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DaJoel
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Thu Nov 29, 2007 4:30 am


Yes, I like stories. Share one!



"So this young girl was staying home alone as the rain poured outside. She was just sitting on the couch, watching tv when she suddenly looked out through the glass sliding door right across the room and saw a figure staring at her through the glass. This guy had long hair and he was just staring at her. Needless to say, she was scared. She quickly took her blanket and pulled it over her head, and hid there until her parents came home. When they did she told them what she'd seen and they searched the yard, but they didn't see anyone. It wasn't until they looked back in the room and saw the puddle of water behind the couch that they realized that what she'd seen was his reflection..."

~ * ~


"A man, at about the age of 30 went to a hotel and walked up to the front desk to check-in. The woman at the desk gave him his key and all, and told him that on the way to his room, there was a door with no number that was locked and no one was allowed in there. So he went to his room, and went to bed. The next night he was curious as to what was in the room, so he walked down the hall to where it was and of course tried the handle. Sure enough it was locked. So he bent down and looked through the keyhole. What he saw was a hotel bedroom and in the corner was a woman whose skin was competely white. She was leaning up against a wall and her head was facing the wall. He stared in confusion for a while then went back to his room. The next day, he went back to the room and looked through the keyhole. This time, all he saw was redness. He couldnt make anything out, all he saw was red. At this point he was confused and a little freaked out. He went to the front desk and asked the lady about the room. She sighed and said, "Did you look through the keyhole?" The man told her that he had and the lady said, "Well, i might as well tell you the story. A long time ago, a man murdered his wife in that room, and her ghost haunts it. But these people were not ordinary. They were white all over, except for they're eyes, which were red." (Get it? She was looking through the keyhole when he was!)"

~ * ~


"A toy company began selling realistic baby dolls to help expectant mothers learn how to care for their soon-to-be-born child. It was all a part of the governments program to aid young parents.

However, after the mother had her child the doll would start crying and eventually the "rocking motion" advertised to calm it down wouldn't work, and you couldn't get it to stop without shaking it. Eventually when it started crying the parent would have to beat it, and the beatings and thrashings would have to get harder and harder to get it to be quiet. The only thing that seemed to shut the annoying doll up permanently was the bash its head against the wall to destroy whatever mechanism triggered the crying.

On more than one occasion though, neighbours called the authorities to report child abuse, and when the police arrived they found the bloody remains of infants smeared across the walls and the floor. In most cases the mother couldn't understand why the police were there at all, she just "got rid of the stupid doll" as she rocked a baby-shaped bundle in her arms.
"
PostPosted: Thu Nov 29, 2007 4:47 am



A teenage baby-sitter put the kids she was watching to sleep in their beds exactly at 7 pm and went back downstairs. The news was on the TV - the reporter said a psychopath from a local mental institution was on the loose and that local police thought he might be in the area. The reporter cautioned residents to lock their doors and windows because this guy was very, very dangerous. Well, the teenager checked the locks on the windows and the doors, but she forgot the door to the cellar.

Needless to say, the psychopath broke in about an hour later, coming up from the cellar, armed with an ax. The children heard some noises downstairs, but thought it was the baby-sitter moving some furniture around. Then it got real quiet. All they heard for the remainder of the night was this noise: "Thump! Thump! Dra-aag... Thump! Thump! Dra-aag..." They were too afraid to get up to see what it was.

In the morning, their parents came home and were horrified to find the babysitter at the top of the stairs, dead with both arms hacked off at the elbows. She'd been climbing the stairs on the bloody stumps of her arms, pulling her badly injured body along. Was she trying to check on the children? Was she trying to get help? Or was she planning to kill the children herself?

Demon of Suffering


DaJoel
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Sun Dec 02, 2007 12:17 am


That's a good one.



The Coughing Dog

"Kristin had always been the black sheep of her family. She came from a rural and very conservative family, and had fought constantly with her parents since she was a child. Kristin wanted no part of the settled and routine life her parents had lead - she was an impulsive free-spirit who would travel to the far corners of the earth at a moment's notice, sometimes not even knowing where she was headed, or why.

