The story follows Johnson, a man fascinated by spiders, who stumbles upon a sign for 'Ellsworth’s Famous Spider Petting Zoo.' Intrigued, he visits the zoo, only to discover it’s a trap set by an old man who breeds giant spiders. Johnson is locked in a barn with a massive spider and its offspring, leading to a horrifying encounter.
Johnson visits the spider petting zoo because he has a lifelong fascination with spiders, stemming from his childhood experiences observing a spider in his backyard. The sign advertising the zoo piques his curiosity, and he decides to take a detour to explore it.
Johnson is locked in a barn by the old man and encounters a giant spider, the size of a pit bull, which attacks him. The spider injects him with venom, paralyzing him. He then realizes the spider is carrying its young, who begin to feed on him as he loses consciousness.
The old man breeds spiders for research purposes, supplying them to colleges. He takes pride in his work, claiming that breeding the best spiders produces superior results. However, his experiments have led to the creation of a monstrous spider, which he uses to trap and kill unsuspecting visitors.
The story explores themes of supernatural retribution and the consequences of trespassing. A surveyor’s clerk enters a mysterious wood despite warnings and experiences bizarre, terrifying phenomena, including shifting paths, moving trees, and ghostly figures, ultimately being ejected by the wood itself.
The clerk becomes disoriented and trapped in the Fairy Wood, where he encounters moving trees, ghostly figures, and a shifting landscape. He is eventually ejected from the wood by unseen forces, finding himself back at the starting point, shaken and confused.
The inked-out sentence on the postcard reveals a warning about a shortcut through the wood, which the clerk initially cannot read. Later, it becomes clear that the wood is enchanted and dangerous, and the sentence serves as a subtle hint of the supernatural forces at play.
The story serves as a cautionary tale about curiosity and the dangers of underestimating seemingly harmless situations. Johnson’s fascination with spiders leads him into a deadly trap, highlighting the potential consequences of indulging in morbid interests.
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That's BetterHelpHELP.com. Welcome, Weirdos. I'm Darren Marlar, and this is Weird Darkness.
Here you'll find stories of the paranormal, supernatural, legends, lore, crime, conspiracy, mysterious, macabre, unsolved and unexplained. If you're new here, welcome to the podcast – and be sure to subscribe so you don't miss future episodes. If you're already a weirdo, please share the podcast with others – doing so helps make it possible for me to keep creating episodes as often as I do.
Coming up on previous Creepypasta Thursday, where I shared two stories that I really enjoyed narrating. I'll be sharing the classic short horror story, Ancient Lights, by Algernon Blackwood, but first, the spine-tingling tale, The Spider Petting Zoo, by Peter DeNiverville.
While listening, be sure to check out the Weird Darkness website. At WeirdDarkness.com you can find paranormal and horror audiobooks I've narrated. Watch old horror movies for free. Plus, you can visit the Hope in the Darkness page if you're struggling with depression or dark thoughts. You can find all of that and more at WeirdDarkness.com. Now, bolt your doors!
"Lock your windows, turn off your lights, and come with me into the weird darkness." At first, Johnson thought it was a joke. Speeding down the country road, the crude sign was only a blur, but it was that one word. Slowing down, he swung the Lexus onto the paved shoulder. In the rearview mirror, he could see it clearly. The sign was tacked to a stick that was stuck in the ground just beyond the paved shoulder.
Shifting the powerful car into reverse, Johnson jammed the accelerator down. The tires squealed and loose gravel flew as he tore back up the road. Reaching to a halt, Johnson stared at the faded handwriting: "Ellsworth's Famous Spider Petting Zoo. 5 miles next right." Spiders fascinated Johnson. One summer when he was eight, a large gold and black spider had taken up residence underneath the shingles by the back door.
Every morning, Johnson would gather up ants in a jar from a nest in the scrubby woods behind the house, and one by one, he'd drop the wriggling insects into the web. With lightning speed, the spider would spring from her hiding place and race towards the victim, sinking her fangs into the ant. She would retreat, waiting for the poison to take effect. When the ant slowly stopped struggling, she would climb back down and delicately wrap her prey in a white shroud.
This continued until, one day, his mother caught him. "What a cruel little boy you are!" she scolded between clenched teeth as she pummelled his backside. He could still feel the shame of being spanked. Years later, in a rare moment of remorse, Johnson wondered what it would be like for the ant. Trapped, helpless, waiting for the spider to return. Did they know fear or horror? Or was that something only humans experienced?
