MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - You Can't Run From This (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: February 11, 2025This is a special bonus episode of "You Can't"I’m going to tell two stories about two very different haunted places. And even though these stories take place decades apart – and invo...lve wildly different people – the message of both is the same… crossing paths with ghosts can kill.For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Prime members, you can binge 8 new episodes of the Mr. Ballin podcast one month early
and all episodes ad-free on Amazon Music.
Download the Amazon Music app today.
Today I'm going to tell you two stories about two very different haunted places.
Even though these stories take place decades apart and involve wildly different people,
the message of both is the same.
Crossing paths with ghosts can kill.
But before we get into those, if you're a fan of the strange dark and mysterious delivered
in story format, then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we do and we upload
twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday, as well as this special episode of You Can't.
So if that's of interest to you, please change all the hotkey commands on the followbuttons
computer so that no matter which command they enter, they all simply restart the computer. I'm Fy'Hash.
I'm Peter Francopern.
And in our podcast, Legacy, we explore the lives of some of the biggest characters in
history.
This season, Genghis Khan. Best known for his brutal campaigns, he was accused of causing
millions of deaths. But he also gave his followers religious freedom and education. So is there
more to his story than violence and bloodshed?
I suspect that there might be, Peter. And since violence and bloodshed is basically
all I ever learned about
Genghis Khan growing up, I'm actually really curious to find out what lies behind the legend.
I can promise you are in for a treat because the Mongols were capable of exceptional acts
of brutality but all the stuff in the positive column either is never talked about or gets
brushed to one side so I'm really grateful to have the chance to speak up for Mongol history.
Follow Legacy Now wherever you get your podcasts.
Or binge entire seasons early and ad free on Wondery Plus.
I'm John Robbins and on my podcast,
I sit down with incredible people
to ask the very simple question, how do you cope?
From confronting grief and mental health struggles, to finding strength in failure. Every episode
is a raw and honest exploration of what it means to be human. It's not always easy,
but it's always real. Whether you're looking for inspiration, comfort or just a reminder
that you're not alone in life's messier moments, Join me on How Do You Cope? Follow now to listen to the full trailer or listen to early episodes ad-free on Wondery
Plus.
At about 2.30am on August 27th, 2010, a 29-year-old man named Christopher Kaiser and his girlfriend
Emily held hands
and stepped out onto a railroad bridge high above the ground in a remote area of North
Carolina.
It was totally dark out except for the beams of their flashlights.
Christopher and Emily were only 15 minutes away from the big event that they had come
out here to witness, and they were nervous and excited. They checked the time, then started walking slowly across the bridge, pausing every few
feet to listen for the sound of a train rumbling toward them.
But all they could hear was whispering and giggling and the occasional shout coming from
the ten other people who had all hiked out here as well to wait alongside them, and who were
now just standing in clusters all along the bridge.
So usually this railroad bridge, which was called the Bastian Bridge, was not a place
that people went to.
First of all, it was technically trespassing to be there, but beyond that, the bridge was
way out in the woods and required a rocky hike to get to, and once you did get to it there really
wasn't much to see.
The bridge itself was pretty basic as bridges go.
It had been built in the 1850s out of brick and stone with big arches underneath and it
crossed a ravine that was about 100 feet deep.
Train tracks ran the entire length of the bridge, which was about 300 feet.
On either end, the tracks disappeared into the forest.
And so the Bostjan Bridge was just a kind of boring, typical railroad bridge with no
people on it except one night a year.
And that night was tonight, because tonight the Bastian Bridge was supposed to be haunted.
Exactly 119 years earlier, on August 27, 1891, a passenger train had somehow lost control
while crossing this bridge and it careened off the side plunging into the ravine below.
The accident had killed 23 people.
Now Christopher and Emily knew that regular trains had not used this bridge in a long
time.
But, ever since the accident, legend had it that if you went to the bridge on the anniversary
of that crash, at the exact moment the train went off the side, apparently a ghost train
would appear, speeding along the tracks and blasting its horn.
