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October 13, 2025 71 mins

These are 5 Outdoors Horror Stories That Will Give You Chills

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00:00 Intro

00:00:18 Story 1

00:15:07 Story 2

00:32:53 Story 3

00:44:31 Story 4

00:58:28 Story 5


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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:20):
I'm Devin, 22, from Erie. This happened over one weekend
in late September in Allegheny National Forest, Pennsylvania.
We had just finished finals and wanted a cheap camp out near
Kinzua Creek. It was me, my girlfriend Mara,
and our friends Theo, Lena and Owen.
On the way down US six, we stopped at A roadside place

(00:42):
outside Cannes called Triassic Trails.
Titans of deep time. That stop started everything.
I'm writing this because I need a record that isn't just what I
replay in my head at night. I know how this sounds.
I'll stick to what we saw, what we heard, and what we did.
I won't dress it up. Triassic Trails looked half

(01:03):
dead. The parking lot was cracked and
weedy. Inside were sun baked posters, a
glass case with dead stink bugs,and a gift rack with melted key
chains. Most of the dinosaur figures
were faded and chipped. 1 wasn't.
It was an Acrocanthosaurus, big theropod with a Ridge of spines
down the back. The gums looked wet, The teeth

(01:25):
had a fine crazing like cracked glaze.
The eyes were amber, not cartooncolored.
There was a metal base with a plaque about a sound
demonstration that was temporarily offline.
Owen touched the base and jerkedhis hand away.
He said it was vibrating. I put my palm on it and felt a
faint hum under the metal. Not loud, but there.

(01:47):
A staff door nearby was locked with a chain, and the chain
links were warm to the touch, like something had been behind
the door recently. No employees were around.
Outside at the edge of the lot, 3 stones were laid across a
little footpath with even spacing.
As if someone had arranged them with a tape measure.
We laughed at that and got back on the highway.

(02:10):
We turned S at Kinzua Bridge State Park and took Forest Rd.
321. Theo said he knew a clearing
where nobody camped. He said his older brother used
to hunt the area and showed him a dry rise above Kinzua Creek.
The drive in was normal green hemlock stands, maples flaring
early, ferns at waist height. A faint 2 tone whistle followed

(02:33):
us for a mile or two. I noticed it because it matched
the gap between my turn signal clicks.
It wasn't close. It moved in and out of hearing
and then went away. We found the rise and pitched 2
tents. Coyotes started up at dusk.
We ate chili from a pot and tookpictures standing on an old
logging cut. We didn't drink.

(02:54):
I want that clear. Right before sleep.
Something moved through the air in a way I felt more than heard.
The tent skin dimpled like someone exhaled slowly against
it. The coyotes cut off mid Yip.
We lay there listening. No steps, no branches snapping.
I told Mara it was just wind pressure dropping.
We slept. Morning had that early fall bite

(03:17):
where breath shows for a second and then disappears.
Sun came in low over the Creek and lit the mist.
We packed light to hike toward an overlook Theo promised was 10
minutes upstream. That was the joke of the trip.
Everything was always 10 minutesaway.
The forest looked good. Then small things started to
feel off. Birds began songs and cut them

(03:39):
short. Squirrels froze on trunks and
stayed there too long. Mara stopped me with a hand on
my elbow and pointed at the ground.
A line of stones crossed the game path.
The spacing matched what we saw at Triassic Trails.
We stepped over and kept going. We reached a clay bank by the
trail and saw parallel scallopedscrapes 4 feet apart.

(04:02):
Each pocket had a short black hair pressed in, not soft like
deer hair, stiffer. Owen took photos.
The clay under his fingertip looked fresh, not dry or
cracked. As we moved on, the path we had
just used was blocked by fresh green branches snapped clean.
The leaves were still full and uncurled.

(04:24):
I know what windfall looks like.This wasn't that.
A thin dragline ran straight as a pulled string through ferns
and leaf litter, then disappeared under a dead limb.
I started to taste metal at the back of my tongue.
My sinuses felt pressurized. Lena wiped her nose and showed
me a thin thread of blood. She passed it off as dry air.

(04:46):
The air was damp. We argued about turning back.
Mara didn't like what she was seeing.
I didn't either. Theo wanted one more Ridge
because he swore an overlook wasjust ahead.
While we went back and forth, a whistle came from the trees on
our right. It wasn't birdsong.
It sounded like someone copying Mara's last words, stretched out

(05:07):
and breathy back. Now the hair went up on my arms.
We turned around as a group. A new stone line that wasn't
there an hour earlier forced us around a rotting game fence.
The fence post leaned inward andthe wire sagged low.
The detour funneled us into a Fern bottom between two
hemlocks. That's where we saw it.

(05:30):
It was between the trees, broadside, tall back with a
jagged Ridge. Coal green hide, pale scar
lattices across the flank. The head turned in a slow,
controlled way. An amber eye blinked with a
sideways membrane and then cleared.
It exhaled. The smell was iron and tar with
a little ozone. No theatrics, no roar.

(05:54):
It looked at us in a way that recognized shape and distance.
It took two steps that didn't feel like a charge, more like it
wanted us to move along a line. It didn't hide.
It didn't posture. It watched where our feet went.
A small deer ran out of cover toour left, like it had been
pushed. The thing flicked its head and
the deer folded on itself. I heard wood break, but there

(06:17):
was no wood. The deer kicked twice and
stopped. The thing did not feed it let us
see it and what it could do. That's when Theo ran.
He grabbed Lena and yanked her uphill.
Owen followed them. Mara said my name and I moved
downslope with her, aiming for the trailhead spur in the car.
Splitting wasn't a plan. It just happened because

(06:40):
everybody chose what looked likedaylight.
I don't remember the exact route, just branches hitting my
face and hands and the sound of breath.
Too loud in my own ears. Something at throat height
caught Owen's camera strap behind us and he swore hard once
I called his name. No answer.
A thrum rolled through the treesagain.

(07:01):
My teeth chattered like I was cold.
It messed with control in a small way.
Fine movements felt jumpy. 2 whistles came from opposite
sides. The same 3 syllables spaced out,
the same words we'd said Go now.I know a person can throw a
voice. This was too far apart.

(07:21):
We reached the small dirt lot near the spur.
My Subaru was there. With a dusting of leaf grit.
I hit the fob. The chirp echoed down the trees.
A slower version of the chirp came back.
Not electronic. Mara got in the passenger side.
I slid behind the wheel, jammed the key and turned.
The engine caught. The thing walked out from a

(07:43):
shadow along the edge and came up beside my door.
It breathed. The inside of the glass fogged
where its breath landed, which Ican't explain.
Threads of saliva hung between its teeth and vibrated.
With the engine idle, the eye tracked me.
The pupil narrowed, then opened again.
While it studied heat through the glass.

(08:05):
I looked down at my hands on thewheel and back up at its mouth.
I did not move. It did not snap.
It left us and turned toward motion in the trees.
Theo and Lena burst into the open at the far edge of the lot.
The thing pivoted with a little hip shift and started toward
them at a speed that didn't match its size.
I hit the gas gravel, kicked therear, swung wide and corrected.

(08:30):
In the mirror I saw the sail Ridge for a second, then nothing
but branches. We shot onto Forest Rd. 321.
Another thrum hit the windshieldand the edges crackled white
like ice. Starting.
I kept the wheel still and eyes forward.
We didn't stop until Warren. We pulled into a 24 hour
laundromat because it was open and had lights.

