. Why were the lights off if everyone was here? But I shook it off. Maybe they carpooled with friends. Maybe they were nightshift guys. Lotsa college kids work security guard gigs.

The fact that they’d need their car to get to this hypothetical gig didn’t matter to my little pep talk. I felt a fresh burst of courage. Enough to get the package through the screen door into the porch area but not enough to knock.

Besides, it was around eight thirty now, if they were nightshift guys they might still be sleeping…or just getting up…in the latter case interrupting their ‘morning routine’ for a late package seemed rude.

I noticed that the packages I’d left earlier were gone which for some reason unnerved me. Spooking me enough to really hate how loud that screen door creaked. But as I stepped into the woods and smelled wafting hints of honeysuckle I was hit with a fresh wave of confidence. What the hell was I afraid of?

Sure at five foot ten inches I wasn’t the biggest guy but I’d always been athletic. I was pretty strong and if that proved insufficient then – my track days meant I was definitely quick enough to outpace any loony boomstick wieldin inbreds lookin for love.

I surveyed the stars twinkling through the tree branches. It was nice out here.

I was roused from my reverie by a buzz in my pocket. My phone which was still set to vibrate from my previous shift had alerted me of a message. I turned down the screen brightness before opening the text.

“tired..wanna go home..plus its creepy AF out here…im serious hurry up or im leavin…”

I smiled in the dark. I was feelin bold. He was bluffin there was no way he’d leave. That coffee had indeed caught up with me. I needed to piss. This was the perfect place to do it. Even though the darkness meant I could take a leak pretty much where I stood good breeding told me to venture a bit into the wood.

Besides I wanted to drag this wee errand out as long as possible. I knew how isolated he felt sitting in that truck surrounded by all these trees. A mischievous grin flashed across my face.

“eh..go…im chattin with this hottie…” I said sending along a pic of my ex on her porch swing a million evenings ago. One that I still had cause I’m a sentimental dweeb. My toolbaggery proved fruitful as the picture was somewhat believable for the current surroundings.

“nice google image ya fukin virgin…now get your ass in this truck…or you’re gonna hitchike”

I was so amused that I didn’t notice how far I’d walked. This gave me pause but did not unnerve me. I unzipped.

As I finished taking the biggest leak of my life fear began to creep back in. Something was wrong.

I just stood there with my fly undone trying to figure out why it was that I felt so creeped out. Then it hit me. There were no more cicadas. Their incessant hum had ceased.

It was very quiet now.

‘Well, I did just trek through here and unleash a river.’ I chuckled to myself

My attempt at bravado through inner monologue was shattered by a loud buzz. Something that in that tense moment felt like a hot lead weight against my thigh. I extracted the phone.

“hurry the fuck up…you’re starting to piss me off..”

Just as I finished reading the message I heard a loud crunch.

I froze. Standing dumbly with my phone clutched in my hand.

Crunch…crunch…it was very rhythmic…and did I hear labored breathing?

It was then that I realized that I was holding my damn phone like a fucking beacon. I thrust it in my pocket with lightning speed.

I listened.

Crunch…crunch…crack…crunch….crunch..snap…crunch..

It was definitely the sound of something walking a few yards away.

Crunch…Crunch…Crunch…

Fortunately it wasn’t heading in my direction. And the distance between me and whoever it was was enough to avoid utter panic. Unfortunately it was heading in the direction of the house. Which coupled with the rhythm definitely ruled out the idea of a deer.

I crouched down and scurried as noiselessly as possible to the shelter of some nearby shrubs.

I could definitely hear breathing. I felt the phone buzz again. I shook my head. No time for messages now.

There was something odd about the breathing. It sounded forced and something else.

The phone buzzed again. I ignored it.

I cupped my hands round my ears and regulated my breathing so I could hear past the sound of my heart.

Yeah…it was definitely very faint but very forced breathing…and in between the breaths …I heard the word..he…help.

Buzz.

Jesus. I looked at the phone. Rick was exploding with rage.

I dimmed the screen as low as it would dim and typed out...”i think someone is in trouble”

The incessant buzzing of the phone subsided for nearly a minute… “What”

“i was takin a leak..someones out here…they sound hurt”

“stop bullshitting”

“i ain’t got time to convince ya…stop messaging me for a while…or wait…” I put the phone on silent

I just sat there in those shrubs. I sat and listened.