"The insect brain was too small," he told himself. Or so he hoped. "Five miles," thought Johnson. This side trip might only add another half hour or so to his journey. He'd still have time, once he got to his motel, to have a shower. The dinner meeting with the buyer from the supermarket chain wasn't until six o'clock and it was only four now. Coasting forward, Johnson scanned the road, looking for the turnoff. About a hundred yards ahead, he saw a lane that intersected with the highway.
Flicking on his turn signal, he shot a quick glance at his watch. "If I don't find it in 15 minutes," he promised himself, "I'll turn back." Accelerating smoothly, he turned onto a well-paved secondary road with deep ditches on either side. Punching the buttons on the CD player, he stretched his arms, settling back into the soft leather seat. As the throbbing beat of "Queen" filled the Lexus, his mood lightened. An unexpected adventure in an otherwise boring day.
Johnson hated his job. Endless meetings with bad food and balding buyers. Too many drinks and too many hangovers. He was packing on the pounds, too. "I have to get back to the gym," he reminded himself. The only redeeming feature of his job was that he was good at it. Top sales rep for the last three years. "I should have been an actor," he thought to himself. "Instead, I'm selling toilet paper and tampons to these turkeys."
As the needle on the speedometer crept higher and higher, the neatly kept fields and freshly painted houses became a blur. Mile after mile slipped by. Johnson felt that he and the car had become one, soaring along like a hawk on a summer breeze. But his mood soon soured. The condition of the road deteriorated. Asphalt gave way to chip seal, which gave way to gravel, and finally ended up as dirt.
Johnson jumped on the brakes when a huge pothole emerged in the center of the road. Cursing the delay, he checked his watch again. It was almost five. The long drive down the country road had dulled his sense of time. "I better turn around," he cautioned himself. As he studied the road ahead, looking for a safe place to make a U-turn, he saw it. An old farmhouse, set back from the road. If it hadn't been for the pothole, he would have missed it completely.
by the mailbox a freshly painted sign that read, "Ellsworth's Famous Spider Petting Zoo. Open year-round. All visitors welcome." "This must be the place," Peake concluded. Carefully turning up the heavily rutted lane, Johnson wondered what he would find. "Perhaps one of the locals playing a joke on the tourists," he mused. Tall grass slapped at the bottom of the car and rusted barbed wire clung to rotted posts that ran alongside the lane.
In the untilled fields, scrubby bushes had sprung up like mushrooms. Johnson tried to imagine what the farm looked like in better days, but it was impossible. When he reached the top of the hill, the farmhouse looked even more decrepit. Blistered paint hung from the wooden shingles, and there was a disturbing sag in the middle of the roof. What once had been the side garden was now occupied by tall thistles, and a mass of tangled timbers indicated the former site at the main barn.
Except for the glass still being intact in the windows, the house looked abandoned. "Where is everybody?" thought Johnson. In response to his question, an old woman dressed in a black skirt and a woolen sweater stepped out the side door. She was gnarled and withered like the lone apple tree that stood in the yard. Johnson guessed she must have been at least 70, maybe even 80 years old. "What you want?" she spat.
Turning off the CD player and rolling down the car window, he replied, Is this the petting zoo? That's what the sign says, don't it? Ignoring her rudeness, Johnson continued, Are you open? I get Jake. He's out back chopping wood. He watched as she shuffled down a dirt path and disappeared around a corner of the house. Charming, thought Johnson. Opening the car door, he stepped out.
Despite the poverty, the farm had a certain rustic appeal which reminded him of the house that he grew up in in the country. But there was something odd, something missing. "Where are the flies?" thought Johnson. On most farms, the low buzz of the black swarms was constant, but here there was none. Except for the moaning of the wind, it was quiet. Perhaps it was the lack of animals, he thought. Or maybe it was the stiff breeze at the top of the hill that kept them at bay.
Glancing at his watch, he frowned. It was after five o'clock. If he did not get back on the road soon, he would be late for his appointment. Either that or skip his shower. After driving all day, Johnson did not want to skip the soothing ritual. Taking one last look around, he reached for the handle of the car door. Just then the old woman reappeared. And behind her an even more wizened-up old man, wearing faded blue overalls and a nicotine-stained undershirt.
