Let's Not Meet: A True Horror Podcast - 3x07: Hotel Basement - Let's Not Meet
Episode Date: December 23, 2019Stories in this episode: My first internet "friend" - FeralTaxEvader "Deliverance" in Alaska. - AnonymousDude90 The Hotel Basement - JohnnyCalibre 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 Merch - https://www.teepublic.com/user/letsnotmeetÂ
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My name is Andrew Tate and this is season three episode seven of Let's Not Meet, a true
horror podcast.
So I've been wanting to post this for a while, but a combination of technical difficulties
and residual fear have been preventing me from doing so thus far.
Now it's the middle of the night, and I've got
nothing better to do, so I'm going to try and get this off my chest. I grew up with my parents
who were reasonable, loving people, but who were also more than a little paranoid when it came to
the internet. Anything that allowed anonymous communication in any form was banned, point blank from the household.
Even club penguin, if you know what that is, wasn't allowed because you could chat in
it.
Naturally, when I got my first laptop at 12, which was a piece of crap, the first thing
I did was to start trying to talk to people online.
I wasn't going into chat rooms or anything because my parents warning still resonated with me, but I wasn't avoiding contact either. I ended up making
a deviant art account. I know, it's cringy. Well, I didn't do much posting there as I lack
artistic talent. In spite of this, however, I was contacted via private message by a guy who will call Joker,
because his profile picture was of the Joker.
That should have been a warning sign in and of itself, honestly.
Joker just started talking to me out of the blue.
I think I had commented on one of his pieces or something, and he reached out to me to
thank me for my kind words.
We started talking.
It turned out we had a lot of things in common.
We played some of the same games, liked some of the same cartoons, etc.
He seemed really, really nice.
I think it was maybe a weaker to in that the first uncomfortable thing happened, even if
I didn't exactly think much of it at the time.
The two of us shared a somewhat mis-entropic view of the world, so there were a lot of
dark jokes passed back and forth between us.
Sometime about a week after we first started messaging, he casually mentions that he thinks
the world would be better off without him.
I sent him a sad face and assured him that that was not the case, as I quite liked talking
to him.
He didn't say anything more about it then, so I assumed that that was it.
It wasn't.
Joker talked about suicide a lot. His talking about it quickly morphed from passing commentary to long graphic rants about
how much he hated himself and how he wanted to die and what method would be the best for
him to do.
I spent hours talking him down over chat, terrified that one day I wouldn't be able to
do enough and he'd actually do it.
His messages started to get creepy in a different way, though.
He started telling me how grateful he was to have me and how no one ever cared about him
as much as I did, how important I was to him, how he couldn't live without me, how he'd
just die if he were to ever lose
me.
He was obsessed.
Well, one day, a couple of months in, my laptop breaks.
There wasn't too bad, but it still took a couple of days before everything was back in
working order.
I logged back into DeviantArt to find dozens of messages, all from Joker. They
started out normal enough, but quickly became frantic after I didn't respond. The last
message he sent was along the lines of, I can't take this anymore, followed by a link to
a picture. The image was of a pair of slit wrists.
The cuts were deep and fairly fresh looking, with red inflamed edges, and the beginnings
of an ugly scabbing just beginning to settle over the top.
I was horrified.
I quickly messaged him back, terrified that I had just lost a friend, and he responded.
I thought I lost you, he said. I thought you'd left me. I couldn't handle the pain without you.
Don't ever do that to me again. I said I wouldn't, and he seemed relieved.
He only got worse from then on. It reached a point where practically all
of our conversations consisted of him either professing his obsession with me, threatening
suicide, or both. The stress was keeping me up at night. I was terrified that one day,
soon I'd open up the chat and see nothing. I was utterly convinced it was my job to keep this guy alive and that was
failing miserably. Joker kept escalating until one day, nearly a year in, he finally said something
that frightened me so badly. I had to leave. Joker started talking about how I was the last good person left on this miserable planet. He waxed poetic
about how much he wanted to kill himself and said that he'd finally found a way to truly be happy.
He said the only way he'd ever be able to find happiness was in killing himself and taking me with him. That way we would always be together, free from
the cruel weight of the world. He started going into very detailed, very graphic descriptions
of how he'd kill me. A lot of them involved carving out my heart and clenching it to
his chest and laying beside me as he took his own life as well.
