The first time I drifted through Caddo Lake on a boat, I understood why people go missing there.
Not the kind of missing you read about in police reports — though that happens too. I mean the other kind. The kind where something old and watching pulls your attention off the path, off the road, off the world you came from. You blink, and the cypress trees have closed in behind you. You turn around, and the water looks the same in every direction.
Caddo Lake sits on the Texas-Louisiana border, and it is unlike any place I have ever been — and I spent over forty years in Alaska, a state that knows a thing or two about wild and untamed land. Alaska's wildness is vast and cold and open. Caddo's wildness is close. Intimate. Draped in Spanish moss and silence.
The town of Uncertain, Texas sits right on its shore. Population: a handful. Name: perfect.
Because that's exactly how you feel there. Uncertain.
The bayou doesn't announce itself as threatening. That's what makes it so effective. The surface of the water is often still, reflecting sky and cypress and the ghostly gray curtains of moss above. Beautiful. Almost peaceful. But beneath the surface, the roots go deep — twisted, tangled, older than memory. And the legends that grow out of that place are the same way. They look like folklore on the outside. Look closer, and they feel like something that actually happened.
"The cypress trees have closed in behind you. You turn around, and the water looks the same in every direction."
I write supernatural thrillers. That means I'm always looking for places where the veil between what we see and what is real feels thin. Alaska gave me that — the Dena'ina legends, the long dark winters, the sense that something ancient watches from the treeline. Caddo Lake gives me something different. Something older in a different way. Swamp-old. Bayou-old. The kind of old that seeps up through the mud and wraps itself around your ankles before you notice.
When I floated through those cypress channels that day, I didn't just see a setting. I felt a story beginning.
The Spanish moss moved when there was no wind. The water held its secrets. And somewhere out past the tupelo trees, something made a sound I couldn't identify — not a bird, not a frog, not anything I could name.
I wrote it down. I always write it down.
For those of you who've followed me through the Ravens Cove series, you know I don't write horror. I write stories where darkness is real, where the supernatural has weight and consequence — but where light pushes back. Where goodness doesn't just survive, it fights. Caddo Lake gave me a place where that battle feels absolutely credible. The darkness there is not invented. It doesn't need to be.
But neither does the beauty. And that tension — between breathtaking and unsettling, between ancient grace and ancient dread — is exactly where my kind of story lives.
If you've never been to Caddo Lake, I hope one day you go. Take the boat tour near dusk. Let the moss drift. Listen.
Just don't wander too far from the path.
Mary Ann Poll is America's Lady of Supernatural Thrillers and the author of the Ravens Cove series. Her six-book series is available on Amazon. She also hosts the podcast Real Ghost Chatter, featuring true accounts of the supernatural. Learn more at maryannpoll.com.