Going West: True Crime - The Knocker / Night Watch
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I'm Daphne Wulsenkroft and you're listening to Night Watch, a show of terrifyingly true
stories.
If you'd like your story told on the show, email it to watcher at nightwatchpod.com. This happened about four years ago, months before the COVID pandemic would keep me locked
inside my house for months on end, which was almost the last place I wanted to be after
this terrifying experience.
It was a November night, and the weather in eastern Massachusetts was growing colder and
colder by the day.
At the time, I lived by myself in a fairly nice suburb that was only a 10 minute walk
from the coast's edge, which both me and my golden retriever loved.
By the way, I was 36 at this time and I'm a woman.
My dog and I lived alone and I hadn't dated anyone in months, as my schedule was quite busy due to my job at Commute 2 in Boston.
I hadn't been looking for love either, as spending my nights in with my dog, cooking lavish meals, and watching Netflix or curling up with a good book was more than enough to keep me happy. And I could afford to take care of myself, living amongst families and older couples in a cul-de-sac
where the most exciting thing to happen on a normal basis
was someone's kid having a birthday party
or a neighbor redoing their yard.
All was quiet and calm and wonderful every single day.
My kitchen window faced the street,
but typically I was shielded by a large tree out in front
of it that had recently been taken down
due to a termite infestation.
But I didn't really mind because again,
the street was nice and calm.
And anyone who would see me pouring my nightly glass
of wine or doing dishes at the sink was a neighbor I knew
or a delivery driver
who would shortly be on their way out of our little street for good.
I didn't even feel the need to get blinds to cover the windows because I just didn't
see a point.
This particular night was the first terribly cold and wet night of the fall season, it
being very early November.
I was bundled up in wool and standing at the sink
as I often did after dinner,
washing my dish of warm butternut squash ravioli
that I cooked from scratch.
My golden retriever, her name is Lemon,
was curled up at my feet,
snoring away on the kitchen floor
to the banal sounds of lapping
water against both my bowl under the faucet and the windows around us from the medium
rain outside.
It was a brisk, cozy night, my favorite.
I must have been dozing off into my washing because suddenly, at the sound of nothing
that I heard, Lemon jumped from her slumber and barked, running around the kitchen
to investigate the noise. I dropped the dish in my sink in fright, completely startled by how
sudden she barked. This was the only reason I ever wished that I didn't live alone, was when
Lemon randomly barked at nothing after the sun went down when it was completely dark outside.
It didn't happen very often,
but it always scared me more than it should.
Was she sensing something I wasn't?
Smelling someone, hearing someone I couldn't?
I gave her a reassuring pet,
and with my heart pounding pounding I paused to listen.
Nothing all I could hear was the rain.
So then I wondered if maybe lemon was just sensing an oncoming storm, maybe there was
a strike of thunder that had blended in with the rain in my own head.
But almost as quickly as that theory came to my head,
it left.
Because very quickly, I felt I knew the real reason my dog barked.
I finished washing my dish and grabbed my dish towel to dry it when I finally did hear a
noise.
By then, Lemon was in the living room, investigating no doubt, as a quick hit the window in front
of the sink.
I jumped another very obvious startle but laughed immediately, thinking my neighbor had
come by for something.
As I looked into the window in front of me, all I could see was a reflection of myself,
as the dimmed kitchen lights were reflecting off the slightly foggy single pane glass of
my dated windows.
I put my whole face against the glass, cupping my eyes with my hands. But I couldn't see anyone outside,
just my grassy front yard and the street.
Still thinking it was my neighbor,
I headed to the front door, opened it,
and peeked out to the area of my kitchen window.
No one was out there.
I knew I heard a very obvious, as though someone's knuckle was wrapping against the glass to
get my attention.
But without seeing a cause for the noise, I started to try and rationalize what I heard.
Maybe it was a tree branch or something falling in the sink.
No, no, no. I know what I heard.
I locked the front door behind me
and reluctantly returned to the kitchen,
peeking out both windows to see an empty wet street
lit only by the scattered lamp posts down on the sidewalk.
My gut was telling me to go into the living room where every window and door was covered
by curtains and to stay away from the vulnerability that was standing in my kitchen at night.
I mean really, even down from the street, which was at least four car lengths away, you could
very clearly see me if I'm standing in my kitchen.
I'm completely exposed in there.
