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@seeingthroughtheveil
seeingthroughtheveil
look it our ship
pretty dead things that’s them
//What happens when Security and seeingthroughtheveil hang out
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Pretty Dead Things (Mercy and Security)
seeingthroughtheveil
Security had been walking in the Cloud in the Villa when he saw something out of place, more like someone. On further inspection he found a woman laying on the ground the Cloud obviously weakening her. He carefully picked her up and carried her out.
He waited for the new person to wake, he had taken her to his own little hiding home and now sat beside her just watching curiously. It had quite some time since he seen a human though he never seen one so close without being attacked and force to turn hostile. Perhaps this one was different?
It was the morbid stench of death that clung to the place which drew Mercy in, being one with an affinity and love for such things. When the cloud took her she didn't even resist, seeing it as a sign of things that should happen. She was incredibly lucky to make it out of there alive.
Her eyes fluttered open, a cough racking through her body as the toxins of the cloud were expelled, it seemed it wasn't as nice as she thought. She rolled over to her side, brushing some loose strands from her face before pausing at the figure in her company. "Hello..." she smiled "...d...did you save me?"
Morris-Jumel Mansion
Once headquarters to General George Washington, the Morris-Jumel Mansion is the oldest house in Manhattan. It was the home to Stephen and Eliza Jumel (allegedly a former prostitute) in the early 1800s; after Stephen’s death, Eliza married former Vice President Aaron Burr. During a seance, Stephen Jumel allegedly revealed that he was a very angry ghost and that his wife had killed him by pulling off his bandages and letting him bleed to death. All three members of this tryst are said to frequently show themselves to guests and visiting schoolchildren.
Morris-Jumel Mansion
Once headquarters to General George Washington, the Morris-Jumel Mansion is the oldest house in Manhattan. It was the home to Stephen and Eliza Jumel (allegedly a former prostitute) in the early 1800s; after Stephen’s death, Eliza married former Vice President Aaron Burr. During a seance, Stephen Jumel allegedly revealed that he was a very angry ghost and that his wife had killed him by pulling off his bandages and letting him bleed to death. All three members of this tryst are said to frequently show themselves to guests and visiting schoolchildren.
Staten Island Monastery
Since its closing in the late 1960’s and again in the mid-1980’s, the St. Augustine Monastery on Staten Island, NY as it was originally named, has become a hot topic of interest for both paranormal investigators and urban exploration.
The monastery was once used as a school house before being converted into a spiritual retreat in its later decades. Activity reported from those who have entered the abandoned building range from hearing moaning echoes and loud noises as well as extreme temperature drops, all closely associated with the paranormal.
The urban legends which have come to surround this decaying landmark remain closely related and share similar aspects in their telling. Agreed upon by most of the monastery enthusiasts is the fact that the structure, though only rising a few stories from the ground, in fact continues for many levels beneath the surface where horrible atrocities were believed to have taken place. Some say that there was a great fire back when the building served as a school house, trapping a number of children underground in the lower levels,. However there is no sign of fire damage nor city record of such an event.
Additionally, it is said that in the time where the monastery was used for spiritual recluse, there was a monk who was driven insane and would drag his fellow spiritualists down into the basement to torture them and eventually murdered them. The exact number of underground levels is not known for certain, though it has been rumored to descend for 20 or so sublevels.
First hand accounts of the structure in its modern standing state that the main basement level is flooded, leaving no possibility for further exploration.
“Nature is a haunted house - but Art - is a house that tries to be haunted.”
― Emily Dickinson, The Complete Poems
Kelpie -
A supernatural horse from Celtic folklore, the kelpie is believed to haunt rivers and lochs in Ireland and Scotland. It is described as a strong and powerful horse that is both white and sky blue in colour. Its skin is said to be smooth like a seal’s but deathly cold to the touch. The easiest way to identify a kelpie is by its dripping wet mane and tail.