I sat and listened to nothing. It took me a while to fully grasp the strangeness of the situation. I looked up to see that the tops of the trees were swaying yet I could hear no creaking of wood. I snapped my fingers as subtly as I could. Nothing.

Then suddenly the normal noises of a wood returned. Well almost, the cicadas were still quiet, but I could at least hear the wind.

I could hear the wind and something else.

It sounded a lot like dragging. After the dragging I heard a sound that made my blood run cold. It was a grunt. The kind of grunt you make when lifting something heavy. Followed by the sound of heavy plodding footsteps.

They were heading towards the house. I was rooted to the spot.

‘Should I follow?’

‘Can I even make it back to the truck.’

I waited till the footsteps were a respectable distance and opened my phone.

The expected rage from Rick was missing.

‘Shit..did he leave…did he actually leave…?’

“rick somethin weirds happenin out here…i think we should call the cops..im headedyour way…”

I waited a few minutes. Nothing .

“stop messing with me.”

The minutes felt like hours.

Slowly, tentatively I flanked my way around the perimeter of the creepy ass yard, and back towards the truck.

Back towards the truck that was leaving….

“O fuck.” I barely modulated my shout into a murmur as I realized the predicament I was still in.

“rick ya bastard…get back here.”  I texted.

It wasn’t for another quarter hour till I saw anythin.

“fukin told ya gonna teach u the hard way not to fuk around.”

“im not I swear. We need to call the cops.”

“o yea call em yourself cause im callin your bluff”

“i don’t know the address what’s the address”

“413 fuck u drive”

“im fucki serious”

The barrage of messages that I sent after he gave the sarcastic address were of no avail.

‘Fuck.’


I wasn’t sure what to do. The most reasonable thing would be to head towards the road and try to hitch a ride. Or call 911 and see if they could triangulate my phones GPS.

But the road was lonely and I imagined all sorts of things emerging from the wood to drag me back into the depths. It was a risk that wasn’t necessarily worth the reward of the rare car that found its way this deep into the boonies.

As for calling the cops, in the time that it took, all the sound I would make…

‘Well, maybe if I ran across the road and called from the trees on the  other side.’

Slowly, I made my way towards it. The road was bright in the moonlight. I didn’t savor exposing myself by crossing it. But I guess I had to.

I was halfway across when a blinding light flashed all around me. I was momentarily stunned. So stunned in fact that I collapsed to my knees. There was that silence again, and as the world went from bright white, to bright grey, and gradually normalized…above the silent swaying of the trees…I saw a strange swirl…like a dark halo…in the clouds above where I was pretty sure that house stood.

I hastily completed my journey across the road. Having secreted myself in the densest shrubs I could I extracted my phone.

The phone was dead. Completely out of commission, the messaging app sat frozen, none of the buttons did anything. I couldn’t even turn it off.

I pulled out the battery.

“What the fuck!” I whisper shouted. The phone stayed on. Displaying the same frozen app.

I sat in a daze.

There were really two options at this point. Follow the road via the woods towards the interstate, a journey of many miles, hoping that the phone would start working. Or sit here and hope the phone would start working.

‘Maybe Rick is just pulling my leg.’

He might come back.

‘He might not.’

As all these thoughts swirled round my panicked brain they were slowly replaced by a different emotion. I was becoming curious. Just what in the hell was going on here?

That break in the clouds was so perfectly circular, that magenta swirl, the light, I had to know.

I recrossed the road and began creeping my way towards the house.

Surprised by my lack of fear I paused a football fields length or so from the cursed yard.

‘Is this wise?’

I really didn’t care. At this point I was committed to finding out just what the fuck was going on.

The house was as dark and silent as ever. I noted that the magenta swirl was indeed right above it wreathed in an inky black halo that parted nocturnal clouds.

My hand shook as I reached towards the knob. Turning it as quietly as I could I realized it was locked. I began circling the house looking for open windows. I found none.

I shook my head. I’d tried the backdoor first. It didn’t have a damned screened in porch.

I knew full well that the front door did. I stood staring at the screen door. The impossible loud creaky screen door and shook my head.

‘No way.’

As my head was shaking I noticed something that I’d somehow missed earlier. There was another door. A cellar door. A cellar door that was thrust open horizontally.