Stopping at the corner of the house, the old man spat out a long jet of chewing tobacco on the road. Wiping his mouth with the back of his hand, he paused momentarily to study Johnson. Speaking to the old woman, he said in a low tone, "'Thought I heard a car come up here. Wants to see your spiders,' she said before she turned away and went back into the farmhouse, letting the screen door slam behind her. "'You want to see my spiders, young fella? Sure, if you're open, how much?'
Looking over at the Lexus, he scratched his ruddy face and said, "Fifty bucks." "Fifty? That's ridiculous!" Shrugging his shoulders, the old man said, "Take it or leave it, I got work to do." Then he spat out another long jet of chewing tobacco and turned to go. "I can't leave now after coming all this way," thought Johnson. Taking another quick glance at his watch, he said irritably, "Alright, alright, but this better be good."
The old man smirked and licked his lips as Johnson whipped out a crisp $50 bill from his wallet. Johnson did not like the old man's greedy look and hastily shoved his wallet back in his pants pocket. "Thanks," said the old man sarcastically and snatched the bill from Johnson's hand. Looking it over carefully, he folded it up neatly, stuck it in his pocket and said, "Follow me." The old man led Johnson down an overgrown path to a shed at the back of the farmhouse.
Inside, the dim glow of fluorescent tubes highlighted the dozen plywood shelves that ran along the walls. In contrast to the rest of the farm, the shed was neat, almost antiseptic in appearance. Sitting on each shelf was a glass terrarium filled with twigs and rocks. In the case closest to Johnson, a small garden spider was spinning a web in the corner.
"That's an orb spider," said the old man. "I know," said Johnson, annoyed by the interruption. "You know spiders?" "A bit," replied Johnson. "I used to study them when I was a kid." "I'll bet you're the type that like to feed 'em, huh? Catch bugs, drop 'em in, see what happens? Fun, ain't it?" Suddenly Johnson was uncomfortable. "How did he guess my secret?" he wondered. Johnson felt the warm rush of blood to his neck and ears as he started to blush.
"No need to be ashamed, young fella. All kids do it. It's natural." Trying to change the topic, Johnson asked, "You been at this long, keeping spiders?" "Yep, been at it a while. Most folks are scared of spiders. Not me. Me and spiders get along real good." Johnson turned back to watch a large black spider in another case, sucking up the half-digested slurry of its latest victim.
Trying to be polite, Johnson asked, "That you don't get many visitors here, being so far from the highway?" "Don't need 'em," said the old man. "This is just a sideline." Pausing for effect, he added, "I breed 'em." Johnson looked puzzled. "For the college?" explained the old man. "They use 'em for research." "Does it pay well?" "Good enough. They don't know squat about spiders," said the old man, spitting on the floor.
Johnson looked down and saw that a streak of the sticky black tobacco had splashed on his shoes. "I've been doing research on my own," said the old man proudly. "Spiders are just like any other critters. Cows, horses, dogs, they're all the same. Breed the best with the best and you get the best." Or the… The old man's voice trailed off as he started to laugh. There was something about his tone that made Johnson uneasy.
"You wanna see my prize winner?" Johnson looked around. "She ain't here. I keep her in the barn. She kinda makes these critters nervous. I can't say I blames 'em." "Wanna see her?" The way the old man said it, the question sounded more like a challenge. Johnson hesitated. He wanted to say no, but he could not let the old man see he was afraid. "Sure," answered Johnson. "What could it be?" he asked himself. "A tarantula?"
With the old man in front, they went down a lesser-used path to a small barn behind a stand of trees that made it invisible from the farmhouse. A shiny new lock on a rusted hasp yielded to the old man's key. "I don't like kids messing with my stuff," the ancient wooden door swung open. Inside, it was pitch black. Johnson hesitated. What was it that made him apprehensive, though? His mouth felt dry and he tried to swallow.
"Go on in," taunted the old man as he shoved Johnson through the door. Stumbling on the raised sill, Johnson fell to one knee, ripping his pants. "Damn it," he cursed. "There's a light switch ahead of you," the old man reassured him. "Just pull the string." A stench of moldy hay made Johnson gag. "Where is it? The spider?" he called out. "She's in the back. You can't miss her." "Where's the light?" "Right in front of you. Can't you see it?" mocked the old man.
Johnson stretched out his hand. At first, he could not feel anything. Then, slowly gripping the air, he caught hold of it. Johnson's heart leapt in relief. But there was something strange. The line didn't feel like string. It was sticky, like pulling the line Johnson knew he'd made a mistake. Something rustled in the rafters above him, and bits of straw floated down. Johnson bolted for the opening. "'Enjoy yourself!' cracked the old man as he slammed the door and locked it.
