The Scariest Creepypasta Stories You Will Ever Read

By Michael Avery in Geeks and Gaming On 20th December 2016
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Infinite Loop

In my hometown, Park City, Utah, things are usually pretty quiet and easygoing due to it being the so called, "Number 1 Ski Town" on Earth by about 15 different ski magazines. Not much happens other than the Sundance Film Festival and ski season. I am telling you this to give you some background and to let you realize that nothing paranormal or odd ever happens here or to any of it's people.

A few months ago I started sleeping more, this is because I am still a teenager and I am probably still growing. When I say sleeping more I mean a lot more. My daily routine is usually school, eating food then sleeping until the next morning which I would later come to find out is very unhealthy psychologically. This whole sleeping thing seems irrelevant but I will get into it shortly.

A dream is defined as, "A series of thoughts, images, and sensations occurring in a person's mind during sleep". The dreams I started having were more defined as an event or an occurrence. What I mean by this is that they started to seem very real and I started to believe that they were real. Some days I would think back to something believing that it was real and not even realize that it was a dream.

Then the dreams got violent. Some nights I would wake up from screams or loud noises echoing through my spine and seemingly, my house. I would always assume that they were just nightmares and go to sleep but they just kept coming back. I started losing sleep and doing whatever I could to get out of having to go to bed. It got to the point where I would even take on extra assignments at school so I could be doing something that would keep me awake.

One particular afternoon, I was sitting at my dining room table doing some physics homework when I heard a knock on the door. I got up and walked over to the door to see who was there, as normal humans do, and no one was at the door. I shut the door assuming that it was just a grade schooler playing a trick. Then I turned from the door to walk back to the table and saw my mom standing in the mud room looking at me with a puzzled face. "Was someone there?" She said.

"No it was just a doorbell ditcher." I replied

"Well don't doorbell ditchers usually ring the doorbell or knock?"

"Yeah, they did knock-"

As soon as I finished my sentence I heard my alarm clock go off and I woke up in my bed. I was very confused because I was positive that the conversation I had with my mom was real. As I sat up in my bed I realized that I was dreaming. I couldn't feel any part of my body and everything felt cold and lifeless as it usually does in a dream. My body laid back down in bed and "fell asleep" once more and once more I heard my alarm clock go off and I woke up in bed, still dreaming.

I cant seem to get out of this loop. I have tried everything. There is only one way I can think of to end this hell.

Pigment – 227

In 1966 the United States government began experimenting with the possibility of creating super humans using controlled amounts of radiation.

Volunteers for the experiment were all members of the United States military; soldiers and their wives.

The experiment entailed both the men and the women to receive a small tattoo using special eradiated ink known as ‘Pigment 227'.

After showing no signs of negative side effects from the ink, the volunteers were urged to procreate. The scientists theorized that the radiation would affect the reproductive tissues and pass alone enhanced, superior genes to the fetus.

The result were not what had been expected.

After a few months 70% of the men were diagnosed with prostrate or testicular cancers and 40% of the women were diagnosed with uterine or became completely infertile after the exposure.

The women who were able to conceive children endured particularly difficult, if not completely unnatural pregnancies. The developing fetus's were no longer growing at a normal rate.

It was reported that four of the women had labor induced at their twentieth week because the baby was too large to carry safely. The premature babies were larger than an average full term baby and were hideously, irreparably deformed. Extra limbs, missing limbs, brain damage, organ failure, blindness and deafness were documented.

One woman gave birth to twins, who developed at a normal rate but died shortly after birth. The cause of death was unknown.

After the miserable failure of the experiment the remaining vials of ‘Pigment 227' were ordered destroyed and the files on the project classified.

Two crates containing the vials were improperly labeled and escaped destruction.

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The Five Of Them

Beware, boys and girls; beware Brie Woods!

It is no place for such young children;

Monsters are lurking in its shadows,

Big and small, wicked and kind.

There are brothers that roam those woods, five of them,

looking to either guide or slay its travelers.

Heed my warning, and you might survive;

Don't, and your death is almost certain.

At the threshold stands the oldest, the Harvester,

the wisest and meekest of the brothers;

Who towers over all manor of man or beast,

Yet is more gentle than the morning dew.

Perhaps you know of the Harvester,

Who breaches the woods at dusk;

Who tills the fields as we sleep,

And returns before the break of dawn.

Yes, the Harvester has brought good fortune to our land,

But do not be deceived, children, for he offers no protection.

He dares not cross his brothers, as not his brothers him;

A blood bond that must never be broken between them.

All he offers is his wisdom and guidance,

For that is all he can give before you part ways.

But, take his words to heart and never forget,

For the other four beasts are not as kind.

Beware your surroundings, little ones,

For the fiercest brother pursues you.

The Stalker, lurking in the trees and shrubs;

Hunting the prey that roams its woods.

Yes, beware the Stalker, for he shows no mercy,

Like the lioness that watches over her cubs,

Or the hornets and bees that protect their hives;

He thrives on an abominable aggression fiercer than hellfire.

When I was young, we knew little of these beasts;

Believing them to be just that; beasts.

To us, mindless and animalistic in their nature,

And our actions were in accordance as such.

My father gathered many of our men for the hunt;

Setting out to slay these monstrosities that plagued our people.

I am still haunted by their lamentations that faded into the night,

Embraced by my weeping mother, who sought to shield me.

By morning, our eyes were laid on the wake of the hunt;

The men's skins mended together into a gruesome banner,

Stretched out along the trees in the rising sun, displayed to all our people.

Their killer's title inscribed across the flesh of my father and his men.

It's true, survival cannot be guaranteed with this encounter,

But not incredible, for there is a way.

You must run, children, run fast and far;

Run and keep your sight forward, for behind is certain death!

This beast is bloodthirsty, and nearly relentless;

His pursuit will only end with one of two means:

The first, his hunt proves bountiful;

The second, his prey comes upon its other kin, the third beast.

Yes, bloodthirsty, but not the least bit foolish.

For once you are in the company of his younger brother;

You are no longer his prey, but the guest of the Sculptor;

The most vain of the five brutish siblings.

Unlike his brother before him, the Stalker,

The Sculptor is more cordial in the presence of strangers.

He even strikes many as a kind-hearted creature,

Appearing elegant and humble in nature.

But you are not beyond the realm of danger, children;

Although the Sculptor seems pure of heart,

He is truly self-obsessed, and easily offended.

From each guest, he demands nothing less than absolute glorification.

Once you're in his presence, there are no early departures;

You are his guest until he grows weary of your company.

All the while, amusing him with melodies of flattering words and praises,

Be either his appearance or his talents, or even his artistic gifts.

As his name implies, the Sculptor's most distinguishable trait is his sculpting;

Spending many countless hours molding, carving, and chiseling away.

And what of his materials, you ask, dear children?

Well, sometimes wood, other times clay, and few times unruly guests.

Which reminds me of this story of a huntsman from our village,

Who reeked with confidence, daring to accept any challenge.

To him, the five beasts of Brie Woods were just that;

A challenge that he sought to conquer.

At its threshold, he passed the Harvester,

Who sensed the determination of the huntsman.

He besought him to reconsider continuing forward;

"You will not make it far like that!" he warned.

The huntsman scoffed at the first beast's pleas,

Presuming his words were a means of intimidation.

He continued into the woods, where the next of the five waited,

Leaving the gentle Harvester in a daze.

Well, days passed, then weeks, and then months;

And there was no evidence of the huntsman's return.

Many wondered of his fate, but only I was determined to seek the truth.

In the dead of night, I slipped from my bed and hurried to the fields.

There, the lonesome Harvester tended the soil,

I anxiously asked, "What of the huntsman?"

The lofty creature looked down to me,

And with a somber note he answered;

"He was swift and spirited,

Eluding the Stalker's grasp,

But was far too assured;

And was ceased by the presence of the Sculptor.

The Sculptor gave to him a nod,

But the huntsman did not return it.

The Sculptor gave to him his charm,

But the huntsman only gave to him his tongue.

The Sculptor prepared them a pipe and puffed once,

But the huntsman puffed twice.

The Sculptor prepared them tea and took a spoonful of sugar,

But the huntsman took two spoonfuls.

The Sculptor prepared them a feast,

But the huntsman gave him no thanks.

The Sculptor offered him a gift,

But the huntsman demanded more.

And the Sculptor was rattled.

But the huntsman remained odious."

"But what became of him?" I persisted,

And the Harvester drew a small, crimson effigy from his hide.

"For the Sculptor, the company was excruciating;"

He sighed, bestowing upon me the sculpture,

"For the huntsman, his was dealt back tenfold."

And with that, we spoke no more of the matter.

Leave your confidence at home, children;

For that was the mistake the huntsman made!

You should be timid and respectful,

Or you will be modeled into his next piece.

If the evening is satisfactory, you'll be allowed to depart;

Only to continue deeper into the woods.

Confrontation with the fourth beast, however, is preventable;

Just fight shy of the scent of ginger and ash.

Though, like the Stalker, he may just find you instead;

The Brewer, the most debaunched of the five.

A stumbling, bumbling, drunken brute,

Seeking to indulge himself with a lavished feast.

He offers to all travelers of the woods his brew,

A deceptive concoction, contrived to tempt any mortal.

Enticing them with a heavenly scent that is nearly irresistible,

But you must resist, boys and girls!

Do not partake of the drink,

You cannot let it woo you!

With only a droplet of the repugnant ale,

You will fall into an eternal rest!

And when you are exposed and defenseless,

The Brewer lets his true intentions be known.

He devours his unsuspecting prey,

Slow and agonizingly, bit by bit.

Your will must be far greater to overcome this enticement,

It is the only thing that separates you from life and death.

The Brewer cannot force you to sip from his cup;

Neither drink, nor sip, or even taste the Brewer's brew!

Try as he might, you must not succumb;

Brace yourselves and persist,

For you must regain your bearings for what waits ahead.

The fifth and final son of Brie Woods, the Spoiled.

With laughter like sobs, and sobs like laughter,

He skitters along the forest floor, like vile vermin.

Driven by a tormentful desire for what others possess,

He will do anything imaginable to acquire them.

The brat of Brie Woods stalks its wanderers,

Knowing what is most precious to them at that moment.

He will give you only one chance to decide,

With only two options to choose from.

You can surrender what he demands willingly,

And he'll leave you to escape the woods;

Or, you can choose to refuse,

And he will relieve you of it in death.

You do not see many strangers to our village,

And that is owed to the Spoiled.

They are not as fortunate to first encounter the Harvester,

Who offers his guidance to ensure them safe passage.

No, for them, they travel with uncertainty,

With no understanding of what lurks in wait.

And when the Spoiled makes his presence know,

They attempt to resist him, and are met with a terrible fate.

A young outsider succeeded in escaping to the safety of our village,

Having eluded the beasts that would surely have stopped her.

And she recalled the chilling tale of how she survived,

And how truly horrific it was to have met with the Spoiled.

Her people had been wandering the land for much time,

Searching for a new home in times of famine.

Seeking what precious land waited for them on the other side,

They journeyed forth into the treacherous Brie Woods.

It wasn't long before they were met by the youngest brother of the woods,

Who knew of the many goods and valuables they brought on their travels.

From each, he demanded what he claimed as his, or they would travel no further.

But, they were far too naive to submit to him, and instead sought to kill him.

The beast held his own against their men,

But was soon overpowered by their great numbers.

The Spoiled desperately cried out, as he would surely have perished,

But then, there came a fierce thunder from the woods.

And ferociously from the woods, came his four brethren;

The Brewer, the Sculptor, the Stalker, and the Harvester.

With wrathful intentions, they struck fiercely,

Slaughtering those that harmed their helpless baby brother.

Only one escaped the onslaught, the young outsider;

Who hid away in the trunk of a Weeping Willow,

Watching as her people were killed, looted, and devoured.

Then, slipped away to our village while the five brothers basked in their victory.

But, you see, children, her tale does not end there,

For her arrival has brought more trouble than good.

The Harvester has not tilled the fields in much time,

And our crop have ceased to grow, leaving us to starve.

The brothers of Brie Woods are scorned,

And demand from us atonement.

What wrong have we done?

We have stolen that which belongs to the Spoiled.

Tonight, children, we will atone for our sins,

And we will return what we so foolishly have taken.

