Radio Rental - Episode 70
Episode Date: November 1, 2024On today's tapes... >> Elk River > Black Rooster and Skull ...
Transcript
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from you. The following podcast includes scary stories with content that could be triggering to some listeners.
Listener discretion is advised.
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Hello, hello, welcome to Radio Rental and happy Dia de los Muertos, Radio Rental.
I am your host and tendero Terry Carnation, aka Terrizio Canazione.
Anywho today is one of my very favorite holidays.
And for those of you who are not familiar with it, in English or Anglais, it is Day of
the Dead, a Mexican holiday that reunites the living with the deceased.
Yes, it sounds a little bit macabre, but it really is a beautiful, whimsical holiday where
the spirits of loved ones are believed to return home over the span of these two days.
And every year I participate.
As you can see, I've got my little altar set up with flowers and ofrendas to honor
all the people in my life that have passed too soon.
You can see at the top I have...
Well, I have a picture of Zilon, my late wife.
Well, she may not actually be dead. I'm not certain of the situation there.
Maybe she's just missing. I don't know. It's complicated. Long story. Also on the shrine,
Patrick Swayze, Suzanne Summers. Heroes gone too soon.
The ofrendas are my offerings to these beautiful people. For my wife I have
offered this multi-directional microphone. For Patrick Swayze I offer, of course, a comb.
For Suzanne Summers, a thigh master. Oh gee. Maybe I undergifted for Patrick, oh well.
Alright, well enough of this. I'm sure you're here to listen to some real, actual,
true horror stories told by real, actual people.
And let's see what I have in store for you today.
Get it? In store?
Wanting to store?
Okay, here we go.
Ha ha!
Let's do this one.
Here we go!
Here we go!
Let's do this one!
Up with the stories of horror. were living in Moscow, Idaho. She was finishing up her redshirt year of track
and I was just graduated and we were looking
to do one more camping trip before the season turned.
We had heard a lot about this town called Elk River
at the end of a highway about due east of Moscow.
They had a really good diner apparently
and a lot of good recreational hiking
and fun spots to see.
So that sounded good to us.
And so we threw all the camping gear in the truck and hit the road.
We pull into Elk River.
It's probably around 630 or 7 and the town is alive.
Like it's bustling. It's packed. There seems to be
tourists there, there's a big group of hunters, people are walking all over the
streets, parents hustling their kids back into the car so they can hit the road.
There was no question that there was a lot going on. That's why we were
concerned as we're driving in that we're not entirely sure that we're gonna get a
campsite because it seems as though everybody had a similar idea.
We're following the signs to the campsite.
The road takes us around the outside of town.
And this isn't a very big town.
Elk River is pretty small.
So you can kind of get a look at the entire town as you're driving around it.
There's this gravel dirt road that winds up this mountain and that's where all the campsites are. It was just packed with
cars. So we head up the mountain and as we're going up the mountain we're
passing campsites and they're occupied and we're starting to get nervous. We're
starting to wonder if we're gonna be able to camp at all. But after about five
or ten minutes of driving up this mountain and winding around, we pass
this middle-aged couple setting up a camp off on the right.
We veer around this corner and there's a spot off on the left.
It was a little tiny spot.
It's right off the side of the road, so there wasn't really any privacy.
Built a fire.
Just got our tent set up, sleeping bags, made a little dinner.
And we're sitting around talking. I think I just opened the first beer.
And we hear a car.
And the car starts coming down the mountain and turn up a few minutes later,
it passes by, kicking up some dust.
A few minutes later, we hear another car coming down the mountain and passes us.
And then all of a sudden there's like a steady stream of cars. And they're bumper to bumper.
Trucks with campers on the back, little cars with sleeping bags packed in the back up against
the windows. All different kinds of cars, all different mix of models, all different groups of people
just streaming down the mountain.
My wife and I just kind of sitting there
and we're wondering, is there something we don't know about?
Is there like a curfew on this hill
or maybe the campsites closed?
We didn't have smartphones back then.
