Lemmy Scare You! A community for sharing short scary stories.

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Inspired by r/nosleep, but without the "Everything here is true" and "You can't criticize the OP" rule. Post your scariest original short stories here.

Rules are simple:

  1. Be nice, criticize constructively, no name-calling.
  2. No obvious AI generated stories, or other spam.
  3. Everything posted here is creative fiction, any similarity to real life is pure coincidence.
  4. Prompts are allowed, but should be prefaced with "[WP]"
  5. Collaborative storytelling is fun, so if you'd like to continue your own story or other people's story as a series in the comments, start your comment with [CHAIN]
  6. Troll/Parody Stories would be allowed on Sundays, but the title should start with "[PARODY]"

founded 2 years ago
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Those moments when everything is going so well it feels like trying to describe or capture them may only ruin them, there's something so wonderful about them. The only way to keep them is to remember them as well as one can. Anything else...It feels like it's doing them a disservice.

So it was for a time where I was living. It was as nice as could be.

Wasn't it?

There was an old plaque tucked away, overgrown and poorly kept, said to be placed in commemoration of the founding of the town shortly after its incorporation. Nearly forgotten, clearly neglected and ignored, most would assume it would say what any old plaque would. Something with the date, maybe some mention of the founders and if they were feeling very proud some light history of the founding.

This was no such plaque. Instead it bore a short, unfriendly sounding message, "Don't Get Comfortable".

Why not? It's such a nice place...The plaque was left by whoever founded the place, wasn't it?

I'm not sure who decided to clean off the old plaque and read it, but the message quickly spread and gradually the place began to feel different. It seemed less nice, things started to go awry.

Was it really all the message's influence? This wasn't an isolated village unused to different ideas and changing times. Why would some old message stir things up?

Had it...Or was this how it was all along? It was a nice place, I could swear, but the plaque was left there neglected...How nice can a place be that forgets itself? Now I look about and notice, it was not all that was neglected...Have we really been living like this? Amidst crumbling roads and bracing ourselves between waves of sickness?

It was then that it hit me, who left the message and why it had been neglected.

And why now I record this message for you: our memory cannot be trusted. They would have us remember rather than read and write, listen and repeat rather than think, they who founded and run this place to ruins, their people to misery.

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A dangling, swaying entity drops from the ceiling of an after hours convenience store. It stays for a little over three minutes, wheezing softly, before slowly fading from view. No one is there to see it happen.

Original post: https://bsky.app/profile/slimyswampghost.bsky.social/post/3lkqf4p3brs27

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 
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Matthew (lemmy.world)
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Years ago, i received an used infrared camera from my cousin and decided to test it in the park near my home at night. The place was pitch black, and i had some fun recording a video. On the way back, i was surprised to find my best friend, Matthew, sitting on the kid's slide, waving at me. I waved back and was about to get closer to show him the camera when I suddenly got a call on my phone from my mom. Apparently, she was panicking because my brother had crushed the glass table and was bleeding a lot. Anyway, as soon as i closed the call, i quickly told Matt i had to go and rushed back home. In the end, we came back from the hospital later that night, and my brother got a couple of stitches on his left arm. The next day, i decided to check the video i made the night before. Everything was normal until i came to the part where i met my friend near the kid's slide. Then everything fell apart...

You see, the fact is, despite what I could have thought the night before—the familiarity, the certainty of recognizing him— I never had a friend called Matthew before. But the worst part wasn't just the confusion from that memory. The worst part was looking at the thing captured in the camera waving at me with its inhuman hand.

th-1564704138

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/25775187

I need help finding this one viral horror story. It described two twenty year old college students and their girlfriends camping in an old RV. They were in an upstate Pennsylvania town in the Poconos during the fall. They spent a few nights playing hold ’em, Jenga, and truth or dare.

One night, the MC, Chase, pulled some shrooms out of his bag and dared the loser of a game to try it with him for the first time. They ended up having a wild night but it was suspicious because it wasn’t Chase’s girl who volunteered but his friend’s girl.

They snuck away from the campsite and fooled around a bit to find the other two passed out drunk laying over one another. They were still coming off their high so they remained unable to really perceive the affair that might have occured while they eloped. In the morning only the two college guys were in the side camper, but the windows were broken, the siding was severely dented and the door was ripped clean off. They checked the RV to see if the girls were in there but the windows were also broken and the sides were smeared with blood. They entered their RV and found shreds of clothing and a shoe of Chase’s girl.

