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THE WRAITH OF MYSTERY MILE
Science is a marvelous thing. It predicts the weather
(albeit with fleeting accuracy), it gives us medicine,
engineering…it even tracks ghosts. Modern paranormal
science has it that there are three types of hauntings.
But the thing about science is that a phenomena has to be
observable, and repeatable. And this is one observation I
hope no one ever has to repeated.
Despite my ardor of Halloween and all manner of horror
film, I never thought of myself as a believer in ghosts.
They were creations of Hollywood and little children,
created to make money (by the former) and garner attention
(by the latter). That all changed with a visit to a local
history museum, where I experienced what could only be
described as a supernatural experience. The ghostly
apparition of a mother, mourning the loss of her child,
occupied one of the historical exhibits in the museum.
Upon returning there later with the tour guide, I found the
exhibit incomplete and closed, and the ghastly remains of a
child in the long sealed coffin – a relic from the nearby
woods in Squirrel Hill.
Ever since then, I have lived by a simple axiom: reason
cannot resolve paradox, but faith destroys it. In other
words, trying to rationalize what happened, come to grips
with the reality of it would be impossible, because what I
saw could not have possibly been there. And yet, it was
there. I could not reason my way through it. I had to
simply admit and believe that it was there because I could
do nothing else.
I am well passed the horror of that experience. But ever
since then, I have taken up an interest in the paranormal,
a deeper interest than the occasional spook flick or ghost
story. As it happened, I also became friends with someone
who shares that interest. We developed a sort of
partnership wherein we looked for all we could about
hometown ghost stories. The ones that claimed to be
authentic, we would look into. Unfortunately, we found
ourselves lacking in the courage department when it came
time to actually go. That all changed when we learned
about Mystery Mile.
I was no stranger to Mystery Mile. As a child, my dad and
I would drive on it all the time. He said he used to live
back there as a kid, and that the road was named because of
all the farm animals that would run out onto the road – it
was a mystery what animal would appear next. Chickens,
dogs, cows…just about everything. I thought it was a silly
name for such a road but I had no reason to doubt it.
Until the day I got a phone call from my dad.
It started off with the usual round of ‘catch up questions’
that we always asked after not hearing from one another in
a week or more. But there was a tone in his voice that
suggested he had something more troubling to talk to me
about. When he mentioned my ‘hobby’ of ‘ghost hunting’
(which was unusual) I had a feeling something was coming.
He asked me if he ever told me why he moved off of Mystery
Mile. I regurgitated the story he had told me when I was
young, about how the farm was just too much work to
maintain. He said that was partly true.
He went on to tell me of the bizarre occurrences that
plagued his home. Aside from the standard array of things
that go bump in the night other things happened on the
farm. Things that would scare the animals, make them run
out into the street where, on many occasions, they would be
hit by passing cars. Bales of hay would be ripped apart
and thrown all over the yard. The animal feed would be
full of insects. Very disturbing things. The most
peculiar thing about Mystery Mile was the road itself.
The highway, superficially similar to any other paved road
in the country, had some peculiar problems. Approaching
the heart of Mystery Mile, the road erupted into a mass of
pot holes and broken pavement. Despite PennDOT’s best
efforts, the road continued to have problems. Eventually,
the project was abandoned. The rest of the road is fine,
but right in the middle…it is in tatters.
I phoned Celina, my partner in crime, and we immediately
met at the Beaver Library to do some investigative work.
We found very little information, except for rumors of
possible occult related activity in that vicinity, though
nothing was ever proven. Celina and I decided that the
best way to find out what goes on in the witching hours at
Mystery Mile was to check it out ourselves. I was less
fearful of the road, in truth. I had traveled on it by day
in my dad’s pickup on numerous occasions. I honestly
didn't expect to see anything. Of course, I remember
thinking something similar on the way to the museum.
On a clear summer evening, the two of us drove my Cavalier
to Mystery Mile. The sun was barely sinking behind the
horizon when we finally turned onto the aging highway. I
hadn't been there in at least a decade, but I was surprised
to find how easily it came back to me.
The mile cuts through a heavy forest on a hillside in a
town called Ohioville. It’s a hilly, twisting, turning
road that, in my ten year absence, was now nearly
suffocated by trees. After driving almost half a mile, we
reached what used to be my dad’s house. The place was old
and in tatters, but it seemed like a good enough spot to
start.
The place was in shambles – not surprising given the number
of years it had stood empty. The house was not unlike a
hundred other farm houses in a dozen other states across
the country. The grass was overgrown of course, and hay
was strewn about all over the place.
We parked near the house and got out, taking our
flashlights and tape recorders with us. Before we even
took a step, the deep, low ‘moo’ of a cow caught our
attention. We glanced at the barn and the surrounding
fields. Nothing. I offered that it could have come from a
nearby farm that was still in use. Celina said nothing.
We started off by having a look inside the house. The main
entrance opened up into the living room, which was a mess.
The ceiling had fallen, exposing much of the upstairs rooms
in the process. The steps had also collapsed, rendering
access to the upper floor impossible.
There wasn't much to speak of on the bottom floor. A few
rats were the house’s only occupants, and aside from the
occasional rush of wind, there really wasn't anything
exciting going on. Until the cold.
Celina was checking out the rubble of the stairs when she
suddenly came down with an incredible case of the shivers.
Her teeth were chattering, her skin turned cold as ice, and
her breath was visible. She jumped away from the area, and
immediately the cold went away.
