Let's Not Meet: A True Horror Podcast - 2x11: Spider - Let's Not Meet
Episode Date: August 26, 2019Stories in this episode: Headlights - candidcavansite He paid with bloody money, and tried to lure me out of the office. - Chellish0ne Pretty sure a spider saved my life - brittjen1988 The C...rumbling Barn and the Crazy Farmer - Taylor Hayes Follow Let's Not Meet: Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/433173970399259/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/letsnotmeetcast Website - http://letsnotmeetpodcast.com Patreon - http://patreon.com/letsnotmeetpodcast  Twitch - https://www.twitch.tv/crypticcounty  Â
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My name is Andrew Tate, and this is season 2,
Episode 11 of Let's Not Meet a True Horror Podcast.
This was around two years ago after going to see a movie with a couple of friends.
I live in a small town, so the nearest, decent movie theater is about 40 minutes away.
I'm always the driver, because my car is the most functional for those long distances,
and I'm also kind of a softy when it comes to doing favors.
This also means I'm always the last one to get home for the night and it's usually very early
in the morning when I do finally get home. On this specific night it was pretty late when we got back.
Like I said, it's a small town, so when it gets late the roads are pretty much dead.
There's an order that I drop everyone off in, the furthest from my house, to the closest.
Logically, we're pretty spread out from each other.
If you've ever been to a rural town, you'll know that there are a lot of twists and turns
on back roads and things like that.
I drop off one of my friends, and there was only my boyfriend left.
I drove towards my boyfriend's house and stopped at a tea intersection along the way.
The road in front of us was lit with street lights, but the further you looked down either
side of the road, it was dark.
There were no cars anywhere, as I expected.
I turned onto the road and headed towards my boyfriend's house.
Not even a minute down the road I saw headlights
in my rear-view mirror. I don't know when they'd shown up, but I remember noticing them
because the headlights looked like the ones on a friend's car. They were four lights
all around and arranged like the corners of a trapezoid. For a moment I thought it could be my friend, because the lights were so distinct, but the
vehicle looked much larger.
I brushed it off and continued driving.
We were on one of the main roads, so it didn't surprise me that they continued to follow
us as we went.
After a while, I turned onto a back road that was pretty hilly, but it was
the shortest way to get to my boyfriend's house. The vehicle also turned onto that road,
but it still wasn't that weird. My boyfriend lives in one of an assortment of ranch houses,
so we've had a lot of people follow behind us to that section of the town, and
then eventually taper off into their separate driveways.
They were pretty far behind us, so I didn't think much of it.
Sure enough, they kept taking every turn that we took.
The closer we got, my boyfriend and I even began to joke about how long they'd been behind
us. It was only when we turned into his driveway that we grew concerned. He has a long driveway
that goes up a hill. I reached the top and could see the vehicle slow down at the end
of his driveway. And then it turned in and began to slowly drive up.
Very slowly.
My boyfriend sat in my car as we looked at each other
because we didn't know what the fuck was going on.
As it got closer, we went through every possible person
that it could have been.
We even considered my sister
who could have recognized my car and wanted to scare us.
It was a reach since no one we brought up owns a car that looks like that, but I was praying
that that was the answer.
They reached the top and parked maybe 10 feet behind me.
Then they turned off their headlights and sat there.
It was too dark to be able to make out what kind of car it was.
I kept turning in my seat to see if someone was walking around
or if I could catch a glimpse of their vehicle.
We sat for a long time,
trying to figure out what the hell was happening.
We didn't dare step out of the car.
And I kept the engine running just in case I needed to make a break for it.
Although they were parked directly behind me, blocking the driveway.
I'm not sure how long we sat there for, but there was a good while that nothing happened.
Then I heard a creaky door open and shut.
I instinctively pressed the lock door button, even though my car was already locked.
I watched as a middle-aged or older man came into view in my side mirror.
As I watched him step closer, I leaned away from the window and towards my boyfriend
in the passenger seat, as the
man walked up to my window.
He had a pretty big gut, and his silver hair was pulled into a ponytail beneath a red
cap.
He cupped his hands and peered into my car.
I can still remember him looking right at me, so vividly.
His expression was blank.
I couldn't move.
Then he stood back up.
He pointed back towards his vehicle and said something that I couldn't make out.
And then just turned around and left.
He didn't turn his headlights back on until he reached the road.
When he turned, I could see the dark outline of a truck.
My boyfriend and I sat there stunned for a long time.
My boyfriend and his stepdad drove behind me to my house to make sure that no one followed
me there either.