Tonight, sweet children, say us a prayer,

For tonight we must go into the woods.

Fallen Angel

I don't like it here

The room is cold and claustrophobic. The walls seem to close in on me if I look at them for too long which is kind of hard, saying that all that consists in my room is a bed, a desk with a chair and those damned fucking four white walls.

Hardly anyone ever comes in here. Anyone except the nurses, wearing those infuriatingly white uniforms (They really like that colour don't they? It drives me mental, hurts my eyes). They stare at me as though I've grown an extra head and don't even attempt at starting a conversation. All they tell me is that I'll be in here for a while a month, a year perhaps. It depends on my ‘progress' as they put it. I don't understand what the fuck they're on about but they assure me I'm doing fine. Whatever

After a few weeks of being here and eavesdropping in conversations I shouldn't be listening to, I've learned three things:

I'm on Ward 3, Section A

I must be monitored every two hours by at least two qualified members of staff

And I require electro-shock therapy as part of my psychological treatment

Bullshit!

I know I'm not insane. I do. I know it. They tell me I'm gonna get better with time and care but I don't need to be looked after, do I? I'm fine. Perfectly fine! They shouldn't be wasting their time on someone who's sane. It's pointless!

I don't want to stay here anymore! I want to go home!

I don't know where I am or what I've done to deserve this!

God fucking dammit! There is nothing wrong with me, you sick bastards!

I'm not insane!

I didn't kill my fucking sister!

The nurses are running in now with the orderlies. Oh fuck, the needles, not again. My body writhes and struggles out of instinct and I lash out at one of the orderlies and scratch down his face. But I mean, come on, who would blame me. It's not fair. I don't need this, I'm fine.

I feel myself slipping into unconsciousness as the world around me fades into shadows. I enjoy this part of passing out. It's comforting. Endless oblivion, complete weightlessness. I feel numb but, hey, at least I don't have to look at those walls anymore! The dark envelopes me as though it's my shield away from the world. Sleep is the one time I can relax. At least until I start dreaming

I never used to have night terrors like so many others however, now, they seems to be making up for lost time. Ever night, after drifting off listening to the cries and the screams of the patients, those faces will constantly appear and torture my poor fatigued mind. They're never clear so I can't identify the figures in my nightmares but, my God, I feel like I've seen them somewhere before. I just can't put my finger on it.

Their terrifying visages will morph into that of demons mouths ripped open wide in a silent scream, eyes bulging, blood dripping from their sockets. I can never move in my dreams. It's like sleep paralysis but I'm not awake, far from it. I'm left competently defenceless as they crawl all over me, bearing their inhuman features and dragging their nails down my chest, tearing through the skin and muscle to reveal my rib cage. It's always the same dream as well. I'm laid on a bed, assumedly in my room, it's nighttime and I can't see anything except the hazy outlines of a door. I feel like I'm going to fall into sleep when the door opens. I hear a muffled voice, feminine, telling me to come with them. My body obeys and I follow the strange woman out of the room.

The setting changes to that of a forest. There's no light, excluding the moon hanging high in the sky above us. This is when I become paralysed. All is silent until there is a sudden snap behind me. Obviously, I can't turn around so my other senses go into overdrive. I hear the wind whistle around me, even my own heart beat at a fast rate but other than that, it's silent once again. My eyes now accustomed to the dark make out a shape in the blackness. Upon further inspection, it's a girl. Standing around 5′ 7 with blonde shoulder length hair. She's just stood there staring at me, it's fucking unnerving.

After a while she'll move towards me and this is when her face becomes blurry and starts to transform. She'll grab my upper arms and force me down to the woodland floor, roots and rocks jabbing into my spine. I cry out but still can't move. Moving down to my level, she'll crawl up my body to straddle my abdomen and move her hand to my cheek. Hyperventilating now, my breaths start occurring more rapidly and much more shakily. She says something I can't make out and then lets out a little giggle. Grabbing my throat, she drags her sharp nails down from my neck to my lower stomach. Even though it's just a dream, it's agony. This appears to amuse my attaccker and she starts to laugh uncontrollably. I scream and try to move but can't. Fucking can't! All I see is red emerging from my body and a hint of white skeletal bone. At this point the woman above me is practically howling with laughter and she rests her head on my shoulder. When she eventually moves back into her upright position, she'll smirk and reach deep into my chest cavity and pull out my still beating heart. This is the time I'd usually wake up, sweat leaking out of every pore, screaming my lungs out. But now, as I spiral deeper and deeper into unconsciousness, my dream continues. I cry out in absolute torture as the woman above me, sighs deeply and says in a calm yet angered voice,

"You know, I never betrayed you. You brought this on yourself, Hun. Now they can all turn their attention to me. Congratulate me. Get down on their fucking knees and worship me!"

She shrugs and runs a bloody finger down the side of my face and smiles. My broken body slowly drains what remaining life I have left. My vision darkens.

"This isn't jealously, my angel, this is justice. This is for your own good. I love you Jenny!"

Jenny. I know that name.

Jennifer West. My sister. My dead fucking sister.

How could anyone do this?! Jenny was a goddess. Everyone loved her. They would always admire her and do whatever she saw fit. Everything about her was amazing! Her laugh, her smile, her oh so angelic face. No one would hurt her. No one.

I'm awake now but I'm not screaming like I always do. In fact, I'm laughing.

I get up and walk towards small desk I have in my room. Hunching over it, my laughter only intensifies. I can't control myself. My whole body is shaking and convulsing as I drag my nails down the wooden desk. I stop laughing for a moment to acknowledge what I'd done. I look down at the scratched wood. Long incisions mark the table. Wow, I never knew my nails were tough enough to do that!

Only then do I reflect on my words and finally understand. Looking down at my nails, I see blood coating the underside of hard surface. Not exactly fresh blood but blood all the same. Weird, I haven't cut myself have I? No.

Hm, funny. It kinda reminds me of my dream. But I knew I couldn't do this! I love my sister with all my heart! She is perfect. I never really minded being number two and always living in her shadow because, well, I adored my sister. She deserved the attention much more than I did. Much like anyone else, I envied her but that's the same with all younger siblings isn't it? Rivalry. Always wanting to be better. Right?

Right?

I didn't kill her. I didn't kill my sister. I couldn't. She was an angel.

But some angels have to fall, don't they?

The Dripping Man

When I was very little, I met my very best friend.

I was quite the fearless little child, so I wasn't afraid of him. Though, I do think most little kids might've been. But, I was a boy, and by my logic that meant I wasn't supposed to be scared of anything. Even if I was little, I was still a boy.

I met him when I was five. I was at a park with my twin sister, Abby. I had just made my way down the slide. That was one of my favorite things. Feeling the wind in my face, the thrill of the fall, even if it were just a gradual slope that lasted two seconds at the very most. I popped right back up after getting to the end and whirled around to run right back to the ladder that would again lead me to my second long thrill.

That was when I saw him. He lingered in the shade of a tree at the edge of the park, peeking out behind the trunk. Everything my mother had told me about not talking to strangers flew out the window as I turned to look at him.

"Hi! My name's Tyler. I'm five whole years old, and I can count to fifteen all on my own!" I cheered, giving a typical five year old's greeting. Something about being little, you just want to be the biggest show off you can.

He was very quiet. He didn't say a word in response to me, which to me at the time was pretty rude. Maybe he was just shy. Yes, that must've been it. I looked to the slide and then back to him. He was still there. In fact, he seemed to have come out a little more. I could see most of him now, when before I'd only seen his head and his shoulder.

"Do you want a turn?" I asked calmly.

He didn't say anything, but he did respond with a very slight shake of his head.

"No, huh? Well that's your loss, I guess." I considered turning back to the slide, but that's when I got a great idea.

I would ask this fellow to be my friend! Yes yes! That's just what I'd do. I didn't quite know why I wanted this man to be my friend, or why I felt so drawn to him. Maybe it was that his skin, slimy looking from what I could see, was pitch black. Maybe it was that where his face should have been was just a smooth surface. No dips for eyes, not a bump for a nose. A blank template, is what I could best describe it as. As for the rest of him, he didn't seem to be clothed. He didn't seem to have any genitalia, but I knew he couldn't be a girl. He didn't have those bumps on his chest that my mom and all other mom's seemed to have. And his skin, just like that on his face was smooth and slimy.

"Weeelll." I lingered on that word. "Do you wanna be my friend?"

He seemed excited by my question. He stepped out from behind the tree. He was nodding vigorously.

Looking back on it, I'm fairly sure other kids would've either cried, or have pissed themselves. Most probably would've done both. But I didn't. I felt quite the opposite of either of those things. I just knew me and this man would be very good friends.

My sister and I had always been very, very close, so logically I was thrilled to introduce the two.

I beckoned my new friend to follow me with a wave of my hand, and I turned to run across the park to the swings, my sister's favorite spot. When I got there, though slightly out of breath, I spoke quickly. "Abby! Abby! I want you to meet my new friend!"

Abby looked up to me. "Where is he?"

"Right here!" I exclaimed happily, turning around to face my friend. It was then I discovered he wasn't behind me like he should've been. She giggled. "We're gonna be in first grade soon, Tyler. You should know imaginary friends are for babies."

I furrowed my brow. My friend certainly wasn't imaginary. But where could he have gone?

Ah. There he was. Back behind his tree. His head poking out had given him away to me. He must've some how seen I was looking at him, as he raised one hand, shiny with slime, and waved at me.

I waved back. "I'm gonna play with Abby now, okay? I'll see you next time I guess!" I called to him. I don't know if he heard me, but I was pretty sure I saw him nod.

When I turned back to Abby. She simply rolled her eyes at me before giggling. "C'mon. Lets go play on the rock wall!"

I smiled and nodded. "Yeah!" With one last look back, I didn't see my friend anymore. But I was sure he was still somewhere near, and so, satisfied with that feeling, I went to go play with Abby.

That night I saw him again. He visited me while I was climbing into my bed. My sister and I shared a room at the time, so I was very thrilled that he was there. Certainly she'd be able to meet him now.

"Abby!"

She rolled over so that she could face me, and she brushed her blonde hair out of her face with a hand, red with a sunburn. "Yeah?"

"Look, Abby! My friend's here! Say hi to him." I grinned.

My cheer turned to confusion as she looked around the room, clearly oblivious to my friend standing there. "Tyler," she murmured, her voice fairly heavy with sleep, "just go to bed."

"But, Abby."

Too late now, she'd already rolled over. I waited a moment, giving her a few minutes to fall asleep enough so that my talking wouldn't wake her. I turned to my friend and jumped a bit, finding him at the foot of my bed. Don't get to thinking wrong, I wasn't scared. I'm a boy after all. But I hadn't heard him move, nor had I felt him sit down. So you could say I was a little surprised.

That was when he talked to me.

He told me if I wanted to I could call him The Dripping Man, and that he wanted so badly to be my very best friend. I was puzzled at the name, but I managed to figure it out on my own. It must have been because he was so slimy. Surely that gunk proved quick messy. I told him that'd I stick to just calling him Drippy, if he didn't mind. The Dripping Man just seemed too formal of a name for little five year old me to call him. The name has stuck throughout the years.

I then asked a question that I was sure would throw him off. Why couldn't my sister see him?

He wasn't as stumped as I'd hoped, as proceeded to explain how you had to be super special to hear him, even more special to see him. Since I was now his friend, I guess it made me pretty special, ‘cause I could do both of those things. I asked him a few more questions. Another little kid thing, I guess. Adults, unless really confused or just stupid, never asked that many.

That night I certainly hadn't been expecting him, but I didn't mind him showing up either. Little did I know this was a good thing, ‘cause he'd be showing up every night for a very, very long while.

Skip a few years. My sister and I were now turning 10.

Abby were still very close, and I relied on her a lot. She didn't seem to mind my clinginess. I also noticed that though she was used to it, she seemed slightly annoyed whenever I brought up Drippy. That was another person I was still very close to. I was still very best friends with Drippy.

I'd learned so many things about Drippy over the years. I learned that I'm not his only friend. He has many friends all over the world. A lot of them were kids, but there were some adults too. He just found the children so much easier to make friends with. So many friends in so many places, I couldn't help but to feel like I wasn't so special to him anymore. But he ensured me I was his favorite. That made me feel better.

