Let's Not Meet: A True Horror Podcast - 4x03: Manson Family Ranch - Let's Not Meet
Episode Date: June 15, 2020Stories in this episode: Invitiation as a Kid To Non-Existent Pool - Jagerboi11. Pizza for the Ranch - octopotacto. The Millionaire Call - Fako5045. Try Shudder free for 30 days! Just go to sh...udder.com and use promo code meet. 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/letsnotmeet - Twitch - https://www.twitch.tv/letsnotmeetstreams
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My name is Andrew Tate in the season 4 episode 3 of Let's Not Meet a True Horror Podcast. When I was about eight or nine, my family took a skiing trip to a small resort, a couple
of hours from where we lived in Spain. The resort itself was a sleepy little town of about 400 to 500 people max, with a few
small supermarkets and hotels, but not much else.
Typically, we picked the worst time possible to embark on the trip, which we had been planning
for a few years.
The night after we arrived, there was a blizzard,
and so we spent the first half of the week locked in the hotel. Although we were able to
go outside for the remaining few days, we had little to do, given that the slopes were
all shut down. The story I want to tell you comes from those first few days locked in
the hotel. Despite my parents' annoyance at the timing of the trip being a nightmare,
myself and my sister, who was 11 months older than me, we were having a fantastic time.
Locked up in the mountains with nothing to do, we were able to spend our days running around
the hotel, eating sweets, and watching the TV and the lobby.
I probably should mention that this hotel was somewhat of a maze.
The large bar and restaurant area where my parents sat each day reading was at the center
of the hotel, a myriad of smaller rooms then connected to the bar area, at random points,
shooting off in different directions.
All these rooms often had no discernible function.
Each one had the same mahogany interior, and they were full of couches, fireplaces, and
antiques that allowed for great games of hide and seek.
The rooms would often have offshoots themselves, connecting to a new room, which would then
connect to yet more useless wooden caves.
As such, it was possible to be four or five rooms away from the main hotel area at any time,
without knowing exactly where you were or how to get back.
Anyway, at some point along the weekend, myself and my sister decided to play hide and seek.
Now bearing in mind the previous information, it was almost an impossible challenge to
find the hider, especially if they moved.
To this day, I'm certain my sister was a filthy cheat.
At one point in the game, I was just about to give up on searching for my sister until
I heard her voice from what sounded like a few rooms away.
After successfully navigating the web of rooms, I emerged to find her sitting on a couch
alongside a German man with gray hair, probably in his 60s, if I had to guess.
As soon as I emerged into the room, the man turned to me, and told me that he was taking
my sister to the swimming pool and asked if
I wanted to come.
I remember immediately thinking that it was odd that there was a swimming pool that we
hadn't heard of.
My parents had been complaining that morning about how much TV we were watching, and so I
was sure they would have taken us if they knew about it. And besides, the hotel did not seem of the size to be able to host one.
I told the man that I'd have to ask my parents first and told my sister to come back with
me to find them.
He immediately replied that I should go, and he can take my sister on a head.
I told my sister that she absolutely had to come with me, but excited
at the thought of a swimming pole she said she didn't want to. We began to argue, with
the men taking my sister's side and encouraging me to go ask my parents permission whilst
he waited with my sister. I dug my foot in, telling my sister that our parents would be very cross
if we went somewhere on our own, and after a few minutes of bickering she eventually gave in
and came back with me, giving her assurance to the man that we would come back.
Of course, when we told our parents they were livid, my dad went back to the room to try and
find the man, But with all the
offshoots, and given that all the random rooms looked exactly the same, it was almost impossible
to be sure that we were in the right one. In any case, there was no sign of him. I remember my
dad screaming at the hotel lobby that he needed a list of all the meld guests and their room numbers,
but of course, they wouldn't give it to him.
We spent the rest of the trip by our parents side terrified of the thought of being locked
up in a blizzard with him.
Thankfully we never saw the man again.
The scary thing, we checked with the lobby, and as we imagined, the hotel did not have
a pool.
So scary German man who wanted to abduct me and my sister during a blizzard.
Let's not meet. On my first summer back home from freshman year of college, I picked up a part-time job
delivering pizzas in a town about 30 minutes away from where I lived.