I was terrified, enough so that I did what I should have done a long time ago and deleted
that account.
For years following that incident, I never spoke to anyone online.
Even to this day, actually, there's still a lingering sense of dread when it comes to
an online interaction.
So to the boy who I thought was my first internet friend, I don't know what your deal was.
Whether you were mentally ill or purposefully malicious or some combination of the two,
but whatever the case may havea, Alaska, in May.
The incident I'm going to describe was a wrong place, wrong timing, completely unprovoked
situation.
Which no one believes.
Another note, I was still only 20 when this incident occurred and could not legally own a pistol
yet.
Also I was in the army and if you live in the barracks you have to keep your weapons
in the arms room so it's not like it's convenient to get that out and carry.
As compared to a guy living off post who can keep his gun in a safe closet.
I know people will wonder why I wasn't carrying and those are the reasons, but anyways, here's my story.
On the night of Cinco de Mayo, I attended a party at a friend's house in North Pole, Alaska.
North Pole is about 20 to 30 minutes outside of Fairbanks.
It's a somewhat rural community, lots of houses
that are on one to two acre lots, and mostly all dirt roads off of the main road.
I was the designated driver that night and drove four of my friends, but three of the friends
that I brought decided that they were going to spend the night at that person's house instead
of going back to the barracks. Only one of the friends that wasn't drinking a lot
decided that he wanted to go back to the barracks
when I was ready to go.
We ended up leaving about 1.30 AM.
As we were pulling into the front gate,
we got a call that there had been a fight at the party.
They said that after the fight,
everyone was going to go home instead of staying the night
and continuing drinking. They asked us all to come back and pick them up, but said that they
had went to a different friend's house that lived in the same area because everyone had
to leave after the fight.
Well, the GPS signal doesn't work that well once you get outside of Fairbanks. When
we went to the address that was given, it came up as being in the
middle of the road. So we took a turn down a side road to turn around and try to get
service so that we could make a call to figure out what house it was. By this time, it was
around 2.30am. As we turned down the road, there was an old red mini-van with fog lights mounted on top, just
idling there, with two guys that looked to be in their late 20s inside.
I remember thinking that it looked like something you'd see in a TV show or a horror movie,
just a really creepy van, especially at almost 3 in the morning.
We had to pass them to turn around, and they looked at us in a way that gave us all of
very bad feeling.
So we turned around and then we had to pass them again to pull out onto the main road.
As we passed, the driver was leaning his head out of the window like he wanted us to stop
so that they could ask for something.
Being that it was almost 3am, we knew it was probably best to keep driving.
My friend wasn't able to get a hold of anyone, so he tried mapping it out again.
The GPS was delayed due to the poor service, though, and we missed the turn again.
We saw a small clearing to pull over, so we pulled over to the side of the road to verify where we were
compared to the street that we missed.
About ten seconds later, the Red Minivan with fog lights pulled up next to us on my driver's
side and rolled down the window.
I rolled down my window and they initiated conversation by asking if we had seen a white
dodge pick up. We said that we
hadn't, and they said, okay, thanks. We then asked if they knew where Meadow Roo, the
street that we were looking for, was. They said it was the first street on the
left. If we headed back the way we just came. We were suspicious, but when we
looked at the GPS, it looked like that was the road.
We found out later that the road was on both sides of the main road.
Note, locals outside of Fairbanks tend to not like the active duty military guys.
The military guys stick out a lot due to the lack of beard and long hair and having the military haircut.
We started heading toward the Meadow Roo, which was about half a mile away,
and saw them pull out and start heading that way behind us.
We made the turn into what we thought was Meadow Roo,
and this road was a little bumpy dirt road,
and immediately forks off into two directions.
One side goes straight, and up a slight hill,
the other side is off to the left and drops down about two feet,
then flattens out.
We turned left and dropped down the small incline.
The road was narrow, only big enough for one car,
and lined with trees on both sides for a good distance.
The first thing we noticed was a dead end sign, and that's when we started to get worried.
We drove about 20 feet, and then we see the minivan with the fog lights turn in and drop
down behind us.
At this point my blood turned cold, and I felt a sinking filling in my stomach.
I knew at this point that they were following us.
I tried to be positive and hoped for a split second that they'd hang back and turn off
at the first driveway.
But we hadn't seen a driveway yet.
But then we saw them speeding up.
Again, this is a bumpy dirt side street, and there's no reason to be going fast. I started speeding up. Again, this is a bumpy dirt side street, and there's no reason to be
going fast. I started speeding up, and they slammed into the back of my car, backed
off, then rammed me again. A few seconds later, we made it to a small clearing like a cul-de-sac
that was in the dirt. I had enough room to pull forward and then reverse myself back so
that I was facing the direction I had just came. While I was doing this, they stopped
and blocked the one-lane dirt road. They hopped out of the car and one of them shouted.
The St. Meadow Room Motherfucker get the fuck out of the car. The one guy had positioned himself directly in front of my car about 10 to 15 feet away
between the trees and the van.
The other guy started walking up to my passenger's side where my friend was.
They kept shouting at us to get out, but I gunded right at the guy in front of me, trying
to run him over.
He managed to jump out of the
way. I thought for sure there wouldn't be enough room between his midivan and the
trees, and figured we'd get stuck. But we had no guns, so there wasn't a better choice.
I thought we'd have to bell out and run into the woods and hide, but to my surprise we
squeezed through. It was such a tight fit
that both of my mirrors collapsed in. I then sped out of there, got onto the main road and headed
for home. I had seen a state trooper not long before all of this, not too far down the road.
I was scared to death of being chased again and then run off the road at higher speeds.
scared to death of being chased again and then run off the road at higher speeds. So instead of slowing down, I blew past the state trooper while doing 90 and a 45, not
exaggerating.
Since that is extreme speeding, I thought I'd get the troopers' attention, but for whatever
reason, it didn't.
There was only one turn on the whole way back, and when I slowed down to make it, the van was nowhere
in sight. I flew back at 90 mph all the way just to be safe.
The next day, we had to tell our friends what happened. Nobody believed us, not one person.
They thought we didn't feel like driving all the way back to pick them up, so we made
up a story to get out of it.
The guy who had invited us all over originally said, if we were serious that we needed to
go file a police report with the Alaska State Troopers.
So I went to file a police report at the State Troopers office in town.
We filed the report, and after giving our story to the trooper, he told us to wait,
and he left us in the room. About 15 minutes later he came back in, and told us to tell
the truth. Confused we asked him what he meant. He said his theory was that we were drunk
driving around late at night after Singu de Mayo, and we had plowed into the van that we described.
He said, he thought the owner heard what had happened, then came out and confronted
us so we took off.
He said that to get ahead of the story, we made up the whole thing so that we wouldn't
get into trouble for wrecking into a car while drunk and leaving the scene.
We repeatedly told him that was not the case and said that everything we told him was true.
Without evidence to prove his theory, he did let us go.
The next day, he went and checked the area that we showed him on the map.
I guess he didn't find a wrecked car, and he knew that we were most likely telling him
the truth.
He called and asked us to come to meet him out there to verify that that was the area,
but we told him we did not want to go anywhere near there again.
About two weeks after that, he called and asked us to come in and possibly ID the vehicle.
He showed us a picture of a red minivan with fog lights, and we said that that looked
like the vehicle from the incident.
He then told us that the vehicle was stolen from another town sometime before
that, and it was stolen from an old woman. These guys may or may not have been related
to her. The trooper said, if any arrests were made that he would call us back, we never
heard any follow-up after that. To this day no one really believes my story. They think
we did something to provoke the incident or just think that we made it all
up to sound cool or something.
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This happened in the summer of 2010 when I was entering my teenage years. My family took
a trip to a really nice hotel in the city.
I can't remember why we decided to take this trip, but I remember a lot of family friends
coming with and staying in adjacent rooms.
I never asked my parents, and it's not really important to the story.
To preface, I am a bit of a scary cat and always have been. I'm pretty skinny and a fragile kid, so I get spooked pretty easily even now.
This however was almost definitely not me freaking out like I normally did.
Looking back, I'm incredibly lucky I trusted my instincts.
This hotel had a strange design.
The lobby was actually on the fourth floor, not the bottom floor, which I found strange.
To access the lobby, you had to use the elevator.
There was no way for you to get to it from the stairs.
The information would have been nice before everything happened, as you'll soon find
out.