I also learned that some of his friends didn't even know they were his friends. In fact, some of them had never even seen him before. I was baffled as to how that worked, but I didn't question it. I trusted him.

But, I did want to know just how he kept in touch with these friends. I learned these friends weren't special enough to see him but they could hear him.

If you've ever heard your name called out, but no one you could find was the source, don't worry. If you've ever found something that wasn't where you left it, don't worry. If you ever heard knocking on the walls or footsteps when no one was there. If you've ever seen a shadow in the corner of your eye, but when you looked it wasn't anywhere to be found. Don't worry. It was just Drippy.

I also learned that Drippy was very close to me. He really did care. Whenever kids bullied me for still having an imaginary friend I'd always get upset. Drippy made sure they'd leave me alone, and sure enough I never had anymore than just one run in with my long line of bullies.

Abby bullied me too time to time. Drippy didn't like that. He also didn't like how close I was to her. I think he was jealous. But I told him it was okay. She never meant it when she teased me, and he was still my very best friend. I think that worked.

Lastly, and most importantly I learned you should never, never ever make Drippy mad. Never. Because when Drippy is mad, he is very, very scary.

I saw him mad once. He had just come to visit me, but he was furious, and with his different mood, his appearance too was different.

His mouth seemed to have torn itself free of his slimy face, the top lip dripping, and sticking to the bottom whenever he closed his mouth, causing him to have to rip it open again, a tearing noise as gruesome as the sight.

His fingers seemed knife-like, and his arms never seemed to be the same size. Looking back on it, his whole body seemed to grow and lengthen at will. He looked so thin when he stretched out like that. You could even see the shaped of his bones if he went far out enough.

And his screams. Oh god his screams were more terrifying than the shrieks of a dying animal. All of this mixed with the sound of constant dripping.

To calm him down, I had to hide a lot and shout from my hiding spot, telling him, begging him to "please please please, calm down Drippy! It's okay now!"

It took me almost half an hour to calm him down, but I finally did. I only had a scratch on my forearm to show for it.

He pleaded for my forgiveness. He said it wasn't my fault. His other friend had gone and broken his heart. He had only come to me because he knew I'd calm him down. I was just that special I guess.

Truth be told, I was still shaking when I agreed to forgive him. That was the first time I'd ever been scared of Drippy. The first time I'd ever been scared at all. He promised me he'd never be mad at me. Somehow, I doubted it. But, for the next few years, he stayed true to his word.

Today, Drippy broke the promise he made to me six years ago. He is very, very upset with me.

My mom's on a business trip right now. She left a week ago and won't be back for another three weeks. So in the time she's been gone, I've felt the need to be very close to Abby.

Last night Abby and I got into a fight. She accused me of being clingy. Too clingy. She demanded time to herself. Snapped and said she didn't want to be associated with some baby who still talked to himself. She said she didn't want me to be so close to her. To go away. To leave her alone. To shut up. To just fuck off.

I think she made Drippy mad when she said those things.

After the fight I retreated to my room, sobbing. I was always very emotional, the emotion I'd felt the least in my life shining out. Fear. First I had been scared of Drippy. Now I was scared my sister didn't want me. Little did I know how soon I would be scared again.

I woke up this morning and I got up with an aching head. I was sure it was from the crying. I staggered to my sister's room. I wanted to apologize to her. For everything I guess.

I knocked on her door. She was an early bird and it was 9:30 in the morning, so surely she'd be up. Oddly enough she didn't respond. Maybe she was still mad. So I opened the door slightly. "Abby?"

I peeked inside, and I wanted to throw up. Had I eaten before, I would've. Before me I saw Drippy, calm looking but surely furious before. He stood over a heap. A combination of soft, pale flesh and splatters of crimson.

Abby.

I went to talk, my voice hitching in my throat, a soft squeak being the only noise to come from me.

He whirled around to face me. He told me he did this for me.

As a wave of rage washed over me, my voice tore from my throat. "Demon!" I screamed at him. "She was my sister! MY SISTER! You just killed my sister! I hate you! I didn't want this!" I sobbed, turning away as I watched him twitch in anger. I rushed back down the hallway screaming as I went that I hated him. I hated him. Soon his screaming accompanied my sobbing.

I slammed the door behind me. I locked it and got my laptop. I need to write this. I need to.

I need to write this now because I want to warn you while I have the time. Drippy is very mad at me. I strongly believe I'll be joining Abby soon. But I have one more thing to tell you.

Please, be careful of Drippy.

Please, if you see him, please be careful of my old friend.

We Don’t Deliver

After moving to a small town in southern Michigan I got a job as a cashier in the local store. After work I would walk home to my small house and order a small pizza.

This was my routine for two weeks when things took a strange turn. I called in my usual order to the pizzeria when a new voice, one I hadn't heard before answer the phone and told me "The usual? No problem. I'll deliver it in less than five minutes."

Sure enough within five minutes my order was delivered and it was exactly what I had ordered every night before. When I tried to give the delivery boy a tip he declined, he said he didn't need it and that he was just working at the pizzeria to get out of the house and to try and meet new people.

This became my new routine for about three months. I'd order the same pizza and the same deliver boy would stop by at the same time. It was sort of a running joke between us how he knew my routine so well and that I always had exactly what he needed.

When I grew tired of eating the same thing every night. On my way home I stopped at the small diner across the street from the pizza place and had a nice dinner. Through the window I saw my usual delivery boy leave the pizzeria with a box in hand, heading toward my block.

I returned home, later than usual, and I found a pizza box sitting on my doorstep. On the box was a note that said, "Missed you. Guess I'll get what you owe me tomorrow."

This creeped me out. I called the pizzeria and told the manager what I had found. I told him about the message and that for the past three months the same delivery boy had been stopping by and that I was sure he was the one who left the note.

It was then the manager told me something I never expected. "Ma'am, we don't deliver."

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Apogee Perturbation

In the late nineties, scientists conducted the Distant Snake Experiment. The experiment consisted of putting a one-man-capsule in a distant orbit around Earth. They would be suspended in solitary confinement for two months, logging their mental status and their physical status during that time. However, the experiment was shut down shortly after it was created due to strange complications. The experiment puts a man inside a vessel, then puts that vessel in a 400,000 kilometer orbit around earth. After failing to get any vessels far enough into space their first two attempts, on the third try they had managed to do it. Astronaut Duncan Vanguard was sent into a distant orbit around Earth. While reaching 400,000 kilometers he had full contact with Earth. However, once he had reached his orbit the station would no longer respond to any of his messages from space. No matter what Duncan said while up there, none of the scientists could legally respond. A full orbit would take about a two months, but the mission only lasted twenty-nine days.

Everything went wrong when Duncan Vanguard went behind the moon. The moon orbits Earth at about 385,000 kilometers. The scientists planned for the moon being there. Something the scientists didn't realize, though, is how fast the moon would come back around and block out communication between him and Earth. Because they were only a few thousand kilometers away in orbit, Duncan's transmission was blocked out for three days. Scientists couldn't communicate with him during that dead zone that occurred on day twenty-four and ended on day twenty-seven. He never made another transmission after coming out from behind the moon. Two days of silence passed until the government shut down the Distant Snake Experiment. Experienced pilots remotely piloted the spacecraft out of orbit and back down to Earth. Only to find that Duncan was no longer in the spacecraft. Duncan's blood was found smeared along the inside of the cockpit as well as multiple notes he presumably wrote to log his mental status while communications were lost. After reading Duncan Vanguard's notes, they concluded that his mental stability dropped rapidly during the time he was behind the moon.

Even though he was thousands of kilometers away from the moon, he could still see how massive it was. Duncan watched everyday as the moon crept closer and closer. He commented about it multiple times in his audio logs that automatically transmitted back down to mission control. On day twenty-four the moon completely covered up Duncan's visibility of Earth, blocking out all communications. He had officially lost the ability to transmit audio logs. Any time he turned the transmitter on he got static so he left it off. His shuttle was about the size of a bathroom. He had two porthole-type windows, one facing Earth and one facing the endless void of space, it had a small bed, a desk, and a light on the ceiling. On the desk there were multiple pieces of paper and some writing utensils in case of boredom. The moon was so close to the shuttle, it blocked out all light from the Sun. The only light he had was the one above his head. All he could hear was the sound of his beating heart, the humming of the light, and the ominous creaking of the vessel.

Duncan was alone with his thoughts for hours as he stared out at the stars. He wondered how far out space went, or if it ever stopped. Hours past with nothing happening, and Duncan figured that's how the next few days would probably be like. Suddenly, the transmitter turned on, creating an eerie static sound. Duncan walked over to the transmitter and flicked the switch on and off again. The static remained playing. White noise hung in the air like thick fog. He couldn't get the noise to stop. He realized that he would probably have to live with it. He also hoped he could still log transmissions and that the machine fixed itself once he came out from behind the moon. After a while, Duncan began to feel tired, he had no way of telling what time it was besides that when he felt tired, he slept. He shut off the lights and sat in bed for what seemed like forever. Finally, he fell asleep.

He was woken up by a horrible, distorted scream coming from the transmitter. He shot out of bed and turned on the transmitter to speak. The scream was deafening.

"Hello!?" he yelled into the mic. "Hello? Who's there? Are you okay?"

The screaming stopped, leaving only the white noise of static. Duncan could hear ringing in his ears and feel his heart thumping out of his chest. The staticky, distorted voice spoke again. "Help."

"Do you need help?" Duncan questioned as fear and curiosity rattled his bones. "I can help you. Who is this?"

Static played through the transmitter.

"Nobody can help," the raspy voice spoke again like an injured man, pausing between each painful word.

"I can help you! Even if I can't, I could get someone to help"

"You," the static voice interrupted.

White noise sat inside the vessel with Duncan. "What?"

"Nobody can help you."

The volume of the static increased as Duncan tried to speak. "What does that mean?"

The voice never responded. He felt sweat roll down his forehead. Moments passed as he stood,

waiting for a reply. Suddenly, the static voice screamed, piercing his eardrums. He covered his ears with his hands. The sound brought him to the floor, wincing in pain. The lights flickered rapidly as the scream grew louder. Duncan screamed in pain, but it couldn't be heard over the transmitter. With the sound of an explosion, everything went black. Duncan lay still on the floor with his eyes closed, hands still covering his ears. Moments passed until he finally gathered himself and opened his eyes. Not that it mattered, he could barely see anything. The light in his room and everything else electronic had completely shut down. He sat as his eyes adjusted to the darkness before standing up. The static had stopped.

Duncan sat on his bed, wide awake. He reached underneath his bed and pulled out a cooler full of canned food. He chose the most appetizing one for his breakfast, canned peaches. He hated peaches, but he hated broccoli more, so he chose the peaches. He grabbed a piece of paper and a pen from his desk. As he ate, he began writing down his experiences because the transmitter was no longer an option. Duncan felt as if he could still hear the scream. He'd never felt so much pain and anger and sorrow in one voice.

Duncan sat at his desk, staring out the window and into the stars, lost in thought. He sat for hours, changing positions from lying down in bed to sitting on the floor. Occasionally, he would think he heard the static again. The voice would haunt him for the rest of his life and, according to the voice, his life wasn't going to be very long. He tried to not let it get to him, but it sat in the back of his mind, lingering.

Duncan found himself staring out the window again, the stars stared at him like dead eyes. As he examined the stars, he felt uneasy. Duncan watched carefully, feeling an anxious buildup in his stomach rise. Then he saw it, a single star disappeared. Duncan thought he'd officially gone crazy, but he knew what he saw. A single star with seemingly nothing special about it, except for the fact that it was no longer there. Duncan's train of thought was interrupted by a knocking sound coming from the door of the shuttle.

Knock, knock, knock.

Duncan fumbled away from the door in shock, questioning what he had just heard. He stood in the center of the dark room, staring down the door. The sound of nothingness was so thick, it seemed as if his heartbeat was deafening in his ears. Then it happened again, the same as before.

Knock, knock, knock.

He felt like he couldn't breathe. He shook off his confusion, leaving only terror upon his face. "That's not possible," he whispered to himself. "H-How can this even be happening?"

Knock, knock, knock.