He hugged me before I went inside and said that he'd give me an update the next day. No one we knew could explain it or knew who he was. I haven't seen
a similar truck since then, but if I notice a car that has been following me for a while,
no matter what it looks like, I make sure to take a few extra turns away from my house
until they've turned onto a different road. I can't help
the sneaking suspicion that things may have gone a lot differently if I were alone.
I am 23, 5 foot 2, and female. I am by no means intimidating, even when I try. I work two days of night audit for a hotel in a heavy populated area of Houston, Texas, with
zero security. If you know anything about Texas, you know, it can never be good news.
With all of that being said, last Tuesday, I was alone
playing stupid games online and listening to Ryan's roses to pass the time.
Around 1am, this man with a craze looking his eyes wanders in. Now I have cameras right next to
the desk, and I saw zero movement before the doors slid open. Anyways, he walks up to the desk
and refuses to look me into the eyes
until I ask him if he's doing all right. He snaps his head up, looks me right in the eyes,
and says, no, I'm not doing all right at all. I'm kind of taken aback, so I apologize and ask
if there's anything that I can do. He declines, and then asks if he can get a drink from the little
shop next to the desk.
I tell him, yeah, of course, go ahead and get whatever you'd like, the prices are listed
on the wall.
Before he walks away to go get a drink, he makes sure to tell me, now don't worry, I have
money, I would never steal from you like that.
I didn't really say anything, just kind of smiled at him and nodded understandably. Well, he wasn't lying. He for sure had money. He handed me two bloody dollar bills.
So now the alarm bells are ringing in my head. He starts apologizing and asking me if I'm
mad at him. And if he's upset me. All of which I say, no sir, I'm not even a little bit upset. I was getting
bored here anyways. I suddenly became painfully aware of how empty the entire hotel was at
that moment. He stands there for a minute, takes a drink, and then makes eye contact
for two seconds before he tells me that he needs me to call the cops. I start shaking, but somehow manage not to let off that I was absolutely terrified.
I get the police dispatcher on the line and begin giving all of my information in our
location.
Then from the background, he starts saying that he was almost hit by a car while walking
in the middle of the road.
Then the dispatch asks to speak to him,
so I hand the guy the phone and he starts looking around while describing himself.
He stops looking around and looks right into my eyes and says,
yeah, I'm going to kill myself on the freeway.
Now, I don't take that lightly.
No matter who says it, an audible gasp left my lips, and it's like it woke up something
inside of him, the way his eyes lit up.
He then hangs up the phone and slams it down on the counter in front of my computer,
and looks at me.
I try to make small talk asking what's going on and how he's really doing tonight.
But no, he avoids those questions and starts asking me some questions about the hotel
like, what's your nightly rate tonight?
He goes from harmless questions to asking me if I'm all alone and when my manager will
be back. And if I'm all alone and when my manager will be back.
And if I lock all the doors around me.
Now I'm afraid.
I pick up what he's putting down.
And I want no part in whatever he was planning if he managed to get me out from behind that
desk.
I switch gears on conversation and tell him that he's more than welcome to take a seat
in one of the comfortable
chairs in the lobby until the police arrive. He thanks me and asks me again for about
the 20th time if I'm mad at him. He then sits down and I get even more uneasy because
he starts looking around anxiously. You know that looks someone gets whenever they are working up the nerve to do something?
They just haven't yet.
Yeah, that's the look and the vibe he was giving off.
Around that time my brain is finally piecing together what is actually happening.
Another guest pulls up right in front of the lobby.
His face immediately drops any excitement, and he almost looks mad.
In comes this woman and her son, who couldn't have been more than 12 years old.
They come up, no reservation, so it's now a walk-in.
Her son starts whispering something to her that neither of us can make out.
So he says it louder.
Mom, didn't we just see him walking around the hospital?
My blood runs cold.
She tells her son to hush and locks eyes with me.
I hand her paperwork to sign.
She takes that opportunity to secretly ask me if I'm doing okay, if the police need
to be called and if I'm concerned.
I tell her, yes, I'm terrified, but the cops are on their way.
I can see him straining to hear what we're saying, so I stop and tell her about breakfast
and all that good stuff.
She tells me that she won't be leaving me alone and that she will stay with
me until the cops come because something doesn't feel right.
I'll never forget her face and her heart. After the cops had come and taken him away to
the mental hospital I presume, she comes back in from just outside the doors where she also
called the police. She comes up and tells me that they just outside the doors where she also called the police.
