The Haunting Return of Rusty
An abandoned house, a stormy night, and a beloved dog that came back… different.
A year ago, the Marchand family's beloved dog, Rusty, ran off into the woods during a brutal storm. He’d bolted at the sound of a thunderclap, his golden fur vanishing into the darkness before anyone could catch him. They searched for days, plastering the neighborhood with posters, wandering through the trees calling his name, until all hope faded. But Rusty was gone.
A year passed, and on the anniversary of Rusty’s disappearance, with storm clouds again looming over the forest, a faint scratching sounded at the Marchands’ front door. Mr. Marchand opened it slowly, his heart sinking, caught between disbelief and dread. And there, standing on the porch, was Rusty.
But something wasn’t right.
Rusty's eyes, once golden and warm, were now a dull, sickly orange. His coat, once soft and bright, looked matted, sticky, and seemed to move in the light as though it were damp. When Mr. Marchand knelt to greet him, Rusty stiffened, holding his gaze with an intensity that was all wrong—a cold, hungry stare that felt as if it didn’t belong to a dog at all.
They were elated but unnerved. Rusty, though seemingly their dog, had changed. He avoided their touch, sidling through the rooms as though searching for something they couldn’t see. Each night, they lay in their beds, hearing faint scratching sounds, whispering voices. The noises seemed to follow them from room to room.
At first, they tried to brush it off, until Kate, their teenage daughter, woke one night to find Rusty sitting in her doorway. She blinked in the dark, and for a second, she could have sworn she saw his face stretch and twist, the dog’s mouth opening into something far too wide, revealing teeth that seemed sharper, more jagged than they remembered.
The next morning, Kate found long, deep claw marks down her bedroom wall—scratches she knew weren’t there before. She kept silent, hoping she’d imagined it. But that night, the scratching grew louder, accompanied by whispers calling their names.
Days passed, and Rusty’s presence grew heavier, darker, as if he were filling the house with a cold, invisible fog. He wouldn’t eat his food, instead dragging dead animals from the yard into the house, devouring them messily, licking his chops as he watched them with a twisted, chilling grin.
The Marchands tried locking him outside, but the scratching only grew louder, coming from the basement. They’d check the door each morning, finding long, frenzied claw marks and spirals gouged into the wood. Mr. Marchand tried calling Rusty’s name, but when he did, a low growl echoed from behind the door—a growl that wasn’t animal, a sound more twisted, more broken, like a voice dragged from some deep, dark place.
One night, Mr. Marchand woke to the sound of Kate screaming. He rushed to her room, only to find Rusty standing over her, his mouth open wide, wider than possible, stretched so far it tore at the edges, revealing dark gums and an endless row of sharp, dripping teeth. Rusty’s eyes glowed in the dark as his twisted mouth seemed to laugh, his low growl vibrating through the floor, crawling under their skin.
“Rusty?” Mr. Marchand whispered, his voice trembling.
The dog turned, its glowing orange eyes locked onto him, and in that instant, Mr. Marchand knew—whatever this thing was, it wasn’t their dog. It wore Rusty’s skin like a mask, puppeteering his body with some dark intent, feeding off their fear. Kate clung to her father, her face buried in his shoulder, her body trembling with sobs as they watched the thing pretending to be their beloved pet slink back into the darkness.
They tried to get rid of it the next morning, hoping it would leave if they stopped feeding it, but Rusty—or what looked like Rusty—kept returning, scratching at the doors, his eyes burning in the dark. One evening, Mr. Marchand heard something inside the walls, something moving, scratching, whispering in a voice he recognized. It was Kate’s voice, broken and hoarse, calling to him from the basement.
The family gathered in the living room that night, none of them daring to speak. They clutched each other as they listened to the scratching, the voices, the quiet, mocking laughter that drifted through the walls. And when they closed their eyes, Rusty’s face loomed in their minds, his mouth open wide, his eyes hollow, hungry.
In the morning, the family left, abandoning the house. They never spoke of what they’d seen or heard. To this day, neighbors speak of the strange scratching that echoes from inside the Marchand house on quiet, stormy nights. Some say they’ve seen a dog with sickly, glowing eyes sitting on the porch, its mouth stretched into an unnatural, haunting grin.
And if you pass by on those nights, you can hear it—a faint whisper, calling out from the dark. “Come back… come back…”