They were suspicious and terrified. Either there was a bear or there was a person that they needed to make a police report. Chase had a warrant so he didn’t want any law enforcement involved. They both agreed to handle it on their own.

I remember that it ended with something along the lines of a “Blair-Witch-esque cult” that may have abducted them and was farming them for their blood to be used in sacrifices. They were kept alive in the basement of an abandoned factory on the edge of a city nearby. One of them managed to get loose from her restraints but they had her drugged and she could barely walk.

The two guys managed to get a lead somehow, possibly a nearby witness to the kidnapping. They mentioned two guys in road worker uniforms coming out of a utility truck that went east. The two followed the clues and only found two factories both completely abandoned and empty. No luck whatsoever.

When they stopped to get more gas, they encountered a trucker who asked why their hands were covered in dried blood. They explained their situation and the trucker told them to follow him to his destination and that he might be able to lead them to their girlfriends.

When they arrived in an empty parking lot and were out talking and distracted, two disguised men came out of the truck and knocked them out, and the trucker lifted their unconscious bodies into the truck.

They remained missing for months until Chase escaped in hopes of returning to rescue them. Unfortunately, he was apprehended by police who ran his info and arrested him for his outstanding warrants. He tried explaining about the others but they didn’t believe him after getting drug test results and finding all the stash of drugs he had in his cargo pants pockets.

Then, I don’t remember whether it just ended there or not, so I did a Google search and nothing. I searched and searched but found no trace to any avail. I needed to know the end of the story. It was eating me up inside.

So, I had to put myself in Chase’s shoes. How would he get released and save his three friends? I had a crazy idea to go out to the woods in the Poconos and camp there. I had no RV or camper and barely any money for a tent but I managed with just my Jeep and a cheap Walmart tent. I made sure to bring one key item–psylocybin mushrooms. I had to call up a bunch of old shady contacts from before I got fully clean. I set up camp and enjoyed myself in hopes of unlocking the memory.

Two nights passed and I almost ran out of food, but it really clicked in my mind: I know what I was missing. His name wasn’t Chase, it was Chance.

I quickly turned on my phone hoping to get  a signal–none.

I got in my jeep, it was about 4 in the morning and I rushed back home to use wifi. As soon as I got in, I googled the same story with Chance instead. I found a blog with the story in question. Eureka!

I read it till the end and boy, I won’t spoil the clever thing Chance did to save them and clear his charges. But you can find it, the story is called “No Game Of Chance” and…..and…..it was by……….me!?!?

I pulled out my other laptop, and did a file search, there it was–not one but several folders in odd locations some on the desktop, some in my documents, others in obscurely named folders that also contained some gruesome fetish art. This had to be a joke. I kept looking through my files and found a document labeled “This isn’t the first, and it won’t be the last”.

I opened it to find a letter addressed to myself, from myself. It explained that I thought I might be going insane. It noted symptoms of schizophrenia and other symptoms that suggested I should consult a doctor.

I booked an appointment that morning with a psychiatrist. A week later when it came time to see her, I chickened out and was scared they might test me for certain drugs. I didn’t need another thing on my record. So I never showed up, but I did drive around an area in a similar town near the Poconos. The story I read had really detailed and specific descriptions of the factory. So much so that I wondered if I had been there before, maybe to do research in order to have a realistic and genuinely convincing setting. I found a similar abandoned factory on the edge of town. I looked around to see that no one followed me or that anyone was nearby. I pulled a crowbar out of my car and a tool box and began prying off boards. I had to unscrew a door hinge and I was in.

The place reeked of rotting wood, rust and water damage. I searched up and down to see the description of where I wrote the captives were held. I found the deadbolted door and began trying to open it. About an hour of effort passed and it finally budged. This would have been a good place for a deranged person to hide captives, I said to myself as I removed the last board.

I felt a vibration under the floor. I thought it might be an animal but then I heard a whimper. Oh, no! This….this is… I ripped and pried off the wooden hatch. And…THERE. THEY. WERE.

Oh, SHIT! Are you guys okay!? I ripped off some duct tape

P.. pp.. she shivered, Please d..don’t hurt us….let us go… we won’t t..tell anyone about you or your g..g…goons.

Goons? I had help!? I thought to myself.

No, you don’t understand, I think I am on some bad type of shit. None of this was intentional. You have to understand, I have no memory of this.

