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The Haunted Grove

The Haunted Grove

Written by: Little Red Ghost Studios
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About this listen

The Haunted Grove is where paranormal horror fiction fans come to escape the everyday world through immersive, story-driven horror experiences.
We craft immersive scary stories that blur the line between reality and nightmare, perfect for late-night listening or satisfying your Creepypasta cravings. Our growing collection features everything from subtle psychological horror to full-blown supernatural encounters.


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Episodes
  • Campfire Horror Story: The Scariest Airbnb I've Ever Stayed In
    Feb 17 2026

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    A wedding weekend should have been easy: a late check-in, a sleepy forest, seven friends swapping stories by the fire. Instead, a small rug in the kitchen lifted to reveal a cellar door and a laminated warning that changed how we heard every sound after dark. Quiet became tapping, tapping became scraping, and then came the wet gnawing that turned our jokes into plans for escape. When Kathy whispered that she heard crying—thin, practiced, almost polite—the note’s emphasis snapped into focus and forced us to ask whether empathy can be weaponized.

    We walk you through every uneasy beat: the suspiciously sparse Airbnb listing with nine words and no recent reviews, the overpowering cleaner scent that failed to hide something sour, and the host’s curt message that promised we “won’t hear anything else tonight.” You’ll hear how the house felt different hour by hour, how group bravado drained into calculation, and how small details—the age-yellowed tape on the warning, the ring handle rattling once, the rug shifting an inch—etched themselves into memory. We talk about why liminal spaces like rentals amplify dread, how social dynamics collapse under stress, and what it means when a boundary asks to be kept not out of safety, but because something beyond it knows how to borrow a human voice.

    By morning we left without looking back, only to find the listing erased and a buried forum thread describing a near-identical night. That discovery reframed everything: maybe the crying wasn’t a plea for help. Maybe it was the hook. If you’ve ever weighed curiosity against caution, or wondered what your compassion might cost in the wrong place, this story will sit with you long after the credits. Listen, then tell us: would you have lifted the rug?

    If this story got under your skin, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review—your words help more listeners find our tales of the strange and uncertain.

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    9 mins
  • I Found My Uncle's Secret Diary
    Feb 4 2026

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    A key to a strange house can feel like a lifeline when you’re broke, grieving, and out of time. Ours came with reinforced doors, a breathing security grid, and a legacy nobody prepared us for. We open the door to Uncle Richard’s fortress and step into a life paused mid-sip: coffee cooling, glasses on the table, monitors casting blue light across a narrow closet built for watching. People called him the family problem. They weren’t wrong. They also weren’t ready for what the recordings would show.

    We dig through diaries, time-stamped to the minute, and find a neighbor named Evelyn who moves through her days with polished calm. The entries read like a case file: deliveries, coolers, flyers for paid studies, missing service workers who vanished between shifts. At first, it feels like delusion documented in neat handwriting. Then the basement yields floor plans, search histories, and a timeline that ends with a planned “intervention.” The line between vigilance and violence snaps into focus. We take it to the police and get a tired lecture about paranoia, grief, and false patterns, the kind of dismissal that flattens real danger and protects routine.

    What happens next turns the camera around. We confess to Evelyn, promise to pull down the lenses, and accept a dinner invite that tastes like relief. The wine is excellent. The room tilts. Professional warmth cools to clinical. In a space lit like a surgery, we face the market nobody talks about: wealthy clients, rare blood types, living donors, and organ transport coolers humming at four degrees Celsius. The twist isn’t a jump scare; it’s a ledger. Supply and demand. Screening and procurement. And a neighbor who was exactly who she said she was—only we heard the job description in the wrong tone.

    If you’re drawn to psychological thrillers, unreliable narratives, true-crime shadows, and the quiet ways obsession spreads, this story will stay with you. Press play, follow the wires under the floorboards, and decide where the truth first appeared: in a paranoid diary, a polite smile, or a locked door at the bottom of the stairs. If the ending jolts you, share this with a friend, hit follow, and leave a review telling us when you changed your mind.

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    32 mins
  • I Worked at a Haunted Hotel
    Feb 4 2026

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    A paycheck should have solved the problem. Instead, a desperate night clerk finds himself in a grand-but-rotting hotel where rules feel like incantations and the front desk phone has a will of its own. We step into the Crescent Bay’s night rhythm: the buzz of tired lights, the weight of a leather logbook that remembers too much, and the one command that matters most—never go into Room 237. Then the phone rings from that vacant room, the elevator opens for no one, and the camera catches a door easing wide to reveal something watching from the dark.

    As the hours crawl, the building grows more alive. A neighbor hears whispers through the wall, three deliberate knocks answer his complaint, and the carpet outside 237 turns wet with no source in sight. The tension pivots from eerie to personal when a guest calls about her husband: eyes open, unresponsive, whispering “come inside” at the wall. By the time our clerk reaches their room, both are gone. Duty wrestles with fear, and the pull toward the second floor becomes impossible to resist. What waits beyond the threshold isn’t a ghost in sheets; it’s a place that breathes through the walls, a closet that opens into void, a bed shaped by years of unseen weight, and hands with too many intentions.

    At first light, the manager’s quiet confession reframes everything. Something older than the hotel uses Room 237 as a mouth. The staff aren’t hosts so much as keepers, trying to keep a door shut in a building designed to open doors. The wave from the doorway, the ringing phone with no number, and the key that arrives on a doorstep suggest a haunting that travels by invitation and reply. If attention is a kind of entry, what happens when you pick up the call? Subscribe, share with the friend who loves smart horror, and leave a review telling us: would you keep the door closed, or would you need to know what’s inside?

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    20 mins
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