So it came as no surprise when, a few weeks shy of her 30th birthday, Kristin announced that she was leaving her high-paying job at a major corporation to fulfill her life's dream - to become a professional sculptor. She sold her expensive suburban apartment and moved into an abandoned mill in one of the rougher areas of Atlanta. She planned on converting part of the space into a full-time studio and living area.

Her parents were horrified, especially when they learned that her studio was just a few miles down the road from the county jail. And Kristin didn't see the need to rig her studio with an expensive alarm system, for her neighbors seemed nice enough. But like every other discussion Kristin had with her father, his words of warning went in one ear and out the other.

So on her 30th birthday, her father took matters into his own hands and bought Kristin a guard dog - a Doberman named Bishop from the local humane society. The dog had been abused by his former owners, and had become mean and distrustful of humans. But Kristin always had a strong love for animals, and she took the poor dog into her care. In a matter of weeks, Bishop became very attached to Kristin, and extremely protective whenever anyone else would approach her.

One morning, Kristin came home from a trip to the hardware store to find Bishop lying in the middle of the floor, coughing and wheezing uncontrollably. She immediately rushed him to the local veterinarian, who performed a series of tests. After a while, the vet was satisfied that Bishop wasn't dangerously sick, but he couldn't figure out why the dog was still coughing.

"Don't worry," he told Kristin in his calm and soothing voice, "Bishop looks perfectly healthy. But I'd like to run some additional tests on him this afternoon. Why don't you go home and I'll call you when we know something. There's no sense in sitting in the waiting room all day."

So Kristin got back in her car, made a trip to the health food store, then returned home. As she walked through the door, she could hear the phone ringing in her bedroom. Loaded down with shopping bags, she decided to let her voice-mail catch the call. But no sooner had the phone stopped ringing then it started ringing again. Thinking it may be an emergency - or perhaps an annoying telemarketer who needed to be yelled at - Kristin dropped her bags and ran to the phone, catching it on its last ring.

"Hello?" she breathlessly answered.

She was surprised to find her veterinarian on the other end. "Kristin, we have some results on Bishop. We need you to come back to the office."

"Okay. I'll be there in an hour or so..."

"...No, Kristin," interrupted the vet in a barely controlled voice. "We need you to come down now."

Kristin was taken aback by the sound of his voice. She could hear the tension lurking behind his words. There was something he wasn't telling her.

"What's wrong?" she asked. "Is Bishop okay?"

"We'll talk about that when you get here," answered the vet, his voice growing louder and more agitated. "Just get in the car now."

"Why can't you tell me over the phone?" asked Kristin.

The vet suddenly blurted out, "Are you in the house alone?"

A chill ran through Kristin's blood. She slowly sat on her bed and replied, "Yes. Why?"

She could hear the vet taking a deep breath on the other end of the phone. Then, barely able to contain the tremor in his throat, he said in a hushed voice, "Listen to me carefully. We found out why Bishop was coughing."

It was then that Kristin noticed her bedroom window. A hole had been punched through the glass, and it was unlocked.

"Kristin, are you there?"

"Yes," Kristin answered, her voice starting to shake. She then noticed drops of blood on her carpet. They stretched across the room and underneath her closet door.

"I don't know how to tell you this, but what we found in your dog's throat were fingers. Human fingers."

As the vet spoke, Kristin sat frozen as she watched the closet door slowly creak open on its rusted hinges.

"Did you hear what I said? He bit the fingers off somebody's hand!"

Kristin still didn't answer. In the darkness of the closet, she swore she could see the hand of a large man, blood dripping from where his fingers had been gnawed off. And on his arm was the orange sleeve of a prison uniform.

"There's somebody here," Kristin whispered into the phone.

"Get out of the house, Kristin! For God's sake, GET OUT OF THE HOUSE!"

The phone line went dead.
"
PostPosted: Sun Dec 02, 2007 12:07 pm


Scary stories is it?

World Horror Stories is a blog with videos, pics and stories. Check it out... Some of the content is seriously spooky.

