This is going to sound
crazy. I think it's crazy, and I know you won't believe me.
I need to stop right
there.
How many creepypastas
start out with those sentences, or something similar? I feel like a
kid sitting down to write a short story for school, who's read one
too many of them online, or been listening to them on YouTube at
three o'clock in the morning.
God knows I've done the
same. I love folklore, and legends, and myths. Even if they aren't
real, they can tell you a lot about a culture, and about humanity in
general. But that's the thing -- I never thought they were real.
Sure, they might have a grain of truth somewhere in them, but...
Yeah. Superstition and
all that. A lack of understanding of science, and the real.
I'm a history major,
and about to graduate. And like all history majors, I have very
little I can do with my degree on its own. I grew up in a family of
accountants and bankers for the most part, but the thought of doing
anything like that gags me, to be perfectly honest. My Grandmother
Ellie, on my mother's side, was a teacher. She was born in 1944, and
after she left secondary school at the age of 17, she studied to
become a primary teacher. At the time, she only had to complete a one
year certification program, so she was out and teaching at 18 years
old.
This was the woman I
had grown up admiring, and part of me always knew I'd try to follow
in her footsteps. Of course, it would take me a lot longer, but I
knew it would be worth it. Grandma Ellie is the kindest, most patient
soul I've ever met. She would sit with me for hours when I was a kid,
reading to me, playing games, making crafts. She always had a smile
on her face, and I suspected the same was true when she was with her
students all those years ago.
So. As I said, I'm
about the graduate. Next semester, in fact. I had planned on applying
to the Faculty of Education, but before I did I wanted to talk to
Grandma Ellie about it. I wasn't sure what advice she could give me,
if any. I mean, everything is so much different nowadays. I think I
just wanted some moral support, since I couldn't really talk to
anyone else in my family about it. They all think I'm nuts as it is.
I went to her for
support then.
The story she told me,
however, is making me question becoming a teacher at all.
Apparently, this is how
it happened:
Grandma Ellie -- or,
just Miss Ellie Sanderson at that point -- took a job in a small
mining town. I won't name any names here. That's not fair to the
current residents. But I can tell you that the town was very old,
even then. The original gold mines weren't pit mines, or even shaft
mines -- they were blast-a-tunnel-into-the-side-of-a-hill old. The
kind you see in black and white, silent gold-rush films from way
back. By the time she arrived to teach second grade, most of old mine
entrances had been boarded up, and the town only had a couple of
larger, more modern mining companies producing ore to be processed.
The school she was
working at was built at the end of the Great War, in 1918, and had
been used as a makeshift hospital in the summer before it officially
opened for victims of the Spanish Flu outbreak. It's main and top
floor had wide, tall hallways stretching from one end to the other,
and my grandmother remembered enjoying the echoed clicking of her
heels on the polished wooden slats throughout the hallways and the
classrooms. Large windows let it plenty of light, and radiators lined
the walls to keep the school warm in the coldest of temperatures.
Overall, it was a pleasant building, brightly decorated in the latest
1960s schoolroom fashions, and she loved teaching her little class of
students, eager and energetic. The basement was another matter.
She told me she never
ventured down there much. It was dark and cold, with a concrete
floor. The ceiling hung low, dropping wires and pipes and other
mechanical things which distressed her. That was the word she used --
distressed. It confused her, being distressed by basement. It was an
"unreasonable" reaction. Miss Sanderson chalked it up to
her imagination, and the ramblings of her students.
Though she didn't go down to the dungeon, as they called it, her students went down all the time. Modern toilets had been put down there about a decade earlier, giving them little choice. The children, being children in a creepy setting, came up with all sorts of stories regarding the dungeon, most of them revolving around the school's time as a hospital. The basement had been a temporary morgue. Nearly fifty people had died in the building. No, over a hundred! Mostly children! The ghosts of these children crept around the dark dungeon, waiting for a living child to play with. Or to scare to death. They wanted more playmates, or (my grandmother shivered at the next thought) a new body to possess, to live a life they were so cruelly denied.
