Otherworld - Episode 171: The Widower
Episode Date: June 15, 2026When Ashley was only 11 years old, she moved back to her parent's home country of Mexico. While the transition was difficult at first, she came to love her new life. Most of all, this move allowed her... to develop a meaningful relationship with her grandfather whose life was full of grand stories. It wasn't until she was older though, that her grandfather confessed a traumatic moment in his life that surprisingly revealed just how much the paranormal is woven into her family history.Check out our MerchFollow us on: Instagram, TikTok, TwitterFor business inquiries contact: OtherworldTeam@unitedtalent.comIf you have experienced something paranormal or unexplained, email us your story at stories@otherworldpod.com
Transcript
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Hey everybody, before we start this episode, I want to say that we are currently on the hunt for new stories.
Technically, we are always on the hunt for new stories, but especially right now because we're already getting a head start on our Halloween episodes for this year.
So, if you have experienced something paranormal, supernatural, or unexplained, email a summary of what happened to Stories at OtherworldPod.com.
If you have a friend or family member that has a great story,
now is an excellent time to talk them into finally emailing the show.
Once again, the email is Stories at Otherworldpod.com.
Thank you, and I'm looking forward to reading all these.
Welcome to Otherworld.
I'm your host, Jack Wagner.
The story you're about to hear covers a long period of time,
multiple generations, and honestly,
so many different things that I'm surprised
it ended up being just one episode.
It comes from a woman named Ashley
who grew up in the United States
but then had to move to Mexico
when she was just 11 years old.
This was a huge culture shock for her
and also a big change of pace
going from a relatively large city
to a small rural town
in a totally different country.
Luckily, Ashley ended up settling in,
and really enjoying life in Mexico.
And something that really helped her with that
was getting to know her grandfather,
who lived a really interesting life
and had many stories to share with Ashley.
But there was one topic that he did not enjoy talking about,
something that took a while to get the full version of.
And that is what this episode is about.
Just a heads up, this one contains
some descriptions of violence that may be difficult for some listeners.
This episode is called The Widower, and you're listening to Otherworld.
This is Bobby?
At its core, the science, you can't argue.
I'm worried about all the science.
Up in the sky.
It's almost frustrating that it's happening.
I'm going to die.
If limbs were just wrong.
Everybody moves back into the light, even if it takes them ahead.
My name is Ashley.
Villarreal and I was born in Los Angeles, California in 1989. I lived there until I was about
11 years old. When I was 11, my grandfather had a heart problem and so he had to go into surgery
and we went to his hometown, which is this tiny town in Mexico, to visit him and to take care of him,
you know, after the surgery.
But my parents did this crazy thing where they left me and my 12-year-old sister taking care of
my grandpa for two weeks.
And when they came back two weeks later, they came back with all their stuff.
It wasn't a, you know, smooth move.
It was a very, all of a sudden, you live in Mexico now.
And so that was pretty shocking because we, you know, I had never moved.
from California. We had always lived in the same spot. And when we moved to Mexico, it was basically
from overnight. And the cultural shock was interesting. You know, from living in California,
we used to live near Anaheim. And then we moved to certain parts like Fullerton and things like
that. So that was like the biggest moves I had ever done, which was inside of L.A. And so when we moved to
Mexico and I go to this town where, you know, my school didn't have a desk for me. There was no,
like, cement on the streets. There was no supermarkets. Everything you bought, like the fruits and the
food, you bought it from, like, particular people. The news was given out in, like, this little car
that passed with a huge sound system. So it was very shocking. It was, like, traveling back in time.
It was hard when we made the move like that.
You know, there wasn't a chance to say goodbye.
And I was 11 and also phones like cell phones didn't exist.
So the only way I had to communicate with people was through email and barely.
You know, I was I was a kid.
So it was more of letting go, you know.
My parents were very, I would call it unstable for a bit.
Like they liked to move around even if we were inside the same area.
So I was very used to leaving schools, you know, moving from school to school and losing friends.
So when it comes to that, it was kind of not that hard.
But what was very hard for me was, you know, my family.
We had my cousins in California and I grew up with them.
So it was very hard from one day to another to basically have brothers and then no.
then it's just you. And also, I knew Spanish. You know, my mom had taught us Spanish as a first language and English basically as second. We learned it in school. But I didn't exactly know how to write well in Spanish. I knew how to speak it. But it was a very tricky transition because I was already in fifth grade. So when, you know, first day of class in Mexico, they start like telling me to write things down. And I was,
in complete shock. So it was a pretty rough transition, like from one day to another,
a life change. But at the moment, obviously, I felt very attacked by the world and angry and
sad. But it took me, I think, if I had to calculate, probably two weeks to be very happy.
