At the edge of town lies Wavecrest Waterpark, once a glittering jewel of summer. Families flocked there for sunlit afternoons, slides, and waves that seemed endless. But after one hazy August, the gates were locked forever. No plaque explains why. Rumors of drowning, electrocution, and even sabotage circulate, but no official cause was ever released. The park now stands abandoned, rusting under relentless heat, its paint peeling in strips like sunburned skin. Pools lie cracked and dry, weeds bursting through concrete. Yet the locals say something remains. At night, water fills the silence. And sometimes, if you listen closely, laughter follows.
The wave pool is the centerpiece, a massive basin yawning open to the sky. During the day, it seems lifeless: concrete split, graffiti sprawled across walls, broken lifeguard chairs scattered like bones. But by night, the air thickens, damp with the scent of chlorine. Trespassers describe hearing the low mechanical hum of pumps that should be long dead. Then, faint splashes echo across the surface of a pool they swear was dry moments before. Moonlight glints on water that wasn’t there before, rippling gently, invitingly. Those who linger too long describe hearing voices—children shouting, whistles blowing—an entire summer revived in ghostly tones.
Teenagers dare each other to sneak in, slipping through fences bent and rusted. Most laugh it off, graffitiing walls and taking photos for proof. But some don’t come back. Survivors say the park changes after midnight. The slides look wet, slick with condensation though no rain falls. Pools fill slowly, soundlessly, until water laps at the cracked edges. The sound of laughter grows louder, mingling with coughing, choking, screams. It’s said if you climb a lifeguard chair, you’ll see faces just beneath the surface—dozens, pale and waiting. Their eyes are open, glassy, their mouths locked in the final shape of screams.
One of the most enduring stories is about “The Black Tube.” It was once the tallest slide, twisting like a serpent above the grounds. When the park closed, the structure stood hollow, metal rusting, fiberglass flaking away. Daring teens still climb its ladder, but those who slide down after midnight never emerge at the bottom. Some vanish entirely. Others crawl out days later, soaked, babbling incoherently about endless water and hands dragging them under. Police claim it’s urban myth, yet scratches line the inside of the slide, fresh and raw, as if desperate nails had clawed to escape something pulling them back.
Another tale centers on the lazy river, a winding loop that once carried visitors peacefully under bridges and sprays. Now, its bed is cracked, vines and weeds spilling across its path. Yet, by moonlight, some claim it still flows. Trespassers swear they’ve heard water rushing, bubbling, even laughter carried along the current. Those who step into the dry channel say their shoes become soaked instantly, though no water is visible. Some report feeling tugged by invisible currents, their legs pulled forward against their will. A few even vanish mid-step, their companions left screaming into the night as the river swallows them whole.
Locals recall the tragedy that closed the park, though details shift with every retelling. Some say it was one child, drowned unnoticed in the chaos of a crowded wave pool. Others claim it was dozens, a malfunction causing water to rise too quickly, dragging families beneath. A few whisper darker theories: that the park was built on cursed ground, over old reservoirs where bodies were buried long before. Whatever the truth, the deaths were enough to shutter Wavecrest forever. Yet, on humid nights, the air still smells of chlorine, and children’s laughter echoes faintly, weaving into the rustling of trees.
The lifeguard stations are haunted in their own way. Towering over pools and slides, they sit empty, their peeling paint catching the moonlight. Those brave enough to climb them report a strange weight pressing on their chests, as if unseen eyes fixate from the water below. Sometimes, whistles blow faintly in the dark, sharp and sudden, though no lifeguards remain. Shadows move across the pools, darting and flickering, faster than any human. Some visitors swear the lifeguards never left—that they, too, drowned, now watching endlessly, their duty twisted into something far darker. The park, they say, does not forget its guardians.
The snack stands, once bustling with laughter and dripping ice cream, now rot under mold and rust. Cupboards are empty, but sometimes, wrappers crinkle though no wind blows. The faint smell of popcorn drifts through the air, sickly sweet and rotting. A few explorers say they’ve seen shadows crouched inside the stands, hunched and twitching, as if gnawing at invisible food. One boy claimed to hear his name called, his mother’s voice, though she had been dead for years. When he approached, the shadow lifted its head, eyes hollow and wet. He never returned after that night. The others ran, swearing the shadow followed.