‘Fuck that…’ I said. But my feet didn’t listen.

I crept to the side and cautiously peered over the edge. It was too dark to see anything except a first step.

‘Fortune favors the bold.’

Is the thought that I locked my focus on to dispel the dizzying feeling of my foot coming in contact with that first step.

I was so fucking glad it didn’t creak.

I felt panic rush through me again as I realized the step was stone. I don’t know why this unnerved me till I realized how out of place it was for a root cellar to have broad stone steps.

It didn’t smell like a root cellar either. There was no earthiness in the unseasonably cool air that wafted past my senses. The steps were large. Each footfall seeming to sink me fathoms further into the very bowels of the earth.

There was no light save what little chanced to fall from the strange sky above. Dim as it was I could just barely make out a landing. It was just a few more steps to the bottom.

I began to fiddle with my phone hoping for more than the frozen screen to guide me. Alas, it was still out of commission. No flashlight.

I turned my head to look behind me just in time to see the cellar doors blot out the stars with a loud thud.


It was so dark. The last time I’d seen this kind of dark was in the caves of Kentucky.

Panic coursed from ventricle to vein. Giving up all attempts at stealth my boots thundered up the steps. Their distant echoes alerting me of the absurd recesses that lay behind me.

I heaved against the heavy wood. It did not budge.

At a loss I slunk down on a step.

‘Did they know I was here?’

‘Did they notice the glow of my phone?’

‘Did they think I was a thief. Just trying to trap me. Maybe they’re normal, maybe all this is just my imagination, they’re going to find out I’m just a delivery guy…and it’ll all be fine.’

The memory of that dragging in the wood, the blasted sky, and the immense dimensions of this prison, all these combined to smother what faint hope had arisen.

As if to drive the final nail into the proverbial coffin of my predicament I heard a voice. A disturbingly pleasant female voice filter through from above.

“Didn’t anyone ever tell you…curiosity killed the cat.”

The smooth soothing almost sing song delivery jared unpleasantly with the words and situation. It filled me with more dread than the dragging.

“It’s rude not to answer a question.” Said the voice with a touch more edge.

“Who..wha…is this…”

“It’s even more rude to answer a question with a question.” This time the voice was followed by a feminine chuckle.

I didn’t respond.

Whoever it was sighed deeply. “O but you’re so young. Can’t expect too much from you lot, can I?”

“I’m not going to hurt you, I’m not a thief, I’m a delivery man, let me out.”

The woman laughed. “You poor dear, I didn’t know companies these days were so zealous. Is breaking and entering now considered a convenience courtesy?”

Her jokes were making me dizzy. Already having worked a twelve hour shift. I was beyond thirsty and tired.

As if reading my mind she said, “Your silence is very rude. Also, do you always talk to your hosts with your back turned.”

I didn’t even realize that I’d been speaking in the direction of the depths. As she spoke I became aware of the scent of honeysuckle.  It was much stronger than it had been in the wood. Making me realize how out of season it was.

It was her scent. But, I’d smelled it during the dragging. She could not be responsible for that grunt.

“My name is Masha Tool. What is yours cold shoulder?”

“Peter.”  I answered slowly turning my head in the direction of the voice.

It all made sense now. How her voice could be so clear through the thick wood doors. How I could smell her. A small aperture had been opened to the left of where the doors sealed.

Peering down at me was a beautiful face painted with a delicate smile. The serenity of her gaze was unsettling. The moonlight danced a jig on the deep steel of grey blue iris. On the uppermost step sat a tin cup.

“As I said, I am your host, and I make sure my guests are attended to.”

I stared.

“Boys.” She giggled coquettishly blowing me a kiss.

“Don’t flatter yourself. I was just wondering how such a frail girl could shut these doors.” I said regaining my acerbic wit.

“Och.” She said feigning an injured look.

As she tilted her head to chuckle I noted the long dark locks that cascaded round bare shoulders.

“That was my father’s doing. My brothers and he don’t share my amusement at your trespassing. The cup is from me. I am very much your host. Please do not spurn my hospitality.” The latter statement was again tinged with that uncharacteristic sternness.

I picked up and sniffed.

“Smart. I knew it would be sin to let you go to waste. That’s why it’s water. Here.” An elegant hand reached through the aperture. “Give it here, Peter.”