(08:51):
Mara was sick in the bathroom for a while.
I dialed 911 and said we'd seen a bear attack.
When the dispatcher asked for the location and details, I
found myself saying the real things.
Stones across the path, fresh green breaks.
A deer bent the wrong way. Whistles repeating our words.
A big animal with a Ridge down the back.

(09:12):
She asked again if I meant a bear.
I said no. She put me on hold and came back
with a plan to meet at Kinzua Bridge State Park. 2
Pennsylvania State Police cars, a game Commission truck and AUS
Forest Service Ranger met us at the park lot near the visitor
center. One of the troopers rode with me
back down Fr 321 while the others followed.

(09:36):
Mara stayed at the office with aRanger.
I drove slow. I told them where to pull off
near the trailhead spur. We moved as a group, step by
step with spotlights and one handheld thermal.
The Creek noise came up from thedark like a constant line.
They found the deer where we sawit go down.
The cut was one motion and clean.

(09:57):
No tearing, no scattered gut pile.
That's not how I've seen bear kills look. 50 yards farther
they found Owen in a shallow draw.
He was inside a new stone line that formed a narrow throat in
the terrain. I won't write details.
I will say it was fast and he did not leave marks that showed
a long struggle. The game Commission officer said

(10:20):
we needed to push toward the oldgame fence because a narrow
culvert by the Creek would be the best corner in the area.
We moved that way with the troopers in front and the Ranger
covering the rear. The.
Spotlights hit the ridgeline first.
The animal paced the fence line and then turned its head flat to
us like a bird sighting down something.

(10:40):
It made a low 2 tone shape of our radio squelch.
Back at us, the Game Commission officer shouldered a rifle he
carries for large animals. One trooper had a 12 gauge with
slugs. They waited for a clear angle
that wasn't toward any of us. Sirens from the cars up on the
road started. The animal slid into the narrow
run toward the culvert and then tried to push past the headwall.

(11:03):
The concrete chipped and popped.The first shot hit the shoulder,
the second hit over the ribs. There was a drawn out exhale and
a different kind of rattle, likesteam.
Leaking, the pressure feeling faded between one breath and the
next. The animal sagged to one side
and went still. We found Lena upstream, near
boulders at a bend. She did not make it.

(11:25):
Thea was under a log jam fartheron with a broken wrist and a bad
shock response. He kept saying he had heard our
words, whistled from behind him and then from ahead, like there
were two positions moving. He confirmed what we saw and
what we heard. The authorities taped off the
area and called more people. I drove back to the park office

(11:45):
and sat with Mara while she filled out statements.
We both gave blood alcohol. Tests.
We were clean. They took my clothes and gave me
a paper suit. I kept my shoes because they
wanted the prints to match my tracks.
The official reason for the closure of that corridor was
unstable structure and hazardouswildlife.

(12:06):
The next week, Triassic Trails shut its doors and swapped the
acro picture on the website for a mammoth, the page said.
Refurbishment. A game Commission officer called
me later and said. Off the record.
That DNA tests didn't match any known North American animal.
He told me not to repeat that part, then told me anyway that I

(12:27):
should avoid that part of the forest for a while because signs
sometimes turns up in clusters. He didn't sound like he was
repeating a script. He sounded tired.
We held a service for Owen in Erie.
Lena's family held one in Pittsburgh.
Theo came to both with his arm in a sling and did not speak it
either. Mara stopped waking up shaking

(12:48):
after a couple of weeks, but shestill won't sit next to a window
at night. I went back to Kinzua Bridge
State Park with her at noon, 1 clear day.
We walked out onto the skywalk where the old viaduct fell years
ago and looked over the tops of the trees.
It's a clean view with good distance, no tricks.
I took 2 flat stones from the edge of the path and set them on

(13:11):
the railing side by side. I said their names.
We stood there a few minutes andleft.
I haven't camped since. People ask what it looked like.
I give standard words so I don'thave to argue.
Big sail backed reptile eyes, long teeth.
The more important parts don't fit in quick answers.
It placed stones. It snapped live branches at the

(13:35):
right height to catch a throat or a strap.
It copied patterns we made without needing to be close.
It chose who to chase and who toignore.
It tested glass and heat. It didn't waste motion.
That is what I try to forget. The other thing I try to forget
is how the forest went from normal to wrong in small steps

(13:55):
before anything big happened. If you hike and the birds keep
stopping mid song, if the squirrels don't run, if the air
pushes your teeth like a tuning fork, turn around then don't
wait for something visible. By the time you see it, you're
already where it wants you. I don't have a lesson that makes
this neat. There is a file somewhere with

(14:16):
our statements and an empty space where the right label
should go. There are concrete chips on a
culvert headwall and a section of old fence that leans at a
different angle now. There are two stones on a rail
at Kinzua Bridge State Park thattourists probably move without a
thought. When I sit at night and the
house is quiet, I remind myself of what the final scene looked

(14:38):
like in full light. Troopers, a game Commission
officer, a Ranger, equipment procedure, people doing their
jobs, and an animal that stoppedmoving.
That was the end. The rest is only what it took to
get there and who did not make it back.
I can't stand the thought of theCreek noise at dark anymore, so

(14:59):
I don't go. I keep the story plain because
that's the only way I can keep it at all.
I'm not law enforcement. I'm the guy they call when a
trailhead sign falls over or a water cache needs to be hauled

(15:20):
before sunrise. Contracted seasonal maintenance.
White truck clipboard keys that never leave the lanyard.
This all started on a late summer afternoon at the yard
when the heat index board still read 112 at 4:16 PM.
The radio net was quiet except for the usual check.
Insurance trail work crew clearing tamarisk near the

(15:43):
marsh. A camp host calling in a toilet
paper shortage. 1 Ranger on patrol out near Yaki.
I had the Jasper trail assignment move Sealed gallon
jugs down from Culp Valley so there'd be fresh water for a
vehicle recovery at first light.Some hiker had tried to drive a
low clearance out of the wash and cracked an axle.

(16:04):
The incident got a pre log number but nothing formal yet.
My job was just logistics in this park.
That's 90% of survival. Right sized water in the right
place before the wrong thing happens.
I signed the cash manifest, checked the spill kit, topped
the bed cooler with ice, and pulled the spare key fob out of
the glove box where someone before me had taped it with blue

(16:26):
painters tape. Habit said tuck it into the
chest pocket and clip the lanyard.
So I did the temp needle on the old Ford.
Climbed a little on Montezuma grade like it always did when
the air was a dry blast and the AC was set too high.
I pulled it off Max, cracked thewindow and kept the fan aimed at
my collar. The cab smelled like sun cooked

(16:47):
vinyl and pine cleaner. I watched the road shimmer and
reminded myself about work rest cycles. 20 on, 40 off.
In this heat, if you can stand the schedule out past the pull
out, the light went slate colored and then thin.
The kind of twilight that flattens everything into the
same bad decision. I dropped into Culp Valley, took

(17:09):
the dirt spur, and eased into the washboard of Jasper Trail
with the truck in second tires letting out that familiar gravel
talk. I saw the headlamps from a long
way off, 3 steady white points floating in line along the
shoulder above a shallow draw. It wasn't how visitors move.
Tourists fuss the beam around and stop to take pictures that

(17:31):
never come out. These moved smooth and
deliberate, like they already knew the ground and we're
checking their pace to each other.
When I rolled closer, they stepped into the wash and raised
arms to flag me down. The one in the middle had a
handheld radio clipped under hischin, the way we do for long
nights. It looked right until I got
within 20 yards and saw the plastic was cheap.