But I wanted to make a cup of tea
so I could start the next book on my list
and bundle up by the fire with lemon.
Again, these were my favorite type of nights.
But this would mean I would need to be in the kitchen
for a few more minutes.
So I sucked it up and I waited for the kettle to boil.
And while I did, I texted my next door neighbor, Janie, who's a jovial and lovely woman in
her 60s, whose house I could see from my kitchen window, as my kitchen was at the far left
side of my house, facing her house that she shared with her husband.
My driveway and her driveway were lined up right against each other with just a small
strip of grass between them.
When I looked over, I could see the blinking light from her living room TV through the
kitchen window, which told me that she was probably awake, and it was only 8pm anyway.
So I texted her something like, Hi, you didn't just come over, did you?
I heard a knock on the kitchen window, and it kinda spooked me.
As soon as I sent it, I felt ridiculously silly.
I heard one double knock, and I'm already texting my neighbor.
But just moments, seconds after I sent it, I heard the knock again, this time coming
from behind me.
I had been leaning my tailbone against the counter with the window looking over at Janie's
house right behind my back, and the window I heard the tap on before directly to my left above
the sink.
When I heard that knock again, although my body lightly jumped but terrified me inside,
I hesitated looking out the window this time.
Instead, I waited a second and then calmly walked out of sight into my living room to sit on the couch with lemon
officially trembling. I didn't want to tip whoever it was off that I was afraid.
From the couch, no one could see me,
so I wasn't exposed anymore. And I racked my brain for minutes in silence,
thinking about whether or not all my doors were locked
and knew that they were.
So I stayed in the safety of my enclosed living room,
listening for more sounds while I thought
about what to do next.
Lemon was fully alert by now,
looking around the room quickly
and jogging around the house,
which only put me more on edge. Minutes passed of pure silence and no reply from Janie,
but my heart was still pounding.
As Lemon returned to my side,
I considered texting or coldest at group chat about the
knocker, but a big part of me still
felt silly like I was overreacting.
Bringing it up to Janie was one thing, but telling the whole cul-de-sac without even
seeing anything felt downright ridiculous.
But every minute that passed without a response from Janie, the more afraid I was, and the more sure I was that whoever was outside my window was
not my neighbor.
Then suddenly I got an incoming call from Janie.
I don't know why but the fact that she was calling me almost put me at ease as though
she was outside and just trying to get my attention.
But deep down I knew it couldn't have been her.
If it was, why would she be knocking on my window and not my front door?
And why would she be out in the rain anyway?
I answered the phone and immediately could tell that Janie sounded concerned, saying she was sorry she didn't
get back right away but she had been on the phone with her daughter.
The tone of her voice made goosebumps rise across my body.
There was a worried urgency.
She said to me, Don't go outside.
Are your doors locked?
Janie has a security camera positioned in her carport, which is visible from my house.
The carport is directly on the other side of her kitchen window that I can see from
outside of my own.
And for context, the camera isn't pointed directly at my kitchen, which she told me
when she installed it some months prior.
But it does show part of the side of my house outside
where my kitchen is.
I actually liked this thought because you can see part of my driveway and it made me
feel safe.
Not that I felt unsafe enough to get cameras of my own, but still.
So Janie told me that when she got my text, she checked that camera to see if anyone came
up in my driveway, thinking it was probably just the Amazon guy if anyone.
And when she checked, someone showed up in the frame.
She quickly told me that she could see a person clad in dark clothes walking beyond her carport on the side of my house.
She said they walked around the back, came back to the front and out of sight by my kitchen,
and then slowly walked to the back of the house again before once again returning to the front.
before once again returning to the front. Somebody was going back and forth between my front yard and my backyard.
The same someone who knocked on my window twice.
I instantly felt unbelievable terror.
She assured me her husband was already calling police for me and asked me if I had
heard or seen anyone else. When I said no, she told me again to make sure my doors were
locked. And even though I thought they already were, I said screw it and ran around my house
in front of all of the open windows, making damn sure I was right.
Janie waited on the phone with me until police arrived just a few minutes later, and she
was able to share the video with me when they arrived.
It will be burned into my memory forever how slowly and curiously this stranger was walking
around my house. To think that I cupped my hands around the window and there was a stranger outside and
not my neighbor and I was in full view of them made me sick to my stomach and it still
does.
Unfortunately without the person's face being seen on the camera, we had no idea who
they were or what they wanted.