It's not like we could check
to see if there was some alert posted.
So we just kind of had to trust that whatever was going on didn't include us.
It was nothing we needed to worry about.
As the last car left, there was kind of a lull in our conversation, and I was zoning out.
I was just staring at the fire.
I hear a scream. No!
I was kinda so lost in thought
that I was questioning whether or not
I'd actually heard that.
And I looked at my wife
and she had stopped what she was doing.
So I knew that there was something.
And we had started talking.
I was like, did you hear that?
And she's like, yeah.
And I'm like, what was that?
And she said, I think it was someone screaming.
I think that woman maybe got hurt down.
And as she was kind of talking, we heard another scream
coming from the woods right behind our campsite.
And that one, we both stopped.
It felt like there was another person screaming. Someone was
screaming down the mountain and then someone was screaming in the woods
behind us. Two people either in trouble or hurt or something. We didn't know. We
just watched a bunch of people leave and then now we start to hear this. maybe we need to get out of here too, like maybe those people knew something
that we didn't know and it's time to go. The scream down the mountain happened
again and it's immediately answered with the one behind us and then it just
started to happen every so often back and forth.
It was no longer like somebody's hurt. It sounded like somebody screaming at you
to leave. The more they happened, the less human they sounded.
All we knew is that we needed to get into a safer spot than where we were.
We pulled the stakes out of the ground.
We had our sleeping bags and everything in the tent, rolled the tent up, and then threw
all our stuff just in the back of the truck without packing it back up or anything, just
dumped everything back there.
And then just stayed long enough to put out the fire.
One of us would run out, pour water on it, stirred up.
They'd run back in the truck and we'd sit and wait.
And then another person would go out
when that seemed to calm down.
And we kept doing that until we knew the fire was out.
That whole time, like every so often,
you would hear this kind of call and response
on these shrieks in the woods. And they were kind of moving around. The one behind us was
kind of moving in the trees and it seemed to getting louder and louder. And the other
one down the mountain was doing the same. It seemed to be getting louder and louder
and it kind of felt right on top of us by the end. And when we were sure the fire was out,
we fired the truck up and started driving back down the hill.
As we were driving away, you could hear like one last shriek in the night
as we started driving down the mountain.
We wanted to stop and check that other campsite where we were hearing that other scream.
If somebody did need help, we didn't want to just leave.
We kind of slowly drive by and their camp stuff was all still set up.
They didn't have a fire going, but their tent was there and sleeping bags, but their car
was gone.
We didn't know if it left with all those other cars that we don't remember them leaving,
so we didn't know when that happened, but we just assumed that they were gone.
That just kind of reinforced the idea that whatever was motivating all those people to
leave, it was validating that we needed to leave as well.
Clearly there's something going on here where nobody wants to be camping on this mountain
right now.
And so we started heading back down the hill.
It's a narrow, dirt and gravel road.
No turnoffs, we're just following the road down.
It's not as though we have a bunch of
choices on different ways we can get down the mountain. There seems to be only one way
down the mountain and we're taking it. My wife has got her phone out and she's trying to
get service because we're both kind of thrumming with energy. And as we're getting closer to town
I can start to see lights through the trees.
But the last little stretch of road does not feel familiar.
It feels like we should be going off to the left, and we were going off to the right, making all these turns that I didn't remember making.
We come around this bend, the road drops, there's kind of a big hill,
and it spits us out into town.
And when I looked at where we were,
my first thought was, this isn't Elk River.
This isn't the same town.
Nothing about it looked familiar.
We were looking down a main street that was lined on either side with businesses.
There was one flashing red light in the middle of that main street.
There's not a car in sight.
There isn't a person in sight.
All that activity that we had seen a couple hours before, no sign of that at all.
Not even parked cars, like there was nothing there.
There were a couple leaves blowing across the street.
It just felt abandoned, like an abandoned town.
We started driving down the street and we're trying to find our way to the highway.
And we're driving down and my wife's still looking at her phone trying to get service.