She comes up and tells me that they just left the hospital up the road visiting her sister
and passed him on their way out, where he was wandering around the hospital parking lot
with his head down.
They came straight to the hotel.
He beat them here.
She swore he walked here.
But there's no freaking way. he walked here and beat them.
She said something felt off as soon as she walked in and saw him.
She told me he likely was trying to lure me out by making me feel bad for him.
Whatever he was planning, I never want to find out.
I work second shift at my company, normally 5pm to 1am.
On the street I work there are two ways for me to get home.
To the left takes me over some train tracks, And there's a 24 hour burger place and a Mexican fast food place that is still open till
3am. The police station is maybe a 10 minute drive from the tracks. To the right takes
me straight to the highway which gets me home. If I go to the left, I have to take side
streets to get to the highway, as it doesn't
connect for a few blocks, or go back over the tracks and pass my workplace to get to the
highway. I hope it didn't lose you there. I wanted the story. Tonight I got out a bit
early, about 1230, lucky me. I was hungry so instead of going straight home, I decided to go out for burgers.
Usually, I have my window rolled down, listening to music on my phone.
As I close my car door, I realize a rather large spider.
Okay, it was the size of my thumb, but that's still kind of a big spider to me.
It spun its web outside between my window and my side mirror.
Spiders freak me out. Since it was outside, I contented myself to leave my windows rolled up and
just blast my music. As I am pulling out, I see the train barriers come down. I'm not foolish enough
to try and beat it so I pull up and wait at the barrier.
As I'm waiting, I see movement out of the corner of my eye and that's when I see him.
A haggard man, maybe somewhere in his thirties with dirty hair and clothes, standing next to my car.
We have a few homeless people around, but they usually don't bother you if you ignore
them and don't talk to them.
I figure he'll go away.
He walks to the driver's side and tries to open my car door.
My car has automatic locks that activate pretty much as soon as the car is on.
Thank goodness.
He starts banging on my car door window. He starts screaming for me
to let him in. I reach for my phone, but of course I'm panicking and can't get it out
of my purse. And then immediately drop it down the side of the seat. I'm scared he's
going to break the glass or something at this point. I have a foldable nightstick in my car, but in my panic, I forgot it was
there. I finally get a hold of my phone in dial 911. I'm screaming at him to back
off, and that I've called the police. He's going around trying to get into my car via
the other doors, screaming at me the whole time, calling me about every name in the book, saying,
get out of the car. I'm giving the dispatcher my location and it feels like
forever for the cops to show up, but was likely only a few minutes. The guy in the
meantime is crawling on top of my car, beating it with his fists. Of course now
the train has left and the barrier is up,
but I don't want to risk killing this guy by flooring it over the tracks. I'm pretty sure that's
at least manslaughter if he dies. Thankfully I see cop lights. He runs off and one of the responding
officers gives chase. The other cop tells me to pull in at the burger place and clumps me down.
gives chase. The other cop tells me to pull in at the burger place and clumps me down.
It takes all the information that I can remember in my panic state. He then says off-handedly something to the effect of, good thing your windows aren't down. And that's when it hit me.
The only reason they weren't down was because of that spider on my car.
They didn't find the guy, as there are a crap ton of places to hide, and it's pretty rough terrain at night.
But they did say that they would step up patrols around that area.
The cops assured me that I did everything right that I could have done.
I decided to skip eating out, as I wasn't in the mood anymore and just went home, to
have a freak out and methodically quadruple check all my doors and windows.
I don't see what his deal was, but creepy guy who tried to get into my car lets not meet
and of the spider that may have inadvertently saved my life.
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it, Taylor Hayes.
She sent over the story in audio format, and she did such a great job that we decided
to include it in this episode.
So listen now to the crumbling barn and the crazy farmer by listener Taylor Hayes.
I have changed the names of my friends who are with me on this horrible night for their
safety.
To give you all some context, I am a 22-year-old baby-faced, skinny red-headed girl living
smack dab in the middle of the Midwest.
At first glance, I look like a wholesome and harmless young girl, and that's probably
why people are usually surprised to find out that I am much braver and much more adventurous
than most.
You wouldn't believe it, just looking at me, but I have much more confidence and charisma
than anyone person could ever possibly need.
Over the years, I've become incredibly capable of keeping my
cool and diffusing difficult situations, and I think it was that skill of mine
that was the only reason we made it out alive that night. Last spring, I graduated
from the University of Iowa with a double major in creative writing and
journalism, as well as a minor in history. Over the past year and a half, I've mostly been doing boring and
menial freelance work. I've written a few articles that have been
published in a couple different types of publications, but mostly
I just write the summaries you read on the back of books. In January
I was hired to write an article about urban exploration, and that
must have been how they found me.