"Let me out! Let me out!" shouted Johnson, pounding on the door. "Let me out, you old buzzard!" But it was no use. The dried-out wooden door was like iron. Pausing to catch his breath, his fists throbbing, Johnson looked around. Slowly, his eyes grew accustomed to the dark. What appeared to be a black chasm was, in fact, the side entrance to the barn. There must be another way out, he thought. But where?
In the gloom, he could see that beyond the entryway was a large open space, and beyond that a boarded-up window through which thin shafts of sunlight streamed. "Great. All I have to do is cross the barn, pull off one or two of those boards and climb out," thought Johnson. "Then I'll show that old man fifty bucks he'll wish I'd never stopped." Then he heard another rustle overhead, and more straw floated down. "Who is it? Who's there?" he called out.
But it's that old man, thought Johnson. He thinks he's going to scare me? Sure, yeah, just keep it up, old man, Johnson called out again. Let's see how much laughing you do when I bash your face in. But first, I gotta get to that window. Be careful, he cautioned himself. This barn must be full of junk. Don't want to fall down and get hurt. Despite the heat in the barn, he shivered.
Licking the sweat off his upper lip, Johnson slowly picked his way across the wide wooden planked barn floor, being careful not to trip. Shadows of old machinery and tools loomed around him. A leather harness that hung from the wall looked like a hangman's noose. There was a peculiar smell, too. It reminded him of a package of chickens that he once left in the trunk of his car on a hot summer day. It was the sickly sweet scent of rotting meat.
"Gross," muttered Johnson. "There's a dead animal in here." Less than a minute, he'd crossed the barn and was standing in front of the boarded-up window. Blocking his exit were three boards nailed haphazardly into the frame. "Either the old man was too weak or too lazy to drive them all the way in," concluded Johnson. "I could probably pull them off with my bare hands," he thought, smiling triumphantly. The first board was half rotted and fell apart in his hands.
Light streamed in as it came away from the frame. Then he shifted his attention to the second one, the board in the middle. If he could get this one off, he could easily climb out. But this board wouldn't be so easy. It was like the old door of the barn, dried out and as tough as steel. Gripping the board with both hands, he began pulling.
The nails squealed in protest and the board started to move. "Only a little bit further," grunted Johnson. The thought of throttling the old man excited him. "Just a bit further. Another half inch." He could almost feel his fingers closing around the old man's scrawny neck, the eyes bulging, the tongue sticking out. "Another half inch," and then it stopped. Desperately, Johnson yanked at the board, but it was no use. It would not yield.
I need more leverage, he said to himself. Balancing on one foot, he braced his other against the window frame and started pulling again. The muscles in his forearms and back bulged as he strained against the board. Sweat rolled down his forehead and into his eyes. Come on, he pleaded with the wood. Come on! In his frustration, Johnson did not hear the soft tap, tap, tap on the floor behind him. Tap, tap, tap.
like a blind man with his cane. Tap, tap, tap. Then it was too late. It struck. The force of the attack rammed him face-first up against the wall, knocking the wind out of him. Warm blood trickled from his nose and ran down his cheek. What was that? Turning around slowly, he could see in the light from the window his attacker. It was crouched inside an empty stall along the opposite wall. The legs tensed, ready to spring. It was a spider.
No doubt one of the old man's experiments, but this was no ordinary spider. It was huge, about the size of a pit bull, with legs that extended out three or four feet on either side, its eyes staring coldly at him. Johnson did a quick tally of his injuries. Except for his bloody nose, he was unharmed. Perhaps the large size of the creature made it difficult for it to mount an attack, he conjectured. Possibly it did not even recognize him as prey.
"Spiders normally eat moths and insects," he reminded himself, "not human beings." When he was a kid, Johnson liked to throw twigs into a web just to see the spider's reaction. Invariably, after pouncing on the object, the spider would pluck it out of the web, turn it over, and drop it on the ground. Johnson hoped this spider would show the same lack of interest. From its vantage point at the other end of the barn, the creature seemed puzzled, unsure of itself.
Spiders are cautious, he told himself. It's waiting for me to make the next move. Although every fiber in his body screamed run, his brain told him to stay still. The spider was too big and too fast to outrun. I need a weapon, he told himself. Quickly looking around, he saw the rotten board from the window lying at his feet. It was about two feet long with a jagged point at one end. It'll have to do. Slowly, he bent down to pick it up.
