Don’t Open the Door: Old Mo Is Here / Chapter 2: The Legend and the Knock
Don’t Open the Door: Old Mo Is Here

Don’t Open the Door: Old Mo Is Here

Author: Rebecca Anderson


Chapter 2: The Legend and the Knock

I asked, confused, “What’s Old Mo?”

I hugged my aching ankle, glancing from the woods to Derek’s face, searching for a hint he was kidding.

Uncle Derek, panting, replied, “The one your grandma always talks about—the Old Mo that eats naughty kids. That’s what we just saw.”

His voice cracked. Even as a grown man, he sounded like he was five again, terrified of something under the bed.

I stammered, “No way? I thought it just looked like a person.”

I replayed what I’d seen, trying to convince myself it was just some hunter or a neighbor in heavy winter gear.

“Shut up, don’t say a word.” His voice was thick with fear, and he ran even faster.

He clamped his hand over my mouth again, nearly dragging me up the steps as if he could outrun the memory.

As soon as we entered the yard, he slammed the door shut and bolted it.

The slam echoed through the house. I heard the old deadbolt slide home, the same way Grandpa always did when a blizzard rolled in.

My grandpa, Grandpa Joe, came out to greet us.

He was still in his flannel shirt and suspenders, pipe clamped between his teeth, clearly surprised to see us back so soon and so shaken.

“Derek, why are you sweating so much? Go warm up by the fire, don’t—”

Before Grandpa could finish, Uncle Derek interrupted, “Dad, I saw Old Mo.”

He practically shouted it, his words tumbling out in a rush.

Grandpa Joe’s ruddy face instantly darkened.

He pulled his pipe out and gave Derek a look that could freeze water. His jaw clenched, and all the warmth left his eyes.

“You went into the old woods?”

His voice dropped low, almost a growl.

Uncle Derek replied guiltily, “Yeah.”

He stared at the floor, shuffling his boots like a kid caught sneaking out after curfew.

Grandpa slapped him hard across the face.

The sound cracked through the room, sharp as splitting firewood, and I smelled the faint tang of tobacco from Grandpa’s hand. The crack echoed, and even I flinched. That was the first and only time I ever saw Grandpa hit anyone. It was as if the word alone was enough to bring down punishment.

“No one’s set foot in those woods for over twenty years, and you just had to risk your neck.”

Grandpa’s words were sharp, but I could hear the fear behind the anger. For him, those woods were sacred and dangerous, like a warzone you never talk about.

The old woods are an unspoken forbidden zone in our town.

Every kid grows up knowing: you don’t cross that boundary. Not for dares, not for lost pets, not for anything. It was as serious as stepping onto the thin ice in January—everyone knew someone who’d gone in and never come back.

The last person who accidentally went in never came out.

That story was always whispered on snowy nights, never told straight out. We all pretended not to believe, but when someone vanished, people locked their doors a little tighter.

The whole town heard his blood-curdling screams for half an hour, but no one dared to go in and check.

It was the kind of thing folks never forgot. People gathered on porches, listening in silence, not moving a muscle, praying it wasn’t their own kid. The police wrote up a missing person’s report, but everyone knew better than to go searching.

Uncle Derek and I had broken a serious taboo.

It wasn’t just superstition—it was a line you never, ever crossed, like stepping onto the railroad tracks after midnight.

Holding his swollen cheek, Uncle Derek tried to explain, “We were chasing a rabbit. The fog rolled in and we couldn’t see, so we wandered in by mistake.”

His voice was small, regretful. I could see him wishing he’d turned back sooner, or never set out at all.

Grandpa took a deep breath and asked, “How do you know it was Old Mo?”

His eyes drilled into us, searching for some hope it was all a mistake.

“He stretched out his arm and waved at Natalie. That arm was nearly seven feet long.”

Derek’s voice was raw, hands trembling as he recalled it. He looked at me for backup, his bravado gone.

I thought for a moment. “Maybe the waving arm hit a tree branch, so it just looked that long.”

I wanted to believe it was nothing, that our imaginations had gotten the best of us in the fog. But I wasn’t sure anymore.