I fell in love with the town and I fell in love with the people.
and the friends that I made there are still my friends today.
I think it was a great change.
I just at the moment didn't see it that way.
So when we moved there initially, you know, the move was rough for, you know, all the reasons that I already told you.
But one of the things that started getting me comfortable and settled in Mexico was being able to be so close to my grandfather.
We moved into his place.
which is a big house that we had been to maybe four, five times in my whole life.
One of the interesting things was that, you know, when I was getting to know him,
I was getting to know him on a personal level.
And I didn't really know, you know, about his life or his professional life.
And when I would, you know, go out or go to school, you know,
one of the first things that people would ask me, and I'm going to change his name for privacy reasons.
but I'm going to call him Carlos, and they would ask me, you know, are you Carlos's granddaughter?
And I mean, it would be like if I was a celebrity's granddaughter.
And I was always very shocked about that.
I wasn't used to that because in California, nobody knows you.
You know, I was nothing compared to like what I became when I moved to this little town.
All of a sudden, I was, if I was walking down the street,
people would wave at me and, you know, say like, say hello to Carlos for me. And I had no idea
who these people were, but everybody knew me. And so it was a very beautiful way to start to understand,
you know, the level of person, you know, that my grandfather was and how many people loved him.
That to me made the move to that town smoother because I felt immediately to,
taken care of, even by strangers and people that I didn't know. And it was this feeling that I had
never experienced in the United States, you know, and in Mexico, it's this very welcoming
environment. You know, people knew, for example, that I couldn't write perfect Spanish. So they would,
my teacher at the time, and the other teachers from this elementary school, which by the way
was public and, you know, they did not get paid extra for this, but they would take turns after
class to teach me, to stay with me and make sure that I was learning and that I was making it
easier for me. And I feel like those are things that made me immediately feel attached and
loved, you know, in that little town. And then in terms of friendship and fun, I learned how to
have fun in a very different way.
I feel like in California, fun usually meant going out somewhere or doing something really cool,
you know, going to a museum or going to Disneyland or going to a park.
And here in this little town, all of that was out of the picture.
So the fun was going to the downtown and getting what we call respados, which is like ice with
flavoring. And then people would, the activity was to walk around that little block and say hello to
everyone. So everybody just said hello to everyone, like over and over. And that was fun. You know,
that became fun to me to be able to know everybody in the town and to be able to have friends and
know their mothers and then know their cousins. So it was a very welcoming environment. My grandfather
is a very interesting person.
I knew that from the gecko
because he's just a wonderful person,
but I didn't know
his history
or his life
either politically
or professionally speaking
until we moved to that little town in Mexico.
And that's where I started learning
about his childhood
amongst many things, right?
So he
started telling me the story,
story of his life. And it, you know, it begins with him being a very young boy. He is one of 11
brothers and sisters, so he comes from a very big family. And they are, you know, his father and
mother were from this little town in Mexico, which will remain nameless. But they grew up in a very
poor environment in terms of money. He, his father,
passed away when he was around 14 years old.
So his mother was left to take care of, you know, 12 children.
And the only thing she knew how to do was make bread.
So, you know, he always tells me that the story that she would make bread, like at 4 a.m.,
you know, she had the bread ready.
And she would put baskets in all of their heads and then, like, fill the baskets with bread
and then send them out to the town to, like, different parts of town to,
sell the bread as much as they could. And that's how they survived for many, many years until
my grandfather was a little older, old enough to get into middle school, which, you know,
he describes to me, was not normal at that time. You know, studying wasn't part of the equation.
And we're talking, you know, this is Mexico. If I had to put a year to it, it would probably be like the 40s.
So a very long time ago.
He says that he wanted to enroll into school because he would see all these kids coming in and out.
And he wanted to live a normal life as much as he could.
And he enrolled himself.
He didn't even know what grade he was going to get into or what he was getting himself into.
But he said he just walked up in there and said, I want to study.
And so according to the age, they put him in a group.
And it was pretty quick that they realized that he was very talented.
He was great.
His favorite subject was math, but he was great at poetry too.
So he did a lot of poetry contests and a lot of writing.