Lil Liin
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DaJoel
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Fri Dec 07, 2007 8:49 am


You expect me to be able to sleep after seeing that? eek
PostPosted: Sun Jan 13, 2008 5:19 am


The Concerned Mother

A man and wife were driving late one night when they were flagged down by a woman that appeared to be hurt. She claimed she'd been in an accident and her baby was alive but trapped in the car. The man told her to wait with his wife and he'd see what he could do. He got to the car and found a couple obviously dead in the front seat but a baby crying in a carseat. He cut the baby loose and returned to his own car.

When he got there his wife was alone, he asked her where the woman had went and she replied that she'd followed him to the wreck. He left the baby with his wife and went back to the car to find her. When he got there he realized the woman who'd been instantly killed in the front seat had been the one who'd flagged him down.

The Mutilated Bride

A young man and his new bride were honeymooning in Paris when his wife went into a restroom and didn't return. With time the man began to fear the worst and went to the police. The police thought it was most likely the girl simply had second thoughts about the marriage, but they checked it out anyway and found no evidence of foul play.

As weeks turned into months the man finally gave up on finding his beautiful wife but his life fell into a shambles he was so filled with grief. Unable to hold a job or go on with his life, he took to wandering the world looking for anything that might ease his pain.

Years later in Borneo he came upon a freakshow in an old shabby building, he went in on a whim. In the last filthy cage he saw a twisted, scarred and mutilated woman rocking back and forth and groaning strange animal-like noises. He screamed as he recognized the birthmark on his wife's face.

isolumme


Lil Liin
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PostPosted: Sun Jan 13, 2008 6:57 am


This a true story.

As a business man unwinds in a hotel bar, he is approached by a good looking woman who offers to buy him a drink. Flattered, he accepts.

The next thing our business man knows, he is in his hotel room. More exactly, in the bathtub. He is covered in ice up to his neck. He looks around confused. He sees a note instructing him not to move and to call 911. By the tub is a table with a phone on it.

He calls 911. The operator listens to his story. She instructs him to slowly and carefully reach around and feel for a tube protruding from his lower back. He feels this tube and tells the operator. She instructs him to remain calm and still, that she has police and medical units enroute.

The business man's kidney has been harvested for the black market. eek

So when your mom told you not to take candy from strangers, you should have listened...
PostPosted: Mon Jan 14, 2008 11:18 am


kshade nice story and scary smile

Stuart21


DaJoel
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Sat Feb 09, 2008 4:21 am


I agree with Stuart, stealing people's organs is just creepy.
PostPosted: Sun Mar 16, 2008 3:57 am


Graveyard Dogs
Written by Wendy Webb

Shhh...do you hear that? The sound of footsteps. Not human footsteps, but something that only walks at night, and visits you in places where you ought not to be - like graveyards. You can hear them sometimes snuffling when you get too close to the graves of their loved ones, or whining. You especially don't want to stay when you hear the growling. And if they decide to let you see them, you never want to look into their glowing red eyes. 'Cause that's when they get you - the dogs. Graveyard dogs.

Joseph Blakely had been scared by that story all his life, and wondered if it had, in fact, come from Widow Morris. He never forgot it, or her. She lived way on the top of a hill in an old house. Some said it was a haunted house. But as Joseph Blakely grew from a boy into a man of 14, he figured no self-respecting ghost would spend ten seconds in a house with that woman. It didn't matter if it was a mean ghost, or a vindictive one - Widow Morris was meaner. It didn't even matter if the ghost made an awful noise by moving furniture in the middle of the night - the widow was louder, stronger, and she rarely slept.

But as bad tempered as she was, she couldn't compare to her live-in companion, the old goat. For that's what he was - an old goat. He went by the name of Emerson. They were the kind ones who called him that. Others used names that Joseph Blakely couldn't repeat, even though the seat of his britches carried many mendings, thanks to Emerson's difficult disposition.

You see, Joseph Blakely had made it his life's work to bother the widow and her old goat. He couldn't explain why he had to do it, and even if he wanted to, he couldn't stop himself. So whenever an idea popped into his head, he acted on it.

