Murder With My Husband - Dear Daisy, I Was Almost Kidnapped From In-N-Out
Episode Date: January 25, 2024Payton and Garrett read listener submitted stories back to you. Submit a Dear Daisy here:Â https://linktr.ee/murderwithmyhusband Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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You're listening to an Ono Media podcast.
Hello everyone, welcome back to the podcast.
This is Murder with my Husband.
I'm Peyton Marland.
And I'm Garrett Marland.
And he's the husband.
I'm the husband.
We have this month's Dear Daisy's up and ready to tell you.
Good old Dear Daisy.
What would we do without her?
We would not have a dog, that's for sure.
But I really like the dear Daisy segment.
I hope that you guys like it.
Please keep submitting your stories.
Just a reminder, we are streaming every Thursday on Twitch.
We might actually start doing some live dear Daisy's,
some live stories here and there as well,
but we're just talking about chew crime,
going through some chew crime footage, and and yeah come check us out on Twitch there will
be links below everywhere and we love to have you.
Alright so this first story just needs a bit of a trigger warning because it is a
little bit graphic. So dear Daisy, this one's called I worked in the County
morgue for two weeks. Oh man could you work in a morgue? No, no, no, no, no, no.
I cannot do that.
I had no offense to anybody, but I throw up.
This says, dear Daisy,
I worked in the County morgue for two weeks.
Hey, Peyton Garrett and sweet little Daisy,
I don't know if this is the sort of story you all want,
but I have a wild, maybe gross, interesting, awful.
You decide.
Story from when I worked in the County
morgue during my last year in medical school first some background I am
currently a first-year resident doctor in a surgical field during my last year
of medical school I completed medical rotations specific to what I was going
into however due to some last-minute scheduling issues I had the choice of
rotating in either the County morgue or pediatric
nephrology for a random two-week rotation. As I will never need to see a kid's kidney in my life, the County morgue
technically applied to my field more, so I just decided to go with that. My two weeks in the morgue was
interesting. I really assumed because I love true crime that I would kind of be into it. But honestly, my stomach couldn't handle it.
The morgue gets any body that didn't die of natural causes.
So we got every overdose, suicide, homicide, and accident.
I saw gunshot wounds, hangings,
and some gruesome car crash victims.
Oh my gosh.
Many of the bodies were found days later
and were green and bloated and the smells were
unbearable. What really surprised me, however, was the
amount of people who came in due to overdose. For every
suicider accident we had, we easily had five overdoses. In
addition, there wasn't a trend in gender, age, race, or
socioeconomic class when it came to ODs. We had 60 year old
businessmen and 22 year old businessmen
and 22 year old college girls laying right next to each other having both OD'd the night
before.
You know, I find that's very interesting because it really goes to show you, you never really
know somebody or you never really know what's going on.
Well, and she says my time there really showed me just how real the drug epidemic is in our
country.
But all of this isn't the wild, gross, interesting, awful story I want to tell you about.
That story happened on my second week at the morgue.
During that day, we had a light body day.
So the pathologist suggested I drive with the cops to their next scene and see how they
process a scene before taking the body away.
I was actually super excited because I thought that meant I didn't have to deal with the bad smells
of the morgue for that day.
Boy was I wrong.
After about an hour of hanging out,
we got called to a scene on our local highway.
We jumped into the cruiser and drove over to the accident
with little knowledge of what we were going into.
When we got to the scene,
the traffic was at a complete standstill
and we had about 20 police officers trying to cover the body.
I looked up in horror as I saw the deceased man's foot on one side of the road and the
rest of him scattered throughout.
Apparently, an elderly man had attempted to cross our five-lane highway during rush hour
and was hit by a truck at 80 miles per hour.
The scene was as bad as you are probably thinking.
I put my poker face on and jumped out of the cruiser.
The cop handed me gloves and told me we had to go take some pictures.
I tentatively trailed behind him thinking, why do I need gloves?
Aren't I just observing?
No.
No, I was not.