Other neighbors were asked to submit any camera footage they had, and one of my neighbors
even caught this person walking down our street that night, but couldn't catch their face
either.
The next day, I got curtains at Target and a security camera from Best Buy, but I asked
my sister to stay with me for a few nights to keep me company just in case.
It terrified me until I moved out a couple years later, and it still haunts me to this
day. For this next story, don't forget to check the backseat.
Years ago when I was a teenager, about 18, my best friend Lizzie and I headed out for
a road trip.
Living in the Los Angeles area, we wanted to spend the weekend in San Francisco
to explore a new place,
even though both of us had been, but never together.
We couldn't go until we finished classes
at our community college first,
but we both finished for the day at around 3 p.m.
So with a six or so hour drive ahead of us,
we'd arrive a couple hours after dark.
Even though neither of us liked the idea of driving up there, just us two girls with part
of the middle of nowhere portion of California being unlit by the sun, we wanted to utilize
all of Saturday, as it would be our only full day there.
And we had plans to go to various sites, restaurants,
and then later that night,
a concert to see one of our favorite alternative rock bands.
This being 2001, neither of us had cell reception
on our shitty Nokia's most of the drive,
but we didn't care.
We listened to music the whole way
in Lizzie's Honda CRV,
drinking gas station coffee and feeling young and free.
But all that coffee caught up to us about three quarters of the way through our drive.
The sunset was off in the distance as we pulled into a gas station in a very small city
that I won't mention for privacy, that's basically just surrounded by dairy farms and open valleys.
And McDonald's across the street just out of sight behind some trees.
When we got to the gas station, it was suspiciously empty for the time of evening.
One car was exiting as we pulled in, leaving us as the only ones there.
But I barely noticed because all I was thinking about was relieving myself and then getting
back on the road.
Lizzy parked next to a pump one row from the entrance and stuck the nozzle into the gas
tank, leaving it running while we headed inside.
I ran into the single room bathroom first while Lizzie perused the snacks.
And when I came out, she went into the bathroom and I told her I'd be in the car.
When I got into the car, I closed the door behind me and was immediately grabbed from
behind.
I couldn't scream because someone's hand was covering my mouth.
I remember their hand was hot and clammy and large and smelled like metal.
I had no idea what was going on or what to do, but I knew the person behind my seat wasn't
Lizzie.
The parking lot was still empty, so I couldn't surmise where this person came from or how
long they'd even been in the car.
The last time we'd stopped was two hours earlier, so there was no way this person had
been in there the whole time, sitting behind my seat since I'd been grabbing various things
from my duffel bag on the back seat throughout our drive.
After covering my mouth, the man told me to calm down and skid backwards to join him in the back seat.
I didn't know if his plans were to assault me back there or steal the car,
but I knew there was no way I was going to follow those instructions.
I thought fast of what to do, and it's almost as though the man could read my mind because
next he said, don't try anything, I have a weapon.
I didn't see or feel a weapon, all I could feel was his hand.
And since it was a CRV, so a medium-sized car, I could barely even
see in the rearview mirror from the way my head was being pulled, so I couldn't see
the man's face.
As I maneuvered to make it seem like I was following his demands, he proceeded to tell
me that me and my friend were pretty, and that he couldn't wait until
she got into the car so he could have his way with both of us.
I wanted to vomit and scream and cry, and with my phone sitting in the cup holder, I
wished it would miraculously self-dial 911 so they could hear what this guy was saying. I still couldn't speak with his disgusting, sweaty hand covering the lower half of my face,
so I simply nodded to show agreement in his overall request to look like I was cooperating.
I couldn't stop staring at the inside of the gas station's convenience store with
the corner of my eye, willing Lizzie
to see the struggle and get help from the attendant behind the counter.
But I could hardly see, and she still wasn't coming outside.
At this point, I had no choice but to follow his demands and get in the back seat. I took as much time as I could, and it's hard to tell exactly how long it actually
was, but it was probably around a minute or so until I was finally in the back seat.
The man had a balaclava on his face so I could only see his eyes, which were piercingly
blue.
I will never forget those eyes.
He appeared to be a large man, with his right hand concealed in his pocket.
Within a minute of me getting into the back seat, Lizzie made her way out of the convenience
store and towards the car, and the man ordered me to stay silent, still holding my face with his
hand, pulling the back of me towards his chest.