The spider crouched low like a sprinter, ready to strike again. Johnson froze, his fingers only inches from the board. "Easy, girl," he whispered softly. "Easy." The spider relaxed, but not completely. Deliberately, it began to move forward. Tap. Johnson was amazed by the creature's grace. Like a ballerina tiptoeing in from the darkened wings of a theater, it was a marvel of beauty and design.
The body, covered by fine gray hair, had the look of velvet, while the eight legs that extended from the thorax provided speed and balance. As it approached Johnson, the spider carefully extended one foreleg towards him. Johnson quickly knocked it away with his hand. The creature stopped and cocked its plate-sized head to one side. The eight eyes looked like black fists. Then the leg came forward again.
At the tip, Johnson could see the spike-like claw for catching prey. It touched his left shoulder. Through his jacket, he could feel the sharp point digging into his skin. Johnson winced and stepped backward into the wall, but there was no place to go. Slowly, the other foreleg came forward. Johnson recoiled, trying to ward off the attack with his free arm, but the creature was too strong.
It brushed his arm aside, as if it was a piece of lint, and planted the second claw into his other shoulder. Johnson cried out, "Help! Help!" Then the spider reared up on its hind legs, forcing Johnson to his knees. For a brief moment, he and the creature looked into each other's eyes. It was almost like love. Then he saw the six-inch fangs that extended from the head.
Drops of venom gleamed in the half-light. He watched in fascination as the cruel daggers arched high over him. Then he screamed as they plunged deeply into his chest. Instantly, white-hot pain ripped through his body. Then it was gone. The spider had retreated back to the stall. Johnson knew he only had a minute or two before the poison paralyzed him. "'This is it!' he said to himself. "'By only chance!' Ignoring his wounds, Johnson turned back to the window."
Grabbing at the board, he yanked and pulled to no avail. Already the venom was beginning to have its effects. His hands were numb and his arms felt like lead. Gasping for air, he threw himself at the boards again and again, but it was no use. He was beaten. Great sobs shook his body as he slumped to the floor. "This can't be happening to me," he protested. "It's ridiculous!" Looking back at the spider, he could see that it still had not moved.
"What is she waiting for?" he wondered. "Why doesn't she finish me off?" He soon had his answer, shimmering like a great overcoat. There was something on the spider's back. It moved and undulated like a small wave, flowing back and forth. Then a piece of the wave pulled away and dropped to the floor. It was another spider, only a lot smaller, about the size of a rat. Johnson recalled that some spiders carry their young on their backs
Horrified, he realized that he had stumbled into their nursery and it was feeding time. Another one dropped to the floor and then another. Soon there was a long line of spiders slowly crawling towards him. Through fading eyesight, he saw the first one reach his foot. Tentatively, its foreleg probed the air until it found his leg and patted it. It was light and delicate like the touch of a child. Johnson opened his mouth to scream, but no sound came.
The last thing Johnson saw before he lost consciousness was a spider tearing a piece of flesh from the back of his hand. Back at the farmhouse, the old man picked up the whiskey bottle from the kitchen table, poured himself another drink and plopped down on the ancient lazy boy recliner. "How long it take, Jake?" asked the old woman. "Not long," he grunted. "They ain't at since Sunday." "You'd a better sign. Attract more folks."
"Yeah, the sign's okay. Anyway, we don't need a crowd," said the old man, taking a long, hard swallow. "What you doin' with his car?" she asked, standing at the window admiring the now-ownerless Lexus. "I hear young Dougal needs one for runnin' moonshine. Willin' to pay a good price, too," said the old man. "Won't he ask questions?" wondered the old woman, pouring a drink and easing herself down onto a dusty couch.
"Nah, you don't care," stickered the old man. "I'll talk to him tomorrow. Meanwhile, pass the remote. Let's see what's on Dr. Phil."
We all dream, but for some people, what should be a time for their bodies and minds to rest turns into a nightmare from which they cannot escape. Our next Weird Darkness live stream is Saturday night, December 28th on the Weird Darkness YouTube channel, and during the live broadcast I'll share some of these chilling nighttime stories.
