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r/nosleep

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Has anyone else noticed the weird new trend where people in your peripheral vision “play dead”? Has anyone else noticed the weird new trend where people in your peripheral vision “play dead”?

I first saw it happen at work. I’d just finished ringing up a customer when every hair on my neck stood on end. Something in my peripheral vision caught my eye. I work at a board game store, and standing in an alcove peering at the game shelves was a skinny dude with a scraggly beard. His back was to me, but when he turned sideways, right at the edge of my vision I could see his mouth was gaping wide open, like he was screaming.

Weird, right?

I glanced up, ready to laugh and ask him what was up—but the dude was just chilling, totally normal face. A slight wrinkle on his forehead, lips pursed as he read the back cover of Wingspan. He looked at me.

“Yo, I keep hearing about this. Is it any good?”

“Slightly overrated in my opinion,” I replied. “But many people do seem to enjoy it.”

“I’m trying to find a game my girlfriend might play. She’s not really into board games, and doesn’t like competitive stuff. You have any good co-op games?”

“Might I suggest a roll and write? Technically competitive, but you can’t attack or interact with other players and mostly do your own thing on your board. They’re also very beginner friendly…” I turned to grab one of the reserved ones from behind the counter, and as I turned back around I nearly jumped out of my skin, because the man had approached so he was directly in front of the counter—and his mouth was wide open in a scream. Eyes wide. Like he was a zombie about to bite me. But it must’ve been my imagination because as soon as I looked at him straight on, he just looked back at me, mouth quirked.

“You all right there, my dude?” he asked.

“U-um, Cartographers is our top selling roll and write,” I stammered, recovering myself.

But every time I took my eyes away from his face… in my periphery, he seemed to be like one of the undead, a corpse with a gaping mouth.

I decided to ignore his behavior in the hope that he’d stop. He placed an order for Cartographers, and I told him I’d give him a call when his copy came in. As I took down his details, much to my annoyance he did not stop, but continued to stand in my periphery silently screaming.

The next week, when I went in for a haircut, the guy sitting a couple of chairs over was also playing dead. He appeared to be slumped in the barber chair, head lolled to one side, blue eyes wide and unseeing. But the stylist kept flitting around him, scissors snipping, and when I turned to look at him directly, he was no longer playing dead, but instead speaking to the stylist, one hand gesturing from under the cape.

Yet when I looked away a moment later… gone were his gestures. I could hear his voice, but he appeared to be lying motionless in his chair in the corner of my eye. A corpse.

When my haircut was finished and I looked over again, he was gone from the chair.

This just kept happening. Honestly, I thought it must be some sort of online fad, with people randomly pretending to be dead. The internet has spawned stranger pranks. I don’t have much of an online presence and don’t keep up with popular memes or tiktok trends, and in my head, it made sense.

It remained a relatively rare occurrence for me, and mostly happened in large crowds—for example, the airport. That was where I finally figured out the cause. I was on my way to visit family, going through airport security. A little farther behind me in line stood a young couple who were pretending to be corpses whenever I stopped looking at them. It was annoying, and I kept turning my head quickly, hoping to catch them in the act, but they were always behaving normally the moment I looked directly at them. And of course, what should have tipped me off is that no one else in the line was reacting to their behavior. Only I could see it. But at that point I was still acting under the assumption that everyone else was in on some new tiktok prank, and I wasn’t. I’m 42 and definitely give “how do you do, fellow kids” vibes by today’s social media standards.

So anyway, I put my belongings on the conveyor belt, and the couple in my periphery were now 100% normal. Finally, I thought, they stopped pretending! But the moment I collected my stuff and turned around, I nearly shrieked because both of them loomed next to me, standing slouched, faces contorted into death masks. You can’t see sharp details in your periphery, but you can catch when someone is making a terrible dead face. But when I looked at them head-on to tell them to cut that shit out they were both—normal! Staring at me like I was the weird one! The woman actually hid behind her partner.

That’s when I realized two things—one, that I was the source of the weirdness, and two, that more specifically the source was in my stuff. I felt around in my pockets, my fingers closed on cold metal, and that’s when it all clicked for me.