I wanted to tell them about the blog and the story and everything but they would think I was crazy. I thought I was crazy.

I will let you guys go, this isn’t me.

I started to think up a lie and that the others drugged and threatened me and that I was a slave just like them, but before I could,

CRACCCCCKK!

Everything went black.

There stood Chance. My crowbar in his hand now covered in blood.

Hurry up, He called. They could be back any minute.

He quickly ripped off the tape on their mouth, and cut the ropes with a knife to unbind them. He explained as they ran that he was on bail until his trial and that his appointed lawyer promised he would only have to do rehab and no jail. They were happy he was alive and came to their aid.

The affairs and what happened at the camping trip were never mentioned again by them, an unspoken agreement.

As for me, I layed there, on the factory floor, slowly bleeding out, my vision coming back faintly and in the dark. I could hear the distant blaring of sirens, they echoed through the corridors of my head.

I struggled to get up and to maintain my composure. I stumbled to the wall for support. I thought that I should just turn myself in and cooperate. I was not fit for society. 

I fainted and collapsed onto the floor. When I awoke it was morning. No cops nearby at all. I was cold and my clothes soaking wet. I managed to stand up and turn on a light. The basement was partially flooded. A pipe in the corner burst and I noticed all my furniture is probably ruined. I looked next to my couch to see my laptop, and some remnants of the drugs I must’ve taken on the coffee table. I opened my laptop to see if it was all a dream of intoxication.

No weird documents, no files, no letter. No evidence whatsoever that I even write stories. Who am I?

Update: I am now in treatment with a good psychiatrist and therapist to aid with recovery from my addictions. I never mentioned my story, or what happened or hasn’t happened.  It has been about a year of recovery. However, I learned one big lesson not to go down the rabbit hole and leave my curiosities as is. It is really weird though, there is a guy who is the spitting image of Chance in my recovery group. That’s not his name thankfully, but he does have some peculiar scars I am too afraid to ask about. He never makes eye contact with me, I might find another group. I’m scared.

  • T.M.
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7th Barn (mander.xyz)
submitted 3 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 
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submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 
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The Nahanni River wound its way through the wilderness like a silver thread, its icy waters whispering secrets that had never reached human ears. This was a land untouched by time, where jagged peaks clawed at the heavens and ancient forests cloaked the valleys in shadows. But amidst its staggering beauty lay an ominous truth—Nahanni was not just a place of wonder; it was a place of death.

The stories began long ago, when whispers of gold lured men into its depths. Among the first were the McLeod brothers, Frank and Willie, seasoned prospectors with dreams as vast as the mountains themselves. In 1905, they set out to find the fabled "Lost McLeod Mine," a vein of gold so rich it could make kings of ordinary men. For two years, they vanished into the wilderness, their absence haunting the small settlements along the Mackenzie River.

When their bodies were found in 1908, slumped along the banks of the Nahanni, it wasn't their deaths that shocked the world-it was the way they died. Their corpses were headless, their skulls never recovered. Theories sprang up like wildfire. Some whispered of hostile Indigenous tribes protecting sacred lands, though no such tribe claimed responsibility. Others spoke of rivals, prospectors blinded by greed, who had turned on the brothers. And then there were those who didn't whisper at all, their silence heavier than words, as if Nahanni itself had decided the McLeods' fate.

A decade later, another prospector, Martin Jorgensen, followed the same siren call of gold into Nahanni. His letters back home brimmed with excitement: he had found something, he wrote, something big. But when his friends finally braved the valley to find him, they stumbled upon a chilling scene. Jorgensen's cabin lay in ruins, reduced to ash, and his decapitated body lay among the wreckage. Theories abounded once more. Had rivals burned his cabin and killed him to keep his discovery a secret? Or had the fire been an accident, with animals disturbing his remains? But in the back corners of smoky saloons and lonely camps, whispers of Nahanni's curse grew louder

As the years rolled on, Nahanni claimed more victims. In 1945, a miner named John Patterson vanished without a trace. His camp was found intact, his supplies untouched, but Patterson himself was never seen again. Earlier in 1926, two men named Annie and Daniel Goulay had embarked on an expedition into the park. Their bodies were later discovered, decomposing on the riverbank. Like the others, they too were missing their heads.

By now, Nahanni had earned its nickname: the Valley of the Headless Men. Some called it a land cursed by spirits, others an ancient burial ground, and still others a gateway to something beyond human comprehension.