Like the time he smelled the blackberry pie and followed his nose to the windowsill, figuring if the widow had no intentions of sharing that pie, why, she wouldn't have put it there in the first place. He had barely stuck his finger through the warm crust when Emerson appeared, beard twitching and yellow teeth bared. And then came the widow with a broom she used to swat Joseph all the way back to town.

And he'd never forget the time he dashed up the steps in the dark of night to throw a rock through the widow's window. But since he forgot the incantation for protection, it was no wonder he didn't get her goat - but rather, her goat got him. Until her broom sent him running for cover behind a stand of old oaks.

And maybe it was a trick of the moonlight, but with red eyes as big as those of an owl, the widow stared into the night and spoke words that still send a shiver down his spine:

"I'll get you for this, Joseph Blakely. You know I will."

And still the bothering kept coming, with plans for even more. But as plans have a way of doing, they went astray two months later, when word came that the widow and the old goat had passed away. So Joseph decided he would just have to see her grave for himself. Only then could he let the plans in his mind rest.

One very dark night, he set out for the graveyard. He paid little mind to the idea of Graveyard Dogs, since it was a story that scared little boys - not a man of 14 like himself. But to be on the safe side, he had practiced the incantation all day. Nothing could get him now.

With lit torch, he peered from one grave to another until he found the one of the widow. Next to her was a stone that said simply: "Emerson."

"Well I'll be," he said, "she's even buried next to the old goat."

Suddenly, a snuffling sound came out from behind the headstone. Was that a Graveyard Dog? So following the incantation, he whirled once and whispered, "Be gone." Then came the whine. "Be gone," he said, whirling a second time.

And then he heard the growl.

Don't look into the eyes, because that's when they get you! So Joseph Blakely did what any young man with a lick of sense would do. He dropped his lit torch and ran screaming from the graveyard.

A hand reached out to pick up the torch. And the voice that made the snuffling and the whine let loose with a girlish giggle. For Widow Morris knew that, one day, she would get Joseph Blakely just as she promised. And just as she planned from the day when she, in fact, first told the story.

"That growl was perfect, Emerson," she said.

"Emerson?"

But the old goat was gone. It seemed he had done what any goat with a lick of sense would do when something was strange, and hightailed it out of the graveyard.

It was then she heard a different kind of growl. And when the Graveyard Dog chose to let her see it, she made the mistake of looking into its glowing red eyes.

In every story, there's a grain of truth - and the opportunity for a lick of sense. So no matter what you hear in a graveyard on a very dark night...

...Watch out for those eyes.

DaJoel
Vice Captain


Demon of Suffering

PostPosted: Sat Oct 11, 2008 9:49 pm


I'm out of stories for the moment. But I'll share this...

User Image - Blocked by "Display Image" Settings. Click to show.
PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2008 12:54 am


I don’t even know why I’m writing this. I can post this in a million different places, it won’t matter. There’s still nobody there to read it. Nobody left to hear my story. Yet this might be my last chance to do this, so I will. The feeling won’t go away. They’re watching. They’re watching and getting closer every second. They can feel my terror. And I know they’re enjoying it.

It has been about four months since everyone disappeared. And I mean everyone. I woke up one morning for school. I immediately noticed the time. School started three hours ago. Must have just hit the alarm clock still half-asleep, and fallen right back to sleep. It happens to me sometimes. Why hadn’t my parents woken me up? Probably just went to work early.

The first time I started to notice was at the station. I usually take a train to school, since it’s the fastest way to get there. I hadn’t seen anyone on my way to the station, but I lived in a rather quiet area of the town, so going was slow at this time of the day. It happened, so I didn’t think much of it. When I arrived at the station, I noticed there was nobody there. It was odd. There should have been at least a few people waiting for the train, even at this time of the day. I shrugged it off as an exceptionally slow day. It happened sometimes, too.

I waited for a good while, but the train didn’t come. I don’t remember how long I stood there, but I grew increasingly frustrated. I decided to walk to school. After all, it was only a twenty-minute walk if I did it fast enough, and I was late for the next lesson anyways.