(17:53):
Blister pack kids grade, No antenna whip, no call sign.
Sticker. No, nothing.
The middle 1 leaned in and said they were volunteers helping the
sheriff on a search. His voice had the right urgency,
but none of the details. We've got a patient up wash,
dehydrated, non ambulatory. We need to move him to the
highway now. No time for paperwork.

(18:15):
I let the window sit halfway down, eyes on mirrors, hands
where he could see them. I asked for the incident number.
He said they were staged out of the sheriff's substation in town
and didn't have it. I asked who the incident
commander was. He said there wasn't 1 yet.
It was a soft start. Behind him.
The guy on his left was holding a translucent jug by the neck in

(18:39):
the slant from my headlamps. It wasn't full, and it wasn't
water. Amber, viscous, a little glint
of something that caught the light wrong.
Fuel smells different in this heat, and it gets into your head
fast. I caught a whiff when the wind
turned. I explained policy.
No transport without Ranger approval.
No ad hoc patient movement without a.

(19:00):
Form and a recorded accept chainof custody on property if
anything was being taken with the patient.
He smiled like I was the kid who'd memorized the rules.
Time is life, he said, and reached a hand through the
window to my key ring. He did it like people do when
they think they're fixing something.
Just a quick, confident grab. And those keys were off the

(19:22):
column and in his palm. My chest went flat and cold.
I don't carry a sidearm. Maintenance doesn't rate 1.
The only thing that's mine in a truck like that is the line
between my hands and the rest ofthe night.
I didn't argue. You learn to work things back,
not break them off. She runs hot.
I said if she idles a while in this heat, you got to prime the

(19:44):
fuel a little. Hood props sticky, I can show
you. I didn't give him time to say
no. I popped the latch and stepped
out with the kind of body language that makes other people
do what you want without thinking they're doing it.
The two on the flanks came forward to crowd the grill.
The middle one dropped the keys on the radiator brace to free
both hands. I leaned in, found nothing in

(20:06):
particular to adjust, and used the movement to bring my
shoulder up and click the spare fob inside my shirt.
The locks chucked down with thattight sound modern trucks make.
I closed the hood harder than I needed to.
The thunk echoing out into the wash and pretended I'd pinched
my thumb so my face had a reasonto look the way it did.

(20:27):
They tried the handle. It didn't give because it was
never going to. One of them walked to the
tailgate and rattled it. I'd run a carabiner through the
latch after the last time some kid stole our trash bags for a
burn pile. The guy with the amber jug set
it on the ground and wiped his hands on his jeans.
There was a faint brown bloom onthe instep of his right boot

(20:48):
pattern, like radiator spray, that coppery color you get when
a hot engine burps out water andwhatever else it's got in it.
They adjusted their positions tobracket me without looking like
they were doing it. Up on the Ridge, 1/4 mile out,
something blinked once, like an SUV parking light, proof of
life, then went dark. Let's not make this weird, the

(21:09):
middle one said, and I heard something metal click near the
guy to my right. I didn't look, I kept my voice
flat and carried it just enough to hit the shoulder mic on my
radio. Maintenance too, to any Ranger
on primary. I said low and even.
Unknowns on Jasper, claiming volunteer status, No incident
number, no IC request, verify ordeny.

(21:33):
The net held its breath way off on the repeater.
There was a carrier squelch froma camp host Mike, then a voice I
knew but had never had reason toneed said copy.
Maintenance 2. No volunteers deployed on
Jasper. Stay put.
If safe, move to hardcover and hold if not.
I'm inbound from Yaki. The middle one smiled like I

(21:55):
told a joke in a bad bar. We'll drive, he said, and put
his fingers on the handle again.The guy on the right used a pry
tool to pick at the driver door seal.
They switched their radios off at the same time.
The way people do when they don't want to be heard by
someone else who can actually hear.
I bled a little air from the rear passenger tire.

(22:16):
With the valve cap off and the Press of a metal tab, it wasn't
enough to strand the truck. It was enough to leave a track
we could identify later if someone rolled it.
I took my soft shell from behindthe seat and slid under the
chassis. The ground was radiating heat
back into my forearms. I could smell dust and frame
grease and the faint suite of coolant that never quite leaves

(22:39):
an old fleet truck. I pressed the radio against my
jaw under the truck so I could talk without moving my lips.
Holding under the vehicle, I said Three at least.
Forth on the Ridge. Fuel can present.
The Ranger answered with a shorthum of words and breathing.
No timeline. We don't give those people

(23:00):
fixate on minutes in a place where moments don't mean
anything. They circled.
One scraped the driver side withthe pry, got nowhere, and then
gave up and walked the bed rack.He found the sealed water and
tapped the caps with his nail like he was checking fruit in a
store. The amber jug sat in the dust
like an accusation. I pushed a reflective cash

(23:22):
sticker up into the dark under the differential where only a
mechanic would look. A low tech breadcrumb if
somebody stole the truck and we needed to make sure it was ours
in a lot a week from now. I tucked my knees to my chest to
reduce surface area, breathed like I was trying not to fog a
lens, and waited for the first ripple of cooler air that says
the night is finally winning. You learn to move when other

(23:45):
people are looking at the wrong thing.
When the night settled enough that the insects came back
close, I eased along the passenger side until my hand
found the key fob through my shirt.
I pressed the panic button twicein quick succession, not long
enough to blow the horn, just enough to tick the lights once
the headlamps on the Ridge pivoted that way.

(24:07):
Out of habit, I slid off the farside into the wash, felt for
hard pan with my boot, and kept the truck between the men and my
silhouette. No light, no sudden moves.
I took a Yucca stem and brushed my softer prints where the sand
wanted to remember them. The only thing I lit was a red
chemstick I cracked under the heel of my glove.

(24:29):
And. Palmed.
Not for seeing things far away, but for not walking into a rock
with my own teeth. The parks full of names locals
use that never make it to a map.There's a sandstone alcove about
1/4 mile off the wash that crewscall the Wind Caves, though
they're not the famous ones downin Fish Creek.
It's a shallow room scoured out by air and time, with a knee

(24:52):
high lip and two tight ways in. I work toward that shape because
I've sat in there on lunch breaks and out of monsoon
sprinkles, and once, when the truck battery died and I needed
a spot to think, the men behind me looked patient on the
skyline. I couldn't hear them, which
didn't make me feel better. In the wash below, a cheap green

(25:13):
laser scribbled across a boulderfor a second and went dark.
People buy those for cats and end up using them for things
that aren't animals. It was meant to see who
flinched. I kept the radio low, moving to
the alcove. No contact.
Negative. Patient observed.
I said. The Ranger asked me for one
cross check. Did I see any Med gear with

(25:34):
them? I said no triage tags, no
litter, no bag, no even attempt to say pulse or airway or heat
illness by degree. If you're with a sick person,
you talk about numbers without remembering you're doing it.
All they had was a word they thought would move.
Me. The alcove held cool in its back
wall. I crawled over the lip and

(25:54):
settled behind a swell in the floor that put stone between me
and the wash. I elevated my feet on my pack
for a minute to chase the heat out of my calves and took one
measured mouthful of water. I kept the bottle cap in my palm
so it wouldn't clack against rock.
I ratcheted the squelch down to the edge of silence.
Somewhere above, a night bird made the sound it always makes.