Tales of shadow people, sleep paralysis, and demons who stalk their victims in that place between dreams and reality. I'll share true tales of prophetic dreams, some joyful, some not. Sleepwalking incidents that are both amusing and disturbing. I'll also share real stories of night terrors so horrifying that sleep
became something to fear and dread for those victimized by the night. You might not want to sleep after joining our next live-screen. It's Saturday, December 28th at 5pm Pacific, 6pm Mountain, 7pm Central, 8pm Eastern. On the lighter side, I'll also be responding to comments and questions live on the air and doing a giveaway of some Weird Darkness merch.
Prepare yourself for our next live-screen for chilling tales of what some people must endure in an attempt to get some sleep. Find the details on the live-screen page at WeirdDarkness.com.
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From Southwater, where he left the train, the road led due west. That he knew. For the rest, he trusted to luck. Being one of those born walkers who dislike asking the way.
He had that instinct, and as a rule it served him well. A mile or so due west along the sandy road till you come to a stile on the right. Then across the fields, you'll see the red house straight before you. He glanced at the postcard's instructions once again, and once again he tried to decipher the scratched-out sentence. Without success. It had been so elaborately inked over that no word was legible.
Inked-out sentences in a letter were always enticing. You wondered what it was that had to be so very carefully obliterated. The afternoon was boisterous, with a tearing, shouting wind that blew from the sea across the Sussex Weald. Massive clouds with rounded, piled-up edges, cannoned across gaping spaces of blue sky. Far away, the line of downs swept the horizon like an arriving wave.
"Shanktonbury Ring" rode their crests. A scudding ship, hull down before the wind. He took his hat off and walked rapidly, breathing great draughts of air with delight and exhilaration. The road was deserted. No horsemen, bicycles or motors, not even a tradesman's cart. No single walker.
But anyhow, he would never have asked the way. Keeping a sharp eye for the style, he pounded along while the wind tossed the cloak against his face and made waves across the blue puddles on the yellow road. The trees showed their underleaves of white, the bracken and the high new grass bent all one way. Great life was in the day, high spirits and dancing everywhere. And for a Croydon surveyor's clerk just out of an office, this was like a holiday at the sea.
It was a day for high adventure, and his heart rose up to meet the mood of nature. His umbrella, with the silver ring, ought to have been a sword, and his brown shoes should have been top boots with spurs upon the heels. There hid the enchanted castle and the princess with the hair of sunny gold. His horse. The style came suddenly into view and nipped adventure in the bud. Everyday clothes took him prisoner again. He was a surveyor's clerk.
Middle-aged, earning three pounds a week, coming from Croydon to see about a client's proposed alterations in a wood something to ensure a better view from the dining room window. Across the fields, perhaps a mile away, he saw a red house gleaming in the sunshine. And resting on the stile a moment to get his breath, he noticed a copsey of oak and hornbeam on the right. "Aha," he told himself,
So that must be the wood he wants to cut down to improve the view. I'll have a look at it. There were boards up, of course. But there was an inviting little path as well. I'm not a trespasser, he said. It's part of my business, this is. He scrambled awkwardly over the gate and entered the compsy. A little round would bring him to the field again. But the moment he passed among the trees, the wind ceased shouting, and a stillness dropped upon the world.
So dense was the growth that the sunshine only came through in isolated patches. The air was close. He mopped his forehead and put his green felt hat on, but a low branch knocked it off again at once, and as he stooped, an elastic twig swung back and stung his face. There were flowers along both edges of the little path. Glades opened on either side. Ferns curved about in damper corners, and the smell of earth and foliage was rich and sweet.
It was cooler here. What an enchanting little wood, he thought. Turning down a small green glade where the sunshine flickered like silver wings. How it danced and fluttered and moved about. He put a dark blue flower in his buttonhole. Again, his hat, caught by an oak branch as he rose, was knocked from his head, falling across his eyes. And this time he did not put it on again. Swinging his umbrella, he walked on with uncovered head, whistling rather loudly as he went.
but the thickness of the trees hardly encouraged whistling, and something of his gaiety and high spirits seemed to leave him. He suddenly found himself treading circumspectly and with caution. The stillness in the wood was so peculiar. There was a rustle among the ferns and leaves, and something shot across the path ten yards ahead, stopped abruptly an instant with head cocked sideways to stare, then dived again beneath the underbrush with the speed of a shadow.
He started like a frightened child, laughing the next second that a mere pheasant could have made him jump. In the distance he heard wheels upon the road and wondered why the sound was pleasant. "Good old butcher's cart," he said to himself, then realized that he was going in the wrong direction and had somehow got turned around, for the road should be behind him, not in front, and he hurriedly took another narrow glade that lost itself in greenness to the right.
