"Some psycho," Eli muttered, his hands shaking. "We’re getting off this road at the next town." The Sight at the Pipe
A few miles later, the adrenaline had just started to fade when they saw the rusted truck again. It was parked next to a crumbling, ivy-choked church. A figure stood by a massive corrugated pipe sticking out of the ground—a tall man in a tattered duster and a wide-brimmed hat. Jeepers Creepers
The phrase “Jeepers Creepers” is a mild expletive that emerged in early 20th-century American English as a euphemism for “Jesus Christ.” Its colloquial, comic tenor made it suitable for mainstream entertainment at a time when blasphemy and overt profanity were socially constrained. "Some psycho," Eli muttered, his hands shaking
"Did you see that?" Maya whispered. "We have to go back. What if someone’s alive down there?" "Are you crazy?" Eli snapped. "We're going to the police." A figure stood by a massive corrugated pipe
As a standard, “Jeepers Creepers” has been covered by countless artists across genres:
He was dragging something. Something long, wrapped in a blood-stained white sheet.