This Is The Terrifying Tale Of What Happened When I Went Too Deep Investigating Unsolved Murders On Reddit

I shot another look out of the back window – didn’t see any movement, but heard the familiar sound of a truck door closing. I didn’t wait to see if anyone was walking out of the truck, dove into the backseat and tried one of the back doors.

The highest I have ever felt in my entire life was when I felt that back door give and open out into the darkened forest. I piled out of it before I even got the thing all the way open.

I dragged my field of vision across the grass between the Apache and the back of my car when I climbed out of the car. The driver of the truck was out of his vehicle, his black cowboy hat obscured his pale face just enough to where I couldn’t make it out. He took tall strides around the front of the truck in a long, black trench coat.

I wasted no more moments in observation, turned into the woods and fled, pissed at myself for leaving my cell phone in the center console. It didn’t matter now, my only hope was running deeper into the woods, finding a house, the river or something, basically just losing the approaching stranger behind me.

For a second, I thought I heard the rumble of the river coming in front of me, but the sound quickly took a familiar form. It was Tyler’s motorcycle. I slowed my sprint, shot a look over my shoulder. At the edge of the trees was Tyler on his motorcycle, he reared back on the cycle, tried to maneuver his way through the brush which served as the doormat for the thicker forest.

“Tyler,” I screamed through the trees. “Call the cops. Call the cops.”

But he couldn’t hear me over the sound of his motorcycle. I came to a complete stop and watched him make his way into the forest where he would have a little bit more space to snake his motorcycle around trees. I tried to also look out behind him, where the truck was parked up near the roadway, but couldn’t see that far.

Tyler put the motorcycle into a skid just before he reached me. He killed the engine and jumped off, was greeted by me screaming out at him over the sounds of his dying engine.

“Where is he?”

Tyler whipped around, looked back through the woods.

“The guy in the truck. He ran me off the road.”

Tyler lifted up the belly of his shirt to show a horrible road rash sprayed across his stomach.

“I hid in the woods for a while. I tried to call you, but you didn’t answer.”

“He ran me off the road too,” I screamed in Tyler’s face. “Where is he?”

Tyler kept his eyes off through the woods.

“He peeled out and drove off when I got back on my motorcycle. He’s gone.”

I followed Tyler’s eyes through the darkening woods and had to agree. There were no signs of the driver, or his truck.

beetlejuice

The cops had a really tough time not just believing what I told them happened, but even understanding it. I had to pull up Reddit on one of the officer’s computers to show them all what it was and how it worked.

Honestly, it seemed like they all thought we were concocting some kind of elaborate alibi to cover up a domestic squabble and/or drunk driving accident. They basically did the least amount of work they could to document it and stopped returning our calls after a couple of weeks. I told them all of the details about The Phantom of West Texas. They didn’t care in the least. I may have well just said The Phantom of the Opera.

Making it a little harder to believe my story, I deleted my account and apparently so did grizzlymane415. There was no record of our conversations, all of our comments within the board said they were posted by [deleted].


About the author

Jack Follman

Jack has written professionally as a journalist, fiction writer, and ghost writer. For more information, visit his website.

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