The Tattie Bogle
About
Rowena plans a quiet weekend alone in the woods, camping by a creek far from roads and other people. She knows the old stories her grandmother used to tell, warnings about the Tattie Bogle, folklore meant for children and places that no longer matter. Some stories are remembered because forgetting them is dangerous.
Rowena plans a quiet weekend alone in the woods. Two nights by a creek, far from roads, noise, and other people.
She knows the old stories her grandmother used to tell. Warnings about the Tattie Bogle, folklore meant for children and places that no longer matter.
But the woods remember.
As night falls, small details begin to feel wrong. Straw where it should not be. A presence on the hill that refuses to move. The growing sense that some warnings are not metaphors at all.
The Tattie Bogle is a quiet folk horror story about isolation, inherited fear, and the cost of ignoring old names for old things. It lingers like something standing just out of sight, waiting to be noticed.