"That's my direction, of course," he said. "The trees has me mixed up a bit, it seems." Lin found himself abruptly by the gate he had first climbed over. He had merely made a circle. Surprise became almost discomfort then, and a man, dressed like a gameskeeper in brownie green, leaned against the gate, hitting his legs with a switch. "I'm making for Mr. Lumley's farm," explained the walker. "This is his wood, I believe."
then stopped dead because it was no man at all, but merely an effect of light and shade and foliage. He stepped back to reconstruct the singular illusion, but the wind shook the branches roughly here on the edge of the wood and the foliage refused to reconstruct the figure. The leaves all rustled strangely, and just then the sun went behind a cloud, making the whole wood look otherwise.
Yet how the mind could be thus doubly deceived was indeed remarkable, for it almost seemed to him the man had answered, spoken, or was this the shuffling noise the branches made, and had pointed with his switch to the notice board upon the nearest tree? The words rang on in his head, but of course he had imagined them. No, it's not his wood, it's ours.
And some village wit, moreover, had changed the lettering on the weather-beaten board for it read quite plainly, "Trespassers will be persecuted." And while the astonished clerk read the words and chuckled, he said to himself, thinking what a tale he'd have to tell his wife and children later, "The bloomin' wood has tried to chuck me out, but I'll go in anyway. Why, it's only a matter of a square acre at most. I'm bound to reach the fields on the other side if I keep straight on."
He remembered his position in the office. He had a certain dignity to maintain. The cloud passed from below the sun, and light splashed suddenly in all manner of unlikely places. The man went straight on. He felt a touch of puzzling confusion somewhere. This way the copse he had of shifting from sunshine into shadow doubtless troubled sight a little.
To his relief at last, a new glade opened through the trees and disclosed the fields with a glimpse of the red house in the distance at the far end. But a little wicket gate that stood across the path had first to be climbed, and as he scrambled heavily over, for it would not open, he got the astonishing feeling that it slid off sideways beneath his weight and towards the wood, like the moving staircases at Herod's and Earl's court. It began to glide off with him. It was quite horrible.
He made a violent effort to get down before it carried him into the trees, but his feet became entangled with the bars and umbrella so that he fell heavily upon the farther side. Arms spread across the grass and nettles, boots clutched between the first and second bars. He lay there a moment like a man crucified upside down. And while he struggled to get distangled, feet, bars, and umbrella formed a regular net.
He saw the little man in browny green go past him with extreme rapidity through the wood. The man was laughing. He passed across the glade some fifty yards away, and he was not alone this time. A companion like himself went with him. The clerk, now upon his feet again, watched them disappear into the gloom of green beyond. "They're tramps, not gamekeepers," he said to himself, half mortified, half angry. But his heart was thumping dreadfully, and he dared not utter all his thought.
He examined the wicket gate, convinced it was a trick gate somehow, then went hurriedly on again, disturbed beyond belief to see that the glade no longer opened into fields but curved away to the right. What in the world had happened to him? His sight was so utterly at fault. Again the sun flamed out abruptly and lit the floor of the woods with pools of silver. And at the same moment a violent gust of wind passed shouting overhead.
Drops fell clattering everywhere upon the leaves, making a sharp pattering as of many footsteps. The whole copsey shuddered and went moving. "'Rain by George,' thought the clerk, and feeling for his umbrella, discovered he had lost it. He turned back to the gate and found it lying on the farther side. To his amazement, he saw the fields at the far end of the glade, the red house, too, a shine in the sunset."
He laughed then, for of course, in his struggles with the gate, he had somehow got turned around, had fallen back instead of forwards. Climbing over, this time quite easily, he retraced his steps. The silver band, he saw, had been torn from the umbrella. No doubt his foot, a nail, or something had caught in it and ripped it off. The clerk began to run. He felt extraordinarily dismayed.
But while he ran, the entire wood ran with him. Round him to and fro, trees shifting like living things, leaves folding and unfolding, trunks darting backwards and forwards, and branches disclosing enormous empty spaces, then closing up again before he could look into them. There were footsteps everywhere and laughing, crying voices, and crowds of figures gathering just behind his back till the glade he knew was thick with moving life.
