The Eyes in the Thicket

The woods behind Millner’s Hollow weren’t known for much—just a stretch of oaks and firs where deer outnumbered people, and silence fell so deep it almost had weight. It was their go-to spot every November for Caleb and Drew Hanley, twin brothers and third-generation hunters. No drama, just frostbitten mornings, thermoses of black coffee, and the occasional glimpse of a ten-pointer crashing through the brush.

But this season, something was different. Tracks had appeared near the salt lick that didn’t match anything in their hunting guides. The hoof prints were deer-like but slightly… off. They were wider like the animal carried more weight than a normal buck. Curious and hoping for something prize-worthy, the brothers strapped a trail cam to a birch tree and left it running for the week.

They weren’t prepared for what they’d see.

Four Eyes and a Forgotten Folklore

At first, the photos were typical: squirrels, raccoons, and a single tired-looking doe. Then came the night stills—grainy, high-contrast images caught just past midnight. Frame by frame, something stepped into view. It had the build of a deer: slender legs, a long neck, branching antlers… and four eyes. Not two glowing dots like every other night animal. Four.

Perfectly symmetrical, two stacked above the other pair, unblinking and fixed straight at the camera.

Caleb assumed it was a glitch. Drew wasn’t so sure.

They returned the next day, combing the area around the salt lick. No fresh tracks. No scat. Just an eerie, soundless hush. Even the birds had gone quiet. Drew swore he saw movement through the trees—a flicker of antlers and a flash of something unnaturally fast—but when he chased it, there was nothing.

The next evening, they showed the photo to their uncle Joe, who’d hunted the area for forty years. He paled the second he saw it and muttered something about “the old stories” and “things that watch from both sides.”

Caleb laughed it off. Drew didn’t.

They pulled the camera the following day and haven’t hunted there since. But sometimes, when Caleb passes by Millner’s Hollow, he glances at the woods and swears he sees something watching. Something tall. Something that doesn’t blink like it should.

And back at Drew’s house, that photo still sits in a drawer, unedited, unexplained, and unwanted.

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