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Have you ever had difficult nights? Nights where, no matter what, you can’t seem to sleep; nights where, once your lights are off, all you can do is stare at the endless void that is indefinitely spreading in front of you? Well then, join us in our Special News Feature, and we’ll talk about the only sleep and nightmare remedy you’ll ever need, LSD Dream Emulator, soon available for the masses on PlayStation!

Disponibile anche in 🇮🇹

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I keep walking and walking

https://www.tumblr.com/theotherhappyplace

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(inspired by mattw03 post)

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My reflection isn't quite right either. Slightly different when I stare at it, like it can't maintain composure over time. I think it's changing when I look away, just brief catches at times, nothing I can really pin down.

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What would you do?

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submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 
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I don't feel like I'm a nosy person. No more nosy than the next guy. I just have what my Ma would call an unhealthy amount of curiosity. I was the kid who climbed to the top of the big oak in the back yard, just to see what was in the crows' nest. I was the kid who dug a hole in the back yard so deep that I hit groundwater because I was convinced there was a cave under our house, and I wanted to see it. To see.

My folks aren't dirt poor, but they're pretty close. They're part of that missing middle of America, the people who work forty hours a week until they die, with no savings to speak of. I got my first job at a horse stable when I was fourteen. It didn't last very long. I knew I needed to get a job, because I knew we needed the money, so I bounced around for the next few years, washing dishes, waiting tables, until I graduated high school.

Pop was really tough on me about college. He never went -- nobody in his family had -- so there were a few fights about where I would go after school. It was a huge shock to me when, just after graduation, he drove me down to the Uni. He'd been classmates with the Dean and they'd come up with an arrangement where I'd get a full scholarship, provided I made good grades and worked for the University. I never felt like a scholar. In high school, I kept my head down and did enough to get by, pulling off B's and a few C's. I wasn't interested in learning, because learning wasn't interesting. Uni was different. I took mainly core classes, math-English-history-science, but they were fascinating. For one thing, nobody cared if I showed up or not. It was entirely up to me to succeed, so I did. In exchange for my education, I worked security and did some light maintenance duties. Maintenance was a no-brainer. I've always been handy, and most of the fix-it jobs were the type that could be solved with a liberal application of WD-40, or elbow grease, or both. Security was a different story. Security gave me super powers.

The job itself was pretty easy. I got a uniform, a badge, a flashlight, and Ma gave me some keychain mace for my birthday. No, I didn't get a gun -- they weren't allowed on campus anyway. I worked mostly nights and weekends, and doubles during long holiday breaks. I was to walk around the full campus twice in a night, checking the labs, computer center, and library. The rest of my time was pretty much my own.

There were two other guards, Jake and Al, but they worked different shifts from me. We had "overlap nights" on Wednesday nights, where we'd get together for about an hour to discuss any major events or changes. There might have been some beer at those meetings, but I'm underage, and you can't prove anything.

Jake worked mostly dayshift, and Al worked swings and some overnights during the week. Jake was a younger guy, training to be on the local police force, so he took his job pretty seriously. On the other hand, I'm pretty sure Al mostly slept during his shifts. Al was two years older than dirt, so he deserved his rest.

Remember that bit about super powers? My first night on the job, Al gave me a huge keychain with about a thousand keys on it. It weighed nearly five pounds, and was secured to my belt with a heavy-duty metal chain. “Don’t lose that keychain, kid,” Al said. “You got the keys to the kingdom right there. Any door that don’t open, you don’t want to go in it.”

My work hobby, the thing that kept me awake on those long cold winter break nights, was exploring. I made it a point, every night, to open some door that I'd never opened before. I started in the new section, where the library and computer center were, opening each room, each closet, making a map in my head of where everything was. Some nights I might explore two or three rooms. Some nights I might not have time for anything more than an odd, out of the way broom closet.

The Uni is actually a pretty large campus, for having a full student body of only twelve or thirteen hundred. It was built as a Methodist college in 1896, and became state-owned in the thirties. There were three main sections. The 'Old School' housed the Administration offices and a few unlucky classrooms —unlucky due to the lack of central heat and air, and the three-story building had no elevators. The 'Labs' were a Brutalist horror of poured concrete slabs and tiny windows, built back in the 70s when buildings that looked like Soviet radiators were in style. The "New Library" was steadily losing its "new", built in the late 90s boom, and made in that unique red-brick-and-glass style like everything else during those years.

