Genuinely didn’t know what to expect
Knock knock.
I slightly open the door to my family’s house, enough to see a kind-looking woman with bunned hair and a notepad.
“Hi” she greets me warmly. “My name is Joan. I’m here from Child Protective Services. Are you Tara Lambert?”
“Y-yeah” I awkwardly answer, slouching in my pajamas as she observes our rundown home’s exterior.
“Is your mother—Tammy—here? I need to speak to her.”
“Yeah, sh-she’s here but…she sorta c-can’t come to the door easily.”
“Can I come inside then?”
Shyly, I unlatch the security latch and pull the door wide open. The social worker’s professional expression slips momentarily as she registers the state inside our hovel.
Everywhere around me in the hallway, living room, kitchen, bathroom and bedrooms, is a mountain of junk items. Old boxes, food containers, crumpled magazines, broken appliances, dirty clothing—you name it, piled up on every surface.
“Who’s here, Tara?” Mama snaps, her morbidly obese frame stirring in her chair as we sift over to her.
“Hi Tammy. I’m from CPS. I have a warrant from the Department of Social Services to conduct an investigation of your family’s living conditions.”
“Get outta mah house now! Ain’t nothing to assess, mah daughter’s happy!”
“Ma’am, I can already see this environment is entirely unsuitable for raising a teenager,” states Joan. “It’s not hygienic.”
“You deaf? I said you needa get out now or-”
Before she can finish speaking, a gurgling screech reverberates through the waist-high trash around us.
Immediately, Joan is violently pulled into the heap.
“Oh God!” Joan shrieks. “Help! Something’s got my leg!”
She continues screaming, to no avail, as second and third tentacles emerge from the sea of clutter and latch onto her. With a sickening rip, Joan is torn limb from limb. Only once they’ve consumed her body do the brown tentacles retreat, like an octopus returning to a trench.
While my mama weeps for Joan, my face barely registers the carnage.
“You’re welcome” I tell Mama, tossing my phone across the garbage. “That anonymous tip I left with CPS brought a case worker to the house immediately. Talk about fast food.”
A look of horrified realisation spreads throughout Mama’s rounded face.
“You…you shouldn’t ave done that. She was a good person…you didn’t needa feed her to it.”
“The monster was born out of your hoarding, Mama” I hiss. “The sheer filth in here literally created it. If I don’t keep luring people here for it to eat, it’s gonna eat the fattest, most useless thing it can find—you.”
I shoot my mother a withering glare and she blanches, shameful.
“I just…don’t want you killin’ people, Tara.”
Leaving, I glance at the bloodied remains of the social worker on the trash mound, her notebook an addition to the junk.
“Well, Mama—someone has to clean up your mess.”
The second half of the second sentence really slaps ya in the face
He went to open his drawer shortly after waking up at 3 AM. When he opened it, however, there was a huge, menacing tarantula that jumped out at him. As he went to bed, terrified, he forgot that his closet was open, the skeleton of the 34 year old man he killed in 1999 was seemingly invisible in the cover of the dangling clothes. It seemed as if it were always looking at him, menacingly, he felt shivers go up his spine when he saw the fear in the man’s eyes flash before his as he was recounting that night in November 1999.
If you’re into the silly yet eerie strange rule trend on r/nosleep one of my favorites is this story about a cinema usher named Shaun who’s theater has some strange rules he needs to follow. I get why some people would find this repeated trope super annoying but I find some of these stories strangely riveting.
For those of you who have read it, how do you feel about The Return by Rachel Harrison? I really enjoyed it, but it seems that from some reviewers they found the banter between the characters quite boring. I guess I just really like good dialogue 🤷🏻
Childhood can be scary.
A collection of some of my hand-drawn horror looping animations!
For a super unique twist on the haunted house trope, I’d recommend this short read, Haunt Sweet Home, by Sarah Pinsker. It’s specifically about a woman working for a reality TV show, whose goal is to make a house seem haunted for new buyers.
clown graveyard and its just one grave
this is an edit I made back in 2015, which I can’t believe was 10 years ago.
Yet, for some reason, my English teacher gave me an F when I mimed my essay instead of writing it.
(here is another story I wrote a long time ago)
~~~
Imagine this: You’re just a normal, average guy, right? You take a few college classes here and there, you work a part time job—nothing special.
You work at an old convenience store late at night. It’s usually really slow at that time, so you spend your time reading superhero comic books. Every now and then, a customer might walk in and buy a pack of gum or bandaids or something.
So one night, your shift is nearing an end, and you’re almost done with your comic. You’re slumped back in your chair, feeling groggy.
You hear someone wall in thanks to the soft ring of the bell hanging over the door.
“Welcome,” you call out, eyes still glued to your book.
The stranger doesn’t respond, but many don’t, so you don’t think much of it.
Five minutes pass when the lights shut off. You curse under your breath as you set down your comic on the counter. It’s only when you look up, you realize it.
The stranger is standing right in front of you, right at the counter. How long was he there?