As I close in on that flashing red light, there's a business kiddie corner on that intersection.
It has these big windows, kind of like a small town diner looking place.
And there's this eerie red light glowing from inside that's kind of spilling out onto the
sidewalk.
As I stop at the four-way intersection, I'm looking in that building.
It's the only sign of life that I've seen is this light coming out.
Inside, I can see that there's somebody in there.
There's a lot of weird jerky movements.
And I turn to my wife and say, do you see that? And I go to gesture to what I've just seen.
And by the time I look back at that building,
there's somebody standing in the window looking outside.
They have a wedge cap on this apron.
There's kind of stains on both.
Black smudges smeared all over.
It was creepy to see this person that had been
flailing around or whatever they were doing,
to suddenly be standing in the window that quickly was odd.
It did not feel natural.
But the creepiest part was the person wasn't looking at us.
They were staring straight out the window into nothing.
The buildings on the other side of the street were dark, there was nobody in the street,
and they're holding this big kitchen knife in their hand.
I remember my wife was just like, we have to get out of here.
This is not even like excited, scary, fun story territory anymore. This is like, we need to get out of here. This is not even like excited, scary, fun story territory anymore. This is
like we need to get out of here. There's something going on and we don't need to be here anymore.
As I start to go, the person starts yelling. Yelling at the window, out into the vacant air.
They don't seem to register us as we drive by.
It's like they're ranting at somebody, like they're letting somebody have it.
This person was very angry.
Make our way through the next stretch of six 6-7 blocks of this main street.
You get to the end of the main street and there was this T intersection
and there was a sign pointing off to the right where the highway was.
It says Highway 8 this way.
And as we turn onto that road, we see a person walking down the middle of the road.
And they were tall. person walking down the middle of the road.
And they were tall.
They're walking very, very slowly, almost robotically down the middle of the road on
the double yellow line.
They had this black hood on that was covering their face and their head. This long black trench coat was kind of billowing around their legs as they were
walking. I'm slowly coming up behind this person. I keep waiting for them to register
that we're coming. But there was nothing. Like this person did not seem to know or care
that we were behind them. So I'm pulling over to the shoulder of the road,
whatever shoulder was there, and I'm slowly going by.
As we pass by this person, as my rear view mirror
and my driver's side window get right next to them,
they slowly turn their head,
and I can just see the bottom half of the face, and it's
this pale, angular jaw, and this super wide, narrow grin.
And they're still walking super slowly.
At that point, I was like, we just need to go. I punched it.
I'm kind of paying attention to this person in the rear view mirror.
I'm half expecting them to start sprinting after us.
And up ahead, where we turn onto the highway,
there's this little gravel turnout lot.
And there's old round headlights, rusty seams,
farm trucks sitting there.
It's completely dark.
It's not on.
Just sitting there.
We get to the turn to get onto the highway, and as soon as I make that turn, the headlights
on this truck fire up, the engine roars to
life and it pulls in right behind us and just starts tailing us.
Now we're winding on this mountain highway.
On one side of the highway is a sheer drop all the way down to this Elk Creek.
And on the other side is this steep mountain.
So there's no shoulder to pull off on. There's nowhere for us to go except forward.
And this truck is right on us.
They're so close that I can't see their headlights.
I look in the rearview mirror and I just see the windshield and I
just see like two non-moving silhouettes in the driver and passenger seat. And if I go
faster they go faster and if I slow way down they slow way down. We finally get to the
spot where there's a little bit of a straightaway and you see the sign, one of those small town signs that says, thank you for visiting
Elk River, come again soon.
Immediately after the sign has a sharp turn to the left, we go past the sign, make that
turn and the truck's right on us.
We're probably going 45 or 50 miles an hour.
As soon as we make that turn,
I look at my rear view mirror and the truck's gone.
There's no sign of it slowing down and coming to a stop. There's no glow of its headlights
as it stopped behind that turn.
There's no evidence that truck was ever there.
It's just disappeared.
We just continued on down the road, It's just disappeared.