When I think back to those early days, those days before, I think how stupid I was. How naive. I should have thought about winter. I should have thought about the solstice.

By December of my sophomore year of college, I had cleared every room in the New Library. I had opened every door, checked every closet, and had a good mental map of the whole building. It was, ultimately, pretty unimpressive. I found no buried treasure, no secret stash of missing computer supplies cached in a forgotten closet. I did find a small, sweaty stack of bad porno mags in a supply closet in the basement level. “Wicked, Wicked Cowgirls.” Who was I to judge?

December is a slow time for the Uni. After the mad rush of Finals, the campus was suddenly deserted, the remaining few staff seeming lost. The buildings stood silent, and dark, in the thin winter breezes. We had a steady series of snowstorms, but none bad enough to close the campus. I made sure the sidewalks were clear and the entryways salted, and otherwise tried to stay indoors.

Besides, I had the ‘Old School’ to explore.

The main ‘Old School’ building, Downing Hall, was a four-story V-shaped building. It had no elevators, tiny stairwells, and was only exempted from ADA compliance due to its “historical importance”. It had no air-conditioning, save for sporadic window-mount units that were only permitted to be installed on the rear of the building, so as not to spoil the building’s historic charm. The building’s heat came from a massive, ancient boiler in the basement. As far as I knew, Al was the only person who knew anything about the boiler, and he must have kept it in good shape, because I never heard of any complaints about it.

I spent the second week after Finals Week poking through the top floors of Downing Hall. I didn’t have a lot of time for exploring every night, as the snow gave me more than usual upkeep chores, but I made steady progress. I discovered a small room in the attic on the Left Wing that must have been an old Dean’s office, complete with a beautiful antique desk and wardrobe. I checked both, thinking I might find something “historic” to give to the Dean, but the wardrobe was empty save for a moth-eaten wool scarf, and the desk’s contents were limited to a few old newspapers and some tax forms from the 1950s. A level below, on the building’s fourth floor, I found two dozen small, empty classrooms. In my handyman mindset, I checked the windows for loose glass panes, and for water or rodent damage. I fully expected to see rat-droppings, or at least some insect damage, but I found none. The second and third floors were much the same, except the rooms on the rear of the building were air-conditioned and thus actively used for classes when school was in session.

The main floor was Administration, and included the Dean’s office. I thought it wise not to snoop around in my boss’s office, or in Payroll, so I skipped a lot of these rooms. I made my way to the stairwell to the basement, used my superhero keychain, opened the heavy door and went down. The basement of Downing Hall was different from that of the New Library. For one thing, it was a lot more cramped. The hallway was narrow, and the ceiling was low, with doorways leading off at regular intervals. I checked every room, flipping the old two-button switches to ON, using my flashlight on the dark corners. I had carried a few packs of spare light bulbs — the fancy new CFC bulbs — in my satchel, thinking to replace any that had burned out, and save the environment while I was at it. The little rooms mostly contained junk — spare desks, filing cabinets full of forty- and fifty-year-old papers, old holiday decorations, and so forth, lit by naked hanging bulbs.

I’m not an imaginative kind of guy. I guess I’m pretty smart — I’d made straight A’s in my college courses. It never occurred to me to be scared. I didn’t think, “I’m alone in a creepy old basement.” This was my place, my job, my hobby, and it all seemed so normal.

By the night of the 20th of December, I had made my way to the boiler room. The furnace was a massive monstrosity of iron and rivets, pipes and gauges. It was hellishly hot in that room, and equally loud. It was, however, neat and very clean. Al kept it that way, because he said “a clean boiler lets you get more shuteye.” The furnace had been converted from coal to gas at some point, but the soot had stained the walls of the room, and the old coal chute still opened in one of the corners. I had no intention of giving the boiler room more than a glance — I’d been there dozens of times, and there was nothing to see, just a workbench and the furnace itself — when I noticed a small door to the back and left behind the furnace. “That’s weird,” I thought to myself. I had never seen that door before. But then again, I had never stood in that particular spot, beside the workbench, and I had never really looked.

The door was smaller than a normal door — maybe five feet tall, painted in the same non-color drab grey-brown of the walls, and was made of metal, just like the other doors in the basement. I went over to the door, and touched the handle.