Quickly, he asked me to assist with his angles.
Hold his arm here.
Can you pick up his foot and bring it over here?
Help me find the eyeball.
At this point, I was disassociating.
Here I am on the side of the road,
holding a man's eyeball while cars are just driving by me.
It was a lot to handle.
We are about done when the cop has one last request.
Hey, can you walk about a quarter of a mile out that way
and pick up any
brain and skull pieces on your way back to the car? Oh my, so nonchalant. I know I realized I could
have said no. In fact, the other three students who did this rotation respectfully declined touching
anything at all. I, however, am a people pleaser, so I faked a smile and said, yeah, of course, no
issue at all. And proceeded to walk along the highway, picking up brain wherever I saw it,
peeling the tissue off the hot asphalt, wondering how the heck I even got here.
My gosh.
The car ride back to the morgue was a quiet one.
I couldn't get that poor man's mangled face out of my mind.
When he landed in our morgue the next day, I just felt so sad.
What must have been going through his mind to attempt to cross the highway?
Was this suicide?
Did he have dementia?
Was he acutely confused?
The pathologist advised that I stopped trying
to answer those questions as it will just make me go crazy.
And I guess they are right.
Still, I never forgot that day or my time in the morgue.
That's my crazy story.
Hopefully it's what you're all looking for.
Keep doing what you're doing and thank you for your passion
and respect towards the victims with love, see.
I don't know how people do that full time, right?
Like working the more full time or anything CSI related.
I couldn't do that.
Do you like turn half of your brain off
and you just kind of go numb when you're doing all of it?
How was that possible?
Yeah, probably, and then they just process at home
on their own, you know?
And like they said, stop trying to ask the questions.
It's the same reason like you probably aren't
as fascinated with true crime,
because you just don't go there.
Whereas the rest of us are like, oh my gosh, why?
What happened?
How could this happen?
Blah, blah, blah, blah.
But still like seeing that would,
I'm sad as it is because somebody died
like that would gross me out.
It wouldn't gross me out because I'm seeing a brain.
It would gross me out because I would be thinking
about how someone died.
And like, and they wouldn't even gross me out.
It would make me sad.
I would just be like, I, that is a brain.
Like that's a brain.
Like no, no, thank you.
I couldn't do it.
I couldn't pick a brain up just because how fragile and scary
is that that you're picking someone's brain up.
That was crazy.
Okay.
Next one is from Danny.
It says, Hey Garrett, Peyton and Daisy.
I have a mini story for you all and my favorite podcast
that I think everyone would find super interesting and eerie.
I hope you like it. And I hope you both are doing well. Love from Perth, Australia.
It's titled, Lady in the White Dress.
Peyton and I just watched a movie that was based in Australia. That's good, huh?
Anyone but you?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it was kind of based in Australia, right?
No!
Exactly.
This story happened back in 2005 when I was one and my sister was seven.
At the time we were visiting the UK and the trip was so last minute that we ended up crashing
at my dad's aunt's house.
We were all sleeping in the same bedroom upstairs all sharing one queen bed.
The reason the trip was so last minute was because my dad's granddad, my great granddad,
was sick and dad was afraid that he might pass away before he got a chance to say goodbye.
So we packed our things and made our way from Germany to London in under 24 hours.
My sister was too young to properly understand why we were making a trip so sudden so my
parents explained it away as having to see great-granddad Bernard before he leaves for
his big trip.
I love. Properly understand.
Yeah.
I thought I read it wrong at first, but no.
Just proper.
It was our first night in the UK and it was getting late.
We had flown into Heathrow.
Hope that's how you say that.
About four hours ago and had planned to see dad's granddad the next morning at 9 a.m.
Mum was trying to set me and my sister down for bed whilst my dad was having a shower.
Mum.
My sister was a great sleeper, always had been, and so she passed out like a light, but since
I was only a baby, Mum stayed with me until I was sound asleep.
I feel like you should be reading this in an Australian accent.
No.
Yeah, she's a, but they're not actually in Australia at this point in our story.