Uncle Derek said, “That fur, it was black, with a yellow ring around the neck. Isn’t that exactly what Old Mo is supposed to look like?”

He glanced at Grandpa, as if begging for him to say no, to dismiss it all.

I said, “That yellow thing—I thought it looked like a scarf.”

A little bit of hope crept into my voice. Maybe someone was just bundled up against the cold.

Grandpa said, “Derek, did you see clearly or not? Old Mo coming out of the woods is deadly serious. Christmas is almost here—don’t mess up, or no one will have a peaceful holiday.”

He spoke with the authority of someone who’d lived through more winters than I could imagine. Christmas, in our town, was about family, warmth, and nothing bad ever happening.

Uncle Derek thought for a while, then became less certain. “I think it probably was.”

He glanced nervously out the frosted window, as if expecting to see a seven-foot monster on the porch.

Grandpa paced back and forth for a long time, head down.

His boots thudded on the old floorboards. The living room was silent except for the ticking of the clock and the hiss of the wood stove.

Finally, with a grave expression, he said, “You two shut all the doors. I’m going to find the town councilman. No matter who comes, don’t open the door.”

He gave us both a look that brooked no argument, then started hunting for his boots and hat.

Grandma Carol went into the house and grabbed several packs of skyrocket fireworks, stuffing them into Grandpa’s coat pocket.

She moved quickly, hands steady. Fireworks were for scaring off bears or the occasional nosy coyote, but this time, it felt like she was arming Grandpa for war. The familiar sulfur smell filled the air for a second.

Grandpa, pipe in mouth, left the house.

He didn’t look back, just squared his shoulders and marched out into the fog, the door slamming shut behind him.