I handed her the cup and watched her take a sip. Then another.

She returned the cup. Our fingers brushed her skin was smooth as silk. The contact sent shivers of pleasure throughout my frame.

I watched her as I drank what to my great relief and perhaps salvation was good old water. She was absolutely entrancing. Yet something was off. There was a tinge of sadness about her eyes that hinted at a peculiar melancholy. A melancholy as deep and heavy as the North Sea.

“Now young man. I see that you have a fine strong body. It would be a great pity for it to perish.”

I felt a chill at the way she said young. At the portent of these words not even her considerable charms could stay the anticipation of doom. The maddening reality of this bizarre situation settled on my chest with the weight of a freight train.

“Young man? You’re younger than me toots.”

She laughed. “O so you are a gentleman after all. I’m flattered, child.”

“That’s a really funny game you’re playing lady. Now let me out and maybe I’ll take you on a date.”

“Game? Yes, I’m so glad you see it that way.”

I was confused.

“There are seven ways to exit besides this door.” She said delicately tapping on the wood.

“I was never really good at mazes…” I began.

She pressed her finger to her lips.

“This I had to coax from my father. He is very strict you know. Consider yourself lucky to play.”

I was officially creeped out again.

“Some are up, some are down, some are in, some are out, but do be careful, lest you shout.”

I cocked an eyebrow at this word salad.

“Your suspicious nature shows you to be a clever lad. I’m sure you’ll muddle through.”

I heard something drop and the aperture slid shut giving me the barest chance to catch her wink.


There isn’t really an adequate way to describe how I felt. I didn’t even have the moxy to bang against the door. I just sat there in this odd subterranean limbo. I sat and felt very tired and very small.

After an eternity of self pity I stirred. I guess the water had kicked in. It was also cool down here. This being a welcome contrast to the day of working in the heat. I began feeling my way around trying to get a sense of the dimensions.

Not only were the steps as tall as my knees, they were to my astonishment several dozen strides in length. The walls of my prison were far from narrow.

They felt smooth under my fingers. I was in a man made cave. Who built this monstrosity? How? Why?   Why here? When…

You really should get moving.

I heard the woman’s voice. Well, heard isn’t entirely accurate. Since my ears didn’t do the hearing. Somehow she was in my head.

For the sake of all that’s holy do pay attention.

‘Huh.’

Did you not hear me drop the lamp…

‘Well, pardon me for being confused but I’m not accustomed to talking with voices in my head.’

Don’t you worry. I’m going to have to put the machine back before father notices it gone. So I won’t be in your head for long.

‘The machine?’

Never you mind that. Get the lamp and get moving.

‘Why?’

They’re not pretty.

‘They?’

I didn’t like the suggestion that I wasn’t alone. Making my way to where I’d heard the object drop I found myself in possession of a very odd lantern.

Tap it twice.

Tap. Tap.

“Woah!”

It wasn’t just the lantern that lit up. The whole tunnel was awash in an odd blue daylight. The walls in the entryway round the stairs were smooth but beyond – reaching into disappearing depths were baroque frescoes and cuneiform etchings.

I wouldn’t throw too much of a party. They see sound.

‘They?’ I repeated.

No time for explanations I’m afraid. Be fast, be quiet, and be smart.

‘Umm…’

There was no answer. After fifteen minutes without voices in my head I guessed that I was alone again.

The blueish light was surreal and cast no shadows. As I walked forward through my probable tomb the cuneiform, and the frescoes, gave way to vast bas reliefs depicting bizarre overlapping geometric patterns.

The way these curvilinear fractals were arranged boggled the eye. And what boggled the eye, doubly boggled the mind. There was no way to just look at the thing. The constant shifts in point of reference caused a sort of vertigo.

I averted my gaze to keep from getting sick. Losing fluid was a possible death sentence. I just kept walking.

I walked for so long that no ancient bric-a-brac, no long dead cityscape, could fascinate me. The terrain was absolutely flat and the air absolutely still for what felt like miles.

This did change. After eternities, the ground began to incline and soon after this shift I reached the first corner I’d seen.

I was less interested in this corner than the ladder propped against a curved recess where the walls would have formed a 90 degree angle. I gazed upward and saw the ladder disappear into a  well like opening that reached further than my eye could see.