She's just-
Yeah, I'm saying, but she's Australian.
Yeah. Yeah. So after an hour or so of trying to settle me down, my dad had
gotten out of the shower and had gotten into bed to take over baby duty so my
mom could get up and have a shower too. She had just stepped into the hot water
when she heard a phone ring. I remember her telling me how frustrated she was
because she had just settled me down immediately turning off the shower and angrily tiptoeing back into the bedroom to give my
dad a silent lecture on why his phone should go on vibrate. But as she pushed into the bedroom,
those angry thoughts had subsided the moment she saw my dad's face. Dad had just received a call
from his mom, my grandma, asking him to come to the hospital. She didn't say whether great-granddad
Bernard had passed or not, just that dad needed to come as soon as he could.
He got up, threw on his coat, and kissed my mom goodbye without a word, and my mom knew he needed to go, and she knew why.
About two hours later, mom still hadn't heard anything from dad.
The hospital was a good half an hour away, and she knew that he would message her call when he could.
I asked my mom before writing this story how this next part goes, and I thought I would insert what she said happened in her exact words for you.
I was sitting up on the bed, staring at the phone, waiting for a call from your dad.
It felt like hours, but I had nothing else to pass the time.
I eventually gave up and curled up next to you and your sister to just try and get some
sleep.
I knew the phone ringing will wake me up if he did call.
The next thing I know, your sister leapt up into an upright sitting position, eyes wide
open, and she was facing the corner of the bedroom. Think of when you see a child in a horror movie
having a nightmare and then waking and sitting up so suddenly. This is exactly what she did.
She was fixated on the corner of the bedroom, and the bedroom was small, so if anything was there,
I would have seen it too, but I didn't. I tried to brush her shoulder and encourage her to lie
back down to sleep, but she was frozen. I tried again asking her what was wrong and telling her it's okay.
Then she blurts out, mommy, who's the lady in the white dress in the corner of the bedroom?
What's up?
That's my mom's side of the story.
And as you can imagine, she was terrified.
She had no idea who the lady was in the room and whether my sister was just dreaming or
if this was all real.
The next morning, my dad returned home bright and early.
He entered the house with some fresh pastries and broke the bad news
Granddad Bernard had passed. It didn't click with anyone at the time
But that lady in the white dress was not in fact a lady
It was probably my granddad Bernard in a hospital gown
Dad didn't make it to the hospital in time
But it seemed granddad Bernard did not want to leave without saying goodbye before his long trip. Wow. And that is the story
I've never really had anything And that is the story.
I've never really had anything like that happen to me.
I always find like, it just happens too often for it to be coincidence.
Yeah. Like not everyone, everyone in the world just isn't lying.
Yeah.
Like not everyone is like, Oh, someone passed and then that same night I had
this weird experience with like a ghost or something.
Yeah.
This next one is I almost got kidnapped
from In-N-Out. Speaking of that, one of my friends posted the other day and said, good
point. He said, how is the In-N-Out line always long, no matter what time of day? It is. It's
always long. I'm sorry if you guys like In-N-Out, but it is overrated. Talk about something that's overrated.
It's good, sure?
Yeah, so I'm from California.
Loved In-N-Out growing up.
Loved it in high school.
Now, it's good.
Look at me wrong, it gets solid, but I don't think it's worth obsessing about.
Should have lines like it does.
I don't know though, if In-N-Out wants to sponsor us, they're the best burger in the
world, so it just depends. No, you need to stop over toasting your buns if you want to sponsor us. Oh see I like that part
I like the over toasted ones. Maybe that's why you don't like it and also like I just I
Don't like that. They only have three flavors of shakes. Oh, I'm fine
I thought you just get the Neopollitan and you get all three flavors. You know what?
You know, it is pretty good actually now that I'm talking about it. I kind of want that for lunch.
It's not any better than McDonald's.
That's not true though.
Yeah it is.
That's crazy that you're saying that right now.
It's not.
Okay let's keep going because that's insane.