Wiping the sweat from his forehead, he tried not to panic. Eyeing the door, he looked out of the porthole. He saw nothing except space filled with stars, along with one missing. He didn't dare speak, he had no idea what would happen. He couldn't see what was out there, but he could feel it.

He could feel it begging to come inside.

Knock, knock, knock.

Duncan watched as his hand rose up towards the hatch of the door. He forced his arm down to his side. Why would he even think about opening the door; it would kill him. The knocking seemed to be beckoning for him. It seemed rude to not open the door. He wouldn't let himself do it. He stood in the darkness for what seemed like ages, the knocking seemed to have stopped. Slowly, he crept over to the porthole, the star was still missing and he still felt a presence.

Duncan slowly crept towards the door and put his ear against it. He heard nothing. He realized he had been holding his breath and he exhaled.

Knock, knock, knock.

Duncan fell backwards onto the floor, startled. He had felt the vibrations of the knocking on his face. He knew it was no illusion. He sat up on the floor and angrily spoke towards the door. "Who are you?"

Knock, knock, knock.

Frustrated, he ran up and slammed his fist against the door. "What do you want from me?" he yelled.

Silence filled the cabin. Duncan's clenched his teeth with anger as he stared down the door, daring it to respond. Moments of silence passed with no response. Finally, it knocked again.

Bang!

Duncan's arms fell to his side in shock as the color ran from his face. "Did you just Copy me?" he spoke under his breath.

Bang!

He hated feeling like a coward, and he wasn't the cowardly type, but he wished he was home. He didn't want to be in that God forsaken shuttle any more. That thing outside his shuttle wasn't just some weird phenomenon, but whatever was out there could learn. Every few minutes the noise came again, asking to be let in.

Duncan crawled into bed, facing the door. He sat for hours listening to the banging and eating, he was too scared to sleep. Eventually, his body got the better of him and he fell into an uncomfortable sleep.

He woke up to the banging. It was never a lot of banging at once, just one knock every few minutes, but it drove him insane.

"Did you stay up all night to knock on my door?" he spoke sarcastically.

Bang!

"I'll take that as a yes," he groaned as he rubbed sleep from his eyes.

He grabbed some food for breakfast, he hated broccoli, but it was all that was left. As he ate, he logged what happened the previous night on a sheet of paper. He looked over to the transmitter and the transmitting light was on. He got up and walked over to the machine. The power was still out in the cabin, yet the transmitter was on. Its green light seemed blinding in the dark room. "What are you doing on?" he spoke to himself.

After listening closely he realized that the static had filled the room, he just hadn't noticed until now. He wondered how long that had been going on without him noticing. The transmitting light had definitely not been on that whole time, he knew that for sure.

Bang! Bang! Bang!

"Open," the static spoke with its own voice.

Duncan was petrified. He glanced at the door and back at the transmitter. Terrified, but curious, he walked over to the door. The knocks had seemed angrier than before. He stared quizzically at the door.

Bang! Bang! Bang!

"Let us in," the voice hissed through the static.

"I'm not letting you in," Duncan whispered. Although, the urge to open the hatch made his hand twitch. Even though he knew he shouldn't open that door.

Bang! Bang! Bang!

"Let us in!" it screamed.

"What do you mean, ‘us.'"

The transmitter made a horrifying crackling and scratching sound. Duncan went over and looked out of the window to find that all of the stars were disappearing one by one. The transmitter began filling with thousands of staticky voices, all of them different. They were all wailing and screaming to be let in. Banging came from every side of the shuttle. The feedback from the radio was deafening. Thousands of voices, male and female, all screaming and wailing, together they sounded just like static. Perhaps he had been hearing them screaming from a distance all this time, and now that they were outside his shuttle the noise was painful.

Duncan's nose and ears began bleeding uncontrollably. The urge to open the door pressed on him like never before. He walk as far away from the door as possible, his hands were covered in his blood. He stood on his bed and pressed against the wall, trying to get as far away from the door as he could. A force he couldn't explain caused him to walk towards the door. With his face covered in blood and his eyes filled with tears, Duncan leaned against the cabin door. The screaming was unbearably painful, emotionally and physically. All the voices pleading that the door be opened, and the constant banging coming from every wall filled him with fear and depression. He felt bad, what if they actually needed his help.

He closed his eyes, flicked the switch, and the door shot open. Blissful silence filled his ears. Shortly, he realized that no vacuum had pulled him outside of the ship. Opening his eyes, he saw the blackness of space without stars. He stepped outside of the ship to find that he could stand on the nothingness that was space. He walked out a few feet and looked around, the moon was gone. There was nothing but emptiness. Duncan heard the shuttle door close behind him. He turned around simply to find that his shuttle was far in the distance. Examining the area around him, he and saw thousands of people standing at different heights in space, wailing and screaming. They were scattered around like stars. In the distance, he saw himself inside the spacecraft, with the colossal moon blocking the sun from hitting it. He saw himself looking out the porthole of the ship. Suddenly, static filled Duncan's ears and he felt a presence with him, an evil presence. Whatever it was, Duncan could tell it wanted to hurt him, it would laugh at the thought of him being frightened. He couldn't hold still, he needed to get away from the being that lingered behind him, breathing down his neck.

Duncan ran towards the the shuttle, it felt like we was running for miles. The sense of evil felt like it was getting closer every second. He finally reached the spacecraft and he tried to open the door. It was locked. He tried to scream, but he couldn't. Duncan wanted nothing more than to get away from that the terrors that lay outside the shuttle. He began to slam his hand into the shuttle door in an effort to escape the nightmare.

Knock, knock, knock.

Mason

It was a dark and rainy day in February when I was hit by a small red pick up. February 15th. I was told I flew 15 feet before landing smack on my head. Apparently the driver was drunk and didn't see me crossing.

I don't remember that day at all.

Four weeks I slept, in a coma that many feared I would never come out of. I was placed in a ward of children and teens with major bodily harm or disease. My roommate was a boy named Mason. I never did find out his last name. For the time in which I slept, he found out bits and pieces of me from my various visitors. My favorite color, what music I liked, and other random things.

The day I woke up, I was showered with love and attention from my family and it took me almost an hour to realize the presence of the boy laying in the bed beside me. He flashed me a lopsided grin and quietly went back to the book he was reading.

Eventually I was left in peace and after about 20 minutes of mental debate, I spoke up and asked him his name. His voice was smooth and low and never failed to make me shudder. We spent the rest of the evening playing 20 questions and becoming familiar with each other.

Eventually, my doctor would break our quality time and give me the low down on my injuries and what the healing process would be like. He told me that when I was hit, not only did I give myself a nasty concussion, but my legs were also broken in my oh so gracefully landing.

They said I had a 60% chance of ever walking again.

We became close instantaneously. The nurses would laugh and say we already looked like an old married couple bundled up in bed watching whatever soap opera happened to be on television. Mason would just flash me his trademark grin while I blushed and buried my face in his chest.

We both had our good days and bad ones, Mason and I. On a particularly tough day of treatment for him, we both lay together with him trembling in my arms. I'll never forget the feeling of his soft hiccups or the knot at the pit of my stomach. I finally got up my courage and asked him the million dollar question.

He had Hodgkin's disease. I don't think either of us slept that night.

While my legs were transitioned from casts to braces, Mason's chemotherapy began. However, without fail, when I'd come back frustrated or in tears over a difficult session of therapy, he'd be there to comfort me with soothing words and reruns of I Love Lucy.

Over the weeks, the chemo began to take it's toll. His brown curls thinned to almost nothing, dark circles took permanent residence under his eyes, and his skin turned as pale as snow. As my legs grew stronger, the day I was released no longer seemed like something to look forward to.

The day we decided to shave his hair was the day I broke down. I told him I would do anything; give blood, bone marrow, anything to make him get better faster, but he just shot me his smile that instantly made me melt and wiped my tears away.

60%. Mason had a sixty percent chance of beating his demons. Same as me.

On May 12, I was officially released from room 104. I would walk with a limp most likely for the rest of my life. Every other day I would visit Mason. Each time I would leave we would take a picture together. Over the months I could compare our first picture and our most recent one and see how much he was deteriorating. It was heartbreaking.

August 17 was the first time I lost him. Overnight a high fever had broken out and his heart stopped for 4 1/2 minutes. Those were the worst minutes of my life. I sat outside his room in an uncomfortable plastic chair watching the nurses I knew all too well scrambling back and forth attempting to save his fragile life.

I didn't leave his side until he squeezed my hand, winked, and told me to go home and take a shower.

After that, I vowed I would never let him leave me alone again.

I guess the odds weren't in Mason's favor for by the time Thanksgiving came around, he was almost a skeleton. But I didn't care.

He confided in me that night, accepting the fact that his time was almost up and promising to wait for me on the other side. I begged him not to go, but he just lightly shook his head and rubbed soft circles into my back. He wasn't going to survive to see Christmas.

That was two months ago.

No longer being able to bear to see him hooked up to all sorts of machines, we decided to steal away in the night together. I bundled him up and we drove away in my mother's car until we arrived at an old cabin my family would stay in during the holidays. Mason and I couldn't be any happier. I don't care that I'm on the news every night, or that every cop in the county is looking for me.

All I care about is being with Mason forever.

Even if his flesh is crawling with maggots and beginning to peel off his bones. Even if the smell off his rotting cadaver never fades from my skin. His lips are still warm at night and he often whispers sweet secrets into my ear before we sleep. No one, not the police, doctors, or anyone else can ever separate us. I'm ready for them when they come.

I made sure to bring the sharpest scalpel I could find when we left the hospital.

But until then, I'll lay in Mason's arms, or at least what I think were once his strong appendages, and we'll talk all night until he takes me away.

We'll be together forever.

Sleep Walking

In 1998 I got a new teaching job in a new town. To save money I moved into a small house that was for rent. My roommate, Claire, was nice enough and the two of us got along easily. I moved in and found my room. While unpacking I came across an old framed photograph. Three men dressed as hospital orderlies were sitting together in the living room of the house. These three men had once lived in the house I was now renting with Claire. I didn't want to throw away the photograph, it didn't seem right. But I didn't want to keep it, either. I chose to hang the picture up in the living room as decoration and a reminder of the friendship that once bloomed in the house.

On the first night I was awakened by Claire stumbling around in the dark in my bedroom. Flipping on the lights I saw Claire and realized that she was sleep walking. I called her name and finally woke Claire up and she, confused by what had happened, apologized and told me that she had never slept walked before.

Claire was shaking, she then went on to explain that she was having a vivid and bizarre dream. In her dream she was in a hospital and a woman, a patient, was holding her hand and leading her down the hallway as if the woman wanted Claire to see something.

The next morning I went for a jog and spied an abandoned building a few blocks away from my house. The building was massive, the windows broken and the doors chained. There were no signs on the outside of the building but by all outward appearances it looked like a hospital. I was staring at the building as if in a trance when I noticed that there was something, or someone looking back at me from the fifth floor window. As soon as I made eye contact it disappeared.

The whole area, the building and the quiet creeped me out. I ran for home.

That night Claire and I sat down together to watch a movie, drink some wine and talk. When I brought up my crazy ex-boyfriend Claire laughed a little. She remarked that my ex sounded like her during her wilder days. She went on to tell me that she had a mental break down a few years ago and that she was on medication, but she was better now and it was all behind her. Her story sent a chill up my spine. I barely knew her and I now I learn about this.

Later when I went to bed a heard a crash outside my window. I threw back the curtain and saw Claire walking off the porch, breaking a flower pot as she moved. I opened my window and yelled her name but she didn't respond. Claire was walking down the street toward the abandoned hospital, sleep walking, her hand out stretched as if she was being guided by some unseen force.

I threw on some clothes and ran outside the house still calling Claire's name. By the time I caught up to her she was stepping inside the hospital doors. Someone had unchained the doors.

I was too afraid to walk inside the hospital after her, I hesitated and I regret it to this day.

When I finally worked up the nerve to walk inside I was greeted by an elderly homeless woman. I asked her if she had seen anyone come into the hospital just now and all she did was smile at me and turn away. I panicked and stepped back outside, the foreboding feeling was overwhelming.

I looked up at the hospital and saw Claire hanging out a window on the fifth floor. I yelled her name but I couldn't get her attention. I'll never forget the look on her face: pure terror. Clair kept leaning out the window and looking back into the hospital as if she was afraid of someone or something. Sometimes she'd look down, seemingly straight at me, but she still never saw me.