(26:18):
Farther up Canyon, an engine coughed twice and died like an
old truck trying to move to a better vantage and failing at
it. They tried a voice not loud.
Maintenance. Someone called from the wash.
We've got him. He's bad.
There's a way someone says that when they know who you are and
what you know, they like to use your language back at you, but

(26:42):
it never fits right. They should have given me a
location marker, or a seat of pain, or a skin check or a
request for a litter and a tarp.They said none of that.
The tone was too clean. I kept my mouth closed and
watched the dust drift at the lip of the alcove.
Two sets of feet scuffed past, not close, testing a perimeter

(27:03):
they didn't want to walk into. They went back up to the Ridge
because they liked being taller than the ground.
Pre dawn is the only mercy out there.
The heat finally drops out of the frame rails and your brain
lets the words you rehearsed allnight line up.
I listened to my watch tick because there was nothing else
to hang time on. The first blue came in that

(27:25):
skinny line over the hills. A single figure stepped into the
wash and didn't turn on a light.He made two quick taps on his
radio mic, the kind of sound a tongue makes on the roof of a
mouth, and gave the short whistle crews use when the net
is too busy for words. I showed hands 1st and stood
slow. He didn't ask if I was all

(27:45):
right. He asked if I was armed.
I said no. Good, he said.
We're walking. We took the long route that
keeps you off the Ridge lines and out of sight of skylines.
He stopped every short stretch and knelt to look at the sand.
He could read a night in the marks people leave, the way a
Carpenter reads grain. When we got to a bench, he let

(28:06):
me look back with him. The headlamps were there, 3
faint whites against the pale coming up behind them, spaced
the same way they had been the first time I saw them.
They watched. They did not follow.
They weren't going to risk whatever they'd planned now that
a Ranger and a marked truck werethe same picture.
We slipped the last mile to a turn out off S 22 that isn't the

(28:29):
obvious 1. He got on the radio and said the
bare minimum to get other bodiesmoving the right pieces.
Maintenance 2 Secured vehicle onJasper unknowns observed Ridge N
no contact. He gave me a bottle of warm
Gatorade that still tasted like a good decision and told me to
hold there. Another Ranger went up with a

(28:51):
deputy later and brought the truck back with Primarks
photographed, the prints swabbed, and the reflective
sticker I'd shoved under the differential pulled off with a
laugh. The flat rear tire told them
where it had sat and for how long.
I didn't ride along. They didn't ask.
Back at the yard, the brightnessof everything felt wrong.

(29:11):
Like it does when you've been awake too long and noise gets
edges. I signed my cash manifest closed
with a note deployment interrupted incident managed by
Ranger and put the bed rack backin order.
Someone handed me a one page nondisclosure in the break room
where we keep the extra gloves in the box fan.
Ongoing investigation they said.Pleasant and tired.

(29:33):
I read it and signed it without asking what exactly I was
agreeing not to repeat because we both knew the thing that
matters in a place like this is that people keep coming back
with stories that end at home. The Ranger wrote a separate
supplement that I never saw. The incident log for the broken
axle turned into a maintenance anomaly sideline.

(29:53):
Paper has a way of moving facts where you'd never think to find
them. Two weeks later, the detective,
who still wears his badge on a metal chain and likes to stand
in doorways, came by, he said. Three men were picked up in
Okatiya Wells in the middle of the night with a bed full of
catalytic converters and stolen tools, he said.
One of their boots had a stain they were pretty sure matched

(30:16):
something they'd sampled out of my truck door seam.
He said thanks for the phone call, like I'd done more than
whisper the truth into a radio and hold still for it to work.
He didn't write my name down. I watched the pen.
It stayed in his shirt pocket. The second fob on the lanyard
never left my neck through any of this, and it hasn't since.

(30:39):
I take it into the shower and set it on the soap tray where I
can see it. It isn't superstition.
It's a checklist item with better manners.
I added a line to the back of myfield card where I keep the
notes I don't want to learn again.
Verify call signs, challenge OESresource numbers.
No transport without an IC. Don't unlock for anyone whose

(31:01):
story skips the parts that take time.
Use the terrain, not the truck. Keep one piece of proof in a
place thieves don't think to touch.
If you have to pick between talking and staying small, stay
small and make the radio do the talking for you.
The park never changes in the ways that count.
The wind still picks up around dusk and rattles the brittle

(31:22):
things. The cicadas still drill that one
note into your skull until you forget it's there.
The road still goes gravel, thensand, then a line that doesn't
exist until someone draws it again with their tires.
They moved me to sign maintenance for a while after
that. Boards, bolts, the small, honest
work that doesn't ask you to be brave.

(31:43):
I still take the white truck outwhen they need a body to haul
water. It still runs hot on Montezuma
grade if you're greedy with the AC.
When the needle drifts, I crack the window and listen to the
sound the tires make on the 1st washboard.
It's clean and dumb and perfect in a way that keeps you out of
your own head. If you want a moral, go rent it
somewhere else. This isn't a lesson, it's just

(32:06):
what happened. 3 headlamps move smooth in the wrong place at the
wrong hour, and they met a Ranger who walks without making
noise and a maintenance tech whoknows the difference between a
form worth signing and a favor that gets people killed.
The only person who needed to remember my name was me, and I

(32:26):
haven't had trouble with that since I started wearing the
lanyard under my shirt. The radio sits on its charger
now with the volume turned down low, and when it hisses in the
evening I feel the muscles in myforearms.
Answer. I don't tell this story on the
net. I tell it here once and then I
get back in the truck and go where they send me.
There's always another cache to stage before the heat makes the

(32:49):
rest of the choices for you. I run steel between Monticello
and Moab often enough to know where the road pinches and where
it lets you breathe. That night I had a 48 foot
flatbed under me with two bundles of i-beam and a stack of

(33:11):
C channel strapped down tight. Three chains per bundle.
Edge protectors, binders rechecked after the 1st 15 miles
day. Cab sleeper, 13 speed Jake
Strong gross right under 78,000.It was early spring, the kind of
storm that drops off the Abajos without warning.

(33:33):
Dispatch pushed a weather alert at 2046.
Sheet lightning flooded shoulders around Indian Creek.
I signed the bill of lading at the yard, checked tread, checked
wipers, checked that my ABS warning stayed out and I said
company policy to myself like a prayer.
Do not stop on an unlit shoulder.

(33:53):
Call it in and keep rolling doors locked at all times.
Re enter traffic only from a safe turn out.
I've said those lines out loud to rookies.
It's different when you have to use them.
By 2110, the rain had turned thered rock.
Black paint lines floated off the pavement like strings when
the wipers missed a beat. I settled at 48 and kept the

(34:16):
RPMS up to keep the alternator happy.
With everything on hands at 8:00and 4:00, no radio chatter.
A sedan bobbed past southbound lights smeared by water.
And then it was just me and the white noise on the glass.
I kept an eye on the mile markers. 6365 I started thinking

(34:37):
about a story our safety guy likes to tell about staged
breakdowns, how they depend on one thing, you giving them the
exact move they need, which is you stopping right there where
they have the angles. I didn't like thinking about it.
I don't want to drive by people who need help. 2 summers ago
outside Green River I did stop. It was a mother with a sick kid

(35:00):
held under a blanket. I could feel the heat coming off
him through the fabric. I pulled up to a lit pull out 50
yards ahead. Called Highway Patrol, grabbed
the bottled water I. Keep in the footwell.
That night went the way you wanta night to go.
It sits in my head next to the policy like 2 magnets that don't
want to touch. AT2135I topped a small rise

(35:24):
before mile 67 and the lightningopened the world for a second.
Hazards up a head, hood up, trunk popped a hair.
Someone stepped into my lane andwaved me down.
Not the frantic windmilling you see when a tire explodes and
whoever's out there is trying tomake any car stop.
This was a chest high palm 2-3 beats timed to my brake light

(35:45):
pulses. I know that sounds odd, but
that's exactly how it looked. He'd practiced off the
reflection. My stomach said no.
I bumped the Jake 1 notch, not too slow, just to put some voice
in the rain eased left to ride the center and watched the
guardrail on the far side. 2 shapes crouched where the rail

(36:07):
meets a drainage cut. They weren't watching the sedan.
Their heads tracked my tractor. I didn't stop.
I kept the wheel straight, doorslocked, windows up and gave
myself 2 feet on the sedan as I passed.
The guy in the lane didn't flinch like a startled motorist
would. He peeled his hand down slow and
pivoted with me. I said.