From somewhere upstairs we heard a noise like a footstep.
Then another, and another. It sounded like people
running. A very soft, female scream echoed through the
halls. I call it a scream, but it was more like a
whisper. Then all at once, the running stopped. I looked
around wildly, trying to pinpoint the source. A half-open
window, debris falling from the roof…anything.
I looked up to the second floor. One of the doors slowly
creaked open. I'm not sure what I saw come out. It was
vaguely the size of a person, and when I saw it, I could
almost sense its fear. It moved quickly towards the steps
and vanished in mere seconds. “Did you see that?” I
asked. Celina shook her head – she hadn't seen anything.
From somewhere outside came a terrible racket, a horrendous
chorus of noises – mostly animal sounds. Cows, horses,
chickens, all of them sounding agitated, afraid. Celina
and I rushed outside and as soon as our feet hit the porch –
silence. Only the sound of my heart beating in my
throat. I remember telling Celina, “I think this might be
a bit more real than we thought.” The understatement of
the year.
Abandoning the house, we decided to head down the road a
little further and see if we could find the part of the
road that was torn up. We hopped in the car and drove for
less than a quarter mile before we hit the bumps. I pulled
off to the side of the road and left the headlights on.
Sure enough, the road looked like the lunar surface. The
potholes were unbelievable. They ran so deep at some
points, that you could see the soil at the bottom.
We ventured from the road and started looking around the
forest – which I swear was thicker now than it was when we
first pulled up only minutes before. As we looked around,
there was a noticeable decrease in temperature. The wind
picked up a little bit and if it were possible, the forest
seemed to get darker.
I looked behind me and froze. In the middle of the road,
not too far beyond my car, was a silver-blue mist just
hanging in the air. The further away it moved from my car,
the more distinct it became – or I should say ‘they’ became
more distinct. The mist seemed to split apart into
sections, which in short order took on the appearance of
people. They didn't look much younger than I did, but from
what I could see of their clothing, it was decades, if not
centuries, old. The apparitions formed a circle on the
ground directly in the center of the road. It appeared as
though one of them spoke, but I could not hear his words.
They were too faint, almost in the back of my mind, like
when you fall asleep but you can still hear people talking.
The wind picked up once again and a myriad of horrendous
noises flooded the forest. Screams, cries of agony, pleas
for mercy – and underlying them all, a deep, dark, growl,
not unlike that of a dog defending his master. This was
much, much deeper, and much more terrifying however. I
suddenly felt the urge to run, but my legs would not carry
me. I couldn't move, I couldn't even take my eyes off of
the ghostly images in front of me. I have never felt such
inexplicable, utter dread. There was something in this
forest, something far more than the apparent residual
haunting we were looking at.
Then I heard them. Footsteps, from somewhere deep within
the forest, steadily growing louder. The trees rustled,
the leaves fell, and something was coming after me. For a
moment, I was too scared to move, to think. When I snapped
out of it, I felt like if I didn't get out of there right
now, I wouldn't ever get out.
I broke free and ran towards my car as fast as I could, the
footsteps only getting closer, louder. When I reached the
car, I couldn't get in fast enough. Celina was there
seconds later, and I could tell from her terrified
expression she had experienced something too. We jumped in
the car and locked the doors, pausing to catch our breath.
The apparitions were gone and the forest was silent.
Celina and I exchanged terrified glances that both
basically said the same thing – let’s get the hell out of
here.
Before I could turn the keys, it started again. It seemed
like every tree in the forest was shaking at us. We heard
the screams again, this time even more real and more
terrifying than before. I started the car, which I have
expected to stall thanks to all the horror movies I've
seen, and we drove away as quickly as we could. For the
remaining half mile, the noises seemed to follow us. Misty
apparitions seemed to appear all around us. And through it
all – the growling sound.
We emerged from Mystery Mile in one piece – though we will
never be the same again. So far removed was this
experience from my first supernatural encounter, that I
have considered giving up venturing too deeply into field
of paranormal science. If science must be repeatable to be
proven a fact, then what happened to us at Mystery Mile
will forever remain a mere hypothesis.
A month or so after this happened, we went back to the
Beaver Library and did a little more searching. We found
an old news paper on microfilm that we hadn't noticed
before. Within this microfilm was an article about a local
cult – maybe half a dozen young men – murdered in the
forests of Ohioville a decade before Mystery Mile was
paved. They were found in a perfect circle, around an
alter with a Ouija board. Popular speculation at the time
(which was dismissed by authorities) said that the young
men had freed something through the Ouija, and that
something was a dark spirit, a demon, a devil – something
evil, something that showed them the price of treading to
deeply into the murky waters of the occult. Even though
the case was never formally solved, Celina and I were left
with the nauseating realization that the speculation of the
day was quite possibly true. Yes, we had witnessed an
interactive haunting within the house. Yes, we had seen a
residual haunting as the small cult began their ritual
right there in the middle of the road (over the potholes, I
might add). But there was something else in that forest
with us. Perhaps it was merely part of the residual
haunting – a recreation of the force that killed these
young men. I am unpersuaded by that, however. What we
encountered was the darkest of spirits. Science would say
that the odds of encountering a dark spirit are slim, but
the odds of encountering all three kinds in one night is
nonexistent.
I say science doesn't have all the answers.
Greywinds is making a short film from the above story, you can visit the website by clicking here.
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