I found my father’s pocket watch.

Now, a little background on this watch. Dad gave it to me the day before he died. It’s cracked and doesn’t run. He’d had it for as long as I can remember, and when I was little, I asked him why he always carried a broken watch. He told me it was a family heirloom and that the cracks didn’t matter because it told time in a different way. Those were his words. When he finally passed it down to me, he looked troubled as he told me, “I don’t know if it’s a blessing or a curse, to be able to see the things it shows. My father told me to sell it, but… I never could bring myself to.”

Dad was always very soft-spoken and polite. He ran an antiques shop that closed after he died. I think he wanted me to run it, but I never had the passion or the interest. Our lives just took different paths. The watch is the one antique he made sure to give to me.

What I’m still trying to figure out is why. Because as far as I can tell, there’s no ambiguity about it. The damned thing is definitely cursed.

See, once I knew the source was the watch, it all fell into place. At the end of that family trip, when I came back to work, I followed my hunch and looked up that guy who ordered the Cartographers game. He never came back to pick it up when it came in. I’d kept it sitting on the shelf for him, even though I should’ve just put it out on the main shelves for people to browse. It still had his name on it, and I searched his details and right away found his obituary from that same week he’d come into the store.

So, THAT’S what Dad meant about the watch telling time in a different way.

If I’d known what was going on back when the customer ordered the game, I could’ve warned him. Could’ve let him know, Hey bud, maybe grab something that’s in stock currently. Better yet, forget the games, go do whatever it is you want to in your last hours of life. Start checking off that bucket list. Maybe buy something more meaningful, since it’ll be your last chance to give your girlfriend a gift.

But…

Would he have listened?

Looking back, I remember when I was a kid how things would happen with Dad that didn’t make sense at the time. He’d get in random arguments with strangers. It was so uncharacteristic, because my father wasn’t a confrontational man. Always polite. But once in awhile, at the antique store, I remember he’d step outside with a customer, and the customer would leave upset, yelling or swearing or hysterically sobbing, sometimes leaving so quickly they’d forgot whatever it was they’d purchased. And once, too, at the mall, Dad was told to leave a store after upsetting an employee. Stuff like that.

Now I realize he must’ve tried to warn people.

But did it actually help those people? Any of them? Is the watch a blessing or a curse?

The watch wasn’t always cracked. Somebody cracked it. Hurled it against a wall, or the floor, maybe in a moment of frustration. Maybe my grandfather. But he didn’t throw it away. He passed it to my dad.

Now, I wish Dad had sold it. Wish he’d given it to someone else. I know it’s not his fault. Everyone has their time. But there are some things that maybe, people are just better off not knowing. And maybe Dad thought warning people was the right thing, but I’m team curse on this one. Knowing is definitely a curse. I’d rather not know. I should’ve thrown this watch away. But like my father, and his father before, I just… didn’t.

Now it’s too late. I’m sitting here at home, and every time I pass the bathroom mirror, every time I catch a glimpse of my reflection at the edge of my vision…

It’s just too late to unsee my own dead eyes, staring back at me.


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My new neighbor keeps smiling, and I think he might have done something horrible to the people who lived there. My new neighbor keeps smiling, and I think he might have done something horrible to the people who lived there.

My escape from my law firm job came in the form of a woman announcing her maternity leave at a bookstore, which gave me a chance to take her place. A chance to drown in the musty scent of old paper, get reacquainted with the sun, and lose myself in the comforting rhythm of turning pages. But the transition from law firm life to bookstore life, it seemed, would require a different kind of adjustment.

My first day working at the bookstore went pretty good. I manned the front desk, greeting customers and stamping receipts with a satisfying "thwack." But after a while, the thrill of a new job wore off, and the dull ache in my feet began to throb. I shifted my weight, trying to find a comfortable position, when the bell above the door chimed.

A wave of relief washed over me as I looked up. There, standing in a huddle, were the Petersons – the kind, quiet couple with three rambunctious kids. They lived directly across the street from me in my neighborhood. Seeing them felt like a warm breeze on a chilly day.

Mrs. Peterson, a woman whose smile could light up a room, beamed at me first.