The wind in his ears, of course, produced the voices and the laughter, while sun and clouds plunging the copse alternately in shadow and bright dazzling light created the figures. But he did not like it and went as fast as ever his sturdy legs could take him. He was frightened now. This was no story for his wife and children. He ran like the wind, but his feet made no sound upon the soft, mossy turf.
Then, to his horror, he saw that the glade grew narrow. Nettles and weeds stood thick across it. It dwindled down into a tiny path, and twenty yards ahead, it stopped, finally, and melted off among the trees. What the trick gate had failed to achieve, the twisting glade accomplished easily, carried him in bodily among the dense and crowding trees. There was only one thing to do.
turn sharply and dash back again, running headlong into the life that followed at his back, followed so closely too that now it almost touched him, pushing him in, and with reckless courage, this is what he did. It seemed a fearful thing to do.
He turned with a sort of violent spring, head down and shoulders forward, hands stretched before his face. He made the plunge. Like a hunted creature, he charged full tilt the other way, meeting the wind now in his face. Good Lord! The glade behind him had closed up as well. There was no longer any path at all.
Turning round and round like an animal at bay, he searched for an opening, a way of escape, searching frantically, breathlessly, terrified now in his bones. But foliage surrounded him, branches blocked the way. The trees stood close and still, unshaken by a breath of wind, and the sun dipped that moment behind a great black cloud. The entire wood turned dark and silent. It watched him,
Perhaps it was this final touch of sudden blackness that made him act so foolishly, as though he had really lost his head. At any rate, without pausing to think, he dashed headlong in among the trees again. There was a sensation of being stiflingly surrounded and entangled, and that he must break out at all costs, out and away into the open and the blessed fields and air.
He did this ill-considered thing and apparently charged straight into an oak that deliberately moved into his path to stop him. He saw it shift across a good full yard, and being a measuring man accustomed to theodolite and chain, he ought to know. He fell, saw stars, and felt a thousand tiny fingers tugging and pulling at his hands and neck and ankles. The stinging nettles, no doubt, were responsible for this. He thought of it later.
At the moment it felt diabolically calculated, but another remarkable illusion was not so easily explained. For all in a moment it seemed, the entire wood went sliding past him with a thick, deep rustling of leaves and laughter. Myriad footsteps and tiny little active energetic shapes
Two men in brownie green gave him a mighty hoist, and he opened his eyes to find himself lying in the meadow beside the stile where first his incredible adventure had begun. The wood stood in its usual place and stared down upon him in the sunlight. There was the red house, in the distance as before. Above him grinned the weather-beaten notice board, "'Trespassers will be prosecuted.'"
Disheveled in mind and body, and a good deal shaken in his official soul, the clerk walked slowly across the fields. But on the way, he glanced once more at the postcard of instructions and saw with dull amazement that the inked-out sentences were quite legible after all. Beneath the scratches made across it, there is a shortcut through the wood, the wood I want cut down if you care to take it.
only care was so badly written it looked more like another word. The C was uncommonly like D. That's the copsy that spoils my views of the downs, you see, his client explained to him later, pointing across the fields and referring to the ordnance map beside him. I want it cut down and a path made so-and-so. His finger indicated direction on the map.
"The Fairy Wood," it's still called, and it's far older than this house. Come now if you're ready, Mr. Thomas. We might go out and have a look at it. Thanks for listening! If you like the podcast and you haven't already subscribed, be sure to do so now so you don't miss future episodes. And also, please tell someone else about the podcast.
I recommend Weird Darkness to your friends, family and co-workers who love the paranormal, horror stories or true crime like you do. Every time you share the podcast with someone new, it helps spread the word about the show, and a growing audience makes it possible for me to keep creating episodes as often as I do. Plus, telling others about Weird Darkness also helps get the word out about resources that are available for those who suffer from depression. So please, share the podcast with someone today!
Do you have a dark tale to tell of your own? Fact or fiction? Click on "Tell Your Story" on the website, and I might use it in a future episode! Stories on Creepypasta episodes are works of fiction, and links to the stories or the authors can be found in the show notes. The Petting Zoo was written by Peter D'Niverville and Ancient Lights was written by Algernon Blackwood. Weird Darkness theme by Alibi Music. Weird Darkness is a registered trademark.
And now that we're coming out of the dark, I'll leave you with a little light. Romans 12:9: "Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil. Cling to what is good." And a final thought: don't let yesterday use up too much of today. Will Rogers. I'm Darren Marlar. Thanks for joining me in the Weird Darkness.
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