People said you could actually hear the horrible screeching sound of the brakes
as they tried and failed to keep the train on the tracks and then you could hear the
screaming of the passengers as they plunged to their deaths all over again.
This ghost train passing through was the big event that Christopher and Emily
and everybody
else had come out to see.
Tonight they were all ghost hunters.
Just then one of the people at the bridge checked the time and called out that there
was only one minute left to go till the ghost train arrived.
And with this all the whispering and laughing and yelling stopped.
Everyone on the bridge fell silent and waited.
Out on the tracks, Christopher and Emily looked at each other and squeezed each other's hands.
The couple was deeply in love and considered each other soulmates.
And one of the best things about their relationship was the sense of adventure they both shared.
And tonight was exactly the kind of adrenaline pumping thing they both loved doing together.
And so as the clock ticked down, the couple turned to watch the tracks where they emerged
from the woods in the direction they knew the ghost train was supposed to come from.
And as they did this, they actually began to feel the bridge tremble under their feet.
And at the same time they heard a few people start shouting with excitement.
It was really happening.
From the woods came a low rumbling sound that quickly turned into a roar, and for a second
Christopher and Emily couldn't believe it.
Of course they wanted to see the ghost train, that's why they were there, but they hadn't
truly been convinced this ghost train was actually real.
But now, as they watched, a bright light emerged from the woods and flooded the bridge.
The ghost train was almost right on top of them.
Suddenly the train blasted its horn and then Christopher and Emily heard the screeching
of the brakes just like the legend said they would.
But this was not fun and spooky.
This was actually terrifying.
The other ghost hunters on the bridge started screaming and running and so did Christopher
and Emily.
But suddenly Christopher just stopped running and turned to Emily and he looked her in the
eyes and told her, I love you.
And then Christopher pushed Emily off the bridge.
Not long afterwards, police and paramedics flooded the woods around Bastian Bridge and
the ravine beneath it.
A helicopter circled overhead, shining a bright light down to help them search.
And it didn't take long before one of the policemen working his way down the slope that
led to the ravine stopped cold and called out for help.
He had found Emily.
She was badly injured and barely able to move, but she was alive.
The police officer looked up at the bridge over his head.
He figured she must have fallen 30 feet or so.
It was incredible that she had not died.
As paramedics strapped Emily into a neck brace to get her safely on a stretcher, another
police officer down in the bottom of the ravine shouted that he needed backup now.
That officer had found Christopher.
It would take some time, but the first responders would eventually piece together what had happened
on the Bastian Bridge in the early hours of August 27, 2010.
At around 2.45 am, members of the ghost hunting group waiting on the bridge had begun to cheer.
They saw a bright light approaching the bridge and they knew this meant the ghost train had
arrived.
But just seconds later, those cheers turned into screams.
Christopher saw everybody else scattering to get away from the bridge and suddenly he
knew exactly what was happening.
Passenger trains hadn't used these tracks in decades, but freight trains still did.
And by some bizarre chance, one of those freight trains came barreling onto the bridge at the exact time when everybody thought the ghost train would appear.
On that freight train, the conductor frantically blew the horn and tried to bring the train
to a stop, but Christopher could tell the train was going too fast and there was no
way it could stop in time.
And so Christopher and Emily, they started running away from the train down the bridge
like the others were, but Christopher saw Emily was lagging behind, and Christopher knew he might be able to outrun this train and get off in time, but from the
looks of it, Emily, the love of his life, was not going to be able to do that.
And so Christopher made a terrible decision.
He took a quick look down to make sure his desperate plan made sense.
Then he stopped running, waiting for Emily to catch up with him, he looked her in the eyes, told her he loved her, and then he pushed her off the
bridge.
Christopher could see that where they were standing was only about 30 feet above the
ravine, not 100, and so he figured by pushing her off the bridge, she had a better chance
of surviving a 30-foot fall than of being hit by a speeding freight train.
However, what Christopher must have understood was that by waiting for Emily and pushing
her off to try to save her life, it would not leave him enough time to save his own
life.