The waterpark’s entrance gate is chained and padlocked, yet locals avoid even walking past. The air seems thicker, buzzing with unseen energy. Some swear they hear faint splashes echoing from within even on the driest nights. Stray animals won’t cross the threshold; dogs howl and pull away from its rusted fence. The boldest claim that if you touch the gate after midnight, your palm comes away damp, covered in water that drips to the ground but leaves no trace. Others insist you’ll feel a hand on the other side of the bars, gripping tightly, pulling, begging you to come inside.
There’s a local legend of “The Lifeguard’s Daughter.” She was said to have drowned during the final summer, pulled under in the wave pool. Some say her father jumped in to save her and never came back up. Now, she appears at the edge of the water, pale and dripping, eyes wide and pleading. She whispers for help, her voice fragile, breaking with waterlogged breaths. Those who rush forward are never seen again. Survivors describe only ripples across the pool, spreading outward like a heartbeat. Locals warn: if you see her, look away. Compassion is what the park craves most.
The wave pool itself is the strongest center of the hauntings. By day, it sits cracked and dry, weeds pushing through the bottom. By night, the water rises silently, filling the pool until it laps the edges. Ghostly waves crash, though no machinery hums. Some explorers describe being swept off their feet by water that wasn’t there seconds before. Once inside, escape is nearly impossible. Hands grasp ankles, pulling, dragging. Some feel lips against their skin, whispering, begging. Others hear screams muffled beneath the water, echoes of those who drowned. By dawn, the pool dries again, leaving only silence and fear.
Graffiti artists paint warnings on the walls, messages like “DON’T GO IN” and “THEY SWIM STILL.” But others claim the words change overnight, morphing into pleas like “JOIN US” or “COME BACK.” Spray-painted eyes appear where none were before, watching trespassers as they move. Some say if you shine a flashlight too long, the paint shimmers wetly, dripping like fresh blood. One explorer swore he saw his own name scrawled across the snack stand wall in a handwriting that matched his own. He left immediately, abandoning friends, and refused to speak about what he saw again. The others never came home.
Security guards once patrolled the property, but none last long. Some refuse to return after their first night, pale and trembling. They describe hearing radios crackle with voices that aren’t human, distorted and watery. Others say they spotted figures swimming in empty pools, moving effortlessly through air as if submerged. A few guards vanished altogether, their booths left unlocked, radios still buzzing faintly. Now, only the bravest—or most desperate—accept the job, and none stay past sundown. The company insists it’s trespassers scaring off staff, but locals know better. The guards weren’t driven away. The park took them, same as everyone else.
The forest surrounding Wavecrest is no safer. On quiet nights, mist rolls from the park into the trees, carrying faint ripples of laughter and splashing. Campers report waking to the sound of waves crashing in the distance, though no water is near. Some who wander too close to the fence return soaked, coughing up brackish water. Others never return at all. The mist leaves behind puddles where no rain fell, footprints of bare feet trailing back toward the park. The line between land and water blurs, the curse leaking outward. Locals fear the park grows stronger with each passing year.
Every town has its dares, but Wavecrest’s are fatal. Teens climb fences, race to the slides, and test their courage by standing in the wave pool at midnight. Those who emerge alive come back different: pale, withdrawn, haunted by unseen ripples in their vision. Some refuse to bathe, terrified of water. Others drown in shallow tubs, thrashing and gasping as if dragged by unseen hands. The lucky ones only hear the laughter in dreams, waking with lungs full of phantom water. The unlucky vanish altogether, their names whispered on summer nights when the air smells faintly of chlorine and decay.
Wavecrest Waterpark endures, rotting yet alive, a monument to forgotten summers and drowned secrets. The gates sag, the slides rust, the pools crack, yet its hunger never ceases. On still nights, the air carries echoes of waves and laughter, beckoning the curious. The pools fill silently, inviting trespassers into their depths. Hands wait beneath, patient, cold, eager to pull. Locals whisper warnings, but legends attract the reckless. The park feeds on them, swallowing whole the young, the bold, the compassionate. And when dawn comes, the sun rises on dry concrete, silence, and weeds. Only the faint scent of chlorine remains, lingering like a ghost.