I could tell he was getting impatient because his knee was shaking like crazy.
I could feel his head consistently turning and his breath quickening like he wanted to
yell, get in the car at Lizzie, but he couldn't.
He just had to wait.
I could tell Lizzie hadn't seen us yet because she casually and leisurely finished pumping her gas
for at least 30 seconds before heading to the driver's side door.
Before she could get into her seat, a car drove into the parking lot from the entrance in front of us, driving right up to the pump
that was directly on the other side of ours. I couldn't believe the timing, it was truly
like divine intervention. It almost made me laugh out loud, but I couldn't do anything but plan
and be tactful. Knowing the car was unlocked, I risked it all as Lizzie was getting in, because I knew
if she entered the car and closed the door, we'd be screwed.
I needed to take the opportunity while this other person was getting out of their car.
For all I knew, they were going to do just what Lizzie did, put the pump into the tank
and go inside.
And then, it would be too late for us. With
the way the man was holding me, I was able to push my head up hard and whack him in the
chin before swinging my body around and kicking him in the chest, while simultaneously opening
the door behind me and falling out backwards screaming for help.
I probably scared the absolute daylights out of Lizzie who turns out hadn't the slightest
clue of what was going on.
She and the person on the other side of the pump came running to my aid while the stranger
man in the car went running across the street towards the McDonald's.
Lizzie's just screaming, what happened?
Repeatedly, while the other person, who ended up being a very nice woman, went running for
the gas station attendant to get help.
We never learned who the man was or how he did get into the car, but after racking our
brains for the rest of the drive to our San Francisco hotel, completely
shaken.
We determined that he must have been lurking nearby, watching as we entered the gas station,
coming up with some sick opportunistic plan as he crawled in the back of the car.
It's safe to say, I always check my back seat before getting into my car now,
as this experience still crosses my mind nearly every single day.
I'm sorry to anybody who had to listen to that while they were driving.
This next one makes me glad my babysitting days are far gone.
Last year, I was babysitting for my neighbors.
I do this a couple times a month for them
when the kids' parents wanna go out
because I live so close
and as a 20-year-old who still lives at home,
I could use the extra cash.
I usually really enjoy watching the kids who are 8 and 11 because they're easygoing and
not bratty like some of the other kids I've babysat for.
And their parents are nice and pay well, so whenever they ask, I'm happy to say yes.
One day, I was going to watch the kids and stopped over a few hours earlier on request
of the
mom.
I'll call her Missy.
Missy asked me to stop by so she could show me a broken window on the side of the house
while it was still light outside.
She didn't know how the window got broken, but assumed one of the avocados from the
tree above had gotten chucked at the window by one of the
wild California squirrels that usually run all around it, as it happened without she
or anyone else in the house hearing it.
When I look back on this day after it happened, I remember that as we went to her front yard
and she was telling me about the broken window and confirming my time to come over that night,
a man was sitting in his car across the street.
I made brief eye contact with him
and he looked like a normal guy in his fifties,
but his dingy car was out of place for our neighborhood.
When I met his gaze,
he looked away at a different house suspiciously quickly, rolled up his window, and started driving away.
Kind of weird, but I didn't think much of it.
Missy finished telling me about how she had called to get the window replaced, but that her handyman, Ronaldo, couldn't make it out until two days later. And I remembered his name was Ronaldo because it was the name of my childhood dog.
Again, I didn't think much of it, and I wasn't worried about the window because it was connected
to the laundry room, and she had covered it up with plastic for the time being, so it
didn't feel like a danger.
And maybe it was because I grew up on this street,
but I didn't feel unsafe about being in our neighborhood
enough to worry about a simple broken window.
So I headed back home, cleaned my room, hung out,
and waited for 6 p.m. to arrive.
It was February, so the sun was still setting early
just before the time I was supposed to head
to my neighbor's house.
But again, even as a 20-year-old girl, walking in the dark didn't worry me because I knew the street so well,
and was only a few houses down.
After I arrived, I made some quesadillas for the kids, and put on Back to the Future, which neither of them had seen before. I thought it would be a fun movie to watch with them for the first time, so we
cozyed up on the couch to watch, when suddenly I heard the doorbell ring.
It startled all three of us, as their house is older and has a doorbell chime that's
reminiscent of an old haunted mansion.