(36:29):
Northbound US 191, mile 67, silver sedan with hazards,
possible ambush indicators. I'm not stopping.
I'm continuing to the gravel pad1/4 mile north.
Request a unit. The dispatcher asked for my rig
description, direction, speed. I gave all of its steady

(36:49):
distance to the next turn out. No hero talk, she said.
The nearest trooper had just cleared a stop South of me.
And would shadow my return. Do not make contact, she said.
Copy The gravel pad at 2140 was soup.
I eased in shallow so I could pull straight back out without
spinning the trailer. Hazards on engine and gear foot

(37:11):
on the service brake while I thought through what I was going
to do. This is the part where you
decide the rest of your night. You can throw yourself into the
story you want to tell later, how you jumped out, how you
helped, or you can stick to the script that gets you home.
I set three options in my head. If they came to me, I stayed in
the cab and called it in again. If they sat, I would roll back

(37:35):
slow enough to keep eyes on distance.
If anything shifted toward this pad, I left and met the trooper
farther up. I told dispatch I'd do a rolling
return at 25 to observe from a distance.
She said the unit would be behind me, unlit and to maintain
movement. I nosed out at 2144 and merged

(37:55):
with my blinker. Solid, no erratic flashes to
read as panic. The storm had settled into
curtains you could part with your beams for only a second at
a time. I ran the right tires near the
crown where the watersheds eyes on the left mirror for that
second set of headlights. They showed up like a low glow.
No bar lights, no wig wag. Just a car that stayed where a

(38:19):
car stays when it doesn't want to be seen.
I let my speed find 22 and stayed there.
The wave man stepped wider into the lane when I came on, palm
out like before. The Crouch shapes lifted as my
trailer midpoint drew even with the sedan's rear bumper out of
the southbound cut. A second vehicle snapped its
nose toward my ICC bar to box the sedan against me if I

(38:42):
stopped. It was the move our safety guy
talks about. Make the truck be your wall.
I didn't brake. I fed torque and kept the
trailer true. At that speed and weight, small
inputs matter. The boxing car needed angle to
take the spot behind my trailer.Angle on wet gravel steals
traction. Its rear wheels climbed.

(39:02):
The berm lost it, and the car slewed bumper kissing the
guardrail hard enough to rattle itself silly.
The sedan tried to drop its hood.
The trooper chose that second tolight the world.
He slid up dark, so close I could see the rivets in his push
bar. When the Blues hit, he didn't do
anything dramatic. He put his car at an angle that

(39:23):
made leaving a bad idea and staying the only option.
I gave myself room and kept rolling to mile 68 where there's
space. I didn't touch the horn, I
didn't curse. I kept breathing like I was
backing into a dock with a boardguy waving me back and a
different board guy staring at his clipboard.
The dispatcher said good work. Continue to 68, unit will meet

(39:47):
you. Do not return to scene.
At 2152 I set my brakes in the pad at 68 and watched rain
ladder down the glass. I wrote everything before it got
fuzzy time I first saw them light timing against my brakes,
the crouched heads following me like a cat follows a toy.
I wrote what the wave man said when I went by.

(40:09):
Hey, hey brother, not Sir and not help.
It matters when you tell a storylater.
People use their words differentwhen they're scared.
The trooper came at 2210, calm like he'd been here before.
He took my license and registration, asked for the log
page, asked if I had dash Cam. I did.

(40:31):
Forward, wide angle and a cabin Cam that shows my hands.
I mirrored the card to his tablet right there and we
scrubbed the footage together frame by frame.
The wave was exactly what I thought.
Time to the afterglow of my brake lights on the wet
pavement. The crouched figures didn't
shift their focus until my cab passed, then their chins tracked

(40:52):
the trailer like they were counting off feet.
You could see the dark spot in the southbound cut where the
boxing car waited outside my headlight cone.
The trooper nodded once. We've had chatter about a crew
trying this. The rain makes people second
guess themselves. You handled it right.
He didn't add anything warm to that.

(41:13):
It didn't need warmth. I filed a near miss through our
company. App at 2238.
Route conditions, actions taken,involvement of law enforcement,
no contact, no injuries, dash Cam uploaded, safety flagged
mile 67 for night weather runs and pushed a note to other
drivers. The trooper told me not to swing

(41:34):
back by the scene. And not to loiter.
He said they'd call if they needed a written statement
beyond what I'd given him. And they let me go.
I drove to Moab in the quiet endof the storm.
When the rain backs off, you canhear the hiss of your tires like
breath in a bottle, and it makesyou think about things you don't
want to. I thought about the kid near

(41:54):
Green River that night. The mother waved different,
bigger, then backed away from the road like she was trying not
to spook anything. She kept looking at her car, not
at me. I pulled ahead to a lit turn
out, called it in and waited in the cab with the doors locked
until the trooper slid in behindme.
When I walked back, I did it with someone already on scene.

(42:16):
That was the difference. It was controlled.
What happened at 67 lives in theopposite of control.
You think you can tell the difference quickly out there.
Some nights you can. Some nights a man waves with his
palm at. Chest height to the beat of your
own brake lights and you know hepicked you and not anyone else.
The follow up came two days later while I was fuelling and

(42:38):
Blanding. Same trooper, same calm voice.
They'd set a sting with a markedunit 1/2 mile back and an
unmarked up front. The dashcam angles help them map
the ruts and the dry spot under the tamarisk where the boxing
car waited. They rolled the crew without a
fight. He said my footage put their
timing together. He said again that I handled 67

(43:00):
right. I thanked him, hung up and
clicked the nozzle back into itsslot.
There's no parade in that kind of call.
It's just the right thing happening later than your
heartbeat wanted. I still.
Run that road. I still look at 67 when the mile
marker flashes by. The company policy sits folded
in my clipboard and I keep reading it like it's new.

(43:23):
Do not stop on an unlit shoulder.
Call it in, keep rolling, make your own safe, turn out doors
locked. It's dry language that keeps you
whole when the night is long andthe highway gives you more glass
than lane. I think about the man's wave and
how it matched my lights. I think about what my hands did
not do. They did not turn toward the

(43:44):
shoulder. I wish the rules weren't
necessary. I wish every hazard with a hood
up was a mother with a feverish kid and a pull out just ahead.
But I don't drive the world. I wish I drive the one that's
painted in white dashes and milemarkers and water pooling where
the asphalt sags. The trooper shook my hand and

(44:06):
said I did it right. That helps.
It doesn't take away the quiet part that sticks, which is the
line I crossed by not stopping, and how that line also brought
me home. When I clear Moab before dawn, I
let the rig drift a hair from the flood dark shoulder, hold
the lane steady and carry both truths like weight.