I called her name desperately as I watched her climb out through the window and jump. She died in front of me.

The police arrived and I told them everything about Claire's sleep walking. But when they learned about her history of mental illness they quickly chalked it up to a suicide and that was the end of her story.

A week later I read her obituary in the newspaper and in the article they confirmed that the abandoned hospital was in fact a hospital. A mental hospital.

I fell asleep that night I had a very strange dream. I was walking down the hall of a hospital, a woman in a hospital gown holding my hand. She was guiding me somewhere and she kept looking back to make sure I was still following.

The snapping of fingers and a man's voice startled me awake. I had been dreaming. I had been sleep walking. I had walked the four blocks from my house to the street of the abandoned hospital. A man had almost hit me with his car. If he hadn't of woken me up I'm not sure what wouldn't happened.

The idea of sleep was now terrifying. So much had happened in such little time I tried to keep awake for as long as possible. But eventually, as it often does, sleep overtook me. The dream, the same dream about being in the hospital, repeated. This time when I woke up however I wasn't in my bed or standing in the street. I was laying the bedframe of an old cot inside the hospital.

Scared I walked through the halls trying to find the stairs and get out, but I found nothing. I heard muffled voices and screams coming from all the empty rooms that lined the halls. I rounded a corner and came face to face with three people all dressed as patients. One patient was the woman from my dream. I backed away and told myself they weren't real, if I ignored them they'd go away.

I kept searching for the exit and heard another screaming voice from behind a door. There was an orange glow creeping out from under the door and through the small window on the door. I peeked inside and a man's face peeked back. His face was burned, horribly burned! He begged me to let him out but I couldn't bring myself to touch the door. I turned and saw the same three patients as I had before.

One by one the three patients approached the window and jumped out. I looked out the window but I didn't see them, I saw three orderlies running from the building in a panic. I yelled for them but they didn't stop. That's when I smelled the smoke.

I turned and saw the orange flames stretching out from under the door and smoke filling every hallway. I had no choice. I had to jump.

I approached the window and prepared to leap out when I felt a hand on my arm. I looked over and saw the homeless woman pulling me away from the window. She led me out of the hospital and I ran for my life.

The rest of the night I stayed awake and did some research on the hospital.

It was abandoned twenty years ago after a fire ravaged the hospital. The orderlies all fled from the building and left their patients behind, to burn alive.

I moved out of the house the next morning and back in with my parents. I haven't sleep walked since.

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The Purple Balloon

It was times like these, when I wished I could just run away and never look back. I wanted to scream, but I only could cry internally from all the stress that came from my family. My father and my stepmother always go at each other's neck like a couple of lions fighting over a piece of meat. There is no peace, sometimes I wish, I could crawl into a hole and never come out of it. I desperately pray to God that every day would at least get a little better, but it never does. Nothing never gets better.

The only thing I look forward to is sleep. The feeling of suppression and neglect from my stepmother increases with every passing day. Sometimes, I lay in bed wondering if my family or friends would even miss me if I went away. Would people cry? The only love I ever felt was from my father, but lately things have taken a turn for the worse. Fights have gotten more violent and there were days, I would find my father crying, praying for a miracle to happen.

Night fell and I waited in my room for about several hours. The grating damned noise of the clock above contributed to my frustration, I did not hear my father and stepmother arguing anymore. My anxiety grew and in my haste, I grabbed the doorknob and right when I was to turn it the door swung open. A wary man stood at the doorway, I gaze upon his tired face and slowly walked towards him. It was my dad, beaten, broken and bruised from the abuse my stepmother inflicted upon him. Then and there, I decided enough was enough, I lost all train of thought and grabbed my father's hand. I forced my way through my stepmother by pushing her aside, seeing the rage plaster upon her face.

Speedily, I put my father in the car on the passenger's side and scooted over to the driver's side, I heard my stepmother fowl words, cursing out my name.

"ALEXA!" She yelled it out in a hoarse voice.

My only decree was to take my father away from here as far as I could, I rapidly struggled to find the keys to the car. A sudden bang on the car window put me into a state of shock as I saw my own stepmother holding up a baseball bat and hitting it against the glass of the window. I cried out in terror and looked at my stepmother as I scurried to find my father's keys in the glove compartment. My father screamed and quickly grabbed the keys from the glove compartment pushing me out of the driver's seat and started up the car as he drives off, leaving a trail of smoke and skid marks upon the driveway.

Panic rose, I pleaded to my father to slow down. The car only sped up more and my father lost control of the car. I could feel the vehicle spin out of control, a sudden thrashing of the car caused me and my father's bodies to shake in turbulence, while the car impacted a streetlight. The restraints from the seatbelt that kept me secured in my car seat broke and threw me out the front window of the car. I landed several feet away from the crash and knocked out instantly upon impact.

It felt very isolated, the cold hard ground touching me created goose bumps upon my skin, triggering my eyes to open up immediately. I was gripped with a sudden strong pain, my head pounded from the hard landing, I suffered from the crash. My hands touched the ground and strangely, I hear absolute silence. There was no people talking or birds chirping. The alarm coming from the car remained detailed and lifeless. Only a distinct cool breeze hit my face, blowing my hair slightly into the wind. I slowly brought myself to my feet, while looking around, I called out for my dad.

"Dad?!" no answer.

I hollered out again, my father's name over and over in dismay. Still no answer. To such an extent, my voice began to grow exhausted, I had to stop before I not only lost my father, but my voice as well. Worn out, I receded away and kept rubbing my eyes. The more I rubbed, the more the light faded away into darkness. An uneasy feeling showered over me and when I opened my eyes, I was blinded by a single spotlight. Only utter obscurity surrounded me. A faint jingling sound echoed in and out through my ears. The disembodied laughter added more to my anxieties. I called out, hoping it was my father,

"H-Hello? Dad is that you?"

I waited several minutes for a reply, but none came forth to confirm my fears. I proceed to trail backwards. The hairs on the back of my neck stood up straight as I quickly turned around. There in colors of blue, magenta and teal stood a towering jester, the jester carried a coquettish appearance about him.

He looked bored and quickly took notice that I was present. He did not make a single noise, the only sound emitting from him was the faint jingling of the bells tied to the ends of his blue hair. My eyes could not break away from his characteristics. His flamboyant vibrant features brought out so much life upon his own being making him stand out more. The jester came closer to me with a grin that, I wasn't sure if to trust or not. I don't understand where he came from or how I came to be in this dark oblivion.

The jester then caught my attention and began to do tricks, which would amaze anyone's eye. One of his tricks he did made a purple balloon mystically appear out of his hand, he looked at me again and smiled. The balloon had a smiley face upon it, he offered it to me, but I didn't want to take it. Especially because he was a stranger to me, I do not know where he came from and I had no time to be entertained by him, I had to find my father.

So I simply took a few steps back and turned around only to have him once again in front of me. The fool looked disappointed and nodded no, he untiringly again offered me the purple balloon. I could not stand the eerie silence between me and him, so I gathered some courage and spoke up.

"Who are you?" I spoke lowly.

The jester still did not answer. I asked again and still he did not answer, but with every question I asked him, he would pull out a card with a letter upon it. I saw him magically make the card dance around him spelling out a name. I glared at the cards and spelled out the name he presented to me.

"Candy Pop?" I answered back.

The only response he would give me was his wide long grin. I don't know why, but each time he would smirk it sent chills down my spine. I somehow felt something was wrong yet, I did not know what. He began once again do tricks and this time he made the purple balloon disappear from his hands and made one blue lollipop appear, then another and another would appear. Finally, he had three lollipops in his hand each unlike from each other. I wasn't sure what to say or what else to ask him, he wasn't speaking to me. So I only watched in silence.

He opened my hand and placed the lollipops inside and closed his hand into a fist. Once again, the jester made that same purple balloon reappear, but he backed away and crouched and the only sounds, I could hear was the sound of plastic being stretched quite a bit. When he turned around toward me he finished creating a shape of a flower out of the balloon.

The jester presented a sweet and kind smile on his face. I was not sure why he was persistent for me to take his balloon, but maybe he just wanted to befriend me. So I finally decided to trust him and accepted his balloon. I examined the balloon and gazed up at Candy Pop's expression, it changed from a sweet and kind one to a sinister one. Quickly, I backed away and hugged the balloon tightly, I felt my body begin to elevate off the ground. Higher and higher, I went. Further into the light, I could not stop myself from floating.

"W-What is this!?" I whimpered. No matter what I did, I could not take my hands off the balloon, I felt that it attached itself to me. The light above me grew brighter and brighter, I could see myself getting closer towards the burning light. I looked back down and noticed this ominous jester waved goodbye to me. I looked at him closer focusing my gaze on his shadow did not match his own figure.

The shadow cast upon the floor projected devilish horns and a tail. In that precise moment, when I tried to look back at the jester, his face was distorted I could hear multiple whispers surround me and in that instant. I felt my head spinning, I closed my eyes tightly and wishing that whatever I was dreaming to be over. The bright lights burned brighter until, I heard my father's faint voice.

''ALEXA! Alexa! Wake up! ALEXA!!!''

My father was calling out to me. I felt so cold as if I had been dead, I was frightened. I embraced myself so hard not realizing, I popped the balloon. I open my eyes and the bright lights, I witnessed became clearer and slowly focused into the beaming street lights above me. Father kneeled next to me checking if I was alright.

Almost immediately, I embrace him with a hug, crying excessively ignoring the pain. He was staring down at me with a concerned face. Next thing I knew, I was taken to the hospital. My dad was kind enough to carry me through the entire road. He was exhausted, but he walked all the way, just to make sure I was taken to get my wounds attended to. Deep down I was glad that I was far from my stepmother and extremely happy I survived along with my father.

Three months have passed since the car crash, but still I could not shake the feeling something still was wrong. I simply shrugged off these thoughts and took a deep sigh. I watched out the window. It was raining just like the day me and father left my stepmother. The doctor then startled me by opening the door, I figured he was probably here to check on my progress. I turn towards him and saw his back is facing me. Once the doctor turned towards me, I notice he was holding something in his hand as he quietly spoke to me.

"You popped the last balloon, I gave you, but do not worry AlexaI got you a new one"

Fractured

My name is Sophia Radcliffe, and I am a retired Social Worker with the Ministry of Children and Family Development. I am only writing this because I am no longer working with the ministry, and have no obligations to keep my personal experiences to myself, however I will not use real names to protect the identity of the survivors. I have been given permission to share this story by my former client, Mrs. Sanderson, who is the only other person who knows the truth.

In the winter of 2003, I was given a case that would be the deciding factor in entering my early retirement. I had been a social worker for fourteen years by this point, and I honestly believed I had seen it all, but this case was interesting to say the least. The six-year-old girl that I was going to be working with had just been placed in the psychiatric ward of a nearby hospital, and I was to meet with her every week until she was considered well enough to be moved to a foster home.

The following information is what I am able to share from her case file, news reports and the research that followed:

The girl's father was a Lieutenant in the military and had been overseas when she was born, unaware of her existence until he came home to find his wife with a two year old girl. Unfortunately, Lieutenant Allan Blake returned with severe Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and had begun to suffer from paranoia believing that his wife had cheated on him, and that the girl wasn't even his own daughter.

His wife, Katharine tried everything she could think of to convince him, even going so far as to take the family to get a paternity test, but by then the damage had been done. In his attempts to overlook his crumbling mental health, Allan took to heavy drinking and pushed himself away from his family, occasionally interacting with his wife, though he ignored the girl completely. According to their family Doctor, Katharine regularly brought her daughter in for checkups, and he had suspected that she was being abused. However with the mother saying everything was alright, and having no proof that the bruises were anything other than playtime injuries, the doctors kept quiet and decided to simply keep and eye on them.

I remember hearing the news story just a few nights before, on Christmas Eve, about a man who had attacked his wife and daughter with the knife they had used to carve the turkey. A neighbor reported that he had been watching for his brother and sister-in-law to come for dinner, and noticed that the power in the Blake home suddenly went out, and that the only source of light was from the fireplace in the living room. Wanting to be helpful, the neighbor headed over with a couple flashlights and candles, but stopped when he saw a strange looking man in a suit standing in the living room with Katharine, who was holding the poker to the fireplace while covered in blood. Horrified, he ran back to his home and called the police.