I didn’t see anyone on my way to school. Nor was there anyone in school. The school building was open, and lit. I still didn’t think much of it, the lessons were on anyways. But the classrooms were empty. Every single classroom in the whole building. Some doors were open, some closed. But there was nobody there. I tried the teacher’s lounge, and it was empty. I even recall the smell of fresh coffee in the room. I tried calling one of my friends to ask what was going on. No answer. The phone rang, but there just wasn’t any answer. I tried another. Same thing. I ended up going through every single person I know from school. No answer.

I rushed to the shopping mall nearby. It was empty. The entire building, normally bustling with life, totally empty. The shops were open, the lights were on, the music was playing, the info screens were on. There just wasn’t anyone strolling around the mall, searching through the stores, manning the counters.

It was like everyone had vanished entirely.


I tried calling my parents. No answer. The whole day, I did not see a single living person. The only cars I saw were parked ones. There were no animals either. Everything was just dead quiet. But everything still worked. The shops were open, the lights were on, the TVs worked, there just wasn’t any program. Even the internet was there. Every site worked, every chatroom was open, there just wasn’t anyone there.

I went nuts. I don’t remember much of the first days, what it was like. Just the feeling of unimaginable terror, loneliness. I didn’t sleep much, I didn’t eat at all. I just sat around my house, waiting for someone to come home, for someone to call me, to hear a car drive past, waiting for the dream to end. It never did.

I eventually gathered myself. I told myself nobody was coming, and I had to get up and at least eat. And eat I did. I ate everything I could find, had the date expired or not. I ate and ate. And cried. I was alone. There was no sign, anywhere, that there’d be a single living person anywhere else in the world. No TV-channels showed any program. Some just showed the same news screens over and over. Nothing in the internet updated. Nobody ever logged in anywhere. Nobody answered the phone. Yet, everything just kept working. The power never went out. The lights were always on. The traffic lights worked. The stores were open. Music played where it had always played.

But everything was still empty.

I eventually grew accustomed to it. It took a while, but I started going out. At first I tried visiting friends, look for people, anyone. I soon gave it up. Before long, I realized that I need more food than what we have at home. I started looting grocery stores. Just what I needed at first, then went to home, and ate it. Before long, I started looting other goodies. Candy. Drinks.

Maybe a month was gone, and I had come to terms with my life, and the fact that there was nobody else in the world. So I made the most of my life. I started having fun, the kind of fun you’d imagine doing if you had the whole world for yourself for one day. I pillaged through every store I could think of, stole everything I could get my hands on. I slept at beds in furniture stores, I played games with the biggest screens electronic stores had. I broke every fine piece of china I came across. I rampaged through malls, leaving behind a trail of destruction. I missed my old life, but made the best of this one.

It was maybe a month ago that he appeared.

I was relaxing back home, listening through some albums I had brought home with me, when I suddenly heard a strange noise from outside. I can’t really describe it well. It was like something called for me. I’m not even sure I really heard it. I just felt it. What I saw outside scared the life out of me. Someone- something. It was the shape of a man, yet it was somehow… wrong. It was entirely black. No, not just black. It seemed to suck the very light from the air around it. There were no features to be seen. No clothing, no hair, no facial features. It was just a black mass I somehow knew was something like a man. I couldn’t stare directly at it, yet I couldn’t take my eyes off it. Every second I stared at it, it came closer, yet it didn’t move. Every second I felt I got dragged closer to it, yet I stayed where I was. The only feature I could recognize was it’s eyes. Two green, shiny dots I knew were it’s eyes. I knew it, because no stare has ever been so piercing, so paralyzing, so dreadful. It felt like the stare itself sucked the very life out of me.

It spoke to me. Not with words. Not with signs or gestures. I just looked at it and I knew what it said.

“YOU’RE NOT SUPPOSED TO BE HERE.”

I woke up. A day had passed, maybe two. I can’t remember for certain. I woke up, screaming, sweating, from my own bed. It was a dream. It had to be. I was alone. There was nobody else in the world, how could it have been anything other than a dream?