(44:26):
I know how to tie down. I make my living doing small
jobs from Salton City down to Ocotillo.
In the summer, I work early and late to avoid the worst heat,
but August never makes it easy. I keep spare belts, coolant and

(44:49):
water in the truck because something always fails out
there. My friend Louise called near
dusk to say his Serpentine belt had come apart and he'd limped
his old Jeep to a stop just pastthe start of Sandstone Canyon.
He had shade and a little water,but not enough to wait until
morning. I told him to stay put and not
walk the wash after dark. I loaded 6 gallon jugs, the

(45:12):
right belt and two traction boards, then rolled out from
Okatio Wells while there was still color in the sky.
The thermometer at the station said 108.
Over the Vallecito Mountains. I could see lightning flattening
against the clouds. That meant rain somewhere up
drain. I didn't love that, but I knew

(45:33):
the lines in Fish Creek and I knew where the banks sat high.
I took Split Mountain Rd. down into the wash heat shimmer ran
across the hard pan and the trucks fan cycled on and off.
I aired the tires to 18 PSI at the turn off and dropped into
Fish Creek. The main channel was dry and
pale. I set the crews low.

(45:53):
Windows cracked just enough to hear my tires.
It's a habit. You can hear a change in sand
before you feel it. I passed the usual landmarks,
the sharp Elbow near the first low bluff in the broad pad where
folks park for the hike into Split Mountain.
The scent was dust, hot oil, andsomething chemical from an old
spill near the picnic site. Lightning popped again to the

(46:17):
West, but there was no wind shift yet.
I kept a mental note. Don't dawdle in the low spots,
face uphill where I can and always leave a way out.
A few minutes down the wash, I saw a white pickup sitting oddly
near the center line. It rode a little high on the
downstream side, tailgate down cooler on the gate, like a sign.

(46:38):
Someone had tied a bleached flagto a shovel stuck in the sand.
That isn't how the regulars markanything.
You don't need flags here. The wash tells you where to go.
A man in a ball cap came out from the shade under the bed and
waved both arms for me to pull closer, 50 yards short.
I angled the truck so I could back out the way I came.

(47:00):
I killed the radio and kept the engine idle.
He called that they were out of water and stuck.
He pointed to the strap at his bumper and told me to back to
it. I looked where he pointed.
Fresh Cairns too neat, stood in a row leading to a side braid
most folks avoid because it slumps after even a small flow
across that line. A tow strap ran half buried

(47:23):
under the sand. I saw a shadow of a trench about
a foot deep trailing from it a length of something rigid.
Rebar or AT post showed an inch above the surface where your
tire would roll if you followed those rocks.
The pickups rear axle was perched like it was sitting on a
mound under the sand, and the tailgate's dust looked
undisturbed. The cooler had no condensation

(47:47):
inside the cab. A second man stared at me
instead of at the supposed problem.
I caught the smell of hot brakes, but my truck was cool
and I hadn't been driving hard. That smell wasn't mine and the
white truck hadn't moved. I don't argue in spots like
that. I set the belt down on the wash
near my front tire where they could see it.

(48:08):
I told the man I'd toss 2 gallons from where I sat and
call in help from the lot. He told me the sand was firmer
by the strap and I should pull forward and nose in.
No one who knows the place says that the strap is exactly where
the sand is weakest after a surge, like a rug that's been
pulled and not smoothed back. I shook my head, lifted 2

(48:30):
gallons from the crate and walked them 10 steps past my
bumper, keeping the truck between us.
I set them on the sand and backed away.
He didn't bend to grab them. He stared past me toward a tight
bend up the wash where the wallspinch.
That bend is a trap for the unwary.
If someone blocks it, you don't have room to turn around.

(48:50):
I didn't like that He kept glancing there.
I climbed in, reversed, and tookthe wider arc toward the north
bank, leaving the fake Cairn line on my left.
The cab door of the white pickupopened and the second man slid
out. Both of them started jogging
along the edge of the wash as ifto beat me to that pinch.
My truck isn't a race car on sand.

(49:12):
I didn't try to outrun them on the flat.
I aimed for the next dry fall, one of those 3 or 4 foot steps
with a ripple of baked mud stonethat turns into a shoot when
water runs. I knew the bench above it held
firm. If I could get the truck up and
parked on that bench, I'd have the only high ground for 100
yards. I put the tires at the base of

(49:33):
the ripple and set the parking brake.
I took my toe strap, tossed the free end over a lip and
scrambled up using it like a hand line.
Dust made the rocks slick under my boots.
I dug the tread in and hauled myself onto the bench, looped
the strap around a clump of roots and pulled it tight to
give me a point to lean against.I slid back down, set the

(49:55):
traction boards on the ripple and ease the truck forward in
low gear. The front tires bit and climbed.
The rear followed with a small slide.
I kept the throttle steady and brought the truck up onto the
bench, then straightened it and let it idle.
From there I could see up wash to the pinch and down wash to
the line of fake rocks. The two men reached the dry fall

(50:18):
a minute later. The first one yelled that I
couldn't park up there because of finds.
He said vehicles weren't allowedwhere I was.
That's not a rule at that spot, and even if it were, he wasn't
anyone to enforce it. I didn't answer.
I stood 5 feet back from the lipwith the engine running behind
me. I watched their eyes.

(50:39):
They weren't looking for a safe path, they were looking for
mine. Then a sound rose from up the
wash. Not an echo or anything strange,
just the real noise of water working across sand.
It started as a soft drag, the way burlap or carpet sounds when
pulled across a floor. A thin sheet of water came

(50:59):
around the bend, barely above the ankles, and pushed a tongue
of sand in front of it like a slow conveyor.
I took two steps farther from the lip.
The bench I was on had old stainlines a foot above my boots,
proof of flows that had come through years before.
I parked farther back than thoselines for exactly this reason.

(51:19):
The men looked upstream and thenback at me, measuring whether
they could still beat the water around the pinch and climb.
The first sheet wrapped the baseof the ripple.
The second pulse came darker with silt, smoothed away
footprints, and chewed the edgesof the trench where the strap
was buried. I saw the rebar flash clear for
half a second, enough to confirmwhat I suspected, and then the

(51:43):
sand swallowed it again. The white pickup shifted, the
rear lifted a little, rotated and kissed the far bank.
It hadn't been stuck. It had been placed to block and
bait. The two men tried to climb. 1
slipped and slid knee deep into the.
Flow. The other hauled him by the
elbow onto a ledge barely wide enough to stand.

(52:06):
They looked for a different pathup, but didn't find one.
The strap the men had buried went taut as the water tightened
the sand around it, then went slack and snaked free.
It ran in a quick arc downstreamand vanished under the brown
water. I didn't shout, didn't taunt,
didn't offer a line. They had a truck and they had.
Lines. What they didn't have now was a

(52:28):
way to get to me quickly. The wash was doing the blocking.
I kept the engine idling so the lights would stay strong and the
power steering would be ready ifundercutting started.
The sand in these spots can looksolid and then fall away 6
inches at a time. I watched for that.
The water rose to mid thigh nearthe pinch, then fell back, then

(52:50):
rose again as another pulse arrived.
It wasn't a wall. It was a steady, heavy push.
The men waited on their ledge, wet from the waist down,
breathing hard. They weren't going to drown
where they stood. They had to weigh up.
Once the pulse passed and the sand tightened again, I let time
do its work. 30 minutes stretch to 40.