My heart pulsed with hope. But that’s all it was, a pulse. Confusion and bewilderment replaced triumph  as the logic of the thing mocked my reason.

‘That doesn’t make any fucking sense.’ The floor hadn’t sloped downward for more than few hundred paces. And my initial descent via stairs couldn’t have been more than thirty feet. So how was this ladder reaching up to illimitable heights? I hadn’t seen any towers in the woods.

I looked at the new corner for context. It wasn’t much help, being more or less identical to the one from which I’d just come.

Up seemed like the right answer. I mean why wouldn’t it be? So I placed a hand on a rung and instantly jerked it back. It wasn’t pain. It was surprise. The rungs were heated. Providing a stark contrast to the cool subterranean air.

After the surprise subsided I again placed my hands on the brass colored rungs. At least I guessed it was brass since the bluish light confused chromatic perception. The sheen of the thing seemed brassy.

I climbed and climbed. My shoulders burned with effort, my back screamed, and my calves cramped. It must have been a good quarter hour and still no end in sight.

‘Up.’ Where else? It had to be the right answer and so I kept climbing.

I kept climbing. Rung after blasted rung until I heard the scuttling.

‘Yep. That’s scuttling…definitely scuttling.’

It was scuttling downward.

“Fuck this..” I murmured frantically launching a hasty retreat.

Fresh pains assaulted my frame. The return engaged a completely new set of muscles that rubbed against their recently engaged neighbors with insistent pleas for mercy.

My brain was having none of it. Manual override. I was NOPING right away from whatever the hell was coming down.

I was unbelievably nauseous and thirsty. The contents of the tin cup couldn’t keep me hydrated through this eldritch Crossfit session.

‘They aren’t pretty.’ I remembered the woman say. I really didn’t want to find out how ‘not pretty’ they were.

All sorts of demonic critters filled my imagination vying for the identity of ‘They.’ The terror of this simple word is profound.

Finally, mercifully I struck the floor with an over-eager step that nearly shattered my ankle.

“Fuck…” I groaned through gritted teeth as I crawled away from the ladder. Scampering with as much haste and stealth as my overtaxed strength could still afford.

It was impossible to hide and I dared not face the thing in the dark. So I moved back as far as I could and waited.

I didn’t have to wait for long.

My god, the thing came down headfirst.


That is if you could call it a head. An eyeless bulb dotted with pulsing indentations froze me to the ground. The appendage was followed by bizarre gecko like limbs. It was disgusting to watch the serpent body thud dully on the ground.

I breathed a sigh of relief as the legs and arms sinuously scuttled salamander fashion towards the new corner.

The relief didn’t last long as I realized I’d have to follow it. The ladder was too tall and there could be more of the things up there. At least in the broad tunnels there was a chance of escape.

I considered the volume of my footsteps.

‘They see sound.’

I couldn’t identify any sense organs on the thing, no eye, no nose, no ears, just those indentations. If anything could look like it saw sound. That was probably it. I didn’t want to take any chances.

‘Be fast, be quiet, be smart.’

Right. Fast and quiet I could do. I wasn’t so sure about the smart part. I mean how could you be smart in a situation like this. There is nothing intelligible about a nightmare.

I moved through that blue world with my boots tied over my neck. Moved as swift as my besocked feet would carry me. Not long after I was presented with yet another decision.

There was an enormous cave  whose height the blue light could not illumine. The furthest wall was obscured by shadow. In the center stood a spiral staircase. Disappearing upward with the light and down into a hole.

‘Some are up, some are down, some are in, some are out, but do be careful, lest you shout.’ I remembered the pretty woman’s instruction as my mind boggled with a reinvigorated sense of the madness of the current situation.

Here beneath the soil of Dixie lay untold miles of impossible masonry. Sure the cave was probably natural but the cave’s dimensions and that damned ladder…

Who was she? Who were they? What was that light in the sky? That dragging? That critter? Nothing made sense.

So I decided to go down instead of up. Maybe this crazy dreamscape was one big game of Opposite Day. Since I’d gone down the exit should be leading back up.

‘But, not if it’s opposite day.’ I grinned at the potential childishness of the logic behind this challenge.

After inspecting the ladder for signs of that freak I again scanned the room. Amid the stalactites and stalagmites there was a strange mist that pulsed with deep blue electric currents.