I went on. At first, the dream kept bothering me. It felt so real. Was it? No, it couldn’t have been. With the days, the memory started to fade. The moment started feeling more and more dreamlike, so I thought nothing of it. I even laughed at myself for thinking it was anything else.

Yet, there was a constant feeling of pressure in the air. It was like a coming storm that never came. Sometimes I barely noticed it, sometimes I couldn’t even think properly because of it. Yet, I went on living.

Today it happened again. The feeling. It called to me, while I was drifting to sleep. It called to me, told me to come to the window. I was too afraid to move. Yet still, my legs slowly took me there. An unimaginable feeling of dread and despair came over me. Tears flowed from my eyes as my feet unwillingly took me to the window. There was nobody there. The street was as empty as always. Yet the feeling did not go away. I felt like there were a million eyes focused on me alone. They were there. They were staring.

They spoke.

“WE HAVE COME FOR YOU.”

That was two hours ago. The calling stopped. The staring didn’t. I’m writing this now, because I know it’s the last time I can. They’re drawing closer by the second.

I’m not even sure why I’m writing this. Maybe there’s someone else like me in some corner of the world. Maybe someone can read this. I don’t care. I have to tell someone.

They’re here.

Demon of Suffering


Lil Liin
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PostPosted: Sat Dec 27, 2008 10:24 am


Driving home from a friends house, you sit at a red light when you hear a familiar tone from your phone, sitting in the passenger seat. A text message. Probably from your friend; you always leave things at their homes. Being a responsible driver, and the light still red, you open the message and wait for a moment for the image to load. Suddenly, a photo pops into view. Red, obscured, strange contrast. And no text accompanying it.

But the light is green, so you close your phone and go back to driving, wondering vaguely what that was, and who would have sent you it. Perhaps someone accidentally took a picture of the inside of their bag or pocket and sent it to you. You’re still caught wondering as you pull up to the next light, also red, and another little tone from your phone. You flip it open, hoping for an apology from a friend, but find yourself waiting as another photo loads on the screen. This one, still mostly red, but textured now with scraps of blue, yet still indiscernible. This time, it takes an impatient honk from behind you before you realize you can pass through the light and be on your way home. Closing the phone, and continue on your way.

You sit uncomfortable now as the tone rings again, at yet another stop signal. You pause, hesitate, and then open the phone. The picture now is suddenly much more clear. That scrap of blue seems to be the ragged edge of a bit of denim, half blood soaked and laying across a pile of entrails, torn straight through the back of a human torso. You can only see from the bottom of the shoulder blade to the tops of the thighs, but its unmistakably human. Blue-white spinal bone smeared in blood, tubes of intestine trailing out between ragged looking spinal tissue and going out of the frame of the picture. You choke back a throat full of bile and throw the phone back into the passenger seat, happy to be on your way again, and dreading the knowledge that you won’t be able to not look as you hear that tone again.

There is some relief as you realize there are no more stoplights before you reach your home. But as you pull up to that red stop sign, the bottom of your stomach drops out and you feel a cold sweat build on the back of your neck. You have already picked up the phone, even before that tell-tale little tone has told you there is a message. The cell vibrates in your hand as you flip it open, your mind gone on auto-pilot, driving home with your eyes on the screen as the newest photo loads. Intestines piled almost artistically to the side of the body, scalp ripped free and no hair discernible, and that sickening contrast of darkening red on blue. For some reason, you expected that, even as you taste bile on the back of your tongue.

Its not as close or obscured. Flesh torn apart by God knows what means, torn denim, and blood soaked so far into the threadbare fabric of a hand-me-down couch. The one you have in your living room. You pull your car into park, hands shaking as you make your way up to your front door. You can’t stop yourself now, your body’s just doing as it normally would, but your finger frantically scrolls down the screen, finding no name, no phone number, and a time dated on the message three minutes from now.

You put the key in the door as you try shrug off your denim jacket.
PostPosted: Sat Dec 27, 2008 11:11 am


Good one.

Demon of Suffering

Reply
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