A few months later, I received a phone call from a major publishing company that publishes those ghost adventure type books,
asking if I would be interested in writing a book about urban exploration in Midwestern ghost towns.
Obviously, I said yes, and within a week the contract was signed and I began writing.
Urban exploration has
been a huge hobby of mine for nearly a decade. Over the past eight years, I've traveled all
across the country, exploring all types of abandoned locations. As a teenager, I never realized
the gravity of the legal repercussions or the risk I was taking on my personal safety by carelessly running around and rotting crumbling buildings.
I play it a lot safer now. I almost always only explore when the sun is out. I always wear hardhat and goggles,
close-toe shoes, long pants, and long sleeves. I also always have a backpack with a crowbar, hammer, nails, rags, bobby pins for picking
locks and a first aid kit.
As a teenager, I only explore it in the dark.
Though it can be more discreet, darkness makes it difficult to accurately assess the condition
and safety of a structure, or to determine whether it is actually abandoned or just a really
rough shape. Urban exploration
while the sun is out is safer by a significant margin, though it is much less discrete.
Even though my trespassing and breaking and entering has gotten me into more legal trouble
than I care to admit, I would much rather take the legal risk over any other any day of
the week. I should have stuck to that rule of over any other any day of the week.
I should have stuck to that rule of mine, then this never would have happened.
I only have one more ghost town to visit before I finish the book.
Though I was given a list of specific locations to write about,
I was also told to independently search for more farmhouses, barns,
and things of that nature to photograph.
So, on all of our long road trips, we always take the back roads and try to find places that
fit that description.
A few weeks ago, at around 130 in the morning on a Sunday night, my friends and I were
driving down an old country highway, surrounded by seemingly endless land that appeared
to have been lost to time.
There were four of us in the
car. Me, my friend Haley, my photographer Jesse, and my friend Jacob, who always
did all the driving. Jacob was driving us back to our hometown after a long
weekend of sketchy motels, trespassing, and a stressful legal situation. I was
luckily able to talk our way out of. We all noticed the barn as we drove past and Jacob quickly slammed on his brakes and
reversed so we could get a better look.
About a quarter of a mile off the highway, there was a large decaying barn.
Most of the barn's roof was caving in around an enormous hole in the middle of the roof.
The windows were boarded up and the siding was barely hanging onto the barn's bones. We could see nothing between the highway and the horizon, except this barn. Typically,
tall crops grow in every Midwestern field at the end of July, but the only thing we could
see for miles was a dark, empty wasteland. The four of us all nodded at each other, and we pulled off to the shoulder of the highway,
where we decided that I would inspect it, and then let the group know if it was safe enough
to explore.
I grabbed all of my belongings and headed towards the barn.
It wasn't a long walk, and I wasn't concerned about getting caught, considering the fact
that we hadn't seen another car, street lamp, town, or even the slightest indication of civilization for over an hour.
I carefully approached the barn and circled its perimeter, inspecting how safe this heartbreakingly
decayed barn was.
I was surprised to find that the main barn door had been taken off, and when I peeked inside,
the inside looked to be structurally sound.
I walked around a bit, checking the beams, the wood, and other things like that before
I stepped outside, flashed my light at the car three times.
Our secret affirmative signal.
From what we could tell, the barn seemed to have once been used to store hay and livestock.
It had a large, open ground floor that was now covered in
dust, hay, and time. Some of the wooden floorboards were rotting from slight water damage,
and parts of the roof had fallen through the hole. On each side of the room, there were staircases
that led to balconies where a few old bails of hay still remained. Underneath the staircases, against the wall, were stables that we assumed
once housed horses. It was in rough shape, but we thought we'd be fine if we were careful.
We were so wrong. As we were inspecting, I jumped and I yelped, when a yellow light accompanied
by heavy footsteps began flashing through the windows of the barn as a deep voice yelled,
hey!
For a moment we were all paralyzed, standing like a petrified forest in the center of the
barn, though my friends are aware of what they are getting into when they do these things
with me, I always have and I always will take the blame and assume full responsibility
for all of our actions.
Jacob was the first to move, throwing me his keys in wallet before sprinting up the stairs to hide behind a bail of hay. Haley and Jesse were able to snap out of our trance and run to the
farthest stable, closing the door, unseen. But I just stood there in the center of the barn,
exposed to the world by the empty doorway
directly in front of me.