The area in rural Georgia is known for having places that are in the middle of nowhere. And the pizza places, whole stick,
was that it delivered to even the most remote areas
imaginable within the town's limits.
I could fill books with the weird experiences that summer,
from the call that came from a long abandoned warehouse
to the dog that got excited about the pizza in my hand
and accidentally shredded
my pants with their claws.
But one will always stand out in my mind as the creepiest.
It was getting fairly late at night, around 10.30 pm, so I was confident at the time that
I would be sent on no further calls before closing at 11.
However, someone barely managed to miss the cutoff time,
and our clerk accepted their order since they were so close.
I was given the address and a single box of hot dough
and sent on my merry little way.
The first red flag was the driveway, or rather the lack thereof.
There was a mailbox, but no actual driveway, not even gravel. It was just grass,
and a barely distinguishable trot and pathway that resembled more of a service trail than
it did something frequently used. I bumped along wondering if I was en route to the place
when I saw a slightly above average-sized house come over the horizon, horribly dilapidated, and
completely surrounded by overgrown woods. I guess, I made it, where the rest of the
driveway led and ended up parking in a grassy patch that could have been the walkway
just as easily as it could have been the front yard. Headlights aimed directly towards
the porch as per company policy.
I walked up to the door, but I believe that calling it a door is generous.
It was a door frame, all right, but the door itself was just a large slab of wood propped
half-hazardly against the side of it, barely covering the entrance.
This was Red Flag number two.
The third and fourth Red Flag were also on the quote unquote door.
This included the A4 sheet of printer paper with the words, around back scribbled in all
caps, which was hanging just below the place where somebody had engraved on the door
with the title, Manson Family Ranch. Typically, I would never go around the back of a house,
especially a shady, unlit house, and especially, especially at night.
However, this was my last drop of the day, and I was ready to get it over with and be on my way home.
Against my better judgment, I made my way around the back of the house.
The door back here was just an actual door, but it was covered in both
cobwebs and fresh spiderwebs. Clearly, this was a door that had not been used in some time.
I found the cleanest area available and knocked. I counted to 45 and knocked again. There were no
lights on in the house, and I could hear no movement from inside. I knocked and counted again,
and I could hear no movement from inside. I knocked and counted again,
and repeated the sequence three more times before
I was finally creeped out enough
to decide to return to my car.
As I returned, I finally heard a voice
coming from inside the house, clearly agitated,
but I couldn't tell what they were saying.
I tried to knock one more time, and as I was counting,
I heard something in the woods behind
me.
It started out as just movement deep in the trees, but soon enough I could make out distinct
running footsteps coming directly towards me from the bush.
As I was standing there coming to terms, with my impending demise, I followed the direction
of the noise to the edge of the woods, which is around 15 feet away from me.
In the moonlight I could clearly see a woman stepping out. She was relatively old, maybe in her
60s, I would guess. She had long blondish gray hair, which was tangled and matted and hung down past
her hips. She was in what looked to be originally a white nightgown, but at that time it was dingy and
closer to a beige or brown color.
She was absolutely barefoot, and her feet were covered in dirt and what appeared to be
blood, presumably due to the fact that she had just sprinted through the prickly woods
where there was no trail to be seen. I never learned her name, but still affectionately referred to her as red flag number five.
She stopped short when she saw me, and started to shake her head, no, with wide eyes.
I stood there like a terrified deer in the most fucked up headlights ever, as she took a few more steps towards me, reaching out to me.
Finger pointed. Her voice came out way stronger than mine would have at the time when she spoke.
You know how Southern people can either sound like loving grandmothers or backwards murderers? Well,
she sounded like the latter when she crawled.
Oh no, no, no, no, honey, you get on, you get, you get out of here.
I wish I could say I listened. I ran, I left, but I was in such shock at how the events were
playing out that my own self-preservation was put on the back burner
while I tried to figure out
just what the Kentucky fried fuck was happening.
She seemed to realize that I was not moving,
even if I could not make my mouth move to ask her
what was happening,
or even what to do with the stupid pizza in my hands, she looked at me,
like she could have smacked the hell out of me right then and there. And proceeded to
deliver red flags number six through twelve. Darling, didn't you hear me? You deaf or dumb?
Young girls like you come out here and they don't get to leave. So I finally stopped being a white person in a horror movie
when I realized that this was not a funny little ghost story.