We just continued on down the road, not looking back, not wanting to stop.
It took us a while driving home before we could like decompress and actually talk about
what had happened.
We were so off balance by all those things that happened back to back that it did just take a minute for us to ground ourselves back into some form of reality
that we could tether ourselves to.
It really wasn't until we started to see cars coming the other way,
other signs of life that we felt like,
okay, now we're back into something we can recognize.
We get home about one or two in the morning.
We kind of just sit around and talk about it.
We didn't sleep the whole night.
We just kept reliving those moments,
reliving different parts of it,
trying to find some sort of through line.
You know, I think at this point we've just accepted
that it was just an experience that has no explanation.
All those pieces together, it was so creepy and bizarre that we really have no explanation.
And so we don't really try to explain anymore.
We just kind of accept it as this bizarre experience.
The possibility that that was a supernatural experience is absolutely valid.
There's absolutely a possibility of that.
That makes more sense to me than to try to assemble any sort of logical through-line through the entirety of it.
There is something exhilarating about that.
It's not something I want to relive ever again,
because there was an uncertainty that we were going to make it out of there.
Holy, holy Elk, what in the real life horror movie was going on there? Good Lord!
Remind me to cross Elk River off of my list of places to
retire and rather find a nice condo in Amityville. Honestly, that sounds kind of nice. Long Island.
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Excellent day.
Hey, hey, Malachi, be careful around all those candles, dear.
Okay.
Remember last time what happened
when you were around an open flame?
Hmm?
Caught your tail on fire and then went missing for a week.
We don't want to repeat of that.
We have literally done that episode.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, Malachi.
Don't get too familiar with that picture of my wife, Malachi.
Don't be weird.
I should have neutered you.
Yeah, you better run.
I'm going to put the next tape in before Malachi comes back.
Consider this story an ofrenda to you, my dear horror fiend. It was late September 2020 during COVID.
We were living in rural Michigan.
I was there with my husband and my two children.
It was a pretty idyllic farmhouse. We had three acres.
We had about a flock of 10 chickens and a rooster. Michigan had been drastically locked down
throughout the year. We couldn't go to parks. Restaurants were closed, so we really were just sort of secluded.
My mom decided to visit from Arkansas.
She had flown up and was there for about two days.
We had planned a road trip to Colorado with the kids, And we were gonna see what it was like.
We hoped to someday move to Colorado.
We all went to bed one night.
In Michigan, the nights get pretty cold.
We don't need air conditioning.
We all have our windows open.
As you're laying there, you hear a lot of noise,
but it's all generally pretty quiet.
You're just going to hear crickets and the river running in the back.
The coop was about 500 feet from the house.
Throughout the night, we had our rooster,
a big, huge, black rooster,
crow all night long.
A full alert crow.
It's quite disturbing to hear the rooster waking you up.
A rooster will alarm everybody that danger is nearby. They will make sure that their whole flock knows that something alarming is happening and that they all need to know. It's very loud.
It's very loud. It's very disturbing. This rooster was crowing non-stop every five minutes, all the way until the morning and then it stopped. The next morning I said to my mom,
oh my gosh that rooster just like kept me up and she is like, I know, me too.
What in the world?
Having owned chickens for over 10 years,
you know that's unusual.
You don't ever hear a rooster at night, ever.
Maybe a fox or a predator was trying to get in the coop.
We thought, well, maybe that's why it was crowing all night.
So I sent my son out in the morning to let the chickens out.
He didn't see anything unusual.
The coop was secure.
They all run out and they run to their swamp land and they sort of disappear for the day.
But the rooster usually won't.
He will stick around, hang out, keep an alert for any hawks or anything that might be around.
So I went out about the morning. I went upstairs and I started to get ready and brush my teeth.
We had a dark brown granite vanity in our bathroom.
