I’ve tried everything I can think of. Enough is enough.
I first noticed the thing when I looked up at my window
after taking a short nighttime walk. At first, I reasoned that it was just my
mom, putting something in my room. But as I came closer and looked harder, I
saw its shape was hardly feminine. Hardly even human.
What stood in my window was a tall, skinny figure,
completely nude and lanky like a teenager, its skin the color gray. It stood
taller than I did, and it looked down from my window at me whenever I was
outside of my house. Its face was more humanoid than the rest of it, as it had
a mouth, a nose, and two eyes, the whites of which shone like dimmed car
headlights. It had an expression that was hard to read; fear mixed with
exuberation, and entirely psychotic.
The first night I saw it, it just stared down at me. It
didn’t move at all. I didn’t move at all. I couldn’t. I was dumbfounded by its
presence.
I felt a sneaking dread climb up my spine, and it settled on
my neck. My mother and sister were in the house with that monster. I ran for
the door.
When I burst through, nothing was amiss. My family members
sat downstairs, watching television as they always did. Panting, I stood before
the screen and looked at them, wondering how they couldn’t have noticed someone
breaking into our home. Looks of concern showed on both their faces.
“What’s the matter?” my mom asked, frowning.
“There’s someone upstairs!” I exclaimed.
“What?” she cried, her voice raised. “How can that be?”
“I saw him in my window!” Without waiting for them to
follow, I stormed up the stairs, determined to catch the criminal. I took a
baseball bat from the closet on the way and, with a moment’s hesitation, I
exploded into my bedroom.
The gray being had inexplicably vanished. Gone, without any
trace. I checked my sister’s room, my mother’s room, every bathroom and closet
and pantry I could. The thing had disappeared. Somehow, its vanishing disturbed
me more than its being here. That night I barely slept, waiting for it to
emerge from some excellent hiding spot. It never did.
After then, I’ve looked up to my window when I was outside,
and every time I saw the thing glaring down at me like I was the freak.
Sometimes I locked eyes with it, making threatening gestures to try to stare it
down and scare it off, but it never affects it. It just stood there, watching.
Waiting.
After a week of seeing it whenever I walked my dog late at
night, and even during the day when I looked up from car as I parked it in the
driveway, I resolved to do something. What a mistake.
First, I tried shutting the blinds and turning off the light
before I went out with my dog. Sure enough, when I glanced up at my window the
thing stood as it had before, with the blinds completely up and the light
juxtaposing its gray mass against the yellow-colored room. When I climbed back
up to my bedroom, the shades were as I had put them. I started to feel crazy,
and unsafe. I started sleeping downstairs.
The second thing I tried worked as well as the first. I
stacked chairs and heavy boxes full of reams of paper before the window to see how
determined this spirit was. As I should have guessed, all of the things had
been removed from sight when I peered up to the gleaming portal. It just stood
alone, its expression constant, its body not feeling my desperate eyes upon the
gray of its form.
As a final attempt before resulting to setting actual traps
to catch the beast, I told my sister to check my room after I’d gone. She was
still sitting on the couch when I walked through the front door, loath to
postpone her sedentary life for even a few minutes. When I returned, she
reported that my room was empty, and asked if I felt okay. Feeling the
concerned and fearful eyes of my family members made me fearful for myself.
For some weeks, I managed to come to terms with the gray
being’s existence. I looked at it less and less, found its presence to be of
decreasing importance to me. It seemed as if we could occupy the same space in
comfort, staying out of each other’s way. I had almost completely forgotten
about it when the tragedy came.
It was a Saturday, a day I typically spend out with friends.
The evening was a time of stress relief in the form of driving around the
suburbs I live in and causing a ruckus in a variety of ways. I left around 4 in
the afternoon, and it was only 4:26 when I received a frantic text from my mom
urging me to come home.
When I got back, I looked up to my window, remembering the
being that had become nearly invisible by its consistency. I froze when I saw
that its gray, strange mouth was twisted upwards in a horrid smile.
I burst through the front door. My mom was collapsed on the
front room carpet, telephone held limply in hand having just called the police.
I knelt by her a few moments, comforting her in her distress, wondering where
my sister was. Sentence after incoherent sentence streamed out of her mouth
like dribble, so I left her there to check if the house had any clues to her
distress.
My natural response upon entering my house is to get
upstairs to my room as soon as sociably acceptable. Logically, I would check
their first. Each day I awake, I wish I hadn’t looked at all.
Blood coated nearly every surface, as if some explosion of
red paint had sent it splattering the walls and ceiling. Parts of my sister
were strewn on my bed, some of her organs lying on my desk, a good deal of her
torso still and motionless in the center of my carpet. Her face had been torn
off and nailed to the wall with a pencil, the eyes missing and nowhere to be found.
The eyeholes were ghastly, elongated things, made to look like demon’s eyes by
the bloodied wall that was visible through them. I retched onto the crimson
floor, making the stench in the room even more sickening than the
hemoglobin-iron smell that fucked my nostrils mercilessly.
I stumbled downstairs back to my weeping mother, and
collapsed as she had. I did not cry, however. I only thought. And it became
clear to me then. The being is too dangerous to let live.
From then on, after police had come to retrieve the body and
found no viable perpetrator of the crime, I spent most of my time at every
public library in the county or on so-called witch websites I knew to be
hoaxes, trying to find a method of purging the spirit from my home. I ordered
holy water purported to be bottled at the Jordan River, spread it in the
still-red room only to see that same gray beast looking down upon me from
within. No amount of charms or amulets or enchantments could repel the gray
being. I cast protection spells, spirit wards, positive repels, waving my hands
and chanting like a manic cultist. In a stupor of frustration, I tried pleading
with the spirit, making a pact with it, left it offerings like it was some god
to revere. Nothing could remove it from the window.
And that brings me to my current state of mind. I have
exhausted all possible means, save summoning a demon of my own or burning down
my house. I would do the latter if I could convince my mother of the gray
being’s existence, but she always claims she can’t see it when I show her its
creeping vigilance. For some reason, I know nothing can rid me of this
malevolence. That’s why I’ve written this tale, this explanation of my next
action; I’m going to climb onto my roof and go in through that window. I want
everyone to understand why I’ve done this, and to make sure that this does not
happen again. Believe someone if they tell you that they’re afraid, and believe
in what causes their fear, no matter how preposterous, no matter how gray.
I’ve tried everything I can think of. Enough is enough.
This journal was found on Derrick E. Weinman’s person on
February the 17th, among other personal effects including a watch battery, a
wallet containing identification and several bills, and a packet of Big League
Chew. Derrick’s time of death was 8:34 P.M. on February the 17th. Cause of
death, still unknown, though the official statement has been announced as
suicide. No sign of a struggle or harmful chemicals found. Derrick was lying
face-down on the floor of his room where his sister’s body had been found (See:
OFCL Report: Case 9a12, Vanessa D. Weinman). Please note that last page of
quoted journal had difficult-to-read message, eventually determined to say “WHY
AM I SO GRAY.”
Source: http://www.creepypasta.com/gray/
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