"Well, hello there!" she exclaimed, her voice laced with surprise. "What a surprise to see you here!"

“Hey Mrs. Peterson! It’s good to see you and your family, what can I do for y’all?”

She gave me a big smile and said, “I’ve been looking for a book written by Freida McFadden called The Inmate, and I was wondering if it was in stock?”

“Hm, I’m not entirely sure, but I can take a look for you!”

“That sounds good, thank you.”

I lifted my weight from the counter, the dull ache in my feet momentarily forgotten. Walking to the towering shelves, I scanned the rows for the alphabetical section. Finding the "F" section, I ran my finger along the spines, searching for the name "Freida McFadden." Relief washed over me as I finally spotted it – a medium paperback titled "The Inmate" nestled between a travel guide and a self-help book.

I grabbed the book and made my way back to the front desk. The Petersons were waiting, anticipation sparkling in Mrs. Peterson's eyes. With a dramatic "Ta-da!" I presented the book, holding it up next to my face with a wide grin. Mrs. Peterson let out a surprised laugh, the sound a little brittle at the edges.

“You scared me for a second there” she said, her gaze lingering a touch too long on the title.

I placed the book on the counter and scanned the barcode on the back of the soft-covered book. "$19.95," I said in my monotone professional-sounding voice. Mrs. Peterson handed me the money while her husband in the back, his eyebrows shooting up slightly as if surprised by the price, watched the exchange.

Our hands brushed slightly as she handed me the money, and it sent a shiver down my spine – her hands were cold.

"Thank you so much for the help!" she said.

Her family shuffled towards the door, their usual rambunctiousness replaced by a strange quiet. Then, as Mrs. Peterson reached the exit, she turned back, her gaze lingering on me for a beat too long. "See you around, neighbor," she said, a strange glint in her eyes.

The end of my shift consisted of me restocking shelves, dusting the spines of travel guides until they gleamed, and putting up colorful displays for the latest fantasy releases. At 9:00 PM, I was finally able to clock out.

Grabbing my keys, I made my way to the door, the silence of the bookstore a stark contrast to the usual daytime bustle. Opening the door, I stepped out into the cool night air.

My car, a dented but reliable Toyota Corolla, sat faithfully in the parking lot. Pulling on the handle, I inserted the keys and twisted and heard the familiar roar of the engine, a welcome sound.

Pulling into my driveway, exhaustion momentarily forgotten, I noticed a man across the street, perched on the Petersons' porch swing, his legs pumping back and forth in an unsettlingly rapid rhythm. An impossibly wide grin stretched across his face, the kind that didn't reach his eyes. He seemed far too awake and enthusiastic for the hour, his eyes gleaming with an unsettling intensity.

What struck me odd was the absence of the Peterson's car in their driveway. It was empty except for this strange man perched on their porch swing, grinning like a jack-o'-lantern carved with a rusty butter knife. Maybe they'd finally moved out, and Mrs. Peterson just didn’t want me to know. But why so quickly and so suddenly? They'd lived there for years, their minivan a permanent fixture in the driveway. If they moved out, then where was this new smiling neighbor's car? Did he not have one? I wanted to ask him about all of this but something about his smile made me really uncomfortable.

As I fumbled with my house keys, his grin widened, and he gave a boisterous wave – a gesture that felt more like a challenge than a greeting.

I plastered on a forced smile, unlocked my front door and went inside. Tired after a long day at work, I took a hot shower that barely managed to wash away the chill that had settled beneath my skin.

Exhausted, I skipped dinner and collapsed into bed, the image of the grinning man on the Petersons' porch flickering behind my eyelids.

I woke up the next morning and relief flooded me as I remembered it was my day off – a whole day to myself to unwind.

Fueling up on cold coffee and stale crackers, I flicked on the TV, and as I was watching, I suddenly remembered the strange neighbor and his unnervingly wide smile. Springing up from the couch, I was drawn to the window in my bedroom, the one that offered a perfect line of sight to the Petersons' house across the street.

A glance out the window revealed the sun fully risen, casting a warm glow on the street. My attention was drawn back to the man across the street. He was back on the porch, that unsettling grin still stretched across his face.