I think the body knows sometimes when things are wrong. Have you ever had that feeling, like you’re being watched? When you know you’re totally alone, and nobody can see you, but you feel eyes on you? Have you ever gone left instead of right, because you got a feeling that you just shouldn’t go to the right today? It didn’t work that way for me. When I touched that doorknob, nothing felt any different. My head didn’t hurt, my neck-hairs didn’t stand up, and I didn’t hear an inner voice saying, “Don’t do it!”

The doorknob turned, but the door wouldn’t open. I looked more closely, and saw a small keyhole. I checked my magic keychain, and found three possible matches. Struck out on the first two, and the third worked, of course. Of course.

The hinges squealed like they hadn’t been used in a long time (decades.) My handyman instincts noted it. “WD-40,” I mumbled. I hauled open the door and stepped through, into another small, cramped hallway. The light switch worked, and the single bulb blew with a crack! “Dammit!” My hackles did raise then. I flicked on my flashlight, and quickly swapped out the hallway bulb with a new one. I looked around, and saw this hallway was narrow, straight, and ended a few yards away at another door. That door opened easily, onto another stairway. “What the hell?” I said. Nobody had ever mentioned a sub-basement for this building. The hairs on the back of my neck were still standing out. I shook it off as nerves from the blown bulb, and walked to the stairwell. It was a standard stairwell, and looked pretty much the same as the others in the building. I walked to the bottom, and met another door. I pushed through it, to see another long, narrow hallway, with doors leading off to either side at regular intervals.

The first door to my left was unlocked, and opened fairly easily, onto a storage closet. There were stacks of late Sixties-era books, a few desks, and a decaying mop in its bucket. The door across from it was unlocked, but did not open so easily. I hauled the door open to find a larger room that looked to have been used as a classroom. There were desks, a blackboard, anatomical diagrams, and posters on the walls. Everything was covered in an inch of dust, and appeared to have not been touched in a long time. “Why would anyone put a classroom down here?” I mumbled to myself, “How would they even convince students to get down here in the first place?” I remember thinking, at that point, that I must have somehow discovered a back way into the other wing of the V-shaped Downing Hall. “Maybe this is where the old Science classes were held, before the Labs were built.”

I moved on to the next set of rooms. They were both classrooms, abandoned, dust-covered, and mostly empty. So were the next pair, and the next. I saw a total of twelve disused classrooms in that hallway, and a small breakroom, complete with a lonely coffee pot. I also found two small restrooms. I didn’t spend much time checking them out, as the lights didn’t work and I didn’t feel like replacing those bulbs. I found myself getting slightly nervous — I was in a strange section of the campus, and I was working alone that night. In the back of my mind I just couldn’t truly justify the existence — the waste — of a whole floor full of unused classrooms.

When I got to the end of the hallway, I met another steel door. I opened it, and saw another stairwell. I was fully expecting this stairwell to go up, to connect to one of the other main stairwells in Downing Hall. The stairs only went down.

This was the point, I remember, at which I began to get scared.

“No way. There’s no way these stairs go down. How would anybody get down here?”

“Here. Here. here,” the stairwell echoed at me.

I should have checked the time. I should have been concerned with finishing my rounds. I should have been hungry for lunch. I should have run.

I started to climb down the stairs.

This stairwell was unlit, and appeared to be much older, and in much worse condition than the others. It was also longer. Much longer. After a few minutes of walking down the steps, I began to count them. At every twelve steps, there was a small landing, a turn, and another set of steps. Down. After ten landings, I reached another door. It was unlocked, and opened easily. The hinges squealed, and the echoes died like lost things in the dark.

I groped against the left wall for a light switch, and there was none. I checked the right, and the wall was equally smooth. I cast the flashlight around, but saw nothing. Nothing forward, nothing to either side, and nothing above. I snapped my fingers, listening for the echo. I may or may not have heard one. I slowly came to realize that the room into which I had entered was enormous, cavernous, possibly the biggest room I had ever physically experienced. I shrank back to the doorway for a moment.

“This room can’t be here,” I said to myself. I started to think about going back. But I also started to think about wanting to know what was in there. I took a step forward, and another, until I was walking steadily into the room. I kept a steady pace, counting my steps. I looked over my shoulder every few yards, using the light from the open doorway to orient myself. I walked, slowly, for a hundred yards, two hundred yards, until I saw a dim glow ahead.

The glow got faintly brighter and larger as I walked toward it. Another hundred yards, and another, and three more passed until I could make out a small dim light bulb near a door.