When police arrived at the scene, Allan was dead, having been beaten to death with the poker, and Katharine herself was bleeding out, with over twenty cuts on her body, screaming about a thin man that had broken into her home before she died of a sudden heart attack. The girl seemed to be unharmed, though highly disturbed by the events, and was brought to the hospital for further monitoring, just in case. Though as it turned out, the girl had her share of trauma, screaming whenever she saw a reflective surface, screaming about the same thin-man that had terrified her mother.

Nine years passed, and the girl, named Kenna, had long been released and sent all kinds of homes in an attempt to find a family that could help her with her unusual symptoms. She had been diagnosed with paranoia and schizophrenia, and was still unable to bear looking in the mirror for fear of seeing the figure that had haunted her since her parents deaths. I remember one day when she told me that if she did look in the mirror long enough, she could hear him whispering to her, though when I asked what he was saying, she refused to say another word.

It was on Kenna's fifteenth birthday that I told her I found a family that was willing to take her in and help her keep healthy. I had been visiting with them for weeks, scheduled and unscheduled, so that I could see them at their best as well as their worst, and was confident I had found a good fit. Mrs Sanderson had a well kept home, a nineteen-year-old daughter named Gwen, and two sons, Heath and Paul, aged seventeen and sixteen respectively. The family was fully prepared for her, adding another bed to Gwen's room and clearing the one side of posters and belongings so that Kenna could have her own space. To my pleasant surprise, they had even gone so far as to install small curtains over all of the mirrors in the house, so they could be easily covered when they were not in use, to minimize the chances of her having a breakdown.

After her birthday lunch, I took Kenna to the Sanderson's place, made sure she had all her things (there wasn't much) and reminded her to make sure she took her medication. We sat and talked with her new foster-mother and siblings, as it was a Sunday afternoon and most of them were home. They all seemed to hit it off well, and I took my leave once Kenna told me she had unpacked. I told her I would continue visiting for a while until I knew for sure whether it was going to work or not, and that I would be in touch.

After four months, I closed her file. Everyone makes mistakes, and after reading Kenna's diary that was recovered, I know just how wrong I was. These are just a few of the entries, though almost every day was disturbing to read.

February 23, 2012

Dear Diary,

I'm starting to think Ms Radcliffe made a mistake when she left me here. Mrs. Sanderson is okay I guess, but Heath and Paul are horrible, and I'm not even sure Gwen is human. How can someone be such a nightmare? She wouldn't stop complaining that she had to cover her mirror with "ugly curtains" and she's refusing to leave it covered. It points right at my bed and I saw him again, hovering over me, watching me with his empty face.

I screamed I couldn't help it! All she did was call her brothers in so they could all laugh at me.

I hate them. I'm just glad they haven't found you.

Love, Kenna

March 17, 2012

Dear Diary,

While Mrs. Sanderson was out today, Heath and Paul jumped out at me, dressed like what they think the Thin Man looks like. I shouldn't have told them anything. Gwen thought it was hilarious, of course and took it one step further. She made them hold me down while she sat on me she's really heavy and made me look in her hand held mirror for 10 whole minutes before they got bored and wandered off.

He's getting closer. I wonder what's going to happen if he catches me? I don't know, but at this rate it would probably be better than staying here.

Love, Kenna

April 30, 2012

Dear Diary,

I had that dream again, about the night my parents died, and when I first saw the Thin Man. I was looking at the ornaments on the tree, the pretty red ones that were my favorite, and I saw daddy standing there with the knife looking at mom, the Thin Man standing behind him, saying something in his ear. I can see mom grab the poker and force it through daddy's head, and keep beating him until there was only chunks left. She told me it would be okay, that I wouldn't hurt anymore I think that's when she saw the Thin Man, watching her, with those long, black whisps coming off his back and picking up the knife. I saw him cut her up, but I couldn't turn around I could only see it through the reflection in the ornament.

That's when the police show up and take me to their car, where I stay sitting by myself until I the big black bags mom and daddy are in come out on the stretchers. In the dream I'm looking through the rear-view mirror, and the Thin Man is looking back.

Why won't that dream stop? I don't want to think about it anymore!

I'm going to go downstairs and get some water. Goodnight.

Love, Kenna

May 3, 2012

Dear Diary,

It's been three days since Mrs. Sanderson said I'm doing well enough that she thinks it's time to take the curtains down. There must be a mirror in every room now, and whenever I walk by I can see him. I've been trying to cover them back up, but whenever I get close enough I see him waiting for me. I'm scared that if I don't cover them again he'll find me!

I'm going to go try again. Wish me luck.

Love, Kenna

May 4, 2012

Dear Diary,

I HATE THEM! I HATE THEM ALL! If Mrs Sanderson didn't get rid of those stupid curtains this wouldn't have happened! Yesterday Gwen said she was sorry, and that she was only mad that she had to share her room! She told Heath and Paul to help her get rid of the mirrors. They went to all the rooms and pulled them all down so I didn't have to, and put them in the basement.

My medication makes me a really heavy sleeper, and I guess she noticed because I woke up to find the mirrors covered with all the mirrors in the house! They even put one on the back of the door so I wouldn't come out! They were everywhere! EVERYWHERE!

He doesn't have eyes, but I KNOW he was looking at me! He was looking and coming closer, and he was right in front of me! I could hear him just like I did before, but he's wrong! I couldn't do anything like that, I'm not like my parents!

When Mrs Sanderson came home, she heard me screaming and I got in trouble. She yelled at me! She HIT me! She told me I was being childish and needed to grow up and stop pretending there was a monster in the mirror!

I hate them but I can't do it. I can't. I can't. I can't. I can't. I'm not like that. I can't. I'm not like my parents! I'm not. I can't. Why won't it stop?

I think I need a nap or something

Kenna

June 19, 2012

Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming. Don't look, he's coming.

July 31, 2012

I'm in the hospital. So tired. I don't remember what happened, but I think I hurt Gwen. Everyone's mad at me. I need to tell the nurse to cover the mirror. Why hasn't anyone covered the mirror? Why is he standing there? He isn't coming for me, but he's laughing. I think he's pleased that I hurt her, or amused.

The Doctor prescribed a higher dose. I need sleep.

August 4, 2012

She's moving out! Gwen is going to college now, and she's finally moving out at the end of the month so she can stay with her best friend while they're going to school. I wish I could enjoy it more, but the meds have been really harsh lately. I'm always tired, and I keep on blacking out. I think I've been sleepwalking too because sometimes I wake up with grass and stuff on my feet.

Maybe with Gwen gone things will get better, but I doubt it. I just hope she doesn't pull another stunt to make up for leaving.

September 13, 2012

He is here. I can't see him, but he can see me. He's never leaving, and I know he's here for me. He won't leave. He can't leave. He won't leave. Please don't leave me. He isn't leaving. It's just him and me. Just me and him. He's always been there. The only one that's ever been there

Kenna had a fondness for writing in purple ink, her writing neat, and tiny with little circles to dot the i's. It was a normal girl's diary, except that no one saw her as a normal girl. Her classmates saw her as the "crazy girl" who saw weird things and screamed at her own reflection the girl with no real family or friends, except maybe me, but I left her.

While the whole diary itself was difficult for me to read, it was the last entry that I found most unnerving. Spread across two pages and, so far as the police have told me, written in the blood of her foster family:

October 26, 2012

Happy Birthday to me.

Happy Birthday to me.

Happy Birthday dear Kenna

It's just what I've always wanted

Mrs Sanderson was the only survivor, having been found in critical condition on the kitchen floor. She was interviewed as soon as she was stable and had the ability to talk about what happened. The following is the conversation between Mrs Sanderson and Constable Wilder about the events of October 26th:

Mrs Sanderson I was making a special dinner because my Gwen was coming home for the weekend, and I wanted her to feel like she never left. Heath and Paul were upstairs playing their video games and Kenna was in the living room doing some cleaning to get ready. I kept on hearing her talking to herself well, I should say, I heard her talking to her mirror.

Constable Wilder I'm sorry, I thought you said she was afraid of mirrors?

Mrs Sanderson She was, for most of the time she was with us, but she had a turn-around after a recent hospital stay. She seemed to find comfort in the mirrors after that, and carried a compact mirror around with her wherever she went. Her teachers were concerned because she had started talking to it at school.

Constable Wilder And what kinds of things did she talk about?

Mrs Sanderson It varied, actually. She would sometimes tell it to be quiet, get into an argument, or sometimes she would whisper to it about not wanting to hurt, or not wanting to hurt someone.

Constable Wilder And you didn't think to inform her doctor?

Mrs Sanderson The doctor said that her confronting the mirror was an improvement and didn't seem overly disturbed by anything. He just told us that increasing the medication a little would keep her calm and she would get over everything.

Constable Wilder I see. Please continue.

Mrs Sanderson Right. While I was chopping the vegetables, I heard Kenna scream and loud crash from the other room. When I went to find out what had happened, I saw her sitting on the floor, with pieces of my Grandmother's antique mirror all over the place. She had a few shards caught in her hair, and sticking out of the skin on her face and arms. There were also some minor cuts on her clothes, but jeans are pretty hardy and that black turtle neck of hers is fairly thick, so I imagine the pieces just got stuck. Anyways, the mirror looked like it had exploded somehow.

Constable Wilder Any ideas on how that could have happened?Did Kenna say anything about it?

Mrs Sanderson No, not about the mirror. All she said was that she heard something buzzing and it wasn't stopping, but I couldn't hear anything. I thought it might have been a result of some head trauma because of the mirror, so I just took her to the kitchen where I could keep an eye on her and called the ambulance.

Constable Wilder Alright, what happened next?

Mrs Sanderson She dropped the glass and started crying, clutching at her head in pain, covering her ears and screaming for it to stop. I thought I'd take that chance to get the glass away from her, but the screaming got worse and she snatched it from me. I think that's when she attacked me.

Constable Wilder You aren't sure?

Mrs Sanderson It's mostly a blur after that point, to be honest. There was so much pain that I wasn't really taking it all in. I know she stabbed me thirty-six times, from what the doctor told me when I woke up. Anyways, that's. that when

Constable Wilder Take your time Mrs. Sanderson, I'm in no hurry. Would you like another glass of water? Okay then, whenever you're ready.

Mrs Sanderson Heath and Paul came into the kitchen to find out what was going on with Kenna. They were very fond of her must have been worried.

Constable Wilder from the evidence we've uncovered, it seems as though the boys were contributing factors to her breakdown. Were you aware they were bullying her?

Mrs Sanderson Are you going to trust what lunatic wrote in some book over my boys who aren't here to defend themselves?

Constable Wilder . the evidence-

Mrs Sanderson They were good boys! Do you want to know what happened or not?

Constable Wilder Um, yes Ma'am. Please, continue.

Mrs Sanderson Hmph. As I was saying, my boys came to check on their DEAR foster sister. I remember her screeching like a banshee when she attacked Heath, and she she s-st-stabbed him b-between t-the eyes. And t-then she went a-after Paul

Talking about the deaths of her children was understandably too much for the poor woman to handle. Mrs Sanderson unfortunately never recovered from the incident, having suffered severe nerve damage and is unable to perform basic tasks without difficulty. She is currently living in an undisclosed location with a live-in caregiver and is undergoing intensive therapy sessions concerning her fear of the "Thin Man" and the "Fractured Girl" she had taken into her home.

The rest of the Sanderson family was butchered. Heath Sanderson died instantly when the mirror fragment pierced his brain, and a large chunk broke off in his head. Paul was found in the living room, almost to the front door, and police believe he had been stabbed repeatedly in the back with a kitchen knife. By the blood on the floor, it seems he survived long enough to pull himself the rest of the way to the front door, but was unable to reach the knob.

Finally, there was Gwen Sanderson, found upstairs in her old bedroom, halfway under her bed, as though she had been dragged out from under it. She had been cut and mutilated, with 13 pieces of the mirror jabbed all over her body, including two almost identical pieces lodged in the girl's eyes. Her face was frozen in sheer terror, her mouth stretched open in a silent scream as her hands clutched at her scratched cheeks, bits of skin under her nails. The autopsy revealed that she had actually died of a heart attack, and the investigators believe the mutilation had happened afterwards for the thrill of revenge.