A knot of unease tightened in my stomach. It wasn't the social awkwardness of being caught staring, but a deeper, more primal sense of disquiet. Like I'd witnessed something I shouldn't have, something that hinted at a darkness lurking beneath the surface. I offered a weak wave and a strained smile, completely embarrassed that I'd just been caught staring at him through my window.

He, his grin unwavering, waved back, then stood frozen, his gaze locked on me through my bedroom window. A shiver danced down my spine like a spider scuttling across my skin. Retreating further into the house, I pulled the curtains shut, the interaction leaving a foul taste in my mouth.

The whole day I stayed glued to the couch watching Netflix. Time seemed to warp and twist, the hours melting away faster than I could keep track. A glance at my phone jolted me – 8:00 PM already.

Just as I rose from the couch to get some real food, a sudden, loud pounding on the door shattered the silence. I jumped, startled by the unexpected noise, my heart hammering in my chest. Cautiously, I approached the door, peering through the peephole.

A flash of red and blue light flickered in the hallway, instantly twisting my gut with a sickening dread. With a trembling hand, I unlocked the door.

A stern-faced police officer stood on my doorstep, a sea of blue uniforms behind him, and a bright yellow crime scene tape, illuminated by the flashing squad cars, stretched around the perimeter of the Petersons' property.

Before I could even stammer a greeting, the officer spoke, his voice clipped and official.

"We're here concerning the residents across the street, the Petersons. Do you know when you last saw them?"

“I... I saw them a few days ago at the bookstore," I stammered, my voice barely a whisper.

The next thing the officer said hit me like a punch to the face.

“We regret to inform you that the Petersons were found stabbed to death in their home.”

stabbed to death?

A chill ran down my spine, the image of the strange grinning man on their porch flashing in my mind. I swallowed hard, my voice barely a whisper.

“I saw a man on the Peterson's porch," I blurted out, the words tumbling from my lips before I could stop them.

The officer's brow furrowed, a flicker of confusion crossing his face.

“What man? We didn't find any other person there.

His words sent a jolt through me. Doubt gnawed at me, the memory of the unsettling grin vivid in my mind. I stammered, unsure of what else to say.

"I... I don't know," I mumbled, feeling a wave of helplessness wash over me. The officer sighed, his gaze lingering on me for a moment longer than necessary.

“Look," he said, his voice softening slightly, "if you see anything suspicious, anything at all, please call this number." He handed me a card with a precinct phone number printed on it.

Before I could respond, he turned and walked back to the swarm of officers surrounding the Peterson's house, leaving me standing alone on my doorstep.

Who was that man? Was he connected to the Petersons' deaths?

Putting everything together made a horrifying kind of sense – the man I had been seeing must’ve murdered the Peterson’s and had been pretending to live there, and just recently, the man must’ve just moved on from the house and left. I have no way to prove this but, logic screams a horrifying truth.

Yesterday should have brought closure, but the guilt of not knowing more gnawed at me. The police investigation seemed to be at a standstill, they had no leads on who could be responsible, and I wasn’t able to get much sleep.

Needing a break, I decided to grab breakfast at the local diner. As I pulled into the parking lot of the diner, across the street from the diner was another neighborhood. Suddenly, I saw a person emerged from one of the houses.

I climbed out of the car, not really thinking about who I had just seen. But as I headed towards the diner’s door, a prickling sensation crawled up my spine. A quick glance back confirmed my worst fear.

There, standing on the porch of a random house across the street, was the same man. He seemed to be staring directly at me, the distance was too great to make out his facial expression, but I already knew it must’ve been a smile.


I Found VHS Tapes Hidden in my Grandpa’s Attic, I Should Have Never Watched Them I Found VHS Tapes Hidden in my Grandpa’s Attic, I Should Have Never Watched Them

They always say you shouldn't watch your parents' old VHS tapes. I should have known that this rule also applied to grandparents' tapes.

It's all still a blur in my head, and I think I could use some help from the Internet to sort it all out.

It all started when I moved in temporarily with my grandfather, who lives alone.

My plan to set up my own YouTube channel on UFOs and the paranormal had failed to take off, despite years of publishing online.