‘A mini lightning storm just off the ground…’

But I hadn’t been shocked or even felt any static.

‘Be fast.’

Yeah, I figured I’d better get a move on. Not only was it an instruction it was a need. I had to have water soon. I had to have sleep.

I was so heavy, so tired, I could collapse at any moment. Who knows what sort of demon would punish me for the luxury of a nap.

Down I went.


Earth and clay pervaded my senses as I spiraled into the depths. I was by now very thirsty again. The promise of the dampening air raised hopes that there might be some kinda underground river nearby.

I descended for longer than I’d climbed the ladder. It was dizzying. The constant twirl of the spiral. After half an hour a hypnotic effect began to set in.

I floated through strange scenes in a state of semi-sleep. Garden cities in the midst of bone dry desert. Dances of transparent people comprised of star dust that reflected my own memories and memories that I felt connected to but could in no way be mine.

Then at the mark of nearly an hour I was roused by the scent of honeysuckles.

‘Was she close by?’

A few hundred more steps and I found myself in a fabulously furnished apartment. Rugs ornate with tantalizing geometries hung on mahogany walls and covered marble floors. The atmosphere was downright oriental.

There were pillows and divans atop one of which was the gracious figure of my host. She beckoned to me. I stumbled awkwardly as my feet familiarize themselves with level ground.

Once I was in earshot. Something I thought an odd necessity for a person who could transmit herself into my head. Once I was in earshot her sweet melodic voice instructed.

“First you drink.”

There just below her delicate feet was a low table with a crystal cup and golden bowl of dates. I didn’t hesitate for even an instance and drank deeply.

She smiled a smile almost as perfectly sweet and delicately balanced as this wine.

“Lay there.” She pointed at a set of pillows just across her line of sight.

“It’s creepy to watch people sleep lady.”

Her lighthearted laughter filled me with strange shivering pleasure.

“So you have remembered my riddle. You know where to go?”

I did.

“In.”

There was an approving nod.

“Go distant go deep.”

“Yes, yes that’s all this innuendo is very sexy… but first off…I’m a terrible lay, too many neuroses… so why don’t you just tell me who you are and what the hell is going on?”

“Does a beekeeper lust for her bees?”

“Oh, I’m a bee am I. Well, I certainly feel buzzed. What’s in that drink…yea…I see the sorta dame ya are..I’m nothin but a dildo to you. You kinky freak.”

“Oh, would you just shut up and sleep child!” She said throwing some sort of silver powder in my eyes.

I went distant. I went deep.

Though I don’t really recall much. Not much that makes sense anyway.

The strongest impression I have is in a sense of realization that follows me everywhere I go. That and glimpses of hanging gardens, and Masha Tool, and pinecones. I see her accused falsely and chased from the city.

I see her become a bride of Cain just outside of Nod. This is the Bible belt so why wouldn’t I infuse my native myths? Except I’ve never heard the phonetic collection that forms the word I uttered when I awoke with two confused college aged strangers in an abandoned warehouse.

On second thought it’s more like a name than a word…

La..ma..sh..tu…

It infuses everything with the scent of honeysuckle and a sense of teasing deja vu. I do not know Sarah or Todd, but I’ve come to know them in the decade since we regained consciousness at the old textiles mill.

Our odd amnesia and dreams has made us fast friends despite differences in age and personality. The two anthropology undergraduates have a strange feeling of gratitude to me. The origin of which neither they or I can place.

It expresses itself in many odd gestures such as inviting me to a dig in Iraq.


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Submitted by J.D. Newsman – Free Car (Creepypasta Sorta) – Pt IV

 


The tale continues!

Sorry for the lag in uploading/creating. End of the year is a busy time and all the rest of my excuses etc..

Also sorry for the subpar voice acting… I really would have preffered getting some dudebros together but I’m far too spent ATM to herd the sort of cats I hang about with.

Anywho hope you enjoy and here’s the script just in case you’d prefer to read it.


Doctor Borowski – The following is somethin I was able to grab with my pen. I never thought I’d use this damn thing. Bought it as a vanity at some conference in Sante Fe years back. Little recording device that let’s you get around certain pesky patients rights legalese….never thought I’d use it…much less for good. Hell I’m surprised the battery still held. I feel like James Fucking Bond here…

Agent Bisby : I’m going to remind you again, just one last time, that your prescence here is due entirely to my good humor.