That door was of a different type entirely. It was huge, fourteen feet tall at least, and half again as wide. The surface was black metal, studded with rivets and bolts, mounted on huge hinges. Across the face of the door, graved into the metal, were words in some strange looping script that I could not recognize. Every surface was carved with that script, or with strange diagrams made of splayed circle-ended lines. In the center of the door was a large spoked wheel lock, and in the center of the lock was a tiny keyhole. Above the keyhole was a sigil, enclosed in three circles.

I looked behind me, and could not see the light from the stairwell. I couldn’t see anything at all. I held the Superhero Keychain to the dim light, and flipped through the keys. Of course, there was one small, battered key that looked as if it might fit. I inserted it into the lock, and turned it. I heard a click, and a thud, and a sound from within the door like pouring pebbles. Or dry teeth. I pulled the key from the lock, and grasped the spokes of the wheel lock. My heart was racing, and sweat was dribbling into my eyes. I turned the spokes to the left, counterclockwise —widdershins, some buried memory in my head said — and kept turning, until the wheel stopped. There was another THUD and a CRACK, and then silence.

The darkness behind me no longer felt empty. In fact, it felt positively crowded, as if I had an audience, watching me. I stepped back from the door and flashed my light around. Still nothing. Dry empty floor. I turned back to the door, grasped the large cast-iron handles, and pulled. Nothing. I tried harder, putting all of my weight into the pull, and at the last moment, at the end of my strength, I heard another CRACK! and the door groaned open on a draft of cool, stinking air. The smell was heavy, moist, and musky. I had a flash memory of my mother taking me to the zoo as a child, and the smell of the Cat House, with the lions. At the thought of the lions, I let go of the handles and stumbled back a bit. I carefully shone my light into the yawning black crevice of the open door. I saw a short hallway that opened into a small, cramped room. I saw a filthy, rusted metal chair. I saw bones. Small bones. I saw — or heard, or smelled — a form so black it seemed to suck in the light of my flashlight. I saw a black form rushing towards me, running towards me, filling the hallway, howling and laughing and speaking, in a voice that sounded like mountains collapsing. I remember fangs, and words that turned my bones to rusted glass. I remember feathers, and a hand with too many fingers, jeweled with something unspeakable. And the smell, the stink of something long caged.

I remember wings.

I don’t know how long I wandered in the dark, alone under hundreds of feet of rock. There was no light. There was no way to judge time. My flashlight was dead, and my cellphone, and even the small specks of luminescent paint on my cheap wristwatch were dark. There was something wrong with my right leg. It hurt, but I couldn’t see enough to find out why.

I kept hearing my audience, there in that cavernous room. I screamed at them. I felt one of them touch my face, and I threw my flashlight at it. The flashlight bounced and rattled and became still, somewhere that I was not. Something laughed, later. I raved and screamed but didn’t throw anything else.

I found the doorway after hours or days of crawling.

There were no lights in the stairwell.

After years of climbing, I crawled into that first forgotten hallway. I sliced my fingers on the crushed remains of the light bulbs I had packed in my satchel. I crawled down the hallway, and reached the next stairwell. I hauled myself up them, and finally out into the boiler room.

When I staggered out of Downing Hall, two full days after going in, it was into dim winter daylight and a full police presence.

Five people had been found dead on and around the campus. All had been brutally, savagely murdered, bodies splayed open, viscera missing. The teeth marks suggested a wild animal, but the murder scenes and body positioning also displayed a certain intelligence to them. There was also the writing, carved into the flesh when it was not yet dead meat. The cops wouldn’t talk about the writing.

The cops wouldn’t talk to me, either. Not afterwards. When they first saw me stumble out into daylight, covered in blood, they assumed I was the perpetrator. They quickly changed their assumptions when the medics pointed out the greenstick fracture, the dehydration, the concussion and the obvious shock. The cops asked a lot of questions, and I answered as best as I could. I told them about the door in the boiler room. They couldn’t find it. They showed me the bare smooth wall from where I had crawled, dazed and broken. My tracks stopped at that wall. Two cops tried breaking through the wall in that spot, only to meet old brick, and older earth past that.

The cops wanted to know where the long, black feathers came from, stuck to my clothes by dried blood. I didn’t know. I didn’t want to know.

The cops, the medics, nobody, would look at me any more. The scars on my face, the deep, gouged-out writing, was not a sight that most would want to see. I was marked.

Whatever I had let out, whatever had killed and eaten five people, and a week later six more, had marked me as a friend.

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