It's the same overrated as Starbucks.
That's insane.
It's good.
Let's move along.
I can't hear this.
So this one is from Megan and it says, Dear Daisy, hi Peyton and Garrett, my name is Megan
and I grew up in a small town in California.
No, not the deserts of SoCal or the beaches of central California.
I lived in the forested countryside of northern California.
My town is one of the original mining towns in California and has much history packed
into it.
From a scenic downtown to the Empire State mine to the wide
variety of people you will meet. We also surprisingly have a lot of agriculture, mostly ranching,
and so I grew up raising livestock for the local FFA and 4-H organizations,
and even branched to showing pigs across the country. Don't think of potbelly pigs in the mud,
think of elite animals bred to look the best, grow the best and taking care of far better than I will ever take care of myself.
That's sweet.
My story today is about how I almost got kidnapped while picking up three new
show hogs when I was 17 years old.
All right.
It was in September of 2021 and businesses were in much fluctuation regarding
masking policy, distance and other side effects of the pandemic.
This will become a big point of the story later on.
My mom and I were traveling to another town
about an hour and 15 away to pick up some more pigs
I had bought from a large show farm in that area.
On the way home, we decided we were both hungry
and should stop for food.
Soon enough, we pulled into an in and out burger.
Having the trailer behind us meant-
Wait, that's hilarious. What? We were just talking about in and out. Because it was about in and out burger. Having the trailer behind us. Wait, that's hilarious.
We were just talking about in and out because it was about in and out. Oh, keep take that out.
Brandon, this is the same story.
Yes.
I'm not here today.
I'm not doing the best.
Oh my gosh.
Having the trailer behind us meant we had to pull into the very back of the
parking lot.
It was very hot, dry September day, and our trailer currently did not have working fans in it. My mom handed me her credit card and
instructed me to go buy us food while she opened the back doors of the trailer
to let in cool air and offer the piggies water. Be grudgingly, I walked the
distance into the In-N-Out and had just gone to the door when I realized I did
not grab a mask and I wasn't sure if this town still required them or not as
every town had different rules at this time. I was about to turn around and walk back to the
car when I remember we had just cleaned all the trash out of it the day prior and with
that all of the masks we had. I hoped like most businesses they would have masks offered
at the door if they required them. I was not in luck however. I did not see any signs stating
I had to wear one so I continued into the door and into line.
I had been in line for no less than one minute, already filling out of place, when the man
in line behind me started speaking to me.
He looked to be in his late 20s to early 30s and had on a collared shirt that just said
Bank.
At first, the conversation was pleasant enough, as he commented on the weather and the heat.
I answered back politely while clutching my phone that had just dinged on the weather and the heat. I answered back politely
while clutching my phone that had just dinged with the order my mom wanted. The man looked
over my shoulder and asked if it was just me and my mom here. I thought the question
was odd, but my mind was really in other places like hoping this line would pass faster so
we could get my pigs home and out of the heat.
Gotta take care of those piggies, man.
I answered yes, thinking maybe he was just a curious stranger looking for a conversation after the lockdown. Then his questions started taking
a turn. Where were we coming from? Where were we going? What were we doing? How old was
I? And other such far personal questions to ask a teenage girl he'd never met. I grew
really uneasy now and kept my back turned to him, answering his questions in short but
polite statements.
I was almost thankful when an employee called out that I needed to be wearing a mask to continue
any further in line. I was about to remove myself from the building when the man tapped me on my
shoulder and asked if I would like a mask from his car. A little embarrassed by the whole situation
at being called out, I foolishly agreed. Thankfully, I had the sense to stay by the in and out doors and not follow him all the way to his car,
which was a small dark blue and old-looking Subaru.
He came back a minute later with a mask that looked new. As he handed it to me,
I regretted accepting his offer as I did not know where this mask had been.