Doctor Borowski: (Sighs) I think you understimate the amount of leverage I yield. These are my patients.

Agent Bisby : Only one is your patient, and he is a possible criminal.

Doctor Borowski:
Hardly.

Alan Rickman : O gee I’m so fucking scared…listen you fucking armed accountant …

Docto Borowski : Easy Alan easy…

Alan Rickman : Alright…but just for you doc…this guy right here….

Docor Borowski : That’s enough Alan…

Doctor Borowski : Are you alright Mr. Hurst?

Frank Hurst: “Alright…hahahaa…yea…”

Agent Bisby“Can you tell us what happened?”

Alan Rickman: Can anyone tell anyone anything?

Agent Bisby: Get real man.

Alan Rickman: Yea, real…ok…let’s talk reality…what do you know about Alexandria?

Agent Bisby: I’m not here for a history lesson.

Alan Rickman: I don’t think that you have a choice. You’re gonna have to humor me. Or at least that’s what you can tell yourself Mockingbird.

Agent Bisby: (after a moment of silence) Hey! Don’t call me that…

Alan Rickman: (Laughs derisively)

Agent Bisby: Trust me buckoo…ya don’t scare me one bit. I’ve seen way weirder shit than that…

Alan Rickman: That’s rather inconsequential…and…you still haven’t answered the question. What do you know about Alexandria…

Agent Bisby: It’s a city in Egypt…what about it…it’s history, the burning of the library….what?

Alan Rickman: The library.

Agent Bisby: Well, what about it? First it was accidentaly burned by Ceasar, then fell into pedantry, then was finally eradicated by Islam.

Alan Rickman: Quaint. Very quaint indeed, but I think you know better….

Agent Bisby: If you mean that paganism and platonism survived, that many libraries existed throughout the mediterannean, then yes…if you mean something else…

Alan Rickman: O I do.
Agent Bisby: I’ve never been one for guessing games.

Alan Rickman: What is theurgy?

Agent Bisby: Voodoo.

Alan Rickman: (laughs) What is demonstration?

Agent Bisby: What I’m doing now…demonstrating patience. A feat growing more and more difficult by the second.

Alan Rickman: I meant etymologically…what is demonstration?

Agent Bisby: I’m aware of the oracle of Delphi…what is your point…

Alan Rickman: My point is that there was a point to the specific destruction of the Alexandrian Library.

Agent Bisby: Alternative history is a great made for TV special but it ain’t got a thing to do with your crime.

Alan Rickman: (Laughs) My crime?

Agent Bisby: Yes, you may recall that you kidnapped and maimed Frank Hurst.

Alan Rickman: (Chuckles) Is that what he told you? That I kidnapped him.

Agent Bisby: No he has trauma induced amnesia.

Alan Rickman: And what did the good doctor here tell you.

Agent Bisby: I don’t for one instance believe that you plucked Mr. Hurst from thin air.

Alan Rickman: What in the doctors record indicates that he is prone to lyign, fanciful stories, or any particular afffinity to me?

Agent Bisby: Well nothing…

Alan Rickman: And you say you’ve seen strange things…

Agent Bisby: I am not the one being investigated right now…

Alan Rickman: And what is now?

There is a great whirring sound.

Agent Bisby and the doctor gaze around a field in astonishment.

Agent Bisby: This…this…this is my dad’s ranchouse…this is our…our pasture…our gate…

Alan Rickman: (Chuckles) I kept the docs furniture to make sure you remained in a comfortable psychoanalytic mood…

Agent Bisby: What…what the hell is happening..am I some kinda guniea pig here…was this the superintendents idea…I want answers damn it..

Alan Rickman: O come now…I don’t think you need an external authority to provide you with answers. You have yet to answer my question what is now? Let…me give you a hint…how is it that I was able to see Frank Hurst all these years?


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Submitted by J.D. Newsman – Free Car! (Creepypasta Sorta) – Part II


Part I

The Alan character sounds a bit different because I finally figured out that my mic wasn’t plugged in all the way. I’m a noob audio wise bear with me. Hope ya’ll enjoy.

The music is free domain see the last videos description for details. Too lazy to look up the link again.

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