The bells visibly clang together in the foyer and continue to vibrate for minutes after
the bell has been pushed outside.
But it only heard it a few times since babysitting for them when we ordered a pizza or something. But we didn't order anything, so why someone would be ringing the doorbell at night was
really concerning to me.
But as the babysitter, I was the oldest in the house and therefore responsible for the
kids.
So, I took a deep breath and walked to the front door like I wasn't a little on edge.
The front door isn't visible from the living room, as it's straight down the hallway,
so the kids weren't in view of the door.
But still, I didn't want to open it straight away.
Again, since their house is old, they even have this ornate rectangular box on the door
that acts as kind of a peephole.
But it's about the size of an iPhone, but a little wider, with a bronze gate on the other side to act as a barrier.
This makes it so you can open it and have a conversation with the person on the other end whose appearance is slightly skewed by the vintage bronze gate.
It's like a peephole you can
talk through. Anyway, so I open it up to see a white man probably in his 50s standing on
the other side of the door with a smile on his face.
Hi, who are you? I asked him. I'm Jim. I'm here to fix a broken window.
I immediately thought back to my conversation earlier that day with Missy when she told me that a guy named
Ronaldo was coming to fix it,
but that it wouldn't be for a couple days.
And the whole reason I came over at all
was so she could show me it
since it wouldn't be fixed until after this babysitting gig.
My phone was back on the couch, but I considered going back for it to call Missy when the guy
said something like, I'll just be in and out, it's an easy fix, it's just at the back
of the house, correct?
From what I could tell through the peeper box, he was wearing a work uniform, but I still
found it so strange that he was reporting
after usual working hours.
It was after 7 by then.
I almost opened the door, but my gut clenched, telling me that something was off.
So I replied with something like, sorry, there's no broken window here.
Which was a lie, but even if he was telling the truth, I would rather have told Missy that I aired on the side of Conshen and have her reschedule.
Plus, she would have texted me if someone was able to come that night.
When I said this, the man on the other side of the door
started to get stern and his smile
vanished.
I know there's a broken window.
The woman who owns this house called my company and I'm here to do a job.
Just let me in.
Suddenly my heart was thumping in my chest because I completely stopped believing what
he was telling me.
So I decided to lie again.
Well, she's here, so let me get her for you.
One sec.
And then I closed the peeper box.
I ran into the living room in the lease I'm scared right now way to not freak the kids
out and grab my cell phone.
Then I headed to the den, which
is right next to the front door, and peeked through the curtains gently as I called Missy.
As the phone rang, I could see the man jumping into his car across the street and driving
off. And that's when I first wondered if what I could see of the guy resembled the person I saw
on the street earlier that day when Missy was telling me about the window.
Missy answered quickly and I immediately asked her if someone was scheduled to come fix the window
that night. When she said no and sounded confused, I explained the situation. She and her husband came home
right away and called the police. But I don't think they ever caught the guy or figured out
who he was and what he wanted. But they knew he wasn't really there to fix the window.
Our final story today is about what goes bump in the night, well, in the forest.
First off, I need you all to know that I don't believe in the paranormal.
Not that the story I'm about to tell can even be categorized as a paranormal
story. Though in all fairness, I don't know how I can describe it other than, it's unexplainable.
And I think the unexplainable can often be written off as such too easily. With the stamp
of the word paranormal, it almost becomes acceptable that we just don't know what it is that we saw or heard or witnessed
And we leave it as such for better or for worse
But all I know is that the story I'm about to tell
really scared me and
It really happened
My wife and I live in a very rural area of England over two hours by train from a major city
All our town has is small shops lots of farmland and dense wooded forests
It's peaceful here relaxed
Some would find the solitude eerie or unsettling, but I think it's brimming with charm
It has all my wife and I need in a village
There's a couple major rural roads that eventually reach larger areas,
and they also boarded the farms in woods I mentioned.
So as they're not often clogged with vehicles, my wife and I enjoy taking strolls alongside them
to enjoy the nature at just about any point in the year.
This evening in question was the perfect night for a post-dinner stroll, which we set off
on at around 10 o'clock.
Because of how rural our area is, there's basically no light pollution and the stars
are bright, but never bright enough to light our way.
And this has proven to be dangerous for cars, especially
because of the livestock in the area. Plus, it being rural, people drive drunk on it,
and it can be a proper disaster on occasion. So we usually walk on either side of the road.
