
By M.D. Smith IV
Near the ragged edge of town, where streetlights thin out and the woods swallow the last sighs of civilization, a dirt road claws its way up the backside of a mountain and simply stops. It ends at a wound in the earth—a limestone cave mined in the 1920s, abandoned when the Stock Market crashed and hope drained out of the country like blood from an opened vein.
The cave’s mouth gapes thirty feet high, like a jaw frozen mid-scream. Just inside, three tunnels split off in different directions, carved by men who once believed rock could be persuaded to surrender its treasure. Nature reclaimed the place over decades, vines threading through broken fencing, trees crowding close as if trying to seal the scar shut. Only locals remember the narrow trail that snakes from the road to the opening.
Teenagers remembered it best.
In the early years, it was beer and bonfires. Later, smoke and pills and whispered dares. Police rarely bothered with a patch of woods just beyond the city limits. Three Caves became a secret passed down like contraband.
Then, in 2002, a teenage couple vanished.
Some said they eloped. Friends said they wouldn’t have left without a word. A year later, a man and his young son camped inside. They never came back. The sheriff found scattered gear—an overturned lantern, a sleeping bag torn open—but no bodies. Officially, drifters or criminals passing through got the blame.
Unofficially, the whispers began.
Monster.
The county fenced the entrance with chain-link and barbed wire, posted NO TRESPASSING signs that flapped in the wind like nervous warnings. But by 2025, the fence had been neatly cut where bushes hid the gap. Teenagers returned, because youth is deaf to caution.
Not all of them returned home.
Those who did spoke of strange dreams, foggy gaps in memory, the sense of being watched by something that breathed without lungs.
Three Caves became The Three Caves Monster.
But who believes in monsters?
Certainly not Clint Marson and Bill Stevens. And definitely not Bill’s younger brother, Jimmy, who tagged along wherever the older boys went. Add in girlfriends Sue and Jenny—whose mothers conveniently thought they were sleeping at each other’s houses—and you had the ingredients for a reckless night.
The sun was still bleeding orange across the sky when the five entered the cave with backpacks and flashlights. Their laughter bounced off stone walls and came back thinner, as if the cave swallowed the joy and returned only its echo.
They rounded a bend in the largest tunnel, where the ceiling dipped low and the air grew colder. A ring of old fire stones marked the perfect campsite. Clint and Bill built a fire with starter logs from a store that lit easily, burned a long time, and soon flames licked upward like hungry tongues. Hot dogs sizzled, marshmallows burned black, which only the boys ate while the girls insisted theirs be a light tan color. They popped open beer cans. Lit the home-wrapped weed.
Smoke coiled toward the ceiling and disappeared into the cracks like spirits escaping.
During a lull, Jimmy stiffened.
“What was that?”
The others groaned.
“It was like something moving,” Jimmy insisted. “Big like a possum or raccoon.”
“They’re more scared of us,” Clint scoffed, tapping the large Case knife strapped to his belt. “And if they’re not, I’ll fix that.”
But the cave felt different now. The air heavier. Listening.
Sue stood, arms wrapped around herself. “I don’t like this. I want to go.”
Jenny looked at her and nodded quickly. “We’ve done enough.”
“There’s only one car,” Clint said sharply. “Besides, you want to explain why we’re home early?”
Reluctantly, they stayed and spread blankets. Kissing replaced conversation. Jimmy read his ghost paperback, though his eyes kept drifting toward the dark edges of the firelight.
The fire dwindled to embers.
A scream shattered the silence.
Jimmy’s flashlight beam jerked wildly. “There,” the light beam wiggled as he was trying to keep it illuminated. “That thing, bigger than a basketball, covered in hair.”
Everyone snapped upright and looked just in time to see something dark gray and furry scurry around a corner. Everyone flashed on their lights and shone them around the cave walls.
“Hey, over there,” Clint shouted. “In the corner, another one trying to get into that crease.”
Flashlights stabbed the darkness. In a corner, one creature crouched in a crevice. It was the size of a basketball, covered in coarse gray hair. Sharp ears twitched. Tiny black eyes reflected the light with oily malice. Thin, batlike membranes clung to its sides. Webbed feet scraped stone.
It hissed, revealing a mouth crowded with needle teeth.
Clint moved without thinking. Steel flashed. He drove the knife into its shoulder. The creature shrieked—a sound so piercing it felt like glass slicing the air, and the echo ricocheted through the tunnels, multiplying into a chorus of pain.
The creature lunged and clamped onto Clint’s calf.
His scream joined the echo.
He stabbed again and again until the thing fell limp.
Blood soaked his shredded pant leg. Bill grabbed the first-aid kit, applied antibiotic, and wrapped the wound with shaking hands while the girls sobbed openly. The cave smelled metallic now, like blood and damp stone.
“We need to get the hell outta here,” Jimmy said, voice breaking.
No one argued.
The girls yanked up their shoulder bags with purses inside, and the guys got only necessities they could grab in a hurry. Two of the flashlights were growing dim, flickering like dying stars.
They rounded the first bend.
Three more creatures stood ahead, side by side, blocking the path.
Both girls screamed and hid their mouths with their hands.
The air felt electrified, like the moment before lightning strikes.
“Should we just rush ‘em, kick the crap out of them, and keep going?” Jimmy suggested.
“Yeah. Rush them,” Clint muttered through clenched teeth. “On three. Okay, one…”
But before he could count, a roar erupted from the depths—a roar so massive it seemed to vibrate the marrow in their bones.
From the tunnel behind the three little creatures, the darkness bulged.
What emerged was not a creature, but a nightmare made of flesh—a heaving mass of gray fur the size of a small truck. Its head scraped the ceiling. Wings—vast and leathery—unfurled like storm clouds. Its eyes burned with an animal intelligence sharpened by grief.
The mother.
She surged forward, jaws wide enough to swallow a body whole. The ground trembled under her weight. Smaller creatures darted around her feet like satellites orbiting a dying star.
A cacophony of screams filled the air. The flashlights went out.
The cave swallowed the screams, one chomp at a time. Then nothing but the sound of crunching bones.
Blood ran in pools on the cave floor.
Days later, search parties gathered at the entrance but went no farther than the cut fence. The memory of past disappearances hung over them like a curse. No one volunteered to step inside. The cave still stands at the edge of town.
And sometimes, when the wind is right, a sound drifts from its mouth, a low, rumbling growl, like a mother mourning in the dark.
* * *
M.D. Smith of Huntsville, Alabama, writer of over 350 flash stories, has published digitally in Frontier Times, Flash Fiction Magazine, Bewilderingstories.com, and many more. Retired from running a television station, he lives with his wife of 64 years and three cats. https://mdsmithiv.com/