(53:12):
The pickup shifted another foot and settled nose down into a new
curve. The water was cutting
downstream. The channel sucked itself into a
deeper line upstream. The surface flattened to a brown
mirror and then wrinkled again as the surge.
Eased when the sound dropped from a rush to a hiss, I checked
the bench edge for fresh cracks.None.

(53:32):
I turned the truck toward the broad fan that leads to higher
flats on the north side. I idled off the bench with
careful throttle, easing over the ripple where my board still
sat. I retrieved them, stowed the
strap, and took the wide arc to the legal approach into
Sandstone Canyon, staying well away from edges that had been
cut fresh. The men never left their ledge

(53:54):
while I watched. Maybe they did later.
The desert doesn't explain itself after midnight.
It just records what you did. I picked up Luis near the mouth
of Sandstone where the Canyon narrows.
His headlamp bounced in the distance.
He had the shredded belt wrappedaround his wrist, and his voice
sounded dry. We walked back to my truck with

(54:14):
the new belt and a small socket kit.
No talking about the men. There wasn't anything to do
about them without making a different problem.
I parked the truck on a high spot and we waited for dawn.
Heat bled out of the ground, butnot by much.
The air dropped to 92 and stuck there.
We slept in turns with the windows down only an inch, just

(54:35):
enough to keep the cab from turning into an oven.
A few bats stitched the air above the wash.
The wind smelled like wet clay near the bend and hot dust
everywhere else. At first light we eased.
Along the proper line into Sandstone, Luis's Jeep sat where
he said, tilted, but not badly. We set rocks as chalks and

(54:55):
pulled the tensioner with a cheater bar, routed the new belt
the right way and spun each pulley by hand to check for
wobble. The alternator spun clean.
The idler felt smooth. We topped off coolant and oil,
let it idle and listened for a whine.
Nothing. He looked like a person again
after half a gallon of water anda few sips of the electrolyte

(55:17):
packet I handed him. Around 82 friends from Okatiya
Wells rolled up in an old Tacomawith more water and a flat of
cold cans for our cooler. We laughed, because that's what
you do after you made it througha dumb night without making it
worse. On the way out we passed the
white pickup. It had settled into the far bank
at an angle half filled with silt to the door seams.

(55:41):
The tailgate was still down. Footprints LED from the ledge to
a worn path up the side where anyone would climb Once the
water stepped down, no one was around.
I didn't look long. The Cairns that had pointed to
the trap still stood, a neat rowagainst the sloped sand
downstream of the pinch. The wash had carved a fresh
curve that would confuse anyone coming in after dark.

(56:04):
We drove past and kept our eyes on the safe line, which is a
wide arc hugging the higher side.
In full sun, the correct route is obvious.
At night, tired and thirsty, it's easy to believe whatever
the rocks tell you. The next weekend, a few of us
came back with a shovel and a bucket.
We didn't hold a meeting. We just cleared what needed

(56:25):
clearing. We knocked down the fake Cairns
and stacked proper markers wherethe line holds.
After a flow. We scratched an arrow into a
patch of hard pan upstream of the pinch where it would last
through a couple of storms. We cut a length of strap we
found half buried and tossed it in the bed of the Tacoma so it
wouldn't tempt anyone else to get creative.
Nobody posted about it or tried to make a story out of it at the

(56:48):
bar. The fix was for the people who
actually drive the wash, not forattention.
That's how most problems get sorted out here.
I thought about those men sitting on the ledge while the
first pulses pushed by. I'm not proud of staring down
from the bench with my engine idling and doing nothing to
help. It felt cold in the moment, but

(57:10):
out there you learn what you're responsible for.
I was responsible for not getting boxed in, for not
letting a bad plan drag my truckinto a blind corner, and for
getting Luis out without adding a search to the list of
problems. The water did the rest.
It moved sand, cut a new line and made their plan fall apart

(57:30):
without anyone getting hurt thatI could see.
A week later, I drove Fish Creekat noon to check the route.
The new Cairns stood in the right places.
Tire marks curved along the highside like they should.
The pinch still had the fresh channel, but the arrow in the
hard pan stood out enough to guide anyone with sense.
The white pickup was gone, either dugout or hauled away,

(57:54):
but the wash kept the scar whereit had pressed into the bank.
I slowed, looked once, and rolled on.
The heat pressed up from the ground.
Cicadas ran their steady racket.The air smelled like hot gypsum
and oil. Nothing dramatic, no lesson
spelled out. Just one near miss turned into a
clean line and a reminder that at night in August, in that part

(58:17):
of Anza Borgo, the safest move is usually the one that sets you
on higher ground with your nose pointed out.
That's the only rule I trust. I was 12 in the summer of 2021
when my sisters decided we needed one night under a Big Sky

(58:40):
to shake off the lockdown fog. We drove down I-77 toward Rock
Hill, SC. The plan was simple.
Visit the Catawba Cultural Center before closing.
Eat on Cherry Rd. then sleep onenight somewhere quiet near the
river. We should have booked a site at
Lansford Canal State Park or stayed in town.

(59:00):
But we talked ourselves into a quick camp because it was just
one night and we were tired of being indoors.
I'm writing this to set it down in a clean order with times and
places so I don't keep moving the details around in my head.
We got off I-77 at Exit 82 and grabbed food on Cherry Rd.
People were friendly. We reached the Cultural Center

(59:22):
in late afternoon and walked theoutdoor exhibits until closing,
read plaques and kept our voiceslow.
I remember the heat coming off the wooden rails and the shade
feeling still when the staff locked up.
We drove out along Mount GallantRd.
A gap in the trees showed a flatpull off with sandy soil and a
thin stand of hardwoods. No sign said to camp there.

(59:45):
No sign said not to Landry. My oldest sister parked the car
nose out because she always doesthat.
We set a two person tent, kept the fire to a small ring of fist
sized rocks. And ate in the car to keep bugs
off our food. There were small things we
noticed and dismissed. A length of orange ribbon on a

(01:00:06):
sapling was tied upside down like a marker.
Someone re tied wrong. There was a cold fire scar in
the sand with fingernail like grooves around it.
Not ours. Along the brush edge. 3 stones
sat in a neat row. We joked a kid did it.
We didn't touch them. The air smelled clean.

(01:00:26):
A little metallic after the heat.
Baseline sounds were normal. A few frogs, a distant truck on
Mount Gallant, and the engine ticking as it cooled.
At about 11:45 PM, Ariana, my middle sister, went to bed.
Landry and I stayed by the coalsto look at the Milky.
Way the sky looked wide and steady.

(01:00:49):
We talked about school and how quiet the world had been for too
long. The wind at ground level died to
nothing. I kept my shoes on because the
sand felt a little cold through the tarp.
The only light was the ember glow and the stars.
At around 12:23 AM, something made a low wet growl in the
brush behind us. It was short and pushed enough

(01:01:10):
air to wrinkle the surface of the water in my cup.
Once we both heard it, I turned my head and the hair at the back
of my neck lifted. The night didn't get colder, it
got heavier. Pulling a breath felt like a
task. The frog calls stopped in under
10 seconds, like someone cut power to them.

(01:01:30):
We stayed still and listened, trying to place it.
Then Ariana's voice came out of the trees.
Come here. It sounded like a recording
through a damaged speaker, not like a person.
The consonants had a static edge.
Landry and I turned to the tent.I could see Ariana's outline on
her side, breathing slow, her arm curled under her head. 5

(01:01:54):
seconds later, the same voice came from the opposite side of
camp, farther off. Same pace and tone, no footsteps
in between. I remember the taste of ash.
In my mouth and the feeling thatI needed to stand up and
couldn't. I reached for the small
flashlight Ariana left near the stones.
Landry said. Don't I already clicked it.