The farm side or the wood side. The long, thin road itself that we enjoy walking along doesn't have lamp posts.
It's a country road in the middle of a field.
So, we always bring one of those large police flashlights with us to provide maximum light,
even though we don't always use them.
Sometimes, we allow our eyes to adjust to the sky's natural glow to experience optimum peace
before skittering
off to bed.
But we always bring it regardless, just in case.
We don't have to turn around on these walks because the road loops around and connects
to an even smaller road that leads back to the area where our house is, so it makes a
bit of a half circle shape.
It was a beautiful evening and my wife and I had nice conversations sprinkled with bouts of silence.
And after around 35 minutes, we were closing in on the end of our walk, with the small country road trailing off just ahead into our left.
And we were pretty glad to be finishing up because the night was getting cold, with each
word out of our mouths producing a cloud of steam.
As we headed up towards the turnout, we heard crunching sounds in the woods off to our right.
The woods are there our entire walk, but they're around 30-some-odd meters away, so not close
enough to feel like we're in them, but close enough to hear something at the edge of the
trees.
Especially since on this night, we were walking on the right side of the road where the woods
are located.
It was a rustling sound,
but not like an animal was running or even walking
because it was slow.
One step after the next, after the next.
A two-footed being.
Immediately, my wife and I got the same strange feeling
in our stomachs and we looked at each
other.
We'd had the flashlight on during the last couple minutes, anticipating heading down
the dirt country road, so I lifted the light and flashed it right at the source of the
noise.
As soon as I did, the sound ceased, almost as though it knew it had been caught.
All I can see is overexposed, blaring light against tree trunks and branches, so I go
lower, higher, left, right, trying to catch it.
I'm moving the flashlight so fast because I'm afraid I'll miss whatever it is.
I tell my wife to stand back and get on the other side
of the road in case it's a vicious animal,
as some of the animals inside those woods
include foxes and bats.
But this didn't sound like it could possibly be
either of those.
And then suddenly, I'm hit with the stark scent
of something rotten.
The best way I can describe it to this day is that it was as though you cooked boiled
eggs and broccoli and then left them in the kitchen for a week.
Just after the smell hits my nostrils, my wife lets out a scream.
I jump back and turn around to see what's happened to her, but she's just pointing
at the woods, asking me if I saw it.
I didn't see a thing or hear any new movements, so I was filled with confusion.
Until she said the words, I think it was a person up in the tree.
I hadn't pointed my flashlight high enough because I was sure whatever was making the
sound was down on the ground because like I said, it was the sound of two feet walking.
I shuffled backwards and pointed the flashlight up into the trees at her instruction, and
that's when I saw it.
Up at least 3 meters into the tree, taller than a person would usually go up.
I could see someone crouching, someone big.
And the reason I mentioned the paranormal earlier is because whatever this thing was,
my wife was wrong.
It didn't look like a person.
The best I could describe it, it looked like a creature with human features.
Two legs, two arms, bald, hairless head.
I didn't shine my light on it long enough to glean more details because the amount of
fear that took over, knowing we were the only people out on the road, that we were still
minutes from home, and that we were practically at this thing's mercy, I didn't know what
to do.
I grabbed my wife's hand and sprinted as fast as possible back home.
I didn't know if this thing was following us or what, but I knew we had to keep running.
Every time we turned around, there was no one behind us, but we didn't want to stop
until we got inside.
If you saw us running up our street that night, you'd probably think we were mental, but
we knew what we both saw,
and it makes me feel better that she saw it too.
It just solidifies my own memory.
We haven't figured out what was sitting in the trees that night, looking down at us.
But it's only been about a month since this happened.
Everyone that we asked down at the pub was astounded to hear such a story, especially
as our town is so safe and quiet.
All I know is that we won't be walking down that road along those woods anytime soon.
In today's episode, you heard The Knocker by Ginger, The Road Trip by Lana.
He wanted to get in by Jamie, and what was that thing in the tree by James?
Each story on Night Watch is told with the permission of the Experiencer.
If you have a story for the show, send it to Watcher at NightwatchPod.com.
Nightwatch is a Dark West Productions podcast, hosted and produced by me, Daphne Wulsinkroft.
Also produced by Heath Merriman, original score by Daniel Amon.
Follow us on social media, at Nightwatch Stories, and tune in every Thursday for a new episode. You