And he was right.
Almost instantly after he saved his girlfriend's life, the freight train struck him and threw him
off the bridge. When the police officer found Christopher a short while later, he was already
deceased. As for Emily, she was airlifted to a nearby hospital and she eventually recovered
from her injuries. And so Christopher is remembered as a hero.
Hello, Matt and Alice here, and we're the hosts of Wanderer's podcast, British Scandal. We are, and our latest series covers one of the century's most controversial and complicated figures, Julian Assange,
the WikiLeaks founder who risked it all in the pursuit of freedom of information and ended up locked up in London.
You might listen to this series and pump the air in support of the little guys exposing
the corrupt secrets of governments and militaries around the world.
Or you might be filled with fury at the brazen disregard for who gets hurt in that quest.
Or you might just get creeped out. While wars in Iraq and Afghanistan raged,
Assange was singularly focused on undermining
America's narrative of the conflicts
by making the truth known.
But did his difficult personality
and extremely questionable conduct compromise his efforts?
Join us in London's Ecuadorian embassy to find out.
Follow British Scandal Now wherever you listen to podcasts
and you can binge entire seasons early and ad free on OneG+.
I'm Raza Jafri and in the latest season of The Spy Who,
we open the file on Witold Pilecki,
the spy who infiltrated Auschwitz.
Resistance fighter Witold Pilecki has heard dark
rumours about an internment camp on his home soil of Poland. Hoping to expose its
cruelty to the world, he leaves his family behind and deliberately gets
himself imprisoned. The camp is called Auschwitz, a hellish place where the
unimaginable becomes routine. Pilecki is determined.
He needs to organise the prisoners, build a resistance and get the truth out.
Except when the world hears about the horrors of the camp, nobody comes to the rescue.
In the end, it's just him, alone, with only one decision to make.
Accept death or escape.
Follow the Spy Who on the Wandery app or wherever you listen to
podcasts or you can binge the full season of The Spy Who Infiltrated Auschwitz
early and ad-free with Wandery Plus. One night in the early 1940s in a small town in eastern Kentucky, a highly respected local
man named Arthur Lewis silently made his way down a dark road.
Everybody who knew Arthur, and that was most people in this small town, knew him as an
upstanding law-abiding citizen.
But tonight, Arthur clutched a hammer and a chisel in his hands and crept as slowly
and quietly as he could because he didn't want anybody to know what he was doing.
The moon and stars cast an eerie glow across the town.
Arthur was not a superstitious person, in fact he was pretty much
the opposite. But the way the moonlight hit the trees along the road made it look like something
was moving in the shadows, and Arthur couldn't help but feel creeped out. Still, the moon and
stars provided the perfect amount of light for Arthur to see where he was going without being
seen. So he took a breath, collected himself, and moved quickly through the shadows on the road.
After walking for a few minutes, he turned onto another dirt road that led to the top
of a small hill that was ringed by trees.
There were a few old wooden houses along this dirt road, and Arthur saw lights on inside
a couple of them.
So he crouched down a little bit more to try to hide himself in the dark and picked up his pace.
Arthur stopped when he reached the top of the hill.
A wrought iron gate and fence stood in his path
and there was a thick metal chain with a lock on it
wrapped around the gate.
Arthur scanned the darkness all around him
and took another steadying breath.
He knew everybody in town would think what he was about to do was crazy, because this
land belonged to a man named Karl Pruitt, and Karl Pruitt was dangerous.
But tonight, Arthur didn't care.
He was on a mission.
Arthur pulled on the gate, but the chain and lock kept it closed tight.
So he walked a couple of feet away from the gate and just tossed his hammer and chisel
over the fence, which was only a few feet tall.
And so Arthur grabbed on to the thin, wrought iron bars that made up this fence and very
carefully he climbed up and leapt over to the other side.
When he landed, he scooped up his hammer and chisel and walked through some overgrown grass.
Now, despite having the hammer and chisel, Arthur did not come to this place in order
to work.
