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What if it's True Podcast

Werewolves and Demons

What if it's True Podcast

Cameron Buckner

Drama, Fiction, Science Fiction

4.81.2K Ratings

🗓️ 27 April 2025

⏱️ 60 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Werewolves and Demons
Story 1
In Stone River, a seemingly typical American town with familiar seasonal events like carnivals and Christmas parades, a dark secret sets it apart: strict rules govern residents' lives to protect them from monstrous, bipedal wolf-like creatures that inhabit the surrounding woods and prey on humans. These rules, such as never traveling alone or leaving windows open at night, stem from centuries-old local lore about these creatures, which have claimed numerous lives, including newcomers like E.G. Parker and his crew in the 1940s, and local teens Alan and Lisa in the 1970s, whose gruesome deaths haunt the town. A 63-year-old lifelong resident, recounts the town’s history and the rules’ origins, which predate his grandmother’s tales of a time without them. His own harrowing encounter with one of these creatures, when his truck runs out of gas on a lonely road, nearly costs him his life.

Story 2
In the summer of 1972, a 14-year-old boy fishing at a lagoon beneath the dilapidated "Monkey Bridge" near the Charles River discovers an old, ornate watch entangled in weeds, which he cleans and cherishes, unaware of its sinister history. That night, a terrifying dream places him on the bridge, reliving the fatal fall of a boy his age, and he awakens to see the boy’s ghost pleading for help, with the watch mysteriously stopping at 4:18. The next day, compelled to climb the bridge, he encounters the ghostly boy again, tormented by demonic gremlins who mock him into a deadly crossing, revealing the watch’s curse: it lures young boys to their deaths, manipulated by these malevolent entities. With his grandfather’s help, a war veteran familiar with such evil, they uncover the watch’s connection to Timothy Burns, a boy who drowned decades ago, and destroy it at his grave, banishing the gremlins and freeing the trapped souls. Now an old man and veteran himself, the narrator reflects on the ongoing battle against such soul-stealing evil, which persists in modern times through technology, as he vigilantly protects his grandson from similar unseen dangers.


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Transcript

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0:00.0

Stone River by Neoma Finn

0:09.9

For the most part, all American towns are the same.

0:15.3

They can be split into small villages and towns,

0:18.6

medium-sized cities and large metropolises, but no matter how you slice

0:23.6

them, the similarities are obvious. Each town, of course, has its own traditions or claim

0:29.5

to fame that will make it unique in one way or another, but for the most part, all American

0:35.2

towns are the same.

0:43.5

Like most towns where I live, we have a carnival every spring, a fair each summer, and a harvest festival in the fall.

0:45.8

They're no different and generally not as impressive as the carnivals, fairs, and festivals

0:51.1

held in any of our neighboring towns.

0:54.7

Every December, the mayor's office decorates Main Street with lights and glittery images

0:59.6

of snowmen, reindeer, and Santa Claus, and there is a Christmas parade.

1:05.2

All of our neighboring towns do the same.

1:08.9

When I was a kid, my parents would take me down to the town square so that we could walk

1:13.7

from storefront to storefront, looking at the animatronic elves building toys and

1:19.6

dioramas of Santa's workshop, or wintry images of forest animals, decorating living Christmas

1:26.3

trees in the woods. I would ooh and I,

1:29.9

and the shop owners would give me a candy cane for my efforts. With the advent of shopping malls

1:36.0

and political correctness, even in a town as isolated as ours, that is all now a thing of the

1:42.3

past. The nearest shopping mall is 30 miles away, but people would rather go there than enjoy the small shops owned by locals.

1:51.9

It isn't any of these things that make our town unique.

1:56.3

Our town is unique because in Stone River we have rules.

...

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