He was just very into learning.
He was a big, big nerd.
As he always says, he was a very cool nerd.
He had a lot of friends.
and he also did a lot of, you know, I don't know how you would say this in English, but like travisuras, like he did a lot of mischievous, I guess, things.
So he always, you know, laughs about his past and how he, you know, growing up had, you know, these two types of sides to himself where he was super strict and smart and committed.
And then on the other hand, he loved having fun and going out on the town and things like that.
But during middle school, he learned that about himself, that he really loved to study and that he was good at it.
So when it was time to pass to high school, he did.
And he also went to the only high school that was in that town.
And at that time, he met a professor which would change his life.
And that professor changed his life by noticing him and applying in his name for a,
scholarship. My grandfather didn't even know that this could be done. So this professor is the one who
did all of that for him. And he got him this major scholarship to be able to study a professional
career at a university in Mexico City, which for my grandfather was impossible to even dream of.
But this professor didn't take no for an answer. He told him, hey, you have this scholarship and
you're leaving. So he even, you know, lent him money for the move and everything. And my grandfather,
from there forward, you know, says his life changed completely. After he accepted the scholarship,
he moved to Mexico City and he started studying at a university called El Instituto Politechnico
National of Mexico, which is the most important school for engineers. And he described
it as a very eye-opening experience for him to live in the city. He comes from this tiny Mexican town
where, you know, the coolest thing you could do is like have a ranch and have a cow. And all of a
sudden, he's in the city that is compared to like New York. You know, he is living a life that he
couldn't imagine he could live. But he's also living at being very careful, you know, with his
studies and with his money. He's sending half of it to his mother. He's still taking care of his
brothers and sisters from far away. So he describes that time as a lot of like growth and fun,
but also very, very serious time in his life where he also liked what he was studying, you know,
and he figured out that he was very good at it. And he wanted to become like the best civil engineer in the world.
So he took out the nerdiest parts of him and it paid off.
He got into a lot of competitions and a lot of teachers wanted him to get involved in other things out of school.
And that's how he started to get his professional career going even before he had graduated.
And it was also during this crazy time that he met my grandmother.
This is a funny story because he always says that he wasn't supposed to end up with her.
He had asked one of his classmates to go on a date with him.
And they did.
They went on a date.
But he says that when he went to go pick her up at her apartment and the door opens and it's his date's sister.
and he says that in that moment he fell in love.
It was like love at first sight,
and he was so worried because he thought,
I'm going on a date with the wrong sister.
Like, I should not continue this date if I ever want a chance
with this girl who just opened the door.
His date comes out.
He, of course, isn't going to be rude,
so he takes her on a date.
You know, at the end of the date,
he told his current date that he had really liked his sister, like her sister,
and that he would like to approach her if that was okay.
And thankfully, his date wasn't bothered by it and, you know, laughed it out and just said,
sure, just give it some time because, you know, we just went out on a date.
So my grandfather did.
He waited a couple of months until he approached them again.
You know, he says he went back to the apartment.
asked for a date and he got it.
And, you know, he explains that first date as the best night of his life.
They went to a movie and that was it.
And he just says, like, it was the best date because we didn't have to talk,
but he just wanted to be with her.
You know, he just wanted to sit with her.
So, you know, whenever he talks about my grandmother,
it's like his whole face lights up.
And he just starts talking about.
how funny it was and how he used to joke with her a lot about, you know, if you misbehavior,
if you do something, I'm going to go back to your sister. And like, they had that running joke
forever. During this time when he starts to date my grandmother, he is also about to graduate.
So it's a very defining time in his life. And he figures out pretty quickly once he starts dating
my grandmother that she is the woman he wants to marry, but he is also very young. And he has,
in his own words, nothing to give her. You know, he didn't have anything to offer her. So he
starts working really hard. He starts in a company where he starts as a civil engineer in
like a low position and slowly starts going up and up and up inside.
of the company. And, you know, he describes this time as his dating time with my grandmother,
but that he kept promising that, you know, they're going to get married and they're going to get
married. And my grandmother would just, you know, say, don't even mention it until you have a ring.
And, you know, there were different times, but they were both very into each other. And he knew from,
in his own words, from the first date that she would be his wife. So he describes a
as he had an objective now.
He wanted to have this professional life,
not only to help his family now,
but to build his own, you know, to have a wife.