I found myself unable to pay my rent and facing eviction. I felt so humiliated by the situation that I didn't dare ask my parents for help, preferring instead to call my grandfather instead.

Since Grandma had left us, he had continued to live alone in his house lost in the forest a few dozen miles from the city.

I figured he wouldn't mind if I came to live with him for a while, just long enough to get back on my feet.

When I asked him on the phone, he only hesitated for a second before agreeing.

When I pulled up in front of the house in my car, he was already waiting for me on the doorstep with a big smile on his face.

"Thanks so much for taking me in, Grandpa," I said, giving him a hug.

"Don't worry, we all go through hard times, that's what family's for. Come on inside, it's cold outside, we'll bring your stuff in a bit later."

Describing my grandfather would be like describing the kindest of forest rangers. He spent a lot of his time outside, hunting and gathering all sorts of things, especially mushrooms. He even had a gigantic poster hanging in the living room with almost every type of mushroom there was, and just below it, several rifles hanging on the wall.

Just below that poster was an actual cupboard full of dried mushrooms.

"Don't worry, there's no risk of you eating something that'll make you vomit or worse. I only keep these for your father when he comes and bother me. Some could even make you see elephants for hours" he laughed.

I moved into the guest room, and for the next few days, everything went smoothly.

One day, in the late afternoon, the Internet connection went down.

This happened a lot, but it usually came back after 30 minutes at the most. But after waiting 1 hour, the Internet still hadn't come back.

I ended up getting up from the sofa and wandering around the house. My grandpa had left for the afternoon, so I was on my own.

When I got upstairs, I saw a trapdoor on the ceiling that I'd never noticed before. I remembered that during one of our discussions, he had told me that he still had lots of VHS tapes, including one of my favorite childhood movies. A dinosaur movie I remembered perfectly, but had forgotten the title.

When I asked him if we could watch it sometime, for old times' sake, he said the tape must be in the attic and he'd go and get it. But I guess he forgot.

I stared at the trapdoor. I'd been living here for a while, and it felt a bit like home. I didn't feel like I was overstepping my rights. Or, if I was, he wouldn't mind too much.

After all, there was only one room downstairs he'd strongly forbidden me to enter, since that was where he butchered animals and didn't want me to set foot in it.

I climbed up the ladder to the attic.

Immediately, dust fell on me and made me sneeze. I climbed the rickety wooden stairs.

The place was plunged into darkness, and not knowing where the light was, I used the flashlight on my phone.

I looked around for a collection of VHS tapes. And I was surprised to see a sickle in perfect condition, with an old TV set in front of it, itself resting on a piece of furniture.

Maybe it was his way of enjoying the viewing of his favorite horror movies

I opened the cabinet and shone the light inside.

No children's cartoon tapes, but dozens of tapes with dates on them like "02-05-1998" and nothing else. My eyes widened, what if these were old tapes of my father when he was still a teenager?

I just wanted to have a look. Just a few seconds, nothing else, then watch them with grandpa.

I smiled as I inserted a random VHS tape into the VCR.

At first there was nothing, everything was black.

Then a hand pulled back from the lens, and I discovered a scene that would remain engraved in my memory for the rest of my life.

A woman. Probably in her twenties, blonde, and tied to an iron chair.

The room looked like a slaughterhouse. Animal skins and carcasses hung on the wall. Knives and other implements whose function I didn't want to know hung on the wall too.

"Please, please don't do that please!" the woman kept shouting, crying.

And my worst nightmare came true.

A younger version of my grandfather walked into the camera, axe in hand. Without any hesitation, he cut her head off with one clean stroke. I couldn't hold back the scream that came from my mouth next.

At the same moment, the worst thing that could happen, happened.

I heard the front door open and close.

My grandfather was back.

For a second, I imagined him coming up the stairs in the half-light, that same axe in his hand.

I stood up on my shaky legs.

I didn't have time to tidy up and get out of there, he was going to see that I'd seen what I shouldn't see.

I walked as slowly and quickly as I could towards the stairs, even though he must have heard me shouting, he still didn't know exactly where I was in the house.

I went down the stairs.

