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- Story Listed as: Fiction For Adults
- Theme: Horror
- Subject: Creatures & Monsters
- Published: 10/31/2021
Millions of people live in America’s rural communities, (ghost towns) Most of them plant flowers and vegetable gardens and enjoy their silence and isolation which permits their commune with nature and wildlife. However, there is a fair share of mysterious happenings in these ghostly places, specifically people disappearing without a trace.
What lies in the backwoods of our rural towns and villages, or ghost towns? There are some obvious answers like bears, coyotes, and other dangerous wildlife. But some believe there is something more sinister in the shadows: feral cannibal humans. And they wager these same humans are responsible for the disappearances and deaths. 600,000 people have gone missing this year. Cannibals, wild feral humans may be the explanation.
This story follows Jay, an auto mechanic who takes his wife Polly and their toddler son Jacob to a Nevada ghost town. Jay’s family does not share his excitement to be away from civilization for the weekend. Things are going great…for one night. The next day, Jay and Jacob are wandering the woods when Jacob disappears without a trace. A massive search begins, but it is futile. The child is not found.
Ten years pass with no solid leads about Jacob. One day, a suspicious man named Bob Birch appears with evidence that Jacob might still be alive. Jay and Poly, who have separated partly because of the unknown fate of their son, head back to the park. They run into the resident park ranger, Stanley Leonard, who admits that he saw a disheveled man carrying a young boy the night of Jacob’s disappearance. Bob Birch dismisses Leonard’s claims, but Jay and Poly are curious. They are desperate and willing to explore any leads, no matter how ridiculous they sound. Birch proved to be another fraud wanting to set them up for an easy payday.
Things really derail when a creature rips Birch’s neck apart as other human-like creatures come crawling out from all directions. Birch ends up shooting Jay in the scramble; however, Jay and Poly make it out alive and back to Vogel. After a tense confrontation, Vogel lets them in on a horrific government secret.
Rural communities are not for preserving the land, or tranquility, but for protecting people from feral cannibal humans. He speculates about the origins of the Feral populations, suggesting that they are the result of inbreeding and genetic mutations have regressed to a more monster state than humans.
There are pockets of them in every small community and, despite thousands of people disappearing, the government won’t say a word. “Governments need their citizens to believe they’re in control,” says Leonard, If people knew there were feral cannibals running around, preying on human flesh, mass hysteria would erupt. We prefer containment of the predator Species.
The story of legendary red-haired cannibal giants in the Lovelock cave area is one local cannibal story where proof exists to confirm cannibals were here and may still roam this tiny hamlet or ghost town.
Cannibal Humans(Martha Hume)
Millions of people live in America’s rural communities, (ghost towns) Most of them plant flowers and vegetable gardens and enjoy their silence and isolation which permits their commune with nature and wildlife. However, there is a fair share of mysterious happenings in these ghostly places, specifically people disappearing without a trace.
What lies in the backwoods of our rural towns and villages, or ghost towns? There are some obvious answers like bears, coyotes, and other dangerous wildlife. But some believe there is something more sinister in the shadows: feral cannibal humans. And they wager these same humans are responsible for the disappearances and deaths. 600,000 people have gone missing this year. Cannibals, wild feral humans may be the explanation.
This story follows Jay, an auto mechanic who takes his wife Polly and their toddler son Jacob to a Nevada ghost town. Jay’s family does not share his excitement to be away from civilization for the weekend. Things are going great…for one night. The next day, Jay and Jacob are wandering the woods when Jacob disappears without a trace. A massive search begins, but it is futile. The child is not found.
Ten years pass with no solid leads about Jacob. One day, a suspicious man named Bob Birch appears with evidence that Jacob might still be alive. Jay and Poly, who have separated partly because of the unknown fate of their son, head back to the park. They run into the resident park ranger, Stanley Leonard, who admits that he saw a disheveled man carrying a young boy the night of Jacob’s disappearance. Bob Birch dismisses Leonard’s claims, but Jay and Poly are curious. They are desperate and willing to explore any leads, no matter how ridiculous they sound. Birch proved to be another fraud wanting to set them up for an easy payday.
Things really derail when a creature rips Birch’s neck apart as other human-like creatures come crawling out from all directions. Birch ends up shooting Jay in the scramble; however, Jay and Poly make it out alive and back to Vogel. After a tense confrontation, Vogel lets them in on a horrific government secret.
Rural communities are not for preserving the land, or tranquility, but for protecting people from feral cannibal humans. He speculates about the origins of the Feral populations, suggesting that they are the result of inbreeding and genetic mutations have regressed to a more monster state than humans.
There are pockets of them in every small community and, despite thousands of people disappearing, the government won’t say a word. “Governments need their citizens to believe they’re in control,” says Leonard, If people knew there were feral cannibals running around, preying on human flesh, mass hysteria would erupt. We prefer containment of the predator Species.
The story of legendary red-haired cannibal giants in the Lovelock cave area is one local cannibal story where proof exists to confirm cannibals were here and may still roam this tiny hamlet or ghost town.
Lillian Kazmierczak
11/02/2021I'm, Martha, I am dying right now. I live in the midwest in a town with less than 350 people. All accounted for. Lol! The most exciting thing that happens is mail dropoff! The fact that there's proof of cannibals near love and is pretty creepy. Keep your door locked! Great story, that is a really interesting fact and you wrote it very well.
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