Instead, he came here to vandalize the place.
He had come here really to prove a point.
He wanted to show the people in town that Karl Pruitt was not as powerful as they all
thought and they didn't have to live in fear of him any longer. Just then, Arthur spotted the engraved stone marker he was looking for, a
marker that declared in capital letters that this patch of land was Karl's. So he gripped
his chisel tightly and walked towards the marker. But just as he drew close to the marker and raised
his tools to strike, Arthur suddenly
froze.
He couldn't tell if the moon and stars were playing tricks on him, but it looked like
a shadow of a large chain had appeared on the ground in front of him.
Arthur instinctively turned around, but he saw he was way too far away from the gate
for the chain on it to be casting a shadow all the way over here.
However, when Arthur turned back around, the shadow of the chain was now gone.
Arthur was shaken up, but he kind of laughed at himself and shook it off.
Things always seemed to look strange in the dark.
And so Arthur placed the metal blade of the chisel directly on the stone marker and then
slammed the hammer into the back of the chisel.
A piece of the stone flew off and fell to the ground, and right away Arthur forgot all about that weird shadow he'd just seen,
and instead he just continued chipping away as fast as he could. He knew the noise he was making
could attract attention from the people who lived nearby, and he had no intention of getting caught
tonight. But just then Arthur heard a sound over all the noise he was making, and it sounded like
footsteps, exactly what he'd been trying to avoid.
Arthur stopped hammering and crouched down a few feet away from the stone marker, trying
his best to hide.
But as Arthur looked around in the darkness, he didn't see anyone.
And eventually the footsteps sounds disappeared, at which point Arthur told himself it must
have just been the wind blowing through the trees or something, and a bit apprehensively
he got back to work with his hammer and chisel.
But suddenly the sound of the footsteps came back, and this time they were so much louder
and they seemed much closer.
Whoever it was, they were clearly making their way towards Arthur.
And so Arthur had no idea if it was someone from one of the nearby houses,
or if a local cop had shown up or something, but either way he wasn't sticking around to find out.
And so he turned around to make a run for it when he froze, because something was standing
right in front of him blocking his way.
Arthur began to shake with fear and then without thinking he dropped the hammer and chisel
and took off running.
Minutes later in a house located about halfway down the road from where Arthur was, a man
was sitting in his front room when he heard a blood curdling scream coming from the top of the nearby hill that belonged to
Karl Pruitt.
The man just froze for a second.
Sound frightened him, but it also confused him.
Because people just did not go up to the top of that hill anymore.
But in the eerie silence that followed that scream, this man sort of snapped out of his
confusion and shouted for his wife to stay inside and then he ran to the kitchen and In the eerie silence that followed that scream, this man sort of snapped out of his confusion
and shouted for his wife to stay inside and then he ran to the kitchen and found his flashlight.
The man stepped outside, flashlight in hand, and ran to the dirt road that led up to the
top of the hill.
And as he did, he saw a beam from another flashlight a couple yards ahead of him.
He quickly recognized that it was his neighbor, so he called out to him.
The neighbor turned around and walked a few steps back down the road, and the two men quickly exchanged notes about the scream they had heard.
And then together, they rushed towards the top of the hill.
Once they got there, they arrived in front of the wrought iron gate, and when they shined
their flashlights through it onto the ground, they saw something lying just on the other side of the gate.
They both just stared at the ground for a few seconds in silence, transfixed by how
gruesome the scene was.
Finally, one of the two men said he'd go get help, and then he turned and ran back down
the hill and headed straight into town.
A little later that night, the man who had gone to get help returned to the top of the
hill to the gate now with a police officer.
The neighbor who'd been there before hadn't moved.
All three men lifted their flashlights and shined them on the ground just beyond the
gate.
And together they all stared at the dead body of Arthur Lewis.
The metal chain that had been used to keep the gate locked had been removed and was wrapped
around Arthur's neck, and Arthur's face had turned a sickly bluish grey.
The three men looked up from the body and they all just nodded to each other.