So at this company that he started working in,
he started working as a civil engineer,
and he worked in projects,
mostly building bridges for the roads in Central Mexico.
But he started basically as an assistant position
and overseeing these big sites and projects
and then slowly started becoming more and more important
within these projects.
And as that happened, in his personal life,
he decided it was time.
So he asked my grandmother to marry him,
even though in his own words again,
he didn't have anything yet.
But he knew he would.
So they got married very quickly.
I believe they had been dating for about only a year and a half.
You know, like it was pretty quick for that time.
And they get married, they move in to this part of Mexico City that is very famous for being a terrible part of the city.
There's a lot of poverty and there's a lot of crime.
And, you know, my grandfather says that this is where they had their first apartment.
And he would come home from work every night, you know, exhausted.
And he would apologize to her.
He would tell her, I'm sorry, we're going to move out soon.
Like I promise where I'm working.
And she would just say, you know, in that time that she was the happiest woman in the world.
She didn't need anything, but she also knew, you know, she would always tell him, I know, like, I know we're going to, this is going to change.
I know I married a very talented man.
So whenever, you know, he tells him.
this part of the story, it's very heartwarming. You know, they both had so much love and, like,
faith for one another that things were going to work out. So even though he always laughs at this part
as, like, a defense mechanism, I think, to think that it was such a horrible part of town and, like,
such a horrible experience, he also says it was what made him feel like, you know, this was the love of his
life, that she could live anywhere with him, and he would feel like, you know, the king of the world.
So that was like a time in their life where, as a couple, they grew very close. And also it is
where my grandmother and grandfather got pregnant for the first time. She got pregnant of their
first child. He started doing a lot better at work, and he started getting ascended. So he moved
out of that apartment into another area of Mexico.
And, you know, he always describes that as, you know, the beginning of his very, very successful
career.
So after they move out of this bad side of town, my grandfather's life starts to change professionally.
He not only leads like these small projects, but he becomes a very important part of the
company. When my grandfather became a very important person for the company he was working in,
he also opened his own company. And in this company, he had a lot of, you know, a big group
of civil engineers working, building huge projects for the government, building bridges and
building roads for the central part of Mexico. So he was very busy. And he had to deal a lot with
politicians because of it. And my grandfather's life changed from completely, you know,
black to white, basically. He went from being this very poor man to having anything you can think
of. You know, he bought a huge house in the best part of the city. They had chauffeurs. They had
more than one made.
And my grandmother was just busy having babies.
You know, she ended up having four.
And at this point in time, they're doing really well.
You know, he's a very important businessman.
She is a very beautiful young mother.
She even modeled for some time.
She was a model.
And she was like in covers of magazines for Mexico.
and she was very beautiful.
So she knew how to how to exploit that part of herself.
And, you know, my mom always says that it was, the common thing for them was to wake up.
And she was already in the hair salon.
Like she would have her hair done every morning.
Like this life that was just completely, you know, my grandfather's dream.
He wanted to give her everything he could.
And he managed to do that.
He managed to give her the best type of life you could give someone, I think.
All right.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
So at this point in time, they have had four kids.
One of them is my mother.
My mother was kind of like in the middle.
She was the third child out of four.
And at that time, she was 14 years old.
And she describes that time as, you know, being wonderful and beautiful.
And her life, her upbringing was just full of privilege and a lot of happiness and love.
And she always describes my grandparents as being extremely in love with one another,
annoyingly so according to her.
And so at this same time that, you know, they're having such a beautiful,
full life. My grandfather's job is getting a little more stressful. He's dealing with projects
that get a little more complicated just because of the size of them. They are huge projects
and he has to do huge budgets for the government. And at this time, my mother is 14 years old.
It was during August of 1979. So it's a very, um,
beautiful time for my mother and her family. And she describes this evening as a completely
normal Sunday night. Her mom had made them hot dogs for dinner and they had had it in the
dining table together. And after they finished, everybody went up to their own bedrooms to,
you know, settle for the night. So my mom says that they each had their own bedroom. So my mom
had her bedroom and she had two brothers and one sister and they each went into their individual
bedrooms to call it a night. But, you know, they were still awake. They were just kind of hanging out
like you do on a Sunday evening. And my mom says that all of a sudden they just heard the door,
their front door in their house was made out of glass. So she said they heard the glass breaking.
and by the time they had gotten up to their doorway, like in their bedroom, the men were already in the house.
They were carrying two guns.
And they were walking down the hallway that led to my grandparents' bedroom.