You may also like

I Unlocked the Door for a Dead Woman
I Unlocked the Door for a Dead Woman
4.6
Mason’s secret is simple: sabotage locks, rake in cash, and never get caught. But when a midnight call leads him to a terrified woman—and a corpse clutching the same phone that called him—he realizes he’s opened the wrong door. Now, haunted by guilt and hunted by something inhuman, Mason must face the truth: the next lock he picks could be his last.
Grandma Came Back Hungry
Grandma Came Back Hungry
4.9
Death never scared my family—until the day Grandma died and a stray cat brought her back. In Maple Heights, rumors fly faster than the autumn leaves, and nothing sets tongues wagging like a resurrection in broad daylight. Now, as ghost stories and Appalachian folklore collide on our front porch, my paralyzed grandma is walking, the neighbors are whispering about zombies, and Mom is laying down lines of rice to test the truth. But when Grandma’s hunger returns—and the kids start seeing fangs in the dark—one family dinner might turn into our last. Is blood thicker than superstition, or have we invited something into our home that won’t let us go? How do you save the ones you love when they come back…wrong?
Grandpa’s Ghost Warned Me Twice
Grandpa’s Ghost Warned Me Twice
4.9
Some families inherit silverware. I inherited a dead man’s warnings. Ever since Grandpa started visiting me in dreams, I’ve survived things no one else could explain—from a poisoned Christmas dinner to the secrets buried in our family’s old farmhouse. Now, jobless and desperate, Grandpa’s ghost returns with a final message: there’s gold hidden in the wall, and a curse waiting in the shadows. But in Silver Hollow, nothing stays buried for long—not greed, not guilt, and not the truth. When a hidden fortune tears the Carter family apart and old skeletons come to light, I have to wonder: am I cursed to repeat Grandpa’s mistakes, or is this my last chance to break free? What would you risk if the dead called you home?
I Sold the Shoes That Killed Him
I Sold the Shoes That Killed Him
4.9
Death doesn’t rest easy in Maple Hollow—especially when a red coffin surfaces and its treasures are stolen by greedy hands. Antique dealer Mason Calhoun thought the crimson-stitched shoes he took home were just another oddity, until a wealthy buyer dies in agony and a preacher warns him of a vengeful spirit with no traceable evil. As Mason fortifies his shop with every charm and memory his grandmother left behind, something relentless claws at the walls, calling his name in the night. With protection failing and footprints appearing where none should be, Mason faces a chilling question: can he outwit a ghost that leaves no warning—or will he be next to join the dead?
The Face at My Window
The Face at My Window
4.9
A face in the window. A voice calling your name when nobody’s there. Death wasn’t supposed to ride shotgun, but out here, on the haunted northern plains, something is crawling up from the coal—hungry for more than just the living’s fear. Mike’s trucking days were supposed to be over, but a desperate job offer drags him back into the badlands with a ragtag crew, a rival’s sinister old man, and a black jar no one dares to touch. As the wind howls and shadows lengthen, stories of cursed mines, coal husks, and missing men become all too real. When midnight brings a visitor with Dave’s face and an impossible hunger, Mike must decide: fight the thing that haunts these roads, or become the next ghost in the dust. Out here, what’s buried never stays dead—will Mike survive the run, or vanish like so many before him?
It’s Not Human: Trapped in Apartment 604
It’s Not Human: Trapped in Apartment 604
4.7
A midnight group chat warning turns into a nightmare when something inhuman stalks the halls, wearing stolen faces and learning how to speak. As neighbors vanish and the creature infects a child, 604 must decide: open the door to help, or stay silent and hope to survive. But when the monster can become anyone, nowhere is safe—and the next knock could be its last lesson before it comes for you.
Don't Tell Them You Can See
Don't Tell Them You Can See
4.8
Every time I reveal my secret—my sight returns, and my parents celebrate—I die, waking up trapped in the same nightmare again. The world outside my door is twisted, my family’s smiles too wide, and every neighbor watches with empty, lifeless eyes. If I slip up, they’ll know I’m not blind anymore—and this time, I might not come back.
The Goat Demon Wants My Soul
The Goat Demon Wants My Soul
4.7
When Grandpa butchers the family's beloved goat to feed a mysterious, starving visitor, our mountain home turns into a nightmare. Grandma begs me not to eat a single bite, warning that something evil is coming—and when a feral woman with goat eyes arrives, Grandpa forces me into a deadly bargain. If I speak a word or break the rules, the demon in the guest room will devour me before dawn.
He Smiled—But He Wasn't a Child
He Smiled—But He Wasn't a Child
4.9
A child’s smile can hide the darkest secrets. When Morgan agrees to watch her best friend’s nephew, she expects a quiet week of cartoons and playtime—not a series of chilling requests and a set of child-sized dentures hidden in her guest room. As her neighbor is murdered and the clues point to someone—or something—small and innocent, Morgan’s reality unravels. Who is the boy in her care, and what happened to the real Tyler? When the lights go out and escape seems impossible, Morgan must confront the terrifying truth: the greatest threat may be the child she let in. Will she survive the night—or is she already too late to lock the monster out?
The Headless Son Haunts Our Store
The Headless Son Haunts Our Store
4.6
Two years ago, Grandpa’s ceiling fan claimed his son’s life in a blood-soaked accident. Now, a storm traps our family inside as strangers with chilling secrets arrive—and the ghost of the headless son is coming for revenge. Tonight, no one in Maple Heights is safe, and the red paper on our beam might be a curse, not protection.
Haunted by My Landlord’s Secret
Haunted by My Landlord’s Secret
4.9
When six-year-old Danny’s family takes over a storm-battered roadside diner, a stranger’s warning cracks open secrets the town tried to bury. As eerie symbols and family legends collide, Danny must face the terror lurking in the attic—or risk losing everything he loves. The truth behind the attic door could destroy them all.
The Fortune-Teller’s Curse: Shadow Dog Haunting
The Fortune-Teller’s Curse: Shadow Dog Haunting
4.6
Blind fortune-teller Caleb Moore scrapes by reading troubled lives—until a desperate woman brings him to her cursed apartment, haunted by a dream lover and a shadow-eyed dog. Every night, something invades her sleep and drains her soul, but the true horror is hiding in plain sight. Caleb must face an evil that preys on the forgotten, even if it means sacrificing what little he has left.