The case file for Kenna Blake was the most earth-shattering I had ever encountered as a Social Worker. It's an emotional job, full of turmoil and heartache, but isn't without it's rewards when things go well. However when things go wrong, it can be fatal. I will never forgive myself for what happened to that poor girl, and to the family I placed her with.

Kenna Blake, that "Fracture" of a girl, has never been found.

Update: I just found out last night, that Mrs Sanderson passed away last night. She was found sitting at her vanity, head resting on her folded arms as though she were sleeping. They're saying she died of a heart attack, but that doesn't explain why the mirror on the vanity had been smashed in, or why they found traces of the glass in her eyes.

Red Water

I was on a business trip about a year ago and I had to drive from Denver to LA. It was a long drive and I was growing tired of the road, so I stopped at the Holiday Inn hotel that was nearby. I walked up to the desk and rung the bell. Just seconds later, a man came out from the back room. "Hello sir, my name is John Shelby," the man said, "How can I assist you?"

"I'm looking for a room," I replied, "Are there any available?"

He searched in his computer to see if a room was available. To my luck, there was one more room left. He gave me a key and told me to have a nice night. I asked him to point me toward a vending machine and he did just that. When I walked to the vending machine, craving a bag of chips, I noticed a pool at the end of the hall. A lot of hotels have pools, there's nothing strange about that. What got me confused was the fact that the water was red, blood red. I purchased my bag of chips and went back to the front desk where the man was still present.

"What's up with that pool back there?" I asked him.

"What do you mean, sir?" He asked, a confused look grown upon his face.

"The water is red," I said, "Why is it red?"

He took off his glasses and took a deep breath. "Well it's kind of a freaky story," he said, "Years ago, a woman was found brutally murdered in that pool and the water was contaminated with her blood."

"Are you telling me that her blood is still in there?"

"No, no, of course not," he said, "The water was removed and the pool was closed down. But many people say they see the pool filled with red water." He put his glasses back on. "Personally, I had never seen it, but I think this hotel likes to play tricks with your mind."

"So this place is haunted then?" He shook his head yes. I was shocked, not really scared, but just surprised because I had never had an experience like that before.

I went up to my room, took a well needed hot shower and I lay in bed. I couldn't sleep for some reason, my mind was so curious and it had so many questions that needed answered. I got out of bed, put on a shirt and I walked out into the hallway. I walked down the hall and headed toward the pool. It was quiet out in the halls, I guess nobody else had trouble sleeping. I was laughing at myself when I realized I was in my underwear, so it was a good thing that nobody was out in the halls at that time. I did believe that I saw a woman cross from one room to the other. I didn't think anything of it at the time, I just figured it was another guest.

When I reached the floor of the pool, I was able to see the blood red water even from way down the hall. I passed the front desk, nobody was there. I then passed the vending machine and I stopped directly in front of the door that would lead to the pool. I tried the door, but it was locked. I don't think I would've gone in even if it wasn't. I looked through the large window that showed the blood contaminated pool. It looked as if the pool had been closed for a long time. I looked behind me, down the hall to the elevator. I was imagining a scene from "The Shining" when the stream of blood came shooting out of the elevator. I had a feeling that I would see something similar to that, but I didn't. Instead, I saw a woman, standing at the edge of the pool and looking as if she was about ready to jump in. She was completely nude, not a single piece of clothing on her body. When she snapped her head my way, I jumped back in fear and I walked back to my room as fast as I could, taking the stairs next to the vending machine instead of the elevator.

Hours later, I woke up to my alarm going off. I took a shower, threw on some clothes and I walked down to the first floor for breakfast. After breakfast, I was ready to check out and get back on the road. I decided to take one last look at the pool before I leave. I walked slowly pass the front desk, pass the vending machine and to the pool. I was still freaked out by what happened the night before as I looked through the window. I was surprised to see that the pool was empty. There was no red water and there was no woman.

I walked back to the front desk where a woman was working. "Is John Shelby available?" I asked.

She gave me a confused look. "Excuse me?" She said.

"John Shelby," I repeated. "He was working here last night."

"John Shelby died back in 1982," she said. "He killed himself after murdering a woman, right there in that pool." She laughed. "Is this a joke, sir?"

"Yeah," I said, forcing out a laugh. "It was just a joke." I returned my key and I left the building. I got back on the road, never forgetting about what had happened that night in that hotel.

Lakeside

My name is Kevin Matthews. I am at the Matthews Lakeside cabin in Black Rock Park which I received in my dad's will. I'm writing this to document my odd findings of my family's lakehouse.

I've been looking at real estate ads in the paper to get a good idea of how much I can get off this place. I then looked through some old newspapers and read articles about murders and strange unexplainable occurrences at a cabin by lake Buchanan, called "Camp Matt". After hearing of this I had to get answers.

9:14 pm. August 5th, 1973.

Today I spoke to someone who witnessed some phenomena, a main named Clawson Aandale. Mr. Aandale said that he was staying at Camp Matt for about 3 days and on the 3rd night he said he saw a man standing under the tall oak out front, staring into the cabin windows. Another odd thing, Clawson said that the man was wearing the same clothes that he was, that he wasimitating him. Another, Ruth Oakley, found her husband Dylan stabbed to death under the "tall oak" at Camp Matt in 1953. She swore her innocence to the police and that she had nothing to do with his death, but the only prints found on the knife were hers and she claims she only touched the knife after pulling it out of her husband. She also told police that she locked the doors at night , but they were unlocked from the inside in the morning.

After hearing about this "tall oak out front" both times, I realized this was no coincidence. Through more research I found that "Camp Matt" was the name of this place up until 1954. Clawson's encounter happened in 1952. Ruth's in '53.

I'm staying at a crime scene only 3 years younger than myself.

This changes my whole perspective on things.

9:00 am. August 7th.

I saw the man Mr. Aandale described through the window, but this time he was dressed just like me. Blue jeans with a hole on the right knee, plaid shirt, and a ripped up baseball cap. He didn't budge at all. Every hour or so I would wake up just to see him standing there in the exact same spot under the tree. I can't call the police. I can't leave. I fear for my life.

August 9th. Time unknown.

There is no longer any electricity in the lake house. I tried to leave when it was daylight outside, but when I opened the door it was night, and the man was still standing there. I think he's holding an axe.

August 11th.

It's morning again. I think.

My watch says it's 5:13 pm but that's most likely false. I've been trying to keep track of the date but this has all been very confusing. I think it's been 6 days. I've tried over and over to leave during the day, when it's safe, but every time I open the door it's fucking nighttime. My watch says 5:13 pm but it could be 9:35 pm or 3:18 am or 11:29 pm or any other time OTHER than 5:13 pm.

I've placed myself in this inescapable house and the nearest telephone is 34 miles away in Llano. I'm helpless.

Time unknown. Date unknown.

I can no longer keep track of the date.

I looked out the window and saw eight corpses wrapped in sheets hung upside down on the branches of the tree, and they were soaked in blood. The man with the axe is still in his spot, waiting for me to step out of here.

I've run out of options.

I'm going outside.

Time Unknown. Date Unknown.

I'm outside. I stood in the light of a lamp mounted on the tree. I keep seeing a man inside the house. He keeps staring at me through the windows. He looks exactly like me. I found an axe at the tree's base.

The man in the house is an impostor. He will come out of there, and when he does

it'll all be over.

Knock

We all have that one story, don't we? The one you grow up thinking about, but never actually grow the balls to tell anyone. Well this is my story. I don't know what I'm hoping to accomplish by telling you. Maybe I'm looking for someone to tell me that I'm not insane, or maybe once I put it on paper it willHell, I don't know. Just someone read thisjust please.

Let me give you a little background. Twenty years ago when I was eight years old, still living with my mom. My friend Dave and I decided that we would brave "The House". Now, The House was an abandoned two story home, that had been empty going on ten years, save for the occasional drug abuser that would sleep in it. However that's not what made this particular house special. The standing rumor is what made it interesting.

For as long as I can remember adults in my neighborhood had told us, the children, that it was haunted. I'm sure it was just their way of getting us not to play in it though. Regardless, because of that, the house had a sort of ominous aura that hung around it. Just looking at that decaying building would give you the shivers. Although despite our inherent fear of the place, Dave and I decided we would explore this house We would become legends in our own right, at least that's what we hoped.

It was Tuesday all those years ago, well past midnight, and both of our parents had fallen asleep. The two of us decided we would sneak out, you know, use the night as our cover. We agreed it would be best to meet up in front of The House. Still, I wish we hadn't agreed to do it.

There I wasalone, waiting in front of The House for my friend. I couldn't help but feel small when I looked at it. It might have been old, and the wood may have been rotting, but man did it look enormous. I bet even adults felt dwarfed by it. To keep myself from chickening out, I decided to think about something else while I waited; it was a little cold that night, which was the typical weather after a hard rain. "Ah, crap." I muttered, noticing the mud that covered my shoes. I should have paid more attention to where I was stepping. "Mom is going to kill me when she" my voice trailed off when I heard a dull thud from behind me. Sounded like someone knocked a door.

Waswas it the house, or was I just imagining things? I spun around expecting to see a hairy monster behind me, instead it was just The House; broken windows, splintered wood, and roof that had more than a few holes in it. Just the usual, nothing to panic about. I should have been relieved, but I found myself slightly shaken. Soon I would be stepping into one of the most feared places in our neighborhood. I wasn't even inside yet, and I could already feel the slight tremor in my hand.

Before I could reconsider the mission Dave arrived. I quickly stuffed my hands into my pockets to hide the quiver. I could see his small figure bouncing up and down. The little jokester was skipping across the street. My fears were immediately replaced with giddy laughter. "You're such a clown," I managed to say in-between my giggles. We both reached out and shook hands, like his father had taught us. Luckily he didn't notice the tremor.

Dave used his hands to smooth back his black hair, kind of like a greaser would in a cliched movie. "You ready for this?" He nodded towards the door. Typical Dave, he always tried to look cool. Whether it be riding his bike with no hands, or sneaking into an abandoned house, he never failed to give off the "I'm a badass" vibe.

I tried my best to sound nonchalant, "Only if you are, Davey." The comment awarded me a slight snicker. Dave hated it when I called him Davey. He said it sounded girly, and that's exactly why I used it. Rather than shoot a retort at me, he simply nudged me towards the house, and we began walking to the door. Our small feet made quiet echoes in the street, I was worried we might wake someone. If we had any doubts about what we were doing, that moment would have been the right time to bail out.

Of course, as per the norm, stupidity got the better of us. The second our feet hit the old steps, we knew there would be no turning back. "Think we should knock?" Dave joked. Seeing him act all cool somehow gave me courage, and so I knocked. What I heard made the hair on my neck stand at attention. The same thud I had heard from earlier reverberated through the door when my knuckles landed. I gulped loudly, but maintained an overall calm composure.

The two of us breathed in deeply, turned the door knob, and pushed the door open. We received a long drawn out creak as payment. I thought I was going to pee my pants, and Davey looked like he was about to shit a brick. Somehow we managed to keep our undies clean. It was dark, real dark. Neither one of had brought a flashlight, we didn't want to accidentally wake up a neighbor by shining a light in their house. Given the circumstances, we decided it was best to use moonlight.

Our eyes were met with a dimly lit house, it took a minute to adjust to. The house was littered with trash, covered in graffiti, and was seemingly falling apart all over. And yet it didn't seem as frightening as we were led to believe. Sure the darkness made it look spooky, but as I looked at the cracked marble floor, I couldn't help but be reminded of my house. "Huh, this isn't so bad." It was me who broke the silence.

"Do you think the ghost will be pissed that we tracked mud in the house?" Dave laughed and pointed at the floor. Little footprints followed us all over the house. "Remind me to clean my shoes before I go back home." I giggled at the thought. Here we are in the big spooky house, cracking jokes about muddy shoes. It was all fun and games. After familiarizing ourselves with the first floor which consisted of an empty living room, a kitchen with rotted food in the cupboards, a bathroom with a disgusting toilet, and a curious looking locked door we decided to explore the second floor.