The hotel was organized in a square shape. Every floor was lined with the
balcony so that you could look down into the lobby and the cafe area from your floor. Essentially,
if you were walking to your room, you could be seen from anyone that was on your floor if they
just stepped out of their room and looked around. The first day or two were nice. My friends
and I hung out and played cards all day, or we watched whatever was on TV. At night, we'd
explore the halls of the hotel and tell each other ghost stories. It was a really fun time,
even though I didn't fully understand why we were there. On the third day though, things got strange, fast. I woke up to the sound of screaming
coming from outside my door. Now because of the hotel's design I mentioned, sounds from
the lobby would echo all the way up to the top of the building. So when I walked outside
to investigate, I immediately looked over the balcony to see what the commotion was about.
I saw a young girl laying on the ground, eggs and milk splattered all around her.
People were rushing to help her, and I heard a couple of people telling each other to call
9-1-1.
It seemed like the girl was unconscious, maybe she had passed out or something.
I scanned the lobby and saw that my family and a couple of friends were in the lobby
getting breakfast, all staring at the event in front of them.
I decided to rush down to meet them and find out what happened.
The elevator was on the opposite side of my floor, so I took the stairwell located right
next to my room.
We were on the 7th or 8th floor, so I knew that I had to take
about four flights down. Not a big deal. I descended for a little while, looking for number
four on the wall, or the letter L. I passed floor five, ready to find a door to the lobby.
It took about two more flights of steps before realizing that there hadn't been a door on the fourth floor, nor had there been a door on the third or second. Now, at this point, I probably
should have turned back, but I continued down because I was tired and I didn't want
to climb back up. There were some weird side hallways that went into pitch black areas
with a bunch of piping and wiring, and though I was curious to explore, I passed
them by. I quickly hit the bottom floor, a dimly lit and cold room with cinder block walls
and concrete floors. And front of me was a set of double doors. I hesitated at first,
but I assumed that this was just another way back to the lobby, so I opened and entered. Behind the doors was a
massive warehouse-type room, probably the size of a smaller basketball stadium. The only
light coming in was from the stairwell behind me, so I really wasn't able to see much.
Stairs were stacked and covered in plastic wraps, tables lined the walls, and in the distance
I thought I could see boxes stacked and lined against the wall as well.
I was probably in the storage room for the hotel.
I looked around and saw an elevator in the back of the room, so I made my way towards it.
I closed the door to the stairwell and began to walk in the back of the room, so I made my way towards it. I closed the door to the
stairwell and began to walk in the dim light. The room was super muggy and dusty, and it seemed like
nobody had been down there in a long time. As I got closer to the elevator, I noticed it was a
little bigger than the elevators in the lobby and the other floors. I pressed the up button and
got no response. There was a card swipe right next to the button. It must have been for
employees only, I thought. I turned back towards the stairwell doors, making my way past
the chairs and tables along the wall. When I got to the door, I gave it a tug. Locked. Of course. This is where
things started to hit me, and I realized that I was stuck in the dark, in the dusty basement
of a hotel. I didn't have a phone because my parents wouldn't let me get one until I
graduated middle school. So I couldn't call anyone. Everyone likely
assumed I was still asleep in the room. So I began to freak out believing that nobody
was going to be looking for me. I searched around the warehouse looking for other ways
out. Some areas of the place were better lit than others, so I looked around in areas
that I could see first before starting on the
darker side of the room.
There was one other set of doors that I found, but they happened to be locked as well.
I began to cry, scared that nobody was ever going to find me in this basement.
I swear it felt like hours, but I think only a handful of minutes passed before I heard
the door creak open. It wasn't the door from the stairwell, rather the second door that I had found.
A slim, middle-aged man and a lab coat came out of the doors.
Now, if this were 21-year-old me seeing this man, I would be very confused as to why this guy was wearing a lab coat in a hotel.
That was only 12 or 13 at the time, so I immediately felt relieved at the sight of an
adult who looked smart.
I approached him, tears in my eyes, and he immediately looked surprised to see me, as
you'd expect.
What are you doing down here?
Yeld. I got lost on my way to the lobby. I've been locked in here. Do you doing down here? He yelled.
I got lost on my way to the lobby.
I've been locked in here.
Do you have a key?
That was shaking, eager to get out of there.
He didn't answer my question, though.
Instead, he said, I know a way out of here, follow me.
He began to walk towards the door with the stairwell, and I followed, relieved that someone
had finally come to save me.
We approached the doors, and I began to reach for the handle, but he continued walking.
Isn't it right here?