But he had gone all the way to his car, so I gingerly put it on. Back inside,
he kept trying to talk to me and I kept responding with short replies when suddenly he left the line for a phone call. I got to
the register and ordered as quickly as possible and sat down to wait for my order, relieved
to be away from him. I'd been sitting no more than two minutes before the man sat down
next to me, smiled at me, and looked forward again. Had he even ordered? Then I noticed
another man wearing the exact same
uniform as the first man standing to the other side of me. I was on the edge of a bench. He was
bigger than the first and looking at me. There was still room next to the first man sitting on the
bench so there was no reason for the second one to be standing next to me instead of sitting by
his friend who's dressed the exact same. Mind you, I'm built like a twig, five, six, and 116 pounds on a good day.
So this freaked me out a bit and I tried to call my mom.
She didn't answer, which wasn't unusual.
Instead, I called my boyfriend at the time.
I didn't tell him what was happening yet
in case I was wrong,
but instead just talked to him about random things.
Eventually, my order was called and I booked it out of there.
At this point, my mom had walked over
after wondering what was taking me so long and
I told her everything as we walked quickly back to our car at the opposite end of the
very large and empty parking lot.
Just as we were crossing off the sidewalk onto the pavement, the same exact car I saw
the man retrieve the mask from rolled up slowly next to us about a row over.
We hurried faster and as soon as we got into the car and locked the doors, the car that had been keeping pace
with us the whole time left through a parking lot exit.
I will never know exactly the intentions of those two men,
but it spooked me.
The irony of the whole situation is that if you ever walk
into an in and out, you will see they always have
human trafficking posters displayed behind a case
saying to be careful and keep an eye out.
Thank you for listening to my story.
Peyton and Garrett, I love your relationship and how you bond over a topic that honors lives careful and keep an eye out. Thank you for listening to my story. Peyton and Garrett, I love your relationship
and how you bond over a topic that honors lives lost
and helps keeps others aware.
Your podcast has definitely made many long drives shorter
and work more interesting.
I will probably write in again,
as growing up in a small historic mining town,
you are taught to keep your mouth shut
about the strange things that happened there.
And oh boy, we've had quite a few strange
and murderous things.
Crazy. Not as a story. It's pretty, okay. Even if they weren't going to kidnap her,
they were clearly making her uncomfortable. Like you're, you're, you've boxed her in
on this bench. You're not sitting by each other. You're talking to her. You're asking her a lot
of personal questions. Then you pull your car up next to her. Like even if it was, there was
nothing nefarious going on, why make someone uncomfortable?
I don't know. I just think there's a lot of weirdos out there.
There's a lot of weird people out there.
Yeah. Weird in that sense. Not weird in.
Right. Right. Weird in that sense.
Yeah. Here's the last one.
It said, my dad visited me in my dream and it's from Claire.
Hi, Peyton and Garrett. My name is Claire and I live in Chicago.
I've been listening to your podcast since 2021 when I discovered you on TikTok.
I was so intrigued by the Karen Phillips murder dream episode
because I 100% believe that dreams can be signs or messages
and I've definitely had a ghost visit me
in my dreams many times.
Is that the episode where the guy had a vision
of like what was gonna happen to the girl, correct?
I think so.
That one was crazy.
What episode is that?
We need to find that.
Well, it's Karen Phillips, but do you, before we even get into this episode,
do you think dreams are a sign? Like, do you think that dreams can tell you things?
No.
You don't?
No, I think it's possible. Do I think it's happened to me? Nah.
Really?
I, yeah, it hasn't happened to me. I think it's possible.
I kind of wish it would happen to me, so then I could believe it hasn't happened to me. I think it's possible. I kind of wish it would happen to me
So then I could believe it more. I've a hundred percent had paranormal experiences in my dreams
Happen when I wake up and so you're right. I've had some weird paranormal things my dreams. I forget I just
Forget about that stuff. Yeah, about that. Yeah, okay, okay
So she said I hundred percent believe that dreams can be signs or messages
and I've definitely had a ghost visit me
in my dreams many times.
I wasn't sure if this story would be considered paranormal,
but I just heard you share Sydney's story
about her grandfather on Dear Daisy,
so I knew I had to share mine as well.
My dad passed away in 2018 due to, unfortunately,
getting into a car with someone who had been drinking.
He was at a college reunion with friends in Wisconsin
and was supposed to come visit me the next day in Chicago.
Of course he never made it.
A heartbreaking.
It was such a sad, confusing and lonely time for me,
but one of the things that brought me comfort
was the many dreams I would have about my dad.
Some were very vague and weird or didn't make much sense,
but one in particular stood out to me as it was very vivid.
One night I dreamt that I was supposed to meet some of my dad's friends at a restaurant
in downtown Chicago.
I got to the restaurant and it was extremely crowded.
As I was pushing through the crowd and looking around for guys I was supposed to be meeting,
I could barely see them through the crowd all the way in the back of the restaurant.
I also thought I saw a man who looked a lot like my dad standing with them but I thought,
obviously that can't really be him
I finally made my way through the crowd to them and saw three men in suits standing there
The first man I immediately recognized as one of my dad's old friends co-worker and he shook my hand the second man
I didn't recognize at all, but I shook his hand and introduced myself and he said hi
I'm Peter Kane the third man was my dad
We just looked at each other for a few seconds and
then I hugged him and he lifted me up. I started to cry and asked him,
why did you leave me? And that's when my alarm went off. It wasn't like any other
dream I had ever had about my dad before. It felt so real. Of course the first thing
I do is call my mom to tell her about this dream and ask her who the Peter Cain guy is.
She had no idea. I spend the whole day obsessing over the stream
and doing a million Google searches,
Facebook searches and LinkedIn searches
to figure out the significance of this Peter person
or who he is, but I found nothing.
Fast forward to now, I'm at a new job
where my current boss happens to be my dad's old boss.
I've known him for years
and he brought me onto his team six months ago.
One day I'm scrolling through LinkedIn to connect with new team members at my
company and guess who's one of the managers at the company?
Peter Kane.
I guess it's kind of a common name and could totally be a coincidence,
but either way, I still believe that my dad visited me and my dream that night,
maybe to help guide me on my career path or to give me some sort of sign or maybe
just check in on me.
Yeah.
Thank you to Sydney for sharing her story and for reminding me of my career path or to give me some sort of sign or maybe just check in on me. Yeah. Thank you to Sydney for sharing her story and for reminding me of
my dream and that not all paranormal ghost stories are scary. When our loved
ones pass, they're definitely still with us in some way and sometimes can visit us
in our dreams. Yeah, I've only, that's pretty cool because I've only ever had
like bad ones. You've never had good dreams about that you felt. I mean,
obviously sometimes you dream, but there's a difference between that and then
like her meeting this random Peter King guy and then I end up being her one of the managers
that are-
Yeah, no, I've never had my grandparent, anyone that's passed away in my family, nothing.
All my dreams that I've had that I don't remember a lot of my dreams.
And the dreams that I do have that I remember are usually bad ones.
Yeah, if I have a good dream, I feel like I just don't remember it. I
I don't know why it's kind of strange. I remember I used to sleepwalk a ton remember how we were talking about that
Yeah, I don't know. I've definitely had bad dreams about spirits or whatever and then I have
Woken up and still felt like there were ghosts
or whatever, like with me.
And then I feel like a lot of the time my positive experiences
like happened during like meditation.
I do be seeing my grandma on meditation.
You be levitating when you're meditating baby.
I'm coming into the room and painting's floating off
the couch meditating.
It's kind of scary.
It's not scary, but it's just like you can get in such deep meditation.
I can't meditate if I try.
I don't have the, I just have too much ADD.
I got too much trouble to do and going on.
Last night I was trying to meditate for like 10 minutes and I just couldn't, I couldn't get there.
So eventually she was like, okay, I did what I could.
Yeah.
That was hard.
All right you guys, that was our dear Daisy's
and we will see you for another regular episode of murder
with my husband.
I love it.
And I hate it.
Goodbye.