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The Scuttler



Estimated reading time — 12 minutes

This is the first time I’ve ever shared the story I’m about to tell you. Sometimes, in the still of the night, it runs through my head on a loop – so I feel the time’s come to put it out there in the hope that certain demons can be laid to rest.

It all started with a dare – like many unspeakable things do. I mean, when Gemma and I initially took up the challenge to stay in the old Chantler house overnight, it’s not as though we hadn’t heard all the stories about the Scuttler – we just didn’t worry too much about them. Girls of logic, that’s what we were – and no amount of crazy stories could shock us or put us off. That’s not to say that the old house wasn’t spooky in its own way. It had been abandoned years previously and, as with all empty, decaying houses, it had an air of melancholy about it that wasn’t entirely pleasant but certainly didn’t appear threatening or other-worldly in any way.
Well, I’m sure you know how it is; a group of university friends sitting around after an evening’s revelry, bathed only in the glow of blossom scented candles, tanked up on a little too much to wine and up way past our bedtimes. Naturally, the conversation turned to ghosts and ghouls and all the other rubbish that people like to talk about when a good spine-chilling session is in order. It was Roger who first introduced the topic of the Scuttler, and not for the first time either. Ever since we’d taken up residence in our own house in the second year of our degrees, Roger had shown a keen interest in the subject, not least because we lived almost opposite the old house. It wasn’t an obsession exactly, more of a vague amusement combined with a certain degree of wide-eyed belief. So, once again, he broached the subject on the night in question. The assembled company groaned audibly when the topic of the Scuttler was raised and Gemma, stubbing out a cigarette with a bored yawn, grumbled, “Here we go again…”
“No but really,” said Roger, “it’s such an odd story that it could almost be real.”
“Yeah, almost but not quite,” I said. “That is the point of urban myths, Rog, to sound believable when, even underneath it all, you know they can’t be true or ninety percent of it is made up.”
“I agree,” said Sophie, “it’s like that stupid story about the man who hammered a nail through his penis for a thrill, split it open, poured Coke over it to stop the bleeding and then passed out.”
“So, what’s unusual about that, anyone would pass out if they’d just split open their most prized possession,” commented Roger.
“No, that’s not the end,” continued Sophie. “Apparently he came round hours later and when he looked down his lunchbox and, by that, I mean the entire ensemble, it had been entirely eaten away, as had part of his lower intestine. It’s said that rats were attracted by the smell of the Coke and had gnawed the whole of his tackle away.
“That’s absolute nonsense,” laughed Gemma.
“Well, you don’t know for certain,” said the ever-believing Roger.
“It is such nonsense,” Gemma giggled, “everyone knows rats don’t drink Coke, they only like Pepsi.”
“You can joke about it all you want,” grumbled Roger, “but I wouldn’t dismiss it so lightly if I were you. And I wouldn’t dismiss the tale about the Chantler house either.”
“Why not?” Gemma said, “it’s not like I ever have cause to visit the place. It really doesn’t affect my life one bit.”
“Yes and I’ll bet you never would visit the place either,” said Roger, in a tone which indicated he thought he’d proved his point.
“Well I don’t need to visit it, so I probably never will but I wouldn’t be scared to.”
Roger held Gemma’s gaze steadily for a full minute before licking his lips, raising an eyebrow and challenging her to prove it.
Gemma, brazen as ever, lit up a new cigarette, inhaled deeply and told Roger that, if that’s what he needed to prove it was all a crock of shit, she’d be perfectly willing to do so. But only on the understanding that, after she’d spent a full night there, he would never raise the subject of the Scuttler again.
Feeling it unfair to allow Gemma to go on her own, and eager to prove Roger wrong, I offered to take up the challenge with her. And, so it was, that we prepared ourselves to spend a full night in the shadow of the Scuttler the following weekend. My joy knew no limits.

So, perhaps now is the time to fill you in on the story of the Scuttler. Legend has it that the house was inhabited by the Chantler family in the early nineties. Said family consisted of a mother, father and two of the most gorgeous children you could ever hope to meet; a blue-eyed, blonde haired dream of a girl and her strikingly handsome brother who, at ten years old, couldn’t do enough for his younger sister.
Life jogged along in a merry old fashion for the Chantler family, with all the obligatory visits to the zoo and Disney World and skiing holidays in the Alps during school holidays. Life was fine and merry for the family. Merry, that was, until one summer morning in 2000 when nine year old Rosa was playing in the driveway of the house, jumping from square to square on a hopscotch board that she had chalked onto the gravel.
She was so engrossed in her game, long blonde hair swinging like a golden sheet in the sun, that she only registered the sound of the car when it was inches away from her. Frozen to the spot, she was unable to move quickly enough before the car reversed over her, crushing both her legs in the process.
Hearing her screams, Mrs. Chantler came rushing out of the house, to be greeted by the unenviable view of her daughter trapped beneath the wheels of her husband’s car, covered in blood and convulsing violently. Her beloved son sat in the driver’s seat, hands still gripping the steering wheel from where he had reversed it out of the garage.
After that the Chantlers’ lives changed considerably. Young Rosa had both her legs amputated above the knee and spent the rest of her childhood in a wheelchair. But, apparently, that wasn’t all. In the time it takes to reverse a car, poor young Charles had gone from being the hero of Rosa’s childhood to being an antichrist. Heart filled with a burning rage, Rosa began to create ways to make her brother’s life a nightmare. Hell-bent on vengeance, she would terrorise him in every way she knew how.
Knowing that he hated the sight of her useless stumps, she refused to learn to wear the prosthetic limbs the doctors had made for her and insisted on making her brother come face to face, on a daily basis, with the results of his actions. Of a night, Rosa would roll out of her bed and, using her arms to move, would scuttle towards Charles’s room where she proceeded to inflict her own injuries on him.
When Charles’s mother commented on the cuts and bruises that had suddenly started to appear on his body, he remained silent or told her that he had simply tripped over, fearing the new-found power of the little girl who plagued his every waking moment. Of a night he would lay rigid in his bed, ears straining for the telltale scuttling sound that marked his vengeful sibling’s approach.
Like all good victims, Charles continued to keep quiet which, in the end, was the biggest mistake of his life. In fact, it was the last mistake of his short little life. In the wee small hours of a cold winter morning, some eighteen months after her accident, ten year old Rosa sneaked into her brother’s room for the last time. Wielding a large steak knife, which she had requisitioned from the kitchen earlier in the day, Rosa set about cutting her brother into small pieces. She ripped so much flesh out of his body that by the time she was finished, the knife was allegedly blunt and there was barely an inch of the room that wasn’t covered in blood.
Now here’s where the story starts to get really silly. Having done away with her brother in the most grotesque manner, Rosa scuttled away and, squeezing her small body through an old service-hatch in the wall, disappeared into the dark crawl space of the house, never to be seen again. Except, of course, on the odd occasion that an unwitting tramp decided to bed down in the abandoned Chantler house, when Rosa would put in an appearance, never getting any older mind, and scuttle over and slash the poor old bugger to death. I mean, have you ever heard such nonsense in your life?
Anyway, armed with a few bottles of wine, an emergency supply of chocolate that would have sent a dietician into a fit, and a carrier bag of large candles, plus a strong torch, and a few blankets, Gemma and I crept into the abandoned Chantler residence. Belief or no belief in spooky tales, it wasn’t a pleasant place. In fact it was rank. It stunk of years of decay and you couldn’t tread on a floorboard without it making some form of protest.
“Yuck. Remind me why we’re doing this again?” said Gemma, untangling a cobweb from her long, fair hair. Usually in pristine condition, I wondered how long it would be before it started looking a bit ratty from all the dust in the house.
“Don’t go blaming me, you agreed to it,” I reminded her, delving into the carrier bag and lighting a few candles.
After a quick reccie of the place, armed with our trusty torch, everything appeared to be Scuttler-free and rather normal – well, as normal as you could expect. Coming down the stairs, my legs gave way slightly and Gemma reached out and grabbed roughly at my sleeve, in order to save me plummeting head first down the wooden staircase.
“Christ, be careful,” she said, a flutter of concern in her voice. “Are you okay?”
“I’m fine,” I said, brushing her off and reclaiming my sleeve. “You know what a clumsy cow I am, and these mouldy old stairs don’t help much.”
“You’re too bloody clumsy if you ask me,” responded Gemma huffily and then her face broke into a mischievous smile as she reminded me of the time I had tripped over and landed face-down in Roger’s birthday cake.
“Well, this is fun,” I said after a while.
“Sure is,” Gemma replied, breaking open a bar of Cadburys Fruit & Nut and taking a huge bite. “I sort of wish I’d never agreed to it now,” she said around a mouthful of chocolate.
“We could always go back.”
“Oh right, and have Roger laugh at us for being cowards. He’d never believe it was just because we missed our creature comforts. No, I reckon we’ve got to stay or we’ll never hear the last of his Scuttler stories.”
So saying, we settled down into a companionable silence, of sorts – the silence bit was total but the companionable part was a little questionable. Gemma and I, although we used to get along fantastically and were still reasonably good friends, had experienced problems in the past; a long story involving her nabbing a tall, hunky post-grad that I’d had my eye on for months. Although we made it up in the end, things had never been quite as rosy between us since. It was during times like this that I always feared she would bring it up again. Silent, all-girls-together times which generated topics of conversation that I just couldn’t deal with. It was not my way to talk problems out and I hoped that she wouldn’t raise the subject that night, because I knew myself well enough to be certain that it would work me up into a temper again. And then where would we be? Back to square one, with a disagreeable atmosphere in the house and people tiptoeing round us.
As bad luck would have it, Gemma managed to last a whole fifteen minutes, roughly the amount of time it took her to polish of a Mars Bar and half a Kit Kat, before she mentioned the hunky post-grad.
“Look Emily,” she began, twisting a strand of hair around her index finger, “I just want to let you know again how sorry I am about all that business with Adam.”
“Don’t mention it,” I responded mildly, trying to stop her before she got going.
“It’s just that I still feel bad about it…”
“Really, don’t mention it,” I said, cutting her off and hoping she would take the hint. No such luck. For the next half an hour I was subjected to the spectacle of Gemma’s guilt. On and on she went until, at about half past one, we heard a scuttling sound from above. Both of us froze and I immediately strained my ears to try and catch the sound. Then it came again, a slow, scraping sort of a noise like a sack, or a very small body, being dragged across the floor.
“You don’t think it’s the Scuttler do you?” hissed Gemma, her eyes wide with fear.
“I doubt it very much, it’s just a story,” I replied. Nevertheless, it certainly sounded like someone was up there.

The noise continued, moving over our heads and then making its way slowly, slowly down the stairs. Bump, scrape. Bump, scrape. Gemma and I stared at each other, mouths slack with fear. Licking my lips, I heard the noise approach the lounge and shrunk back into the shadows. It couldn’t be the Scuttler, I mean it was just a story, right? A pile of crap. But, nevertheless, something was in there with us. Suddenly the door banged open and Gemma and I screeched, grabbing each other in a fear-induced embrace as an old tramp lumbered in, a half-finished bottle of Gin hanging limply in his hands.
“Whaa yer doin’ ‘ere?” he slurred, as his glassy eyes tried to focus on us.
Gemma and I, still catching our breath were unable to answer.
“Bloody treshpassers. Bet you’re lookin’ out for Scuttler,” he said and giggled manically. “Well, I hope she fin-findsh yous,” he scowled and, with that, he shuffled out of the house, letting the front door bang loudly behind him.
Gemma and I looked at one another and then her blue eyes crinkled into a smile and she started to laugh in relief, lightening the atmosphere somewhat until, that is, she insisted on raising the issue of Adam again five minutes later.

By half past two I was in a blind rage with her. The girl didn’t know when to drop an issue. Above us, a floorboard creaked again and something scuttled in the murky depths of one of the rooms. Probably just a rat, I thought. I tried to convince myself that the Scuttler didn’t exist anymore. Perhaps had never existed but, as Gemma flicked back her long, blonde hair and surveyed me with cool, blue eyes that knew too much, I instantly sensed that the Scuttler was amongst us. Hidden all those years, she had been right there without my even realising.
As Gemma’s eyes looked fearfully at a point just beyond my shoulder, as though assessing the chance of escape in the presence of the damned, I felt the hair on the back of my neck rise and a cold chill fill the hollow of my stomach.
Suddenly there was blood everywhere. Before I knew what had happened, there was a snapping sound inside my head, or maybe it was one of Gemma’s bones because, in that instant, Gemma was being torn to pieces. I watched the whole thing, as though standing outside of myself – saw the gelatinous, viscid gore that eased out of her body and matted her hair. The glutinous pop that her eyeballs made as they were ripped apart and the shocked, rictus grin that her mouth made as she realised the truth and, through it all, the shadow of the Scuttler hung over us, terrifying me more than anything ever had before, driving me into a demented, petrified panic.
And then I was running along the pavement with all my might as I sought to gain the sanctuary of my own house on the other side of the street and outrun the spectre of the Scuttler. Twice I stumbled and fell, and twice I clambered unsteadily to my feet, looking behind me at that house of horrors before I lurched forwards again towards the warm lights of the student house. Screeching through the door, I was met by the aghast faces of my friends as I told them that something, I knew not what, but something unearthly had attacked Gemma.
Unable to stop them, I watched as they ran across the road towards the old Chantler house and, slowly, I ascended the stairs and made for the quietness of my own room. Once there, I surveyed myself in the mirror. Quite a lot of Gemma’s blood had made its way onto my fair hair, tingeing it with ruby-red highlights. As I sat down on the bed, I contemplated once again the strange myth that had attached itself to the house. My, I thought, as I ran my hand over my aching thighs, how people liked to exaggerate. How things get changed over the years. As if a small girl would refuse the use of artificial limbs, preferring to scuttle around. And as if a girl would beat and bruise her brother, and then to think that she would kill him and slip away forever into the bowels of a house, living there even after it was long abandoned. No, that would never happen.
A girl would run to her parents, confess what she had done but they would understand. In time they would understand. Her brother had taken away her life and, in turn, she had exacted her revenge but not in a gory display, just with one swift motion of the knife; one exact, precise thrust into the heart of her once-loved sibling. And, surely too, she would be given proper psychiatric care allowing her, eventually, to live a normal life.
Yes, apart from the occasional bout of anger her life would be normal, almost boringly normal. Perhaps she would even go to university and try to get herself a degree, change her name and, at some point, forget the past – just so long as people stopped stirring up that buzzing nest of anger in the pit of her stomach. Yes, I though, as I bent down and ran my hands over the length of my artificial legs – legs that I had become so adept at using over the past ten years that, apart from the odd bout of clumsiness, nobody would ever guess I wore them – that’s the way it would happen.

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I should know, because that’s the way it did happen.

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Credit To – Adena Graham

Please note: This is original version of The Scuttler and is posted here with permission from the original author, Adena Graham. It has been since altered without prior permission and circulated around the internet in a video by Mr Creepy Pasta and Gemma Louise Carline (Gemma Moonstone)  on a number of other websites. The author wishes to distance herself from these other, unapproved versions (including the altered version on Scary for Kids) as they are in breach of copyright. 

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Copyright Statement: Unless explicitly stated, all stories published on Creepypasta.com are the property of (and under copyright to) their respective authors, and may not be narrated or performed under any circumstance.

105 thoughts on “The Scuttler”

  1. Just one thing? Why didn’t she go into full on scuttler-mode any of the other times her friend presumably mentioned the post-grad incident? I get that the setting of the house where the original incident took place makes the story work better but things like that kind of lift the suspension of disbelief for me. Also I kind of think it would’ve been better if the scuttler had actually just been a myth, a myth used to explain a series of unsolved murders of vagrants and squatters inside the house. The protagonist (who could just be a cold, calculating psychopath) could have then decided to use the creepy urban-myth as a scapegoat to cover her murder of her annoying friend. That’s probably how I would have told it just to make it feel a bit more realistic and less cliche. Don’t get me wrong though, the story was great and I really like your writing style. I just feel that the more realistic or plausible you make a story the more creepy/terrifying it becomes.

  2. I must admit I am a much better critic than I am writer. I read for entertainment, but criticizing makes me happy too. I have seen many good pastas, and realize that this is actually better than some pastas that have clawed their way up from the bottom of the garbage pile. BUT if you compare this writer to Stephen King, I will have to laugh in your face. He is the Stephen King of Horror and very best author ever (completely biased statement).

    And remember, never criticize based off of the writer but instead the story. Criticize first, ask questions later.

    P.S., thanks for making this an interesting conversation. I get bored easily and have a ton of free time.

    1. Haaa. No worries. It’s always good to have a debate. And just to be clear, I wasn’t comparing this story to King who i agree is the king of horror!/ was just pointing out that I looked up this writer and they appear to be very accomplished and have had other stories on a syllabus alongside King. I suspect that Pastas are sometimes dumbed down for good reason. I sometimes think the aim of a Pasta is to appear real and sometimes not written by a proper writer. TBH, I still cant get my head round Squidwards Suicide! Not that well written and not particularly scary either but to each his own i guess! Let me know if you do submit tho! I will be your first ‘critic’!!!

  3. Wrong assumption. I’ve read loads of pastas and most are not as well written as this. I found it very entertaining and I think the rating and comments it gets suggests other folk do too. Would like to see you do better tho.

    1. This from someone who can’t take the time to write out the full word ‘though’.
      And if you haven’t noticed, it is in fact a closed submission period. I will take up your request when it is open.

  4. Dude, your review of this story doesn’t even make sense. You clearly can’t write yourself so I can’t see how you can criticize this story it seems you’ve missed the point of it. I actually agree with the up-ratings and gave it a 9. Its one of the best pastas on here.

  5. Nicola Marie Jackson

    That was great but, and I’m sorry for asking, how does one chalk a hopscotch grid on gravel? Apart from that, bloody marvellous! Xx

  6. I’ve been looking round for some good Halloween stories and wow, this one is great! Should definitely become a Halloween classic and its one I’ll be reading out round a camp fire!

  7. Holy crap that was good!
    I was a bit confused by the hectic nature of the climax and was in fact considering calling you out for it but wow, that ending; absolutely marvelous and caught be 100% off-guard.
    Quite honestly I was expecting just your average run-of-the-mill cliche abandoned house story but the way you handled your characters and brought all plot points to a satisfying conclusion warrants a solid 9.5/10

    Great job, hope to read more from you!

  8. I figured out almost immediately that the narrator was the one who killed Gemma, but figured it would be one of those “the real evil lies in the human heart” or “the monster drives you crazy and makes you do its will” pastas. The second twist at the end was brilliant! The part with the vagrant added just the right touch of humor, too. :)

    While I did really love this pasta, it must be pointed out that the narrator is now looking at a serious prison sentence. Let’s face it, she was the last person to be seen with the victim, and the police aren’t going to buy an urban legend as an alibi. Not to mention that a name change doesn’t just wipe out all official records of a person’s past, so the authorities will know her true identity even if no one else does. Sorry to be a buzz-kill, I actually gave the story 10/10.

  9. true story:
    my moms house is haunted my a old man who has a burned face and who drags his back legs and torso .. he has been seen by everyone in my family,and is one of the reasons iI moved out at a early age. Soon as the author described the scuttler,I immediately got chills and thought of the old man dragging his self around my moms house

  10. what i never understood is iF THE SCUTTLER IS THE NARRATOR THEN WHO THE HELL IS SCUTTLING IN THE HOUSE

    1. Nobody is scuttling in the house. The way I see it, its an urban legend. At the end the narrator reveals that the stories are wrong and she knows what really happens. Basically sometimes she just gets angry and attacks people but not necessarily in that house! The scuttler is in her psyche. Haaaa people are often more scary than old urban myths!

  11. First heard this one narrated by Mr Creepy Pasta then came on here to read it. Wow! What a fantastic story. I’d love to read more from this writer.

  12. WOW!Excellent pasta. I literally screamed “WAT!?!?” at the ending when I realized that that the main girl WAS the Scuttler. It had a great suspenseful feel to it and it gave me chills. I give it a 100/10. Great writing. :3

  13. This pasta gave me chills, not because of how creepy or scary it was, it was because of the fantastic ending and twist. Absolutely fantastic! 10/10 one of the best I read, I literally had my jaw wide open reading the final paragraph.

  14. Her Imperious Cleopatra

    This made me a bit nervous, but the thing about killing her brother and about how things turned to crap didn’t scare me. They made me really sad. :( but the pasta was tasty 10/10 A+ on the twist.

    1. It says the old man’s a tramp. That’s what homeless people tend to do find old abandoned houses to sleep in. An abandoned house is just one that doesnt have an owner. Excellent story with a great twist keep up the good work.

    1. Ali, mate, doesn’t matter if a pasta’s long if it’s good and this was an excellent pasta. Tip, scroll down to see how long a pasta is if you only like the short ones. For me, this is top marks as it had me gripped the whole way through.

  15. That…..was…..AWESOME! I swear I didn’t see the ending coming, I almost always do, except for the certain few that hide the ending so well, and then…..BAM! She’s the scuttler. very,very,very good pasta, will definitely nom in the near future.

    -Herobrine

    Always watching

  16. Cool story and nicely written. It’s great to get involved in a short story and not have my suspension-of-disbelief interrupted constantly with bad spelling and a terrible misuse of language. I couldn’t write a story to save my eternal soul but I know how to read one and this was a goodie!

  17. lollipop_gestapo

    Absolutely terrified. I have a horrible phobia of people with missing limbs,(no I don’t care how rude that is. It’s scary, don’t touch me with your nub.) so when it went that route, I instantly became upset and scared. I gave it a 10 for this – sleeping with a light on.

    1. jussi harmamen

      Hi Adena, I wish to narrate your story keeping it unaltered and crediting you in my new youtube startup video. May I please ask if that is ok with you ?

  18. “What’s that you say, darling? You’ve murdered your brother?! Well don’t worry my love, we shall get you the best psychiatrist possible and will change our names so that you may live in peace. By the way, did I mention we’re going to move and live RIGHT ACROSS THE STREET from where you killed your brother so that we may be haunted by that fact even more so for the rest of our lives?”

    That’s the only thing that bothered me about this story. Why would they live right across the street from the house in where she killed her brother? It would be more realistic if they moved to another community or town and then changed their names.

    Other than that it was a very good read & kept my interest throughout. Keep it up :)

      1. Still, I have to agree, if they really were loving syblings, one wouldn’t exact revenge on the other because of a mistake, no matter how huge it was. Also, there is no way of getting hit by a reversed car just getting out of the garage that your legs have to be amputated. And then the parents were probably outright crazy if they let it slip, and the great therapist total amateurs to let someone out in this kind of a mental condition. Also, there are no prostatic limbs that don’T give away themselves if you live with the person for more than a week. Trust me, I am surrounded by doctors. xD

        What I think is: GREAT writing, but improve the plot! Mainly by doing at least basic research on the territories you include in your story. Don’t just make a plot on a whim, you have to build it up, work on it, like a complex mechanism.

        Bottom line: this pasta seems a bit overrated, but that desn’t make it any less good. I think a 7.5/10 is more real than an 8.8.

        1. Hey Tsugirai, I know a kid who this happened to back when I was in school. The legs being crushed by a reversing car bit (not the being murdered by a sister bit!). I think with short stories you also have to suspend a bit of disbelief (this is a quick story and packs a punch) its years later so she could well have got through counselling and all that. For my money i thought it was incredibly well written with a kicker of a twist.

  19. I love stories where I do not see the twist coming. I suspected because it happened so quickly that she killed Gemma, but not that she was also the scuttler. Awesome, 10/10.

    1. Right On, someone pays attention. She did say’90’s and as far as I can tell, it doesn’t specify the exact ‘when’ of this incidence occurring.

      1. It was the early 2000s, the story happened in the early 90s, and one of the last few sentences said “legs that I had become so adept at using over the past ten years” so it was in the early 2000s.

  20. The imagery of the scuttler is definately creepy.
    But how did the live there in the 80s . . . and then have something happen ten to twenty years later in 2000?

    1. Well, who’s to say how old she really is. She could be in her mid to late 20’s when she killed Gemma. She lossed her legs when she was a around 9 because of her brother and killed him when she was 10. Her parents took her to theripy and Bla, Bla… Then Gemma came in and stired up the past about her crush, “stirring up that buzzing nest of anger in the pit of her stomach,” causing her to kill Gemma…

    2. The_Ghetto_Bener

      The story of The Scuttler was very loosely retold. The dates could have gotten messed up over years of retellings.

      1. I’m the writer and I’ve never heard of Al Sarrantonio, so I object to the term ‘rip off’ as this implies plagiarism. I’d be interested
        to know what the story is, as any similarity is purely coincidental. As a
        writer, I don’t seek to re-hash other people’s work and I certainly
        haven’t in this instance.

  21. holy crap! I kinda guessed it was her who killed gemma, but never would have guessed she was the scuttler. Great Story!

    1. Oh my god! Its windy out and my dogs nas on the floor are scaribg the shit outta me cause of this story!!! Great pasta!

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