I asked him.
I'll never forget the look on his face when I said that.
He looked nervous, and though it was dim, I could see sweat glistening from his
forehead behind his glasses. No, this way, he said sternly. I continued to follow him, but I was
now nervous myself. We had passed the door to the stairs, and we're now headed toward a darker side of the
basement, away from the elevators.
He looked like he had no clue where he was leading me, as he kept checking around him
almost as if he were taking in his surroundings for the first time.
We turned a corner and began walking towards the boxes.
A dead end.
I immediately froze, realizing that something was very, very wrong.
This guy had no idea where he was going, nor did he appear to work at the hotel.
I said, with my voice shaking.
Okay, where are we going?"
He turned and said, this way, just follow me.
I knew that there were no doors by those boxes.
I had checked there first after I found out that the stairwell door was locked.
I want to think whatever God is up there for gifting me with the idea that I had next.
I started yelling.
As loud as I could, I yelled so loud that I gave myself a headache.
The man irritated and plugging his ears began yelling back at me.
What are you doing?
Be quiet!
I continued to yell.
I don't even remember how long I was yelling.
Finally, the man snapped and began quickly walking towards me.
I went in a full sprint towards the stairwell doors, hoping to God did somehow be magically
open.
He didn't run after me.
He walked sternly behind me, muttering things like stupid fucker and other kinds of compliments. I was about five feet
from the door when somebody burst through my savior, a hotel janitor who had heard the screaming
from the stairwell. He saw the situation, me and some random guy in a lab coat and a locked basement,
some random guy in a lab coat and a locked basement, and immediately told me to get behind him.
The janitor asked me who the man was,
and I said, I had no idea,
and that he had come through the door
on the other side of the room,
and I pointed to the door.
The janitor quickly radioed to the desk
that he had found a child in the basement and quietly,
so that I wouldn't hear. He said, this man came from outside,
get security. The man in the lab coat started trying to argue with the janitor claiming that he
simply was looking for the bathroom. The janitor clearly wasn't buying it and kept saying things like,
wait until security gets here and talk to them about it.
I was standing beside him the whole time, trying to take in whatever was happening confused
out of my mind.
Eventually an employee from the front desk arrived and took me back up the steps to the lobby
where I met my family, who surprisingly had no idea I was missing. I told them the story,
crying and shaking, and they hugged me tightly thanking the employee over and over again for their help.
I never got to think that janitor though. Looking back now, I have absolutely no clue what that man
was doing in the basement. I don't have any information as to what happened afterwards or who he was. I
know for a fact that the incident with the girl in the lobby was unrelated, something about
low blood sugar. Not sure. I thought about that day a lot, and the only explanation I can
put together is that the door that I had found in the basement led to the streets of the
city, where he must
have wandered in from. I have no clue what his intentions were, why he was wearing a lab
coat or why he chose to pretend to know a way out. To be frank, this could have been
a huge misunderstanding of some sort, and I just chose a really bad time to get lost. But all I know for sure is if I hadn't screamed my lungs out,
I might not have been telling this story the same way, or at all. So strange man in the lab and let's not meet.
Thank you for listening to this week's episode of Let's Not Meet, a true horror podcast.
This week you have heard, my first internet friend by Reddit user,
Ferrell Tax Evader. Deliverance in Alaska by Reddit user anonymous dude 90. And finally,
the Hotel Basement by Johnny Caliber. Thanks to everyone who sent in their stories and
if you'd like to send in your story, email Let's Not Meet Stories at gmail.com and
for any questions about the show, email me at Let's Not Meet Podcast at gmail.com and for any questions about the show email me at Let's Not Meet Podcast
at gmail.com. Special thanks to Pat Hills from Earthtone Studios and Sacramento, California
for having me in the studio so that I could record my episodes in peace and quiet.
And it's thanks to my Patreon subscribers and I'm able to do this.
So if you'd like to sign up go over to patreon.com forward slash let's not meet podcasts to get access to bonus episodes and support the show.
I got to say though it's a bit creepy at night. It's about 11 o'clock here.
It's dark, it's quiet, it's cold, and this vocal booth is surrounded by red curtains.
I feel like I'm in an episode of Twin Peaks
with the lighting and these curtains.
It's pretty creepy.
I want to get out of here as quickly as possible.
So I'm going to go.
I'll see you guys next week for a brand new episode
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