This was 5,360 pound me potentially being targeted
to be robbed or kidnapped or worse.
So I dropped the dumb little pizza
which had these serial killer toppings, by the way,
and started running back to my car,
which I had stupidly left on and unlocked as was usual for most of my deliveries. As I
neared the car, I heard a slam from behind me and I looked over my shoulder to see that the wooden
door had been pushed over and had fallen under the porch beneath it.
As I was closing the car door,
an older man was limping down the front steps,
waving his arms like an airplane runway attendant at me,
calling me a little bitch, telling me
to get out of the fucking car now.
At a loss of what to do,
I called out something muttory and shaky
along the lines of pizza's out back.
I floored my dad's shitty little 90s Lexus, and somehow managed to avoid the trees on
the odd trail back to the main road, which was still 12 miles and several turns from any
road that actually had a name, let alone painted lines.
I reported it to my manager and he said that he contacted the police, but nothing ever
came of it that I'm aware of.
Either way, that was my first and hopefully last personal encounter with the self-proclaimed
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I had just turned 15 and it was the end of the summer.
My parents were working.
They were administrative and monetary consultants at a lawyer buffet.
And my brother was in basketball practice.
So, I was home alone with my puppy watching TV.
The phone rang.
Hello?
A feminine voice responded.
Hello.
Are you Martha's son?
Um, yeah.
My name is insert name.
Who asks?
Oh, it's Janice. Your mom and I have been working together for five years at the Lawyer Buffet.
Now, I've never seen nor heard of Janice. My parents have always kept their jobs and personal lives miles apart, but I knew who she was. My mom always spoke about her, and she was a personal assistant
of one of the buffet's owners.
Oh yeah, Janice. My mom isn't here at the moment. What can I help you with?
Oh, I'm sorry, but Mr. Delgado called me. Your mom and dad are in court. They seem to
be in trouble, and he's just arriving there. A fraud allegation
he said. They can't call due to legal proceedings. But can I have your cell phone number? Mr. Delgado
will call you right away so he can explain better.
Uh, yeah, sure. I gave her my number.
Don't worry. I'm sure it's nothing serious.
Take care."
She ended the call.
Don't worry, I was scared shitless.
My mom and dad would never commit a crime, or at least I don't think so.
Maybe this was just a misunderstanding.
Before I continue, I must clarify some things.
Mr. Delgado was another name that I knew.
This time, thanks to my dad.
He was a junior associate at the same buffet
that my parents and Janice worked.
And as far as my parents' conversations went,
he was a capable liar.
My cell phone rang.
A mail voice.
Hello.
Yes, Mr. Delgado?
Yeah, kid.
Listen to me.
We're in quite the trouble.
I'm here in court.
Your parents are being prosecuted for tax evasion and financial fraud.
Now, I'm working the bare minimum here, and the judge won't let me talk to them.
So, I need your help.
This is a thunder of a case.
So, if we don't work fast, it could be serious.
What?
My parents would never do something like that.
We haven't done anything illegal.
Oh, I believe you.
I know you're scared, but listen to me.
I need your help, so we can help your mom and dad, alright?
Uh, I'll try.
I was almost crying at this point.
Have your parents made some big purchases recently?
A property, a car, house items like TV, computers, fridges, or anything like that?
Anything that could set the government's alarms off about illegal money movement.
Well, they bought me a computer for my birthday and my brother, he got a new iPad.
He may have used my dad's credit card.
That's great.
That could be part of it.
Anything else?
Not that I can remember.
Maybe they took an extra large sum of cash from the bank.
Do you have access to the safe?
Your dad said he had one.
Safe?
We don't have a safe. Not one that I'm aware of. I don't know what you're
talking about. Damn. I thought he told you about it. Maybe it's because you're too young.
Your brother didn't know either. Have you talked with Josh, my brother? I was going to
call him, but he rarely answers when he's playing. Yeah, Janice spoke to him before calling you.
You can't call your brother nor your parents.
These kinds of procedures are really sketchy.
Your parents' cell phones are held by the police, and I'm sure they're going to track the
calls.
They won't check mine or Janice because we're the lawyers.
But yours are not safe, so please answer only if it's one of us two.
Janice's number is...