The kelpie will appear as a lost pony. It will then encourage people to climb onto its back for a ride. Once it has a rider its skin will suddenly turn adhesive to prevent the rider getting off. It will then dive into the nearest body of water, taking its rider along with it to be devoured at the bottom of the river or loch. Kelpies will eat an entire human, with the exception of the heart and liver. If tricking a person into riding them doesnt work the kelpie will turn itself into a beautiful woman in order to lure in men for it to eat.
Kelpies are extremely difficult to defeat as you need to ride them in order to stop them, which can easily lead to you being drowned and eaten. When riding a kelpie you must try to find the brindle it is wearing. Taking hold of this will make the kelpie submissive and subservient. A submissive kelpie horse is highly prized but like all captured fairy folk it will quickly betray you once it gets the chance.
Paranormal hotspots are places that are heavily populated with spirits. It seems that the top three places for troubled souls are hospitals, insane asylums, and prisons due to the large amount of suffering that often occurred within their walls.
Cemeteries
It would seem fairly obvious that a cemetery would be an extremely haunted place due to its direct connection to death – this would be a true statement. During the 1800s, lynchings (hangings) took place in cemeteries to speed up the time between the hanging and the burial.
During the 1860s around the heat of the Civil War (mainly in the South), many innocent freemen were killed simply because the southerners were so opposed to having free African Americans. Union supporters were also lynched. However, not all cemetery hauntings revolve around the execution of people……. (via Ghostly World™ | Paranormal Hotspots)
The Bhanghar Fort, India
According to legend, the fort became cursed when a wizard who lived in the town fell in love with the princess of Banghar. Drawing on his skills in black magic, rather than on his interpersonal skills, he tried to woo the princess with a bowl of magic potion. It didn’t work. She figured out the play and threw the bowl against a large boulder. The boulder was disturbed enough to start rolling, and it rolled right in the path of the wizard. As the wizard faced down the boulder, he cursed the town, saying that it would be destroyed and become uninhabitable. He was crushed to death. Soon after, the town was invaded and pillaged. Most of its inhabitants, including the princess, were killed. Those who lived abandoned the fort.
The wizard’s curse remains, of course, and the ghosts of those killed continnue to haunt the fort. The Archaeological Survey of India, which manages the site, forbids anyone from staying at the fort after dark.
The Tuesday Haunting: Barnstable Jail -
Structural, documentary and archaeological evidence suggests that the Jail was constructed circa 1690-1700 by Barnstable County as ordered by the Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay Colony Courts and under the leadership of Sheriff Bassett. The Barnstable Jail was constructed on a piece land just west of the town center. The jail was moved around and attached to the rear of an early 18th century, two-story, five-bay house sometime later in the early 18th century. Apparitions have been seen and voices have been heard.
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In the 1730s, German immigrants in Fredrick County, Maryland claimed to have encountered a terrifying creature. Shortly after founding their town, the residents began reporting sightings of a beast that was half-bird, half-reptile, with a beak made of metal with razor-sharp teeth. It also sported tentacles like an octopus that it used to seize people and carry them away, presumably to feed to its bird-lizard-robot-squid babies. When you first hear this story, not to mention the creature’s moniker of “the Snallygaster,” it is easy to scoff. But the plot thickened a bit for residents when sightings of these creatures were reported everywhere from New Jersey to Ohio. Of course, “sightings reported” and “hard evidence” are worlds apart, but we aren’t going to nitpick.
(via 10 Terrifyingly Creepy Abandoned Hotels | Paranormal)
Bokor Hill Station was a Cambodian resort town built in the early 1920s by colonial French settlers, the crown jewel of which was the beautiful Bokor Palace Hotel and Casino. Construction in the remote mountains was difficult and around 1,000 lives were lost in the process. The area flourished for two decades as an oasis in the squalid heat and clutter of Phnom Penh, but Europeans fled the area in the late 1940s when the Vietnam conflict ramped up. Bokor Palace was used intermittently over the years, but constant military and political instability—including invasions by Vietnam and mass killings by the Khmer Rouge—ensured the area was all but abandoned by the early ’90s.