I can't believe it, my grandfather is a murderer, a psycho

I tried to think of my options, but it was already too late, he'd just arrived upstairs.

No words were necessary.

He simply looked at the open attic hatch, and the look in my eyes, to understand that I had seen what I should never have seen.

I rushed into the first room on my right, the bathroom.

Damn, there's no window to get out!

I could already imagine him taking out his axe and breaking down the door like in the movie The Shining. Except I had nothing to defend myself with, and the movie was probably going to end prematurely this time.

"Please I won't say anything grandpa, just let me go," I begged him.

"Sweetie, it's not what you think, open the door please," he replied.

I was crying, seeing my life flash before my eyes as I watched the door handle move back and forth, hyperventilating. My head became light. He was still talking through the door, but I could no longer understand what he was saying.

It was too much. Even as I knew I was telling myself I was living my last moments, I fainted.

The light was dazzling.

I got to my feet, still confused, and realized I was lying on the couch and right under the ceiling bulb.

"Are you feeling better?"

I turned my head, and saw my grandfather sitting not far from me, scrutinizing me with his eyes.

I was still dazzled by the light that had flooded my eyes a few moments ago, and I still felt an intense sense of confusion from the shock. My stomach was also churning and I had a bitter taste in my mouth.

"I know it's hard, but you'll have to get up and follow me."

I obeyed, seeing no other option in my condition.

He helped me get up and walk, holding me under the armpit. I couldn't help shivering at his touch.

We walked, and the whole time he seemed to be scrutinizing me out of the corner of his eye every five seconds.

He opened a door and we went down a few steps.

When I looked around, I realized despite the confusion where we were : the same room in which he had killed that poor woman, and probably dozens of others before. And probably me in a few moments.

"Grandpa please, you don't have to do this."

"Sit down," he simply replied.

I sat down on a wooden chair I hadn't noticed.

On the iron chair where I'd seen him kill that girl, sat the TV from the attic with a VCR underneath.

He put his hand on the TV.

"Listen to me carefully. You should never have seen what was on that tape, but not for the reasons you think."

He glared at me, and I felt like I was still floating.

"I don't want to make you see this shocking scene again, but please, listen to what happens right afterwards," and as he said this he played the tape shortly after the murder.

He crouched down right next to me.

"You can hear it, right?" he asked.

At first I couldn't see what he was talking about, but then I heard it. The woman, despite the fact that her head had separated from her body, was still screaming. But it wasn't really the woman's voice anymore. It sounded like it was filled with rage and malice.

"I will take your soul! You and all the others!"

My grandfather was standing right next to my face, staring at me.

"I... I hear it, what is it?"

"We're not sure. And you shouldn't know too much either sweetie."

"Wait, how do I know this isn't just a trick?"

He stood up slowly, looking hesitant. I vaguely tried to keep my balance on my chair in the meanwhile.

"Once the head is separated from the body, I keep it in order to send them... somewhere secret, to study them."

He stood right in front of me and stared, "They're all still alive in jars, right behind that wardrobe door. Can't you hear them?"

He seemed to hesitate but finally stood next to the door, still staring at me.

"They're screaming, look at their faces," and with that he opened the door.

Inside were dozens of jars containing women's heads in clear liquid.

In shock, I saw them one by one start to scream, their eyes black.

Demons.

We finally went back upstairs and I spent the rest of the day in bed, still in shock. I even threw up several times during the night. I had so many questions, but it was clear that he wouldn’t answer to any of them.

I've been bedridden for several days now, recovering little by little, both physically and emotionally. My grandfather brings me my meals every day and we chat a bit. Most of the time, he asks me how I'm doing, and I ask him what he plans to do with his day. Then he leaves the room and tells me to get some rest, closing the bedroom door with his usual smile.

I still don't know who my grandfather really is, but whatever he killed in that room was definitely not human.

At least, I don't think so.

You see, the thing is, sometimes I close my eyes, and I see these dozens of jars filled with heads.

But none of them move, none of them scream.

Just dead faces, some with horrible expressions.

No matter how hard I try, they remain inert in my mind.

I can't be sure of what I've seen anymore.

Please, tell me that my grandfather isn't a serial killer.