And so my mom says that the only thing she managed to grab was a pair of shoes that she was wearing and she took them off her feet.
And she started throwing them towards the men.
but she says that they were coming in so fast.
She's not even sure that the shoes hit them.
And then they proceeded to go into my grandparents' bedroom
and they shot my grandfather and they shot my grandmother multiple times.
And, you know, my mom describes that as the most terrifying moments of her life
because she wasn't sure what had just happened.
And she says they took the shots,
and then as quickly as they took the shots,
they left the house.
They didn't bother to either shoot the kids
or anything.
They just walked right out of the house,
right where they came in from.
But my mom says that they ran towards her parents' bedroom,
and my grandmother was on the floor.
She had been shot.
And my grandfather was not.
He had managed to grab this huge television set that they had in front of their bed to throw it at the men.
And when he did that, the men shot him and the bullets got stuck in the television.
So he survived.
But the men, they did it so quickly, I think they didn't even notice.
And so when my grandfather is, you know, laying on the floor with my grandmother and my mother describes this as, you know, the most traumatic experience of her life, she's seeing her mother pass away.
And, you know, my grandfather is in a state of shock holding my grandmother.
And my mom says it took a couple of minutes that she was alive for a little bit, managed to say a couple of things.
But, you know, the things she managed to say were like if she was going to survive, you know, like the ambulance will be here soon and everything will be okay.
But she passed away and when the ambulance arrived, it was too late.
My grandfather, the only times that he has, like, talked about the event itself, he always says that he feels like it was very unfair.
He's very upset at what we would call God because he feels like he should have died.
You know, whenever he thinks about that moment, that's all he ever says.
That he tries to forget about that moment because he should have died.
You know, he always says that that he, that was wrong and that he's sure that, like, destiny, something got twisted because it shouldn't have been her.
But he, in terms of detail, doesn't give much.
He just describes it as the worst day of his life.
And, you know, he says that after she passed away,
he, like, kind of came back to himself for a second and, you know,
told the kids to get out of the room.
So he, that's the only thing he's told me,
that he got up and told them to go to their rooms.
And he regrets that too.
You know, he says, like, I should have stayed with them.
I should have hugged them.
I should have, you know, we just lived something severely traumatic.
But he told them to go to their rooms and wait until police and ambulance came.
And part of me wanting to tell this story now is because he doesn't speak English.
And also he doesn't speak about it.
all, even if it's in Spanish. He considers it the most important event in his life, but also
obviously the most tragic. But I feel like it's important to talk about it in a way, to
like remember my grandmother and the way she died so unfairly. Once my grandmother passed away,
My grandfather called the police.
The police came to the house and took my grandmother,
but they also took him to the police station
because he had become immediately suspect number one.
And, you know, they took him in to interrogate him.
And then in the morning, they brought in my mother and her brothers
to also give their interrogation.
But the way that my mother did,
describes it is that they separated the children into different rooms and told them that their
father had confessed and that he had been the one who shot their mother. And my mom says that she was
very scared and she was very angry because she of course knew that this wasn't true. She had
been in the house. She knew that two men had come in. And she said that,
they were there for days interrogating them and telling them he already confessed and they wouldn't let them see each other.
So this went on for about two weeks and they were trying really hard to keep him in jail.
But they couldn't because, you know, the kids, they were not breaking and nobody, you know, they refused to lie that way.
So they had to let him out.
after he is released from jail, he realizes that this has to do directly with a specific politician who he did not want to make deals with.
Because these projects and deals had to do with huge projects that would require him to inflate numbers and therefore participate in like massive amounts of corruption in the government.
And my grandfather did not want to get involved.
And so he declined. And right after he did that, this happened. And so my grandfather knew at that moment that my grandmother wasn't supposed to be the one who died. It was supposed to be him. I'm being intentionally vague here with the details of people because it's still a subject that scares me a little bit. It probably shouldn't because it's so far in the past. But we are talking about very powerful people.
people who, you know, do very horrible, corrupt things in Mexico.
After he comes to this realization, he decides to leave Mexico City, as well as, you know,
his former colleagues do too.
He meets up with them one last time.
They basically shut down the company illegally, and my grandfather decides to leave, to sell
the house and to go back to his home.
town where, you know, he's from and to bring his children with him, which that part, eventually
his children go back to Mexico, but for the moment being, they all move back to the city of,
to this unmentionable small town. And he goes back with the sense of wanting to like fix things.
So he becomes a politician himself. So this is eventually the town that he moves back to,
which is his hometown is the town that I end up moving two years later.
And this is the town where he has this change and he becomes a politician.
He decides that he wants to fight corruption for himself.
He wants to make sure that in his town where he's brought up,
these type of events don't happen.
He starts to bring a lot of projects for growth for his town.
he becomes a politician.
He starts canvassing basically in the streets
and he eventually becomes mayor of the town.
And the way he describes it to me is
he would give money from his pocket to the town.
Like the town was so poor, it was so little.
And he wanted to see it grow and he wanted to see it prosper.
He made it like his life objective
to basically bring this town
up. I think he wanted to erase so hard, like what had happened in Mexico and his previous
life that he completely focused into work. He became a very strong politician for this
small town, which eventually, you know, would be the town that I moved into. And that's why
people would recognize me all the time because of his history with the town. He did a lot of
amazing projects. He built a lot of bridges around the town to connect to bigger cities. He put
cement in the streets, which, you know, doesn't sound like a big deal, but at the time, it was a
huge, huge deal, you know, from having a dirt road to having an actual road. He did a lot of
projects like that. He built more schools because he wanted there to be more than one option for
each level of education. I could honestly continue listing the things that he has done for this town
to date, you know, even though he's not an active politician, he's still in a lot of groups and
he's an advisor to many politicians at the moment. You know, to keep, he's obsessed with this town.
He loves it. I think he transformed his heart, kind of, and he poured it into this town. After
You know, years later, I move to this town of his and we move in with him to his house.
I was very curious at the time.
You know, I was 11 years old.
I was so curious to figure out who he was.
So I would, every day, like during dinner time, just ask him so many questions.
I would ask him about his past.
I would ask him about his friends.
I would ask him about my grandmother, but in terms of details, like I wanted to know if she was funny or.
you know, I wanted the positive stuff. And so I think it took him a while. You know, at the beginning,
he wouldn't really tell me a lot of details or a lot of stories. And he slowly started opening up
and telling me a little more about his past. I would always joke with him and tell him that
I was going to write a book about his life because he has a very interesting life. And honestly,
I think I would.
He does have such an interesting story.
And through this connection that we develop,
he begins to tell me more details,
but it takes a couple of years.
So I start getting closer and closer to him.
I'm always very curious about his life.
You know, his room to date is still full
from like ceiling to ground with photos of my grandkids.
mother. So my curiosity keeps growing. And it isn't until years later, I'm 17 years old,
that one night he decides to tell me the full story. That's where, you know, he begins to tell me
the story. And at this point, I'm trying really hard to not interrupt him because he does not
speak about this. And the story he tells me honestly blows my mind on one hand.
I fully believe him and in the other I'm obviously kind of like confused.
The way my grandfather told me that this happened is that after he had been detained
and the investigation for the murder had begun but not really begun, like nothing much was being done.
He was starting to feel very frustrated.
And so he started looking for other ways to find information.
And when that was happening, he had a cousin of his reach out to him and say that if he was interested,
he knew somebody who could talk to the Ouija board or communicate through the Ouija board.
And my grandfather, even though I don't think he was a believer,
I feel like he had no other option at the time.
he felt very desperate.
So he agreed to contact this person through his cousin.
And what he told my mother is that after that happened,
they made an appointment.
And that the appointment was at a very late or early time,
you could say, at around 2 a.m.
To meet in the outside of the city,
outside of Mexico City, in a ranch,
where they would meet this person
and this person would bring out the Ouija board
and my grandfather was able to
go there and ask the main questions
that he wanted to ask the Ouija board
which was all concerning my grandmother's murder
he wanted to know who committed the murder
and where this person lived
because my grandfather wanted to
basically take the matters into his own hands
he was obviously very upset at the time.
So what he recalls is going and the Ouija board being very rude.
He always said that to me that the Ouija board was very rude and said a couple of bad words to him.
And that when he was able to ask the questions, the Ouija board just gave him a name and an address, spelled it out.
And so my grandfather after that went back to the city.
And he found the house.
And when he went to the house, he told me that he had gotten his gun because he was basically ready, you know, to avenge his wife's death.
The way he describes this to me is that he's not thinking.
Like he says, I just like, it was like just immediate.
I got the address, got up, and then just started doing everything.
went got the gun got into the car and then started driving when he gets to the address he finds out
that it's like in the same area where he used to live with my grandmother at the beginning like when
they had just gotten married and moved in so it was you know the poor side of town and exactly
where that address was was a small house that was made out of like laminate like a very poor house
So he could see through it
There wasn't really windows
The windows were made out of like curtains
And he says that he sees through the curtain
The shooter
He recognizes the shooter
From outside his house
So he's
You know, ready basically to take a shot
But
During this moment
He says that there's a lot of things
Going through his head
he says that he got very scared for the first time because he heard a voice that was clearly not his internal voice.
My grandfather says that it started telling him, like,
no se as a pendejo, no sas as a coward,
aslo, idiot, pendejo, pendejo, like that he kept repeating pendejo, pendejo, no says pendejo.
And my grandfather, you know, what he told me is, like,
I don't speak to myself like that.
Like I don't tell myself that there were more words, like homophobic words involved.
The voice was telling him, that no sea covarde, that not say gay in a very demeaning way.
To not be a pussy, basically, you know, not say joto.
Which to my grandfather was a huge insult, you know.
He's brought up in a very machista kind of Mexico.
he says that he got really freaked out by this voice and it got so loud in his head that he couldn't do it.
You know, he tells me, I wanted to.
Like, I felt like I wanted to.
But I see this man.
I recognize him and he's about to like sit down in his whatever dining table is.
And he's got kids.
You know, he's got little kids.
He's got little kids.
He's got a wife.
They're about to have dinner.
And he says that, you know, he's still to date doesn't understand, like, how he got the strength to not do it.
You know, he says that there are nights where he, like, still dreams about it.
And he thinks about doing it.
You know, he dreams that he does it.
But that at the moment he was very scared and the voice in his head was getting louder and he didn't like it.
So he decided to jump back into his car and, you know, throw the address away.
And that's the night that he decided that they had to leave.
In the family, we did know that this cousin of his ended up in time committing suicide.
And they believed that he was very into like,
you know, dark magic and things of that sort.
So he was controversial in the family.
You know, he explains it as the way he presented that to me
was for me to understand that there are things that hold a power that we probably don't understand.
And he wanted me to stay as far away from a Ouija board that I could.
You know, he didn't want me to ever play it or approach it or take it as a funny game.
You know, he that night just told me, I believe, you know, he's never said this again, though,
that this was the only time he told me that he believes that the devil is in that game.
And he just says, like, and the devil, you know, it's not, you don't mess with the devil and not get hurt.
And I honestly think that the only reason he told me the story
was because he felt like I was a very curious young girl.
You know, I was always asking questions.
I always wanted to learn and to experience.
And I think he didn't want that to happen to me.
So I was, you know, when he ended the story,
I was honestly presented like with a little.
a lot of confusion. I thought, wow, I can't believe my grandfather is opening up to me and telling me this part of the story that I had never heard of. But then also, he's so serious. You know, he's not kidding. Like, this really happened. And the fact that, you know, this board that he didn't believe in out of the blue and quickly gives him the address of the person that he recognizes as the killer to me.
me was like a movie. Like it was bizarre. I was like, this can't be true, but my grandfather
would have no reason, you know, to make this story up and to lie to me. So after this happens,
I talked to my mom. And, you know, it's also a subject that I don't really approach with her,
but I told her mom. I, you know, my grandfather just told me this story. And I'm a little
freaked out.
And my mom
was like supernatural about it.
She said, yeah,
that happened.
And that's all she told me that night.
She was like, yep.
No more detail.
Just that that's true.
Yeah, that happened to your grandfather.
Don't ever play that game.
And that's it.
Later on, you know, we've had
different conversations about it.
But the day of, I was just shocked
to one,
receive the story for my grandfather and then receive a confirmation, you know, from my mother.
Hey, I am Claudia. I am from Mexico. My daughter is Ashley. Well, I'm here to tell you some,
a little bit of my story of something that happened in our family. My dad told us that he once
had contact with this board. He played with that, the board and asked a lot of
of questions and the board answered and he had answers.
That's the only thing that he told us that he had answers for that.
My dad is a very, it's, he always, I remember him like a very happy person, but when this
situation goes in our family, well, my father just changed.
It's not a, it's now a serious, it's not like he is a serious person now, but this success
make a change in his life.
So at that time when he told us about this, he was very concerned, I think, and very worried.
And to tell us that thing that he did at that time, that he knows that it was wrong.
You know, my dad and I, we have a very, we are very closed since I was a little girl.
So I said, okay, okay, dad, don't worry.
It's okay.
Because he, at that time, he wants like, you know, has a white eyes.
And I said, don't worry about that.
If you don't want to say more, don't say more.
That's it.
It's okay.
And never, ever, we're going to talk about it.
about that again.
Is that the last you heard about this?
Yeah.
Or did you ever find out more about what happened?
Because Ashley, you told me a lot more.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think what happens is that my grandfather, as the years go by, he opens up a little bit more.
He talks more about what happened the older he gets.
I feel like he saw an opportunity to, when I was living with him in his house, we had never lived together.
And we started getting really close, the three of us, my sisters and him.
We used to go to the ranch with him in the mornings and things like that.
And so we had a lot of time to talk.
And I also think that since I'm not my mom, you know, it was like a different type of relationship where he could.
tell a little more.
You know, I feel like the subject of my grandmother's passing is something that we all acknowledge,
but don't really talk about in the family.
So when he decides to tell me this story, I was also a teenager.
But, you know, I think the difference was that I wasn't his daughter, and he was just telling
it to somebody else.
So he gave me a lot of more detail that at the time,
I didn't, I thought my mom knew.
I thought, you know, and my mom and I spoke about it afterwards.
And we're like, yeah, yeah, that happened.
But, like, we never went into detail of, like, all the things he told us.
Did, Claudia, did you ever find out about what he did with the information?
Or did you find that out from Ashley?
Well, first for Ashley and then for my dad.
Some, some, I don't know, maybe.
That's why Ashley and I were talking.
Maybe, well, my dad with my daughters had a special, like, feeling.
And my dad told lastly at that time a lot of things that I didn't know that.
I think because at that time when we were young,
my dad doesn't want to tell the complete story because,
I don't know.
Maybe he thought we, our hearts, we're going to be sad or I don't know.
But time passed.
And my dad right now has 89 years old.
And now he can talk about that now.
But another year's no, because this.
This story of his life and of our life like a family, it's terrible.
So we don't talk about, we don't like to talk about too much about this, especially my dad.
Unrelated to all of this, I heard that some strange things happened later on.
I don't know, Mom, if you remember better than I do.
I don't remember if it was my grandpa who told us that they had gone to the house like years later.
and that whoever lived there had to leave because they would hear like a woman cry and kids in the swimming pool?
Oh yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
We had a big pool in the house and the person who lives, who bought the house, they just keep calling my dad and said,
something is wearing your in this house.
Because sometimes during the night time or daytime, we hear people in the pool.
And you know what?
We love to swimming in that pool.
My sister, my brothers, my mother loves to swim in that pool.
So then they decided to close the pool.
And they closed that pool.
And they, and then start to hearing like crying, somebody's crying, like a woman's crying.
And I think it was my mom.
So they decided then to sell the house for that.
And they sell the house and they sold the house.
Oh.
Did any other strange things happen to you guys?
I know.
No.
No. I mean, there's a couple, you know, the story mom of, you know, that everybody believes that my grandmother wouldn't have liked my aunt's ex-husband because every time they put the Day of the Dead altar and, you know, her photo is the main photo in the altar every year.
And every time he would pass by the altar, something would fall or.
the candles would like shut off.
So everybody believed that she didn't like him.
And they ended up divorcing, so it makes sense.
Yeah.
But there's stories like that.
It's not particularly spooky.
It's, she's like a presence in the family.
But, you know, we just didn't get to meet her.
Okay.
Thank you so much to Ashley and Claudia for speaking to me and sharing the story.
You know, typically on Other World, I only feature first-person accounts,
but when I read this submission, it was pretty obvious that it was worth making an exception on this one.
Thank you once again to Ashley and Claudia.
I'm so glad we got to help preserve this incredible and very surreal piece of family history.
This episode was called The Widower, and you've been listening to Otherworld.
Otherworld is executive produced and hosted by myself, Jack Wagner.
Our producers are Theo Schaefer, Theo Krantz, Haley Pearson, and Nikki Kate Delgado.
Our theme song is by Cobra Man.
The soundtrack of this episode is by North Americans and Juice Jackal.
Our artwork is by Coldassack Studios.
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Colin Gaynor, and Hillary Schuff.
Follow and listen to Otherworld now for free on the Odyssey app
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And finally, if you or somebody you know
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