Though she didn't go down to the dungeon, as they called it, her students went down all the time. Modern toilets had been put down there about a decade earlier, giving them little choice. The children, being children in a creepy setting, came up with all sorts of stories regarding the dungeon, most of them revolving around the school's time as a hospital. The basement had been a temporary morgue. Nearly fifty people had died in the building. No, over a hundred! Mostly children! The ghosts of these children crept around the dark dungeon, waiting for a living child to play with. Or to scare to death. They wanted more playmates, or (my grandmother shivered at the next thought) a new body to possess, to live a life they were so cruelly denied.
My Grandma Ellie knew
it was foolish, but she was certainly happy for the toilet in the
staff room on the second floor. As long as she stayed in the airy,
bright upper floors of her school, she had nothing to fear. What she
didn't recognize was the very real danger coming from down the road.
Not more than a five
minute walk from the school was one of the boarded up mine entrances,
quite possibly one of the oldest ones in town. Though most of the old
tunnels had been boarded up in the early 1900s, this one, she was
told, had been closed off much earlier. Much, much earlier. A
colleague, whom she could remember only as a fifth grade teacher,
said he had done a little research on it when teaching his students
how to use microfilm. They ran across a newspaper article from just
before the Second World War discussing reopening that particular
mine. The article didn't go into much detail, however it did say that
there was still a large vein to be mined out. Later on, another
article reported a unanimous town council decision to leave it
closed. Miss Sanderson's colleague found it perplexing. She didn't
find it all that odd. She just assumed it had something to do with
finances, or safety codes, or something like that. Maybe it wasn't
safe to mine. She remembered that though the fifth grade teacher had
nodded his head, he didn't seem satisfied with the possible
explanation.
That was the last she
had thought about the mine until about a month before the end of the
school year. It was May when the strange occurrences began, and Miss
Sanderson took notice. One of her students, Sarah-Anne, stood in the
cloakroom, doing the "potty dance" when she was supposed to
be outside for recess. When she was told she had permission to go to
the toilet, the little girl shook her head furiously and refused
to explain why. Sarah-Anne wouldn't say anything at all. My
grandmother finally rushed her to the staff room, and let her use the
facilities there.
Over the course of the
next few days, several other students nearly had accidents, and not
just those in my Grandma Ellie's class. Neither her, nor any of her
colleagues could drag any sort of explanation out of their students
until Friday morning. One of the sixth graders had been caught
escorting his younger sister behind a utility shed on the edge of the
soccer field, a roll of toilet paper in hand. He confessed she was
too frightened to go to the dungeon -- they all were, he whispered --
but she really needed to pee. Most of the kids had been rushing home
at lunch time or holding it until the end of the day.
When asked why, he went
silent for a moment. My grandmother said he looked like he was
considering something very carefully. It made her wonder how much of
his answer was the truth. When the boy spoke, he said there were dead
children in the dungeon, but they weren't ghosts and they weren't
from the hospital. He said he wasn't even sure they were actually
children. Another teacher scoffed loudly, admonishing the boy,
telling him he shouldn't be scaring the younger students and ordering
him to detention hall to write lines.
Miss Sanderson caught
the child's arm quickly, before he could leave, asking one more
question: Where did he think the dead children came from? It was a
ridiculous question, and she wasn't sure why she asked it. But her
students were terrified, and she wanted answers. My Grandma Ellie
said she'll never forget the boy's sheet white face as he answered
her: From the mine.
Well, in her mind that
settled it. The story of the dungeon had changed! Her colleague, and
his research studies with his class on the neighborhood mine, had
altered the prevailing myth of the dungeon. She had laughed at
herself, feeling stupid. Children's stories, and nothing more.
That evening, after
working on her end of year reports, Miss Ellie Sanderson found
herself walking home a little later than usual, past the boarded up
old mine tunnel. This time she glanced over at it incredulously, and
stopped in her tracks. There were a few boards missing, creating a
hole just large enough for a child to enter. Or exit.
She laughed out loud
this time, and convinced herself that with all the rumours spreading
around the school, it was most likely some of the older kids had
taken to exploring. My Grandma Ellie made a point to speak to the
principal about it on Monday. An abandoned mine was dangerous, dead
children or not. She thought nothing more of it that weekend.
(to be continued)