I realized that we weren't alone.
We were trespassing.
And in the state where I live, it is well within a property
owner's legal rights to shoot and kill any trespassers
on their land.
I couldn't move.
I just stood there, holding Jacob's keys and
wallet when the spotty yellow light flickered again. I don't blame my friends for hiding.
Maybe I would have to if I wasn't frozen in fear, wondering whatever horror I was about
to deal with. And then eventually the lights and footsteps just stopped.
I waited in that spot for what felt like forever.
I don't know how long it really was.
My friends peaked out at me once or twice, but the look of fear that I'm sure was painted
on my face told them all they needed to know.
Don't move a muscle.
I stood and I waited.
Just waited for something to happen. for anything to happen, but nothing
did.
After a while, I thought nothing would.
I slowly crept towards the entrance of the barn, and as I leaned out of the doorframe
and looked to my left, I heard a very familiar noise off to the right, the sound of a shotgun
cocking.
I shivered and slowly turned my head to seen incredibly tall middle-aged man in dirty
overalls, and of course, a cocked shotgun in his huge hands aiming at the ground.
As calmly as I could, I dropped Jacob's belongings and raised my hands in the air.
As I carefully stepped out of the barn's doorway,
the father immediately took a step forward
and pointed his shotgun directly at my chest
without any hesitation.
In an effort to maintain my cool
and not get murdered by some Midwestern hick,
I said to him in a shaking, panicked voice,
please don't shoot, I don't want any trouble.
My name is Taylor Hayes.
I am unarmed and I have no ill intentions.
I thought your barn was abandoned.
I didn't realize I was trespassing.
I'm so sorry.
Please don't shoot.
I'm so sorry.
And I figured that would generate some sort of response from him.
I waited for him to lower his shotgun or say something or even shoot me, but we just stood
there staring at each other with a shotgun aimed point blank at my heart.
Based on how long the clock in the car said that we were at the barn, we stood there staring
at each other in silence for the longest 20 to 30 minutes of my life.
I couldn't move. I couldn't speak. I had no idea what to do.
After a while I found myself wishing that he would just shoot me. He wasn't moving. He wasn't
speaking. He was just holding that shotgun and staring. And I don't know how, but somehow I mustered up the courage to speak again.
Please don't shoot.
I'm going to pick up my car keys and then I'm going to back up slowly towards the highway
and leave your property.
I'm so, so sorry.
Please don't shoot.
Is that okay?
He still said nothing, but after a minute I took a deep breath, and I decided to slowly
back away anyway, not taking my eyes off of his dark silhouette.
After a few steps, he lowered his shotgun, though he remains still, still staring at me.
I walked backwards towards the highway with my hands up, my sweaty palms holding Jacobs
belongings the entire way up to the road.
He only turned around to leave when I reached the highway.
I stood on the gravel road as I watched him walk away into the darkness.
After a few paces, he turned around and waved to me.
I don't know why.
I don't know why I waved back.
When he had completely left my field of vision, I ran to Jacob's car and started the engine
before taking out my phone to frantically message our group chat, telling them to get the
hell out of the barn as fast as possible.
Shortly thereafter, I saw three bodies sprinting towards me, while I sat in the driver's seat
of Jordan's car, smoking a spigarette and absolute shock.
As soon as they flung themselves into the car, the tires squealed
as I sped back onto the highway, very quickly reaching almost 90 miles an hour. After a
few miles, Jacob, who was sitting in the passenger seat, yelled at me to slow down, and when
I refused, teens sisted, I pull over. He drove the rest of the way home as we all sat in
silence. I don't know exactly how much of that nightmare.
My friends clearly heard our saw, but I know they heard enough to know what really happened.
We didn't talk about it in the car on the way home though. We still haven't talked about it.
The book is almost done and this definitely isn't going to stop me from future urban exploration,
but I will never deviate from my
plan or explore anywhere abandoned at night ever again.
So, Crazy Farmer, who almost shot me for exploring his crumbling barn, let's not meet again.
Thank you for listening to this week's episode of Let's Not Meet a True Horror Podcast.
This week you have heard headlights by Candid Cavan's site.
He paid with blood money and tried to lure me out of the office by a cellished one.
Pretty sure a spider saved my life by Brit Gen 1988 and finally the crumbling barn and the
crazy farmer read by Listener Tamer Hayes.
I'll see you guys next week for a brand new episode of Let's Not Meet.
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