Showing posts with label scary stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scary stories. Show all posts

Monday, February 10, 2025

Campfire Stories 6 #OurAuthorGang

 A short story by Eva Bielby

 

“Here, Dad! “Dad, STOP! Right here, please!” Chloe urged.

Her father’s foot hit the brake and the car came to a grinding halt.

“Here? Are you sure, darling? Why here?”

“See over there?” Chloe waved her hand to indicate the stunning scenery. “There’s a gorgeous little stream over there, woods pretty close by, which will be handy for twigs and branches for firewood. Plus, it’s not too far from the road.”

Elaine and Jenny, her friends, opened the rear passenger doors and climbed out. After kissing her father goodbye, Chloe joined them and they pulled the tent, sleeping bags, and backpacks from the boot.

Chloe’s father lowered the driver’s side window for a few final words.

“Your Dad will be picking you up late afternoon tomorrow, Elaine. Is that right?”

“Yes! He’ll be here for us, Mr Jackson. Don’t worry.” Elaine reassured him.

“Please be careful when lighting fires. Have you got fully charged pho…?”

“Yes, Dad. And a solar charger. We’re seventeen, not five. Stop stressing… and go.” Chloe butted in. She turned her back on the car rolling her eyes as her father pulled away.

“Bloody Hell! We’ve grabbed the fourth sleeping bag. We’ll have to take it with us now. Never mind.” Chloe cursed.

“Damn. I sure wish Charlie was with us, though. What a time for her to pick up that stomach bug.”

The other girls muttered in agreement. Together they picked up the baggage and set off to haul it twenty yards back down the road and through a well-worn gap in the hawthorn hedge. Making their way across the field, they occasionally stumbled with the heavy load, the terrain being so uneven.

“Hey, Elaine, how is your Dad going to find us tomorrow? He doesn’t know where we are.”

“He’ll find us, trust me. He’s put one of those tracker apps on my phone. We tried it out a couple of days ago. It works.”

Half an hour later, they’d located an ideal spot by the stream, the tent was up (despite their hysterical laughter) and had ventured into the woods to collect suitable dry material for the campfire.

Back at camp, they sat and devoured the sandwiches and snacks which Chloe’s Mum thoughtfully and lovingly prepared for them. Chloe recalled the conversation.

“It’ll save you doing too much in the way of cooking!”

“Other than breakfast, we won’t be cooking, Mum.”

“Then what will you eat?”

“Snacks, nibbles, cookies and things. It won’t hurt us to miss a cooked meal or two, will it? We’ve got sausages, eggs and bacon ready in the cool-box.”

They lit the fire at eight pm. It was mid-May and though the days were very warm, the temperatures could plunge dramatically in the early evening. The girls shivered as they took turns to add more twigs to the already glowing tinder.

“Oh look, there’s a girl heading this way,” said Elaine, pointing her finger. “I wonder where she’s going…”

Chloe and Jenny turned to look. The girl headed towards them. When she was twenty five yards away, the stranger waved at them. They returned the gesture.

“Hi!” Elaine shouted. “What are you doing out here, walking alone?”

“Hello. I’m just heading home. I live in Doulton, four miles away. It’s a small village.”

Now close up, the girl watched on as they continued to feed what was fast becoming a roaring fire. She looked to be of a similar age to the rest of them and quickly became involved in their continuous chit-chat. Elaine in particular, found the girl endearing,

“Are your parents expecting you home soon? If not, you’re welcome to stay for the night. We have a spare sleeping bag. We sit around the fire and tell spooky tales after dark. We have to guess whether the stories are true or false.”

“My parents won’t be expecting me home until tomorrow. I’d enjoy that very much. Thank you. I suppose I’d better introduce myself properly. I’m Sharon.”

Once the full round of introductions were complete, the girls settled around the fire until darkness closed in. Twigs were drawn to decide who would be the first to start the tales.

Jenny went first and her story of how she was abducted by aliens as a five year old came in for plenty of scorn and derision from the others as they all declared the tale “FALSE!”

Chloe was up next and regaled the girls with her story of a haunted bedroom in a local nursing home. The stream of old ladies who had resided in that particular room, all reported to staff that any pink items were constantly flung around or smashed in their absence. As her audience gawped at her, wide-eyed and open-mouthed, Chloe claimed the ghost story to be true.

The girls waited in anticipation for Sharon’s contribution to the evening. She glanced around at their faces and began her narrative.

“Okay! Three years ago there was a girl killed in a motorbike accident about five hundred yards back on that stretch of road over there. Her boyfriend survived the accident, though he suffered multiple injuries. He now spends his life in a wheelchair.