Insert the number.
And this is mine, understood?
Uh, yes, sir.
Okay, call you later, take care.
He hung up.
I was scared.
I did not know what to do. I couldn't call anyone.
And I just found out that my dad was keeping a secret safe from me.
What the hell? Since when did my parents manage that amount of money?
I waited for an hour. I was just about to call Mr. Delgado when I received a call. The number was Janice. Sweetie, how are you? I'm fine.
Oh baby, don't cry.
We're gonna solve this together.
I know this is probably going to end well.
Mr. Delgado was able to speak to your dad, Philip.
And they had made a deal with the prosecution.
They're going to do some home checks to see if there are any stolen or fraudulent assets.
And this will all be over.
That's amazing, thanks, Janice.
I know, I know.
But that brings us to another problem.
These break-ins are sometimes done by unscrupulous people, and they will take anything they consider
valuable as evidence, and will never return it. Your mother fears
that they will do that, especially, to her jewelry and most importantly, her wedding ring.
You need to take it all out, including the computers. We already told the judge about
them, and he discarded them, as the cause. But we don't know if your parents will respect
that verdict. Mr. Delgado is going to pick the things up.
Wait, I don't know where my mom keeps her jewels or wedding ring.
She never used it because it was way too small for her finger after she gained some weight.
They must be in her room.
Just look for those that you can save.
Worry about those that could look suspicious."
Okay, but does Mr. Delgado know where I live?
Yes, sweetie. He will wait for you in the park on the other side of the street.
Be ready in 30 minutes.
She hung up. And I did what I was told. I went through my house, searching for anything that could be expensive, and put it in my backpack.
I was able to find my mom's ring and other jewels.
I also packed my brother's laptop and my old computer.
Better be safe, I thought.
I went to the park and waited.
Near minutes later, a black SUV made a turn and parked on the other side.
A bald man with a suit came out.
When I came close, maybe a hundred meters, give or take, my survival instinct finally
kicked in.
Mr. Delgado, I asked.
Yes, boy, it's me.
Yep, that was definitely the voice in the cell phone, no doubt about it.
But there was something off.
Mr. Delgado was a junior associate.
As I told you, my father always said he was an intelligent young man that would go very
far.
The guy in front of me was at least in his 40s, not young at all.
I stopped, so the man came closer.
Is there a problem?
Are you all right?
His fatherly tone was almost enough to make me put my guards down.
Almost.
No, I'm fine.
Well, then let's go.
Your parents are waiting.
Sorry, what?
Where are we going?
To court, obviously, you can't be here when the police do the checkup.
The alarm has gone off in my head, and its volume is just increasing.
In that moment, I finally start putting the pieces together, mistakes in their story,
some illogical points that they've made. This
was all wrong. There was something wrong here. I needed to get away from there as fast as
I could. But there was a problem. Mr. Delgado had company. I could see in the SUV there was
another man in the driver's seat. The park was totally empty and my house was too far for a sprint
No one in the streets either. I was alone until I remembered. I
Wasn't
Mr. Delgado looked at me very suspiciously like he knew something changed
Hey kid, let's go
Ah my puppy
What I can't leave my puppy. What?
I can't leave my puppy alone.
He's just a few months old.
He was a birthday present.
I need to go for him.
It's important.
We don't have time for the dog, he said.
I was making time.
I needed him to believe that I was still in his game
until someone arrived in the area.
It was still a public park in the summer.
It was bound to happen sooner or later.
More likely sooner.
I think he knew the same.
Whoever he was, he knew he couldn't stay in the open for too long.
He responded, fine, go for the puppy.
But give me the backpack. It looks really heavy
It will only make you go slower
Shit, I didn't want to but I gave it to him
It would at least appease him somehow if I refused who knows what he would do and
I went away. I didn't run. I walked trying to keep my calm, trying to keep the
charade up. Until I was sure that my distance between us was enough. And then I sped up.
I didn't even think it was possible for me to go that fast. As I got farther away,
I could see that the SUV started to take off. I stopped. I was in front of my house. I broke apart. I was crying.
I was shouting scared.
Sad, mad.
How could I be that stupid?
My neighbor heard me and came over that moment.
She must have thought that I was having a panic attack.
Maybe I was.