In most circumstances, the discovery of a dead body like this would cause shock and
alarm.
But these three men felt nothing but resignation and sorrow.
They weren't surprised, panicked, or afraid, because they already knew exactly what had
happened.
Everybody in town knew the kind of violence Karl Pruitt was capable of.
This is why most people in town would never have set foot on the piece of land where Arthur
had gone, and why they would definitely never have vandalized something that belonged to
Carl.
And this was because of the horrific chain of events that began back in 1938, a few years Before Arthur made his fateful trip up the hill.
Back in 1938, late one afternoon, Carl Pruitt had finished a hard day's work in town as
a carpenter and headed home.
Like most people in this small town, Carl knew pretty much everybody and seemed to get
along well with his friends and neighbors.
Most days, he worked hard building and repairing things for other people and then when he got home, he would often find his wife cooking dinner for both of them.
But today, when Carl arrived home, he didn't smell anything cooking
and he didn't see his wife in the kitchen. Instead, he heard a strange noise coming from
his bedroom at the back of the house.
He ran there to make sure his wife was okay, but when he stepped into the room, he found
his wife in bed with another man.
Carl began to scream and the other man leapt out of the bed, climbed through the window
and fled across town.
As for Carl's wife, she just stayed in the bed, covering herself with a blanket and trying
to apologize to her husband and trying to get him to calm down.
But Carl, filled with rage, grabbed a metal chain he used on his job, leapt on top of
his wife, wrapped the chain around her throat, and strangled her to death.
After the murder of his wife, no one in town ever heard from Carl again.
Even though there had never been an arrest or trial, the townspeople were glad Carl was
gone.
They tried to quickly put this horrific event behind them and basically stopped thinking
about Carl Pruitt.
However, within months of this murder, a series of violent deaths began taking place in town, and most
people did not think these deaths were accidents.
The first death that caught people's attention involved a young man who had been seen happily
riding his bicycle towards the dirt road that led to the top of the hill.
But later that day, someone found the boy back in town lying dead on the street, strangled
with his own bike chain.
Days later, after the boy had been buried, neighbors found his mother dead in her own
yard.
She also had been strangled but with a clothesline while she was out hanging up laundry.
These two deaths put the whole town on edge.
Even though nobody had seen him, many people suspected that Karl Pruitt must have come back
because the boy and his mother had been strangled to death just like Karl's wife had been.
And not long after that, a farmer turned up strangled with the reins from his own horse-drawn
wagon, which prompted a police investigation. However, before he could finish it, that police
officer was strangled to death as well, found
in an open field with a large chain wrapped around his neck looking like it had almost
decapitated him.
After the death of this police officer, combined with all the other strange strangulation deaths,
the town had had it, they were terrified, and they went into full panic mode.
Soon stories began to surface that people had seen Carl wandering through the shadows
on this small patch of land he owned on the top of the hill, just waiting for his next
victim.
And now, Carl appeared to have found his next victim.
Arthur Lewis, the man who said he wasn't afraid of Carl, who had traveled up the hill with
his hammer and chisel.
On top of the hill, the officer and the two men who'd found Arthur's body stood at the gate.
The officer told the men to step back and wait over there.
Once they had, he opened the gate, walked through, and stepped directly over Arthur's body.
He made his way through the grass and found Arthur's hammer and chisel on the ground,
and right next to them was the engraved marker that Arthur had come out to deface.
However, when the officer shined his light on the marker, the marker had no damage to it whatsoever. It was completely intact. Not a single piece of the stone had been chipped
off by the chisel.
The officer crouched down and moved his light over the stone, and he saw very clearly that
on this stone were the words, Carl Pruitt, and next to it were dates, the date Carl was
born and the date Carl died.
Because this stone marker that Arthur had come up here to deface was actually Carl's
gravestone.
Because Carl had died back in 1938 on the day he found his wife in bed with another
man.
It would turn out Carl Pruitt not only killed his own wife, but also after seeing what he
had done, seeing her dead body, he grabbed a pistol, put it to his head and fired, taking
his own life.
