Night of the Creepniks
In the autumn of 1956, the disfigured
remains of four unidentified young men were unearthed
in a field outside of rural Elkhart, Texas. Authorities
were unable to determine a cause of death for any of the
men, but an unsettling connection between the four was
soon discovered; they all bore the same strange runic
mark on their right hand and forehead.
The bodies were written off as the only
remains of an esoterrorist cult operating in the shadows
of backwoods East Texas, but before forensic examiners
were able to positively identify the remains, they vanished
from the locked morgue where they were being stored. The
only witness to the grave-robbing was local policeman
Donald Alkerd of Slocum, TX; his testimony was dismissed,
however, as it made no coherent sense. The officer, only
a week from retirement, ranted about the bodies shuffling
out of their body bags and delivering warnings about the
end of times through mouths full of blood. After giving
his testimony to the first police officers on the scene,
he fell into a series of convulsions and died shortly
thereafter in the ICU ward of TVMC. An autopsy, performed
later at the request of the deceased’s wife, Margaret
Alkerd (also of Slocum), found that he had been suffering
through the final stages of dementia, in addition to a
hitherto unknown variant of rabies. The police continued
their investigation of the missing cadavers for a few
weeks, but by then, the trail had run cold.
The unidentified bodies were all but
forgotten in the year following the body-snatching fiasco;
that is, until police began finding more corpses, also
marked with the strange runic symbol. Nothing of this
scope had ever been witnessed in the small towns surrounding
Elkhart. The townsfolk prayed for an end to this plague,
but more and more corpses were found, all in various stages
of decay. Forensic specialists were called in to assist
with the identification of the bodies, but their efforts
were fruitless, more so by the fact that none of the locals
were actually reported missing. The local funeral parlors
worked long hours to get the ever-growing roster of the
recently dead planted quickly in the earth.
And then it all stopped.
Life returned to semi-normality for some
years. Children filed back into the schools, parents returned
to their jobs, and farmers planted crops (though strictly
avoiding the portions of fields where corpses were unearthed).
The stories of the strange corpses took on the aspects
of a local legend and were all but forgotten. Even school
functions such as dances started to recur with some regularity.
It was at one of these dances that the delicate veneer
of normality exploded with a force unequalled in the annals
of Texas history or legend.
All the local students were in attendance
at the Fall Festival dance in the gymnasium at Elkhart
Jr-Sr High. A local band, The Rockin’ Daddy-O’s,
was belting out the hits of the day. The students were
hopping, bopping, and having a gay old time when a scream
pierced the air. A young girl at the front of the audience
was admiring the dashing good looks of the Daddy-O’s
frontman, Jake Henson, when she noticed something was
terribly wrong.
The heat of the house lights had begun
to affect Jake’s face; it was blistering and peeling
at the edges. As this rotten façade sloughed off,
the dancers bore witness to something that had lain dormant
for years; the thing that had been found in that desolate
pasture all those years ago. The decayed cadaver continued
to lurch and sing, spewing graveworms all over the mike
and the audience as the flayed features of the once-handsome
singer settled into a putrid pile at his feet. Upon seeing
the grim visage and hearing the unholy shouts of Hellfire,
the attendees at the dance started to panic, running each
other over as they fled for the doors. The rest of the
band followed the decaying frontman’s lead, shedding
the hollowed bodies of the band members that they had
so mercilessly gutted an hour before. That all-too-familiar
rune was visible on their slime-covered faces, leering
like skeletons through a tissue-thin layer of gelatinous
skin and grave wax. The walls trembled with the throbbing
pestilence of their riotous cacophony.
The youngsters in the audience were running,
screaming, vomiting, fainting… all trying to escape
the evil that befell them. But just as they reached the
gymnasium doors, they came crashing in under the weight
of the reanimated corpses who had silently surrounded
the gym. Legions of these fly-blown corpses shuffled in
through the doors, each bearing the mark on their foreheads.
The students nearest them were overcome by the utter stench
of death and degradation that engulfed them. The undead
army tore through the students, pulling entrails from
young bellies, tearing out eyes with exposed fingerbones.
An unearthly chorus of moans, like the choir of Hell,
filled the gymnasium to the rafters. Some students simply
stood there in a pool of their own urine, hands to their
ears, chanting mantras of disbelief. The carnage was total.
The hardwood floors were covered in the flesh and blood-matted
hair of the dancers. The whole scene looked like some
blasphemous collage of anatomy books; a respiratory system
here, a jellied brain there, the whole building bathed
in the sheared-copper smell of teenage blood.
And onstage, the band played on.
In the decades following that brutal
night, the town of Elkhart was quarantined off from the
rest of the world. There was too much danger that the
evil would spread. Sources say that you can still hear
that hellish band playing in the now-decrepit gymnasium,
now resembling more than anything the maw of Hell.
And the band plays on forever there,
until the end of times when the Abyss will be thrown wide
open to welcome them back home. Until then, the rest of
the world can only pray that their evil is contained;
that the naïve ears of the populace should never
hear their damning racket or heed their luciferian beckon.
That infernal tool of Satan, the Creepniks!
The Creepniks © 2001-7