It’s impossible to see him clearly in the dark, even with the streetlights shining in from outside. He seems to be wrapped in a long, black trench coat, and his head is covered in a hoodie coming from under it. You can’t see his face, except for his eyes. You don’t know if you’re imagining it, but they appear to glow a sickly yellow and are lined with dark red veins.
You’re frozen. Your heart’s racing, but you can’t move. It felt like time itself had stopped.
Finally, logic enters your brain, and you jump from your chair. Stop looking at me like that! You don’t actually say it, but you almost do.
“I’m so sorry, it’s just a power outage, I’ll call someone. Sir? Are you okay?” you ask.
He doesn’t reply. You fumble for a flashlight.
So you continue. “I’m sorry about all this. This has never happened before, really. Can I borrow your phone?”
The lights flicker back on. You blink, struggling to adjust for a moment, when you realize it.
The man is gone.
Over the next few weeks, you keep seeing figures out in public that you swear is him. You catch him on a bridge up ahead, or disappearing behind a building at the corner of your eye.
You must have been tired that night, you need to keep telling yourself. So why do I keep seeing him?
You try to ignore the lingering figure. You pretend you don’t see it. But it’s getting harder and harder.
And he’s getting closer, and closer.
You become more terrified as time oasses. You scroll through the internet for hours, and flip through dozens of books. No answers..
You sleep with all the light on and a baseball bat under your bed—if you can even sleep at all.
He’s like a disease eating you. You begin to get weaker and weaker, and soon, you fall ill.
The thought of being stuck in bed scares you. You can’t run. And he knows this.
You ignore the doctor’s order to stay in bed, and one day, you pass out. You wake up in a hospital. You’re relieved to be surrounded by nurses and doctors.
You’re eating dinner one night when the power shuts off.
You press the button to call the nurse, but nothing happens. No lights, no sound, no nurse.
The room is getting colder and colder. You scream for a nurse. The feeling of alone-ness increases.
You’re relieved to head the door open. You say “Nurse! Thank you! There’s been a power outa-“
Glowing, yellow eyes.
He’s watching you, right at the foot of the bed. Towering over you.
“Who are you?l you scream. “Leave me alone!”
The figure doesn’t move. The room is getting colder, and it feels like your fingers are going to fall off. You scramble to get up out of bed, to run. Instead, you pummel right onto the ground.
The figure kneels in front of you, and you let out another blood-curdling scream. He takes off his hoodie.
And you see your own, smiling face staring right back at you.
~~~
Other stories by me:
THIS ONE IS REALLY GOOD
“Boys, don’t play in the woods! If you get mauled, you could die out there.”
That was the warning parents in our town told kids like me and my friend Beckett.
Technically, we obeyed them.
About a mile into the woods near our street was an abandoned bomb shelter. In the middle of the clearing was a slanted door jutting out of the ground, with two outward swinging metal panels that could be deadlocked from inside.
The furnished bunker had been stocked by some insane doomsday prepper in the 90s before they deserted it. Beckett and I discovered it unattended ages ago, making it the perfect safe, secret weekend hangout for two 10 year olds.
In the fall of my 5th grade school year, my parents announced that we were moving.
For old time’s sake, Beckett and I decided to chill one last time in the bunker. Saddened, I said goodbye to the piles of canned food, bottled water, flush toilet and electric generator.
“Pity you won’t get to try all this stuff” Beckett sighed. “Someone could survive for like 3 months with all the things down here”.
“Maybe” I laughed doubtfully.
Afterwards, I bid goodbye to him, shut the bunker door and went home. My family moved across state the next day.
I didn’t think about Beckett much after then. I’d made new friends and assumed he did too, which I imagined was why he never wrote.
In the winter of my 5th grade school year, that bunker suddenly re-enters my mind.
While opening a stationery cupboard in my classroom, the door jams. I can’t open it until I notice a chair blocking it from the outside. That’s when an insidious thought invades my head.
Could the same thing have happened to Beckett on that night? Could he be missing and alive in the bunker? I remember those words: “Someone could survive for 3 months down here”. Which means…
Immediately, I race from the school in panic, whizzing past confused students and teachers. Paranoid, I board a bus straight back to my hometown.
Reaching that sloped door on the forest floor, my worst fears are confirmed. A heavy boulder is perched on top, obscuring it. It must’ve rolled down the hill and pinned the door shut after I left. Adrenaline screeching, I throw myself at the boulder and heave it off.
Nothing could have prepared me for the unfathomable sight I see when I pry open the bulkheads. The boy I’d said goodbye to in the bunker is no more. In his place is a yellowed, emaciated, incoherent, balding, bearded…man.
While I went to college and became an elementary teacher, Beckett was trapped in that hole, screaming every night, completely alone.
If my mind ever recovers enough for me to teach 5th grade again, I’ll have a lesson for my schoolchildren.
Boys, don’t play in bunkers. If you get trapped, you could survive down there…
…for 20 years.
~Art~ she/they/heShort Scary Stories 👻 @MonsterbloodtransfusionsAi ❌🚫
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