Soon after the murder-suicide, Karl's wife was laid to rest in the cemetery near her
church, but her family demanded that Karl be buried somewhere else.
And so, Karl was buried in an isolated grave in an old cemetery at the top of that hill.
And of course, since the man was dead, everybody in town assumed he was gone for good and they
would never have to deal with Carl again.
But that all changed not long after Carl was buried, when people in town reported seeing
strange shadows around his gravesite.
And these shadows always took on the same form, a large chain like the one Carl had
used to murder his wife.
The story spread and soon a morbid curiosity about Carl's grave arose in town.
And that's around the same time that the other strangling deaths began, and when people started
to claim that maybe Carl's ghost was responsible for them.
But being strangled was not the only thing that connected all these victims.
It would turn out not long before their deaths, they had all tried to vandalize Carl Pruitt's
grave.
Some had done it on a dare, others did it out of anger.
As for the police officer who eventually launched this investigation following all these strangling
deaths, well, he didn't vandalize Carl Pruitt's grave, but he was so intrigued by the idea
that Carl's ghost could be responsible that he went to the gravesite and began taking
photographs and it was not long after that that he went to the grave site and began taking photographs, and it was not long after that that
he died. As for Arthur, he did attempt to vandalize the grave, but he was not doing it out of anger or
some vendetta against Carl or a dare, he was actually doing it to prove to the rest of the
townspeople that there was no such thing as ghosts and that Carl Pruitt was dead and could no longer hurt anyone. However, the instant Arthur began to deface that headstone, someone or something strangled
him to death and many people believe it was Karl Pruitt's ghost.
And despite all those attempts at defacing Karl Pruitt's headstone, that headstone was
always found, at least according to local legend, in perfect condition.
Following the discovery of Arthur's body, people in town really began to fear Karl Pruitt's
ghost and his cursed headstone, and they demanded that the cemetery on the hill be closed.
And so family members with loved ones buried up there had their bodies removed and reburied
in other cemeteries, however, nobody dared touch Carl's grave.
So Carl's body remained in that cemetery until 1958, so 20 years after he had killed his
wife and taken his own life.
At that time in 1958, a strip mining company dug up the ground on the hill, destroying Carl's body and his headstone and so the curse was said to have finally been lifted.
And so, if these two stories tell us anything, it's that if you think you can go searching
for ghosts without consequences, you can't.
A quick note about our stories, they are all based on true events, but we sometimes use
pseudonyms to protect the people involved and some details are fictionalized for dramatic
purposes.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Bolland Podcast.
If you enjoyed today's stories and you're looking for more bone-chilling content, be
sure to check out all of our studios' podcasts.
This podcast, the Mr. Bolland Podcast, and also Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries, Bedtime
Stories, Wartime Stories, Run Fool, and Redacted.
Just search for Bolland Studios wherever you get your podcasts to find all of these
shows.
To watch hundreds more stories just like the ones you heard today, head over to our YouTube
channel which is just called Mr. Ballen.
So that's going to do it.
I really appreciate your support.
Until next time, see ya. Hey Prime members, you can binge 8 new episodes of the Mr. Ballin podcast one month early
and all episodes ad free on Amazon Music.
Download the Amazon Music app today.
And before you go, please tell us about
yourself by completing a short survey at wondery.com slash survey. A few miles from the glass spires of
Midtown Atlanta lies the South River Forest. In 2021 and 2022, the woods became a home to activists
from all over the country who gathered to stop the nearby construction of a massive new police training facility
nicknamed Cop City.
At approximately nine o'clock this morning,
as law enforcement was moving through various sectors
of the property, an individual, without warning,
shot a Georgia State Patrol trooper.
This is We Came to the Forest,
a story about resistance,
The abolitionist mission isn't done until every prison is empty and shut down.
love and fellowship,
It was probably the happiest I've ever been in my life.
and the lengths will go to protect the things we hold closest to our hearts.
Follow We Came to the Forest on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of We Came to the Forest early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus.