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Tormented



Estimated reading time — 5 minutes

Tormented

When will this soul be put to rest?

How long must I sit

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Writing my will in these coded ways?

Forcing these walls to bare my misery.

A little girl lies sleeping in her bed. No more than 7 is this girl, who rests though the sun has greeted her room with warming rays.

“Darling, wake up.” Her mother calls through the door, gently tapping it to stir the girl.

“I’m awake.” She calls from under her blanket. Yawning, she sits up and greets the day.

But that night…

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Her mother kisses her and tucks her in. “Sleep tight, don’t let the bed bugs bite.”

“Night mommy.” the little girl smiles, gazing into her mother’s eyes. They were noting more than spheres of color, but they held an entire world to the little girl, one of understanding and compassion. One that never let her down.

The lights went out and the walls began to move.

They were back. Once again, like she’d done so many times before, the little girl tried to do what her mother told her.

“Simply hide under your blanket, that’ll make any monster go away.”

Her head under the covers, she sat in silence. Attempting to hold her breath, she became almost paralyzed in fear. She could hear it, them, moving around searching for her. Soon enough they’d sniff her out, so she resorted to the one thing she knew worked.

Racing out of bed she dived for a little box under her desk. Though she’s not sure when exactly this idea came, or why she decided to try it, it had yet to fail. She pulled out a red crayon from the box, its writing would be textured but constant. Strong like iron.

As quickly as she’d done that, she found a spot on her wall to begin her writing.

Where did these words come from though? She thought as she wrote.

Rapture is needed now

Save me from Earthly binds

Study my every move

Judge my truest heart

Be it Heaven or Hell

Just take me from here

The walls were still as she wrote, but it wouldn’t hold forever. Her words meant little to the dammed stalking her. Back to the box she replaced the crayon with a paint brush. Coating it in red paint she whispered. “It’s writing will be smooth but random. Unpredictable strokes leaving lines to run. Flowing like water.”

And just like that her hand was once again to the wall.

Tell me again

The story of how I may be sane.

The one you believe is true

And I hope it.

Tell me again

Why I shouldn’t cry at night.

Why the sight of stars should make me smile,

And the moon make me calm.

Tell me again<

Why you treasure my every motion.

Why the sight of me doesn’t make you cringe,

Why the thought of me doesn’t make you scream.

One final time she rushed back to the box, this time pulling out a red colored pencil. “Your writing will be small and light. Almost invisible, very fragile. I wouldn’t want you to break apart in my grasp. Intangible like a cloud.” With this she wrote.

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Night falls again

And so they come

As they always do.

I’m no longer surprised

No longer worried.

If they kill me now so be it.

No longer would I be tormented.

All was completely quiet now. She didn’t hear them, and they didn’t seem to be sniffing her out any longer. Her work was done for tonight. In the morning all of this would be gone. She wasn’t sure why, but her words hid from the light. They hid with the moving walls.

The next morning everything played out the same. Like always.

Night fell with storm clouds rolling in. The little girl was being tucked in when lightning hit and the power went out.

“It’s oka–” Her mother was going to tell her, but her eyes quickly turned to the walls. Almost covered in the girl’s work, her mother looked shocked and angry. “How– What is this!?” She yelled at the girl.

“Mommy it’s the monsters.” The little girl tried to explain. “They’re coming now.”

“I don’t want to hear it. I’ve herd of imaginary friends, but never a child blaming imaginary monsters. Tell me, where are you keeping the stuff you use to make this?”

Afraid of her mother’s tone, the little girl pointed to her box. “There.”

With that her mother took the box and walked out. “Go to bed.” She said simply. No kiss goodnight, no tucking. Just “Go to bed.”.

And then the walls began to move.

The little girl hid under her blanket. There was no other option now. She didn’t have her iron, her water, or her clouds of red. She couldn’t think of anything that could possibly–

Just like that the little girl remembered one day when she’d been riding her bike and fell off. Her skin got tore up and this red stuff her daddy called blood was coming out. It didn’t hurt all too much, and it had made her really curious, so she asked her daddy what blood was. He told her it was stuff that flowed through her whole body and that it was very important. He showed her these colored lines on her skin he called veins, the paths blood used to travel.

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All she had to do was break her skin. No problem, she knew how she could do that too. She jumped out of bed and rushed through her door, down the hall and to the bathroom. She passed her parents’ room, a place she’d gone to many times for help. But this was something her parents couldn’t help her with. In the bathroom she found a razor. The thing her mother used to make her skin smooth. She remembered once her mother accidentally cut her self with it.

This would work fine. The little girl rushed back to her room, the walls moving around her the whole way.

She sat down in front of the wall where she could write. Studying her skin, she searched for a vein to cut into. It didn’t take her long to notice one on her wrist.

So she cut it.

The liquid she’d seen only a few times in her life began dripping to the floor. This hurt more than when she crashed her bike, but it would have to do. She stuck her finger on the wound and let blood run onto it. Then, sticking her finger to the wall she began to write.

Written on the wall in Red

My thoughts and feelings

Crushed by liveliness

Snatched away

My life is draining

Let it fade

For in this life I cannot live

If there’s nothing

Before she could finish, she felt her world growing darker. It was a darkness she’d never felt before, her eyelids becoming heavy, her arm becoming stiff. She fainted onto the floor.

The next morning a scream was herd by the neighbors, that of the mother who found her little girl lying on her bedroom floor in a puddle of her own blood. The mother almost collapsed, catching herself on the doorframe so she could proceed to call 911, but as she did the light switch flipped off.

The curtains not yet drawn, the room was completely dark. What she saw could only be described physically, for it was to strong for her mind to grasp. Around the walls were poems, all written in red, one above the little girl written in her blood. But what caught the mother’s attention most of all were the footprints. Something had been walking around in the little girl’s room. On the floor, walls, and ceiling, they’d caught the little girl’s blood and trailed it around her room.

“The foot prints of demons.” She’d said.

(A little girl tormented by figures of pure evil, with no one to turn to, she resorted to old warding spells that were placed into her knowledge by higher powers. Though her parents could never see the demons, in the darkness of the demon’s realm they could see the little girl’s words– as they were written with mortal tools. Finally, with no where else to turn, the little girl resorts to her blood. Killing herself in the process, and unknowingly, she leaves an immortal substance for the demons to tread through, thus leaving a trail as they moved.)

Credit To: Neesa Jones

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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.

37 thoughts on “Tormented”

  1. Bit complicated in the way it was worded and structered, didnt hugely understand it but got the story in the end. 7/10

  2. I found the writing fascinating, though the fact that the writings only showed up in the dark and still the girl’s mother just complains about them, entirely failing to notice this “little detail”, makes no sense.
    Also, if the wards actually survived the daylight, just vanishing from sight, why did the girl have to rewrite them every night?

  3. Just a few words.. amazing creepypasta, dude.
    I have been trying to find a good one, but now I found it, caught my attention, and loved it,
    Bravo

  4. I gave this story 9/10. That last paragraph shouldn’t have been there, and whether it was your fault or not, I can’t be sure. :S

    Good job!

    1. yeah i think leaving it a bit of a mystery would have been preferable than completely explaining whats going on in that last paragraph

  5. ok my question is the mother obviously didn’t see the writing on the wall until the lights went out you would think that she would notice and at least wonder why the heck thy were only seen in the dark

    1. Suicide (Latin suicidium, from sui caedere, "to kill oneself") is the act of intentionally causing one’s own death. This girl accidentally killing herself =/= suicide.

      To the author: I liked the idea. The delivery, while not perfect, was enjoyable. I did not like the parenthetical explanation at the very end though.

  6. I enjoyed this story I don’t know why anonymous is always hating on peoples work haven’t heard a good story like this in a long time

  7. I don’t mind the way you word things it all, I thought that the story came out fine, and I really enjoyed the poetry. Great Job. :)

  8. So the mother doesnt find it weird that the poems only appear when the lights are out? I would be scared as hell. Random words in red only shown in darkness, blame the daughter and not supernatural beings is the best way. Stupid mother.
    Great story by the way 9/10

  9. I thought it was legit. I don’t see what the guy above me is whining about. The only thing that concerns me is how does the girl know those words she wrote on the wall. Besides that, I got no problem. 7/10. I felt funny inside reading this.

    1. about the words, it states that she had learned the (magical) ‘wards’ from a higher power as to protect her from the demons. so if the poetry was handed down to her i suppose the knowledge of the vocabulary might have been transferred alongside it.

  10. I didn’t like this at all. The story was okay, but the way it was told was pretty bad. The parenthetical explanation at the end was the worst part, though. I suspect the submitter intended only for derpbutt to read it, and not for it to be posted with the story, but I could be wrong.

    Either way, the ingredients were delicious, but the pasta was really overcooked.

    1. SorryImAwkward

      I hate you just be nice. By the way parenthetical means explaining or qualifying so please always make sure you know what your saying before correcting someone else.

      1. 1. You hate someone for having a different opinion than you? Grow up. Dirjel is entitled to voice his/her thoughts.

        2. He/she was perfectly nice. They may not have liked the story, but they said so in a very calm, gentle way and went to the trouble of explaining why they disliked it. I’m guessing you’re one of those people who labels anyone who disagrees with you a “hater,” yes?

        3. You say “parenthetical” means “explanatory” or “qualifying,” which is correct. That’s exactly what the story’s last paragraph is. It just spells out what happened.

        Get your head out of your ass and realise the opinions of others are just as valid as your own. You sound like a spoiled child, you know.

  11. It completely reminded me of the movie “Don’t Be Afraid of The Dark” Anyways, it was all good except for the phrase: “The lights went out and the walls began to move”. should have been “The lights went out and the walls began to rattle.” instead. Becuase moving walls makes me think of walls sliding to different positions. So hopefully you fix that error soon, so far 7 out of 10.

    1. I don’t think the writer wanted the walls to “rattle”…he wanted them to move…move is better,doesn’t imply the walls are shifting.not at all the pic I got in my head when reading

  12. Now that…that, was very interesting. A return to the stuff that makes up a Creepypasta- fairly well written, somewhat short, and an ending which leaves the reader satisfied with a slight unease that makes one crave more; although IMHO, the narration might use some work. A fair job overall, 7/10

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