(01:02:18):
The beam cut into the brush in aflat white cone.
Something shifted behind a trunkand stepped once into the edge
of the light. It stood the size of a man, but
the proportions were off. The upper arms were long from
shoulder to elbow. When it stepped, the foot
planted toe 1st and then droppedthe heel late like a joint was
reversed. It wore old torn clothes that

(01:02:40):
hung without sitting right on the body.
The eyes reflected the beam likean animal's.
Would flat and bright, then the head lifted fully and my stomach
flipped. It had Ariana's face.
Not a mask, not face paint. A close copy that didn't fit.
The bones underneath the mouth sat a little too low, The

(01:03:01):
cheekbones. Weren't in the right place.
It spoke again in that damaged speaker tone.
Come here, Ladybug, that is my nickname.
We had not used it that day. The heat from the flashlight
pressed into my palm and my legswouldn't answer.
Landry didn't breathe for a second.
Then it started using our earlier talk like bait.

(01:03:21):
It repeated Landry's Hwy. joke. It played the line I'd said
about the sky. It hummed the tune Ariana had
half sung while packing the cooler.
The order was wrong, like someone shuffled clips and
didn't care if the sequence madesense.
It tried another voice. Our mothers.
Not perfect, more like a memory of her voice.

(01:03:41):
Seatbelts, it said. The hairs on my arms lifted
straight. Landry grabbed my elbow and
pulled us backward into the tent.
We landed hard on our knees. Ariana jerked awake, blinking.
Landry didn't explain, she said Shoes, keys.
Ariana saw Landry's face and moved without questions.

(01:04:01):
Outside, something circled the tent once, fabric depressed at
my right shoulder like a palm through nylon.
A slow scrape ran along a stake,head metal against something
hard. A guy line buzzed for half a
second as if it had been plucked.
The voice pressed close to the wall at my ear.
Quiet and exact. Open up.
First as Ariana, then as me. A little too low, like it was

(01:04:24):
testing the pitch. We went, I unzipped and we ran
in a line for the car. The flashlight jumped the ground
and caught 3 details. I can still list. 1A set of bare
footprints at the edge of our fire scar.
Toes pointed toward the tent. The stride length didn't match
the size. 2A Half eaten apple from our cooler sitting on the

(01:04:46):
hood. Bite mark wide at the front and
narrow at the back. The shape wrong for a human jaw.
3 The row of three stones had been straightened into a pointer
aimed at the trees we'd been staring into earlier.
The doors shut and the locks clicked.
Landry turned the key. The engine caught immediately.
Headlights washed over the two rut track and the figure stepped

(01:05:09):
into the center of it like it had been standing just out of
view, waiting for the light. The face slid once, not changing
features, just resetting them into the positions it wanted,
and the eyes flared again in thebeams.
It tried more lures. It used my nickname.
It set a line our dad uses to tease us about snacks.

(01:05:31):
Then it tried our mother's voiceagain.
Girls, be nice. The pace and volume stayed
steady. It did not rush, Landry said.
Hold on and press the gas. The figure did not jump on the
hood. It tilted its body at the hips,
the top half moving before the lower half, and the car passed.

(01:05:52):
In the rearview mirror, it was already upright again in one
motion, turned to face the tail lights.
It did not chase. It just watched us go until the
track curved and the trees blockthe view.
We reached Mount Gallant, then Cherry Rd.
Landry kept the high beams on. Oncoming cars flashed us and she
didn't turn them down. We took one wrong turn and

(01:06:14):
corrected. At a gas station near Cherry Rd.
We pulled in too fast and parkedcrooked under the fluorescence.
The normal sound of a pump clicking on the other side of
the island made my hand stop shaking as fast.
We sat there until another car pulled in beside us and the
presence of strangers in a lit space let my breathing even out.

(01:06:35):
We got a room at a hotel near exit 82.
We triple locked the door and pushed a chair under the knob
because it felt like something to do.
I couldn't sleep. I lay on the bed and searched on
my phone. I typed.
Voice mimic long limbs. Eyes reflect lures.
Which shapeshifter. I found posts about skinwalkers.

(01:06:57):
I'm not claiming expertise on anybody's culture.
I'm saying those pages were the first thing I had read that
matched the facts I had in frontof me.
A familiar voice used to draw you away, A face borrowed to
lower your guard. Silence in the woods before it
speaks and a patient way of standing in your path to make
you choose wrong at sunrise, Landry.

(01:07:18):
Checked the car. On the dusty trunk lid were
three smudged prints that could have been palms or feet.
The shape suggested more than the usual number of joint
points. On the bumper was a single long
dark hair. It looked normal until we rolled
it between our fingers. It felt flat.
We didn't argue about going backfor our gear.

(01:07:39):
We were in agreement we would not return to.
That pull off, we did go back tothe Cultural Center during open
hours. We did not ask for a tour.
We did not ask for stories. We went to the front desk and
apologized for camping where we shouldn't have.
We said we heard voices we couldnot explain, that a person with

(01:07:59):
a face that looked like my sister stood at our camp, and
that we ran and left our things.The staff were calm and
respectful. They told us plainly that
unauthorized camping was not allowed and gave us State Park
options for the future if we wanted to be near the river.
They said not to go back to retrieve anything and that they
would pass word to the right people.

(01:08:20):
There was no lecture, just clearrules and the kind of look that
says don't do that again here. We understood.
We drove home that afternoon in the car when our mom said
seatbelts, my muscles jerked before I could control it.
We told her the story in a single piece, without drama,
sticking to what we saw and heard and what we did.

(01:08:43):
We did not try to prove anything.
We focused on the choices we made and the ones we would not
make again. A week later we got a short call
confirming our bag and tent had been collected and disposed of.
No extra detail, no request for us to return.
That message closed the last loop we had left open.
The aftermath for me is simple to describe and hard to live

(01:09:06):
with. I measure nights against that
one. If a voice calls me in the dark,
I verify with my eyes before I move, and if even one thing is
off, I don't. Go.
I don't camp where it isn't allowed.
Not for a photo, not to save time, not because it seems quiet
and no one will care. I keep small rules that help me

(01:09:26):
feel in control. I park nose out.
I keep my shoes by the door. I listen for baseline sounds,
bugs, birds, highway noise, and if they drop out all at once, I
pay attention. There are details I hold onto
because they keep the memory exact.
The ripple in the cup from a single growl, The air getting
heavy without cooling. The way the same voice came from

(01:09:49):
2 directions without steps in between the toe first foot
placement and the late heel. The eyes reflecting like an
animal's while a human face tried to sit right on top.
The use of my nickname when no one had said it.
The apple on our hood with wrongbite marks.
The row of stone straightened topoint where we had been looking.

(01:10:10):
The prints on the trunk lid withtoo many joint points.
The flat hair. I can't name what stood there.
I don't need to. The facts are enough.
We camped somewhere we shouldn't.
Have. Something watched us long enough
to copy our words and pull from older family phrases.
It tried to separate us with a voice and a face.

(01:10:31):
We left together. That's the part that ends the
story in the right place for me.We were lucky and we listened to
the person who said move now. If you ever hear someone you
love call you from the dark, check with your eyes before you
answer. If there is anything off, don't
go. That is my rule.
It kept me alive once. I intend to keep it.
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