When I was eight years old, there was a forest not far from my house, just past the field of wildflowers that marked the edge of our yard. The pines grew so tall, their branches heavy with dark green needles, dense and shadowed even in the brightest daylight. The forest was close enough that the wind, which seemed to have a voice of its own, would carry whispers from deep within it, and on certain still, quiet nights, I could swear it called my name.
It started innocently enough, those trips into the woods. My friends dared each other to see who could go the farthest before getting scared and running back. And, of course, I was eight, fearless and quick to show off. I wandered further each time, learning the landmarks like they were old friends – a hollowed-out stump, a jagged boulder shaped like a snarling face, and the twisted pines that seemed to point in the same direction, deeper into the forest’s heart.
Then, one afternoon, the murmuring changed. The wind picked up as I neared a small clearing I’d never seen before. Just inside, a tall, thin figure stood, shrouded in something dark. I knew it was a trick of the light; shadows often played games in the woods. But as I turned to leave, I heard it, clear as a bell — the figure whispering my name.
That’s when it happened. I lost my footing, tripping on an unseen root, and hit the ground hard. When I looked back up, the figure was gone. But the whispering stayed, faint and persistent, following me all the way home. And every night after that, in the quiet stillness of my room, I could hear it — a voice, speaking in a tone barely audible, hidden in the rustling of leaves and the creaking of old trees.
As a kid, I convinced myself it was all just in my head. The forest had too many shadows, and kids see things, right? I told myself that enough times, and eventually, the fear eased into something manageable, like a bad dream fading in the morning light. But even then, I felt watched, especially in the quiet. It was a strange feeling that never quite left me.
As I grew older, I moved far away from that house and that forest. I became a teacher, leading a steady life in a town that never felt haunted. But there were moments, unexpected and inexplicable, when the murmur would return. Sometimes it was a creak in the classroom as I closed up late, the dry hiss of paper sliding off my desk, or the distant rustling of trees outside my window. It all felt the same, like something from the past reaching out to me, reminding me it was still there.
Then, last spring, I got a call that my parents’ house was going up for sale. They’d moved south, and the land where the forest once stood had been cleared. With a strange feeling I couldn’t quite place, I went back to help clean out the house.
The field of wildflowers was still there, though wild as ever, and beyond it lay a stark empty lot, the trees all gone. For a while, I stood there, staring at the scarred ground where the forest once held me captive in its shadow. And that’s when I heard it, louder than it had been in years. The murmur, my name whispered as if the very earth remembered it. It was absurd, of course – no trees, no forest, just an empty lot and a stiff breeze. But the feeling was real. My stomach knotted, and I felt like that same eight-year-old, alone in the dark woods.
Then, for the first time, I remembered something. In my mind, I saw the figure I’d glimpsed in the clearing, that towering shadow. It wasn’t a trick of the light. It was a memory I’d buried deep. The figure had been there, had been waiting for me, watching, and in that instant, I remembered the feeling of its eyes, its cold, steady gaze. And this time, I understood something — I wasn’t just a curious child wandering too far. It had chosen me, somehow marked me, and the years I’d spent haunted by its presence weren’t by accident.
As I stood there, frozen, I felt an urge to leave, to run back to the car, but something kept me rooted in place. I had a sense that if I ran now, that feeling, that figure, would stay with me forever. So I took a step forward, into the lot. The breeze picked up, swirling dust around my feet. And then, from behind me, a voice, low and rasping, whispered my name.
It was real, this time. Real as the chill crawling up my spine, real as the shadows lengthening on the ground. I turned slowly, my heart pounding so hard it drowned out every other sound, and I saw the figure standing there. Tall, lean, barely distinguishable from the dusk, like it was made of the shadows themselves.
It didn’t move toward me, didn’t say anything more. It just watched. And as I stared back, I understood — its wait had been intentional, and it had followed me all this time, perhaps waiting for a moment just like this. The weight of that realization was crushing, pulling me down like roots twisting around my ankles.
In that moment, I had a choice. Run, let the fear follow me for the rest of my life, or stay and face whatever this was, whatever had haunted me from childhood. And I knew, deep down, that it wouldn’t end until I did.
Taking a shaky breath, I stepped forward, closer to the figure, and whispered, “I’m here. What do you want?”
The figure tilted its head, and I swear, for just a second, its shadowed face split into something that might have been a smile. Then, like a breath on the wind, it dissolved, disappearing into the dusk. And the murmuring finally faded, the quiet settling around me like a blanket.
As I left the lot and headed back to my car, I knew the fear would never truly leave me, but something had changed. I’d faced it, come back to it, looked it in the eye. And that, somehow, felt like enough.
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1 comment
Excellent imagery.
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