Apparently, Steve, the boyfriend, remembers losing control of the bike around a fairly sharp bend. It veered off the road and crashed into an oak tree. Immediately before impact, he tilted his body to the side. That’s why one leg was smashed up against the tree. He also recalls trying to brake but his bike seemed to be accelerating. Seventy miles per hour he said. Anyway, she lost her life and Steve hardly has much to say to anyone these days.”

“Oh God! How terribly sad.” remarked Elaine. “But is that it, Sharon?”

“No. There’s more. The girl had confided in her friends about her relationship with Steve. She told them she heard several rumours doing the rounds through friends of friends, his workmates and so on, that Steve was seeing another girl. Also, she related that he’d acted ‘cool’ towards her and skipped several dates. He’d call and make various pathetic excuses for being unable to see her.”

Chloe was incensed.

“Oh, yes! Standard practice for a guy who’s cheating. Poor girl. Sorry! Carry on, Sharon.”

“That’s alright, Chloe. So, one of the girl’s friends, Jo, happened to know that on the night of the accident, the girl planned to catch a bus from Doulton to Hemmersley, which she did. She was hoping to find Steve exactly where he said he would be – out with his mates in their usual hangout. Steve was there, not only with his buddies, but with a blonde. Her arms were draped around Steve’s shoulders. Anyway, she tackled him about his cheating, and was broken-hearted. Her sobs eventually died down and she allowed him to comfort her. He told his friends that he was taking her home on his motorbike. They watched on as the pair climbed on the bike and sped off. The female he had been with, also witnessed the upsetting scene and rapidly disappeared, in what the lads called ‘a stonking mood’.

And…and that’s it really, girls. You already know how it ends. It’s true. She…she lived in my village.”

Her eyes filled with tears.

Sharon’s sad story somewhat dampened the mood, but as the last embers of the fire died out, Elaine told an extremely far-fetched and rather rude story about the wicked fairies and gnomes who lived in her father’s orchard. The other girls were thrilled and were still falling about with laughter long after they climbed into their sleeping bags, Elaine still attempting to convince them that it was true!

On waking the following morning, Sharon bade them all goodbye and resumed her homeward journey after turning down their offer of breakfast. It was a glorious warm and sunny day so the girls launched themselves into the stream, paddling in the shallows and swimming in the deeper parts. After partaking of their snacks around lunchtime, they packed up the tent and other paraphernalia before traipsing through the woodland. Five o’clock came all too soon and Elaine’s father arrived to collect them from the roadside. It had been their first night of freedom – alone without parents.

Three Days Later

Chloe, Jenny and Elaine left college early. They had no lectures that afternoon so they ventured into town. Both Jenny and Elaine needed a new study book. Chloe had already purchased a copy. In the bookshop she sauntered away to peruse the paranormal section and soon joined the girls at the checkout queue.

“Hey! Look what I’ve found, girls. It’s the latest – Volume Four of North Yorkshire Spooky Stories.”

“You and your damn ghost stories! You’ll become one eventually! Jenny laughed.

Next stop was the coffee shop. Jenny and Elaine chatted as they sipped their Cappuccinos. Chloe’s head however, was already buried in her new book as she flipped over the pages, totally oblivious to her friends.

“Oh. My. God.” exclaimed Chloe. “Listen. Listen. There’s a story about a girl, well, a ghost really. She haunts a stretch of road between Hemmersley and Doulton hitch-hiking when there’s a lone motorcyclist. As they approach the bend the riders report her hand gripped tight over theirs to open up the throttle. Quite a few of them. They’ve been lucky each time in gaining back control and avoiding an accident. This must be the girl Sharon told us about.”

Jenny stood.

“Come on! Quick! Let’s get to the library before it closes.”

They abandoned their coffees and bolted from the bookstore and down the high street.

“Why Jenny?” shouted Elaine as she panted, trying to keep up.

“You’ll see!” Jenny shouted back over her shoulder.

Ten minutes later they were ensconced around one of the library’s PCs with Jenny’s fingers flying over the keyboard. A website appeared on screen for the Daily Yorks and Jenny clicked on the tab for Archives. She typed ‘Motorbike Accidents’ in the search bar and ‘2-4 years’ for the dates. It didn’t take long before a headline appeared GIRL KILLED IN MOTORBIKE SMASH – BOYFRIEND SURVIVES. Alongside the story was a picture – a picture of Sharon. The article went on to give her name, Sharon Cook and that of Steve – Steven Howie.

“It’s her! It’s Sharon!”

“But…but she was real…wasn’t she?” Elaine stammered.

“She…she was going home,” whispered Jenny.

Eva Bielby

https://www.evabielby.co.uk

Eva Bielby was born in North Yorkshire in the Northeast of England. She has spent over thirty years of her working life as a company accountant. Eva has a keen interest in spiritualism/mediumship and has attended several workshops to develop her skills further. During her quieter moments, Eva enjoys a cryptic crossword, sudoku, and gardening.