Bokor Hill Station is now a popular tourist attraction, sitting on national park land. Although not even 100 years old, the hotel looks like a moss-cloaked ancient ruin. According to locals, the Palace teems with the spirits of those who gave their lives to build it. A park ranger named Vichat explained that he wouldn’t enter the building at night, saying “Every time we walk past, we can hear the dead walk in there. It’s full of ghosts.” Several movies have capitalized on the hotel’s creepy atmosphere, including Korean horror film R-Point and Matt Dillon’s forgettable crime drama City of Ghosts.
“Some people believe when you die you go to a place where you feel happy and safe. For some kids during the Second World War that was the caves.”
The eerie words of Chislehurst Caves’ (London) ghost guide Jason Desporte are what he offers by way of explanation for some of the haunting sounds he has heard in the 20 miles of tunnels.
The labyrinth has a long history of spooky encounters, from bizarre noises to the bizarre tale of The Challenge in 1985.
Banshee - Paranormal Vocabulary - If you are the first one in your household to hear the Banshee’s cry, you are doomed to die. The Banshee will make three visits, on three consecutive nights, each visit bringing a greater sense of fear. The first night it is only heard by the person to whom death with soon visit. They begin as a series of moans about the rooms the target is present in. The moans are unmistakable, and the target is obvious, as they are the only one to hear them. This is thought to act as a warning, that death can be avoided, but with no idea where the tragedy will strike from, the warning is generally moot. On the second night any argument about the Banshee’s visitation is put aside as the entire family can now hear the howling through the night. Now the family is certain that the following evening, the target will surely pass. On the third and final night, the Banshee’s wailing turns into a full screech. This screech has the ability to break glass and pottery, and instils a total dread in those who hear it. Before the evening of the following day, the Banshee’s target will be dead. The Banshee will once again leave the family in peace, its job of foretelling a death complete… until death is once again due to visit the family. That is one telling of the Banshee’s wail. The Banshee, being a common figure of Irish folklore and mythology, has seen its legend travel along with several prominent Irish bloodlines. Once a figure only for several prominent Irish families - the O’Brien’s, the O’Connor’s, the O’Neill’s, the O’Leary’s, the O’Grady’s (the names do change with different sources.) - this spirit or sidhe from the Otherworld has followed along with marriages and unions to now occupy a much greater number of families, and is not limited to their traditional homeland. Once the foreteller of doom of kings and lords, the Banshee took on several different forms – A beautiful woman, a motherly figure or an old hag. Those unlucky enough to see her will see her dressed in clothing, not unlike a burial shroud. A Banshee may also take the form of an animal. It would seem that in more recent centuries the Banshee not only visits those of prominence soon to die, but even the commoners, albeit those with long distance relatives to ‘royalty’ of times gone by. Tellings of a Banshee’s visitation vary from family to family, and although the shrieking is by far the most prominent, the Banshee has been seen to stand silently to the side of the bed of someone soon to die, or to be washing their clothes, or in the case of a knight/warrior, their armour. A Banshee may also appear to be a wailing woman at a funeral, a mourner that no one knows, and who soon disappears. It is thought this might be how the legend originated, the traditional singing/keening woman at an Irish funeral, a kind of sad song where the musical melodies are connected to the song of fairies and spirits. There have been modern day reports of Banshee’s visiting families of Irish descent. There are other cultures with similar figures present - Scottish, Welsh, Norse and American cultures all have similar legends. Ashley Hall 2013. Picture: A Banshee appearing as a beatiful woman, mourning the loss of a warrior. Inset Upper:A Banshee represented as an old, shrouded hag. Inset Lower: A more modern realisation of the Banshee.
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Quaker Cemetery
Worcester, Massachusetts
Called Spider Gates because it has eight gates, this cemetery is said to be very dangerous. Starting at the first gate it is said that one will hear whispers and notice leaves moving around when the wind is calm. As one gets closer to the eighth gate, it is said they will feel the sensation of someone brushing against them. Others have reported seeing people walking aimlessly around graves. As one gets closer to the eight gate, the sensations and images become so strong that most people faint. No one has ever made it to the eight gate. It is said that some have suffered massive heart attacks and died because they were over come with fear.