We ascended the stairs together, Dave leading with his brave face on. The wooden stairs were old, much like the rest of the house, and each step left us wondering if it would collapse beneath us. "Think the ghost is up there?" I asked, half sincere.

Dave chuckled at the question, "Ghosts probably aren't even real." We had reached the end of the stairs, and were on the top floor. It wasn't a big second story. Two hallways, one to the right and one to the left. Four rooms for the two of us to explore. "Let's go left." Dave suggested. So we went left, and into the first door on the right.

The door was already open, so we just peaked our heads in. The first thing I noticed was the hole in the roof. Moonlight was shining through it, and it gave us a faint light to survey the room with. It wasn't a very kind room, actually it was kind of like my room. Probably big enough to have a bed, dresser, maybe a desk could fit in it too. We couldn't see inside of the closet though, the light didn't quite reach it. Dave looked at me, and I looked at him. "I bet there's something cool in there. Let's go look." Dave suggested with a mischievous smile. Not sure what we were hoping for exactly. A treasure in a closet or something?

Just before I stepped into the room, I heard the familiar thud noise. The one that was made before, and when, I knocked on the door. My heart felt like it was going to stop. The noise was distant, but there was no mistaking it. My first instinct was to run, but I couldn't leave Dave behind; he of course paid no mind to it. Hell, he was already in the room walking towards the closet. And it was at that moment that things went to hell, I never even had the chance to warn him.

The second Dave stepped foot in the center of the room, there was a frightening crack. He didn't have time to react. The wood splintered, the ground beneath him gave way, and he fell through the floor. I nearly jumped out of my skin. Everything in front of me was crashing down. The wood was so old and decayed that it couldn't even support Davey. Dust and dirt flew everywhere, by the time it was over, it was hard to breathe. WaitDave didn't make a sound. Did he die on impact? Was he okay? My mind had never asked raced so faced. "Dave!" I shouted in-between coughs. "Dave are you okay?!" I repeated the question a few more times, and waited. After an agonizing minute I got my response.

"I'm okay," he answered weakly. "Not a scratch on me." I peered down the large hole that was now in front of me. Dust was everywhere, but as it cleared I could see him more clearly; there was Dave and he was completely intact. "And guess where I am?" I sighed deeply, glad that he hadn't lot his sense of adventure. "I'm in the locked room, get down here, I'll open the door for you." He wiped the dirt off of his forehead and motioned for me to come down. I obediently turned around and headed for the stairs, preferring to take the safe route down.

As I reached the bottom of the stairs I noticed something odd. Were those big footprints always there? Two frighteningly large footprints had been left on the floor. There was something odd about them thoughthey didn't look human. Too big, four toes, and they were round. My imagination quickly got the better of me, and I could feel the panic rising quickly. I was starting to feel nauseous, even more so when I realized the footsteps were leading to the room that Dave was in. I glanced at the front door, it was open. I could leave right now, run home, and tell my parents to call the police; we didn't have cell phones back then. But I didn't do any of that, I just kept walking towards the locked room.

The door was open, and I could see shadows dancing on the door frame. There were two shadows, one big one small. The larger shadow was pounding into the smaller one. I could hear the blows landing. Thumpthump, thump thump. Each time it hit, Dave would whimper. I was frozen in place. The door was only a few feet away, but I couldn't bring myself to take another step. I wanted to save my friend, but I just couldn't move. I could only stand there and watch the shadows. "Please..sto-" Smash. The last hit was harder than any of the others ones, I could hear the bones break from where I was standing. Dave's shadow stopped moving. The larger shadow picked up the frail little body, and began slashing into it with what looked like a blade. A dark liquid splashed onto the door, and started oozing towards the floor. I wanted to puke.

I could feel hot liquid running down my pants. Must have been scared enough to piss myself. I looked at the floor and saw the puddle that I had made. It was time to leave. I took one last glance at the door, and what I saw when I looked up still haunts me today. A large humanoid figure stood in the door way holding Dave's body. It was too dark to see it clearly, but I got a peak at its eyes; its big blue eyes. Big and blue like the ocean, and the waves were rippling with rage.

I wanted to leave. No, I needed to leave but my legs refused to move. They were anchored to the floor, fear had stopped them completely. My heart on the other hand was moving, it was moving very fast. Reluctantly I stood therestaring at the monster that was holding my dead friend. It didn't take long for our eyes to meet. We stood there in a eternal staring contest, I was too afraid to blink. I remember thinking that if I closed my eyes I would never open them again.

It was only after two long minutes that I could finally feel my legs again, so I slowly took a step back. The monster mimicked my movements by stepping forward each time I took a step back. My heart sunk when I realized what it was doing. Every molecule in my body was telling me to turn around and sprint, but could I really outrun this monstrosity? No, there was no way. I decided to keep my pace, buy myself time until I got to the door.

Once we reached the living room it dropped Dave, outstretched its arms towards me, and grinned. It was the single most wicked thing I had experienced in my life. The monster's grin, from corner to corner, reached both of its eyes. His teeth were long, white, like a shark. We were almost at the door, but he was no longer mimicking my steps.

For each step I took, he took two. Step by step he was closing the gap. The moonlight from the window shined on his outstretched arm. Its hand was human-like, only there was something off about it. The nails were long, the skin was rotted, and some of the flesh looked like it had scratched off. It was enough to make me dizzy. Soon I could hear it breathing. Each breath was labored, it was almost wheezing. One more step and I would see its entire body in the moonlight. I didn't want that.

The thought alone was enough to make me turn, grab the door knob, throw it open, and rush out of the house. I didn't dare look over my shoulder until there was some distance between the two of us. I expected to turn around and see the monster lumbering after me, but surprisingly it wasn't. The monster never came out of the house. It didn't chase me down the street. It didn't rip me to pieces. It just stood there, on the porch, waving goodbye. Its malformed hand slowly rocking back and forth, with the same deranged smile on its face.

A few days later, when the police report was made public, my parents told me that the monster was, "Just a hobo on drugs." The police had found Dave's body next to a dead homeless man. Apparently he had overdosed shortly after I had left. I try to tell myself that I was just imagining things, and that there was no monster, but I don't know what to believe. I've been thinking about it a lot lately, I can't get that fucking smile out of my head. I'm done with this, if I write anymore I'll start having nightmares again. Food's here anyway, I just heard a knock at the door.

Soundless

Ever since I can remember I have been able to see things that others cannot. I still remember the days of my infancy when I would, for the first time, sleep in my own bed, in my own room, and how the shadows of unknown beings would haunt my room. Or perhaps my head? All I know is that I saw things, and that, at least to me, these things were as real as the other things that other people were able too see and touch.

I can still play in my memory the ominous events. How I pointlessly attempted to sleep as the door of my wardrobe opened slowly, and always stopped just before I could be able to see what pushed it open, although it was already hard enough to see with one eye barely open just to be aware in case that whatever hid behind the door decided to come out.

As I grew older I came closer in contact with these things and I started to be able to sense them, feel them, and even smell them. The odor was not pleasant, it was a rotten smell, maybe even came close to smell like death itself. As time passed and I got more used to these beings, my senses were more effective, I could see everything, sense everything, smell everything, and be able to differentiate what was one of these beings, and what was something else shared with the rest of the people around me. However, as close as I came to these beings, I never could hear them. This made me feel so desperate. I knew they were there, I could sense them, I was able to tell they were there, but the missing noise provoked an immense fear. How was it possible that with everything these being were able to do they did not emit any sound? Seeing them, knowing they were there, but still, unable to hear them.

Soon enough people noticed my constant state of, as they called it, paranoia, and I was sent to a psychologist. I was not paranoid, I was simply cautious, I had to keep my senses always in full attention of what was around me, since I could not hear them, they could get closer to me at any time when my guard was down and do God knows what to me. Maybe convert me into one of them? maybe they were demons trying to drag my soul into the depths of Hell? Maybe they were angels of death trying to steal my life away?

I had refused to attend to said psychologist but I was dragged to his so called office, which looked more like his own apartment.

The visit was quick, he asked me all kinds of questions about my life and got me to talk about my personal life. I had told him everything about my past experiences with the strange beings that haunted me. Being 25 years old and having a long history of experiences like these, most accurately ever since I can remember, did not sound too well for the doctor and I was sent to a psychiatrist, whom after the very first visit prescribed pills for me. He explained to me that the pills would help me get rid of the beings and would help me feel less stressed and I would be able to maintain a more normal lifestyle. He did, however, warn me that those pills were not easily found, but that whenever l needed more he could provide me with them, and he also mentioned that the effects would kick in slowly, and that the more I took the faster they'd fade away.

After a month of taking said pills I could feel the difference. I felt more free, less scared, and the beings would stay away as long as I could take these pills. The pills made my life so much better, people around me would no longer call me insane or mention I seemed paranoid. All in all, whatever these pills did to me, I knew that the things I had seen were not a product of my imagination. I knew they were real, and wherever they were when I took the pills they were just waiting. Waiting in the darkness of my ignorance, waiting in the silence they've always been in.

But of course, everything has an ending, no matter what it is. Everything ends eventually.

One day, approximately three years after my treatment began, I ran out of pills. As usual, this wasn't a problem: all I had to do is go back to the doctor and ask for more. To my surprise, the doctor wasn't there anymore, he had disappeared. An immense fear invaded me and I felt more worried than I have ever felt in my whole life, even when those things were around. Then it hit me; those things. Those fucking things took him, they knew he provided me with the pills that kept them away from me. I knew the pills were not easy to find, as the doctor had already said, and those things knew it as well. I had to find more pills, wherever and at any cost, I had to find more. Those things would be back again otherwise, and it might be sooner than later.

Days passed, and as they passed I started to see them again but luckily for me they started coming back slowly, as if they were reversely fading back into my life. I could see them again in the corners of my house, still hiding in the shadows, making themselves more evident as time passed. I could see them when I tried to sleep, creeping through the gap between the wall and the door of my room. I could see them again, and it did not take long for me to start feeling their presence again. Their odor came back, and in less then two months, in which I desperately looked for more pills and the doctor, they were back. Before this torture came back into my life I had noticed that the doctor's disappearance was not just evident for me, the doctor had indeed disappeared. Police officers, along with his family, looked for the doctor or any clue that could drive them to him, but never found anything. In the meantime I slowly descended back into my long forgotten hell. This time though, something horrible happened.

The one thing that I felt before like it was the worst thing about being able to know these things were always there turned out to be a torture with no comparison. After the two months I could start hearing them. They became louder and louder every night, they were screaming. When they did not scream they whispered, when they didn't do one or the other they simply talked to me. Requesting me, demanding me, to do horrible things. Out of all the things I could hear from them the whispers were the worst, because when they whispered, ironically, they were louder and clearer than when they spoke or screamed. They did not demand me anything when they whispered, they simply whispered four words that caused a frightening chill that traveled from the core of my bosom, throughout my chest, to the very tip of my fingers, and to my head. "You cannot escape us", they whispered, over and over again. At night these whispers rang in my head, freezing my blood and causing tears to come out of my eyes as if they were waterfalls.

After a few weeks of living like this, the screaming, demands, and whispers became more constant. Everyday and every night, haunting me, and making those around me fear for my well-being. Everything became so constant, all the demands of blood, the whispers that kept reminding me I could not escape them, the screaming and more recently the maniacal laughter, as if they enjoyed my suffering and fed from my desperation. I thought back when those around me used to say I was just insane and that it was all in my head, and I realized that if it were to be true, that all this was all just in my head, than it would be worth taking the risk. I ran to my kitchen and the screaming and everything else became louder with every step. They all started to shout, speak, laugh, and whisper at the same time as I rapidly grabbed a knife I had left on the sink. All the noise at once became quiet. Silence. The screaming and all that torture rapidly faded away as I could feel a warmth and a stinging yet relieving pain in my throat. The red spilled out of my throat, soaking my shirt in blood. I fell to the ground barely feeling the impact of the fall, I felt numb, and suddenly I felt a freezing cold.

As I lie on the floor, feeling my life slowly fade away, I can see and tell my life to you. You who have tortured me for so long, and that now at the edge of my life finally leave me in peace, you who I have been trying to get away from for so long and even succeeded for a while. To you I tell this. I did escape you, and although it cost me my life I can say it as worth it. Why even bother to live if my mere existence had become a torture?