She hugged me, trying to keep me calm.
I told her everything, and she was the one who called my mother.
My mom was in our home within 15 minutes.
The magic of love, as she normally took 45.
After that, she hugged me so tight.
I was terrified, and it would still be a long time after the incident that I felt better.
To this day, I'm still unable to answer a call from an unknown number without feeling
the pain I felt in my stomach.
And in general, I hate phone calls.
I only text to say what I need to say to everyone I meet.
I gave away the equivalent of $5,000 in electronics, jewelry, and some spare cash that I had found.
I gave away my mom's wedding ring and my two family heirlooms.
In that moment, I just hated myself.
I hated that I had been tricked so easily.
Even if my family said the most important thing was that I wasn't hurt, I still felt
the pain of losing all the material things.
As did my mom.
And that hurt me the most.
With time, we were able to understand that this was a very long game that we had been
involved in for months.
How did they know my parents' co-workers' names and jobs?
My mom quote unquote lost a flash drive with lots of documents some weeks prior.
She believes in the bus with a lot of job information on it as well.
Nothing legal, mostly administrative.
She never thought much of it, but they probably got our phone number from the documents.
How did they know where we lived, though?
That summer, we had received a lot of calls
from different services, banks,
cell phone lines, public services,
to quote verify data.
Most of the time, it was my brother who answered,
sometimes my mom or me.
We understood that under the pretext,
they were able to obtain not only our address.
My brother is sure that he gave them the quote gas company,
but they verified my parents' names as well.
How did they know I was alone so that they could trick me?
Same method. With their almost daily calls, they knew who was at home at that time, and were able to pinpoint
that most Tuesdays and Thursdays I was left in the house with no one else, not even my brother.
I also believe that they could have come to the area at some time as they knew the park had no
security cameras and that my mom did not use her ring. They created this whole story almost perfectly,
but still they had flaws.
First, the one that saved me, Delgado's age,
second, I forgot my mother had just been working at the buffet for only three years.
It was impossible that she would have met Janice five years prior.
Third, the safe, I think.
Obviously, a general assumption
that they had made, believing every person has one. And fourth, I found it weird that Mr.
Delgado was acting as my parents' lawyer when my uncle, my dad's brother, had always
been the one in charge of any legal problems that we had. Oh yeah, all their legal chit chat?
I didn't know our legal system that well,
but it's almost impossible.
You are taken suddenly into court
and judged in less than half a day
without being able to establish defense.
I was the victim of the millionaire call, a method,
in which the criminals manipulate the most naive
and vulnerable person in a household
using an emotional bargain so that they will willingly give things up.
Even themselves.
The thieves were never caught.
The phones they used were fake, used without camera footage, and police had nothing to
work with.
There were no fingerprints or anything similar because they didn't touch anything that we
keep.
I wasn't able to see the SUV plate due to the distance and Mr. D was an average Joe without
any identifiable mark.
The only good thing that happened that day was that I didn't enter that damn car.
I wouldn't be writing this if I did.
We lived in fear that they would appear someday, as they knew our home address.
But thanks to God, it didn't happen.
And I hope that it stays that way.
So Janice and Mr. Delgado, let's not meet again. Thank you for listening to this week's episode of Let's Not Meet, the True Horror podcast
this week you have heard, invitation as a kid to the non-existent pool by Reddit user by RedditUserYagerBoy11. Pizza for the Ranch by RedditUserOctoPetokto.
And finally, the Millionaire Call by RedditorFaco5045.
The stories that you've heard this week were all produced and narrated
with the permission of their respected authors.
If you'd like to hear your story on the show, please email me at Let's Not Meet Stories at gmail.com.
If you're looking for bonus material, as always, you can check out patreon.com forward slash
Let's Not Meet podcast for all the bonus episodes.
I'll see you guys next week for a brand new episode of Let's Not Meet. You're already there, hero.
But if you want to take it to the next level, turn up Bull Loose in your backyard.
Bull Outdoor can help you design, build, then deliver the outdoor kitchen of your dreams.
Think of all the fun you'll have.
Grills, pizza ovens, sinks, ice chests, refrigerators, and more.
All designed to last a lifetime.
Start customizing now at bullbibikiu.com.
That's bullbibikiu.com and turn a bull loose in your backyard.
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