I was brushing my teeth and I looked down and there was this perfect imprint of a skull staring
back at me at this dark countertop. There was a perfect skull made out of
toothpaste. It was obvious that it was white toothpaste. It was obviously a skull too. The skull to me looked like one of my children
had dropped maybe a bit of toothpaste on the counter and then stuck their palm in it. As they
lifted their palm up, it left the skull. I don't know why, but I just instantly knew
that something bad was going to happen
without a doubt in my mind.
And I immediately text my husband,
who is a large animal veterinarian.
Exactly what I text was, something bad is going to happen.
And it wasn't like I was being dramatic
or overthinking anything.
It was just clear, like completely clear in my head
that something bad was gonna happen.
Come around noon, I went downstairs.
We started to get lunch.
Knowing the routine of my family
and the chickens and the rooster, I realized the rooster was not crowing.
And usually a rooster will crow a lot in the morning and it will die down, but you're going to hear a rooster all day long.
My husband came home, he always came home at lunch, and I said, maybe you should go out
and look for that rooster, because now it's not crowing.
Maybe it did not get into the coop,
and it was locked out of the coop,
and had been out all night,
and it was fending off predators.
He went out and he found the rooster in the back in the dark corner of the chicken coop.
And it was just laying hidden in the shadows in the back.
The rooster was completely dead.
Had already gone into rigor mortis, so had been dead for a while.
He pulled it out of the coop, checked it over. had already gone into rigor mortis, so had been dead for a while.
He pulled it out of the coop, checked it over, looked for injury.
Nothing was wrong with it.
No injuries, no feathers were lost.
Usually if a predator gets in a coop, you're going to see feathers all over the place.
The rooster just appeared to have crowed itself to death.
Maybe crowed itself to the point it had a heart attack.
It's the only explanation.
My husband's a veterinarian.
He's not an avian veterinarian, but he knows chickens really well.
There was nothing wrong with this rooster.
He was a year old.
He was young.
He was healthy, huge.
We had no viruses, no signs of any disease, no sign of predator attack.
There was no sign that anything had tried to even get into the coop that could frighten it.
He just crowed all night to exhaustion and had died.
My husband went back to work.
We were left with this giant rooster body.
And so we decided to bury it under our apple tree that we had in the back of our property.
We went about packing for our road trip,
kind of ignored the events.
I didn't think anything of it.
A rooster's gonna die, these things happen.
And so we just ignored it
and went about packing for our road trip.
The next day we were supposed to leave for Colorado. We got on
the road. When you leave Michigan and you drive to Colorado, you have to circle
around Chicago. My brother at the time lived in Chicago, and my mom, I know, would have been really excited
to see my brother, but the timing of it wasn't great.
For one, we had a timeline with our road trip.
We had reservations.
Two, my brother was uptight about COVID, COVID restrictions.
We decided that we would not stop, but we had decided that
we would text my brother and say, we're passing Chicago and we're waving hello
as we go by and we love you. During that week my brother's restaurant had just
opened back up. He was training new staff. They had been closed all through COVID restrictions.
He was busy.
And we kind of understood that.
And you know, my brother, he's 10 years older than me.
He wasn't like a great text responder anyways.
So it wasn't that unusual to not hear a reply from him.
So we just decided to just keep going, and we made our way.
We finally ended up in Pagosa Springs, Colorado.
The minute we arrived, we get out of the car.
We go to a park to let the kids run around and I get a phone call. And
it's a nurse from an emergency room that's asking me about my brother's medical history.
They were asking me if he was a drug addict or an alcoholic. They were questioning whether he had diabetes.
I was completely thrown off guard
by why a nurse was calling me,
asking me those questions.
They found him collapsed in his apartment.
He had aspirated a pneumonia,
which meant that he had been down for days.
I was completely shocked. I hung up and I talked to my mom, and my mom
just immediately lost it and started crying, and
was really upset. And then we just immediately tried to figure out how we could
get her to an airport to get to the hospital to see what was going on.
We didn't know if he had had a stroke. The get her to an airport to get to the hospital to see what was going on.
We didn't know if he had had a stroke.
The hospital had no idea what was going on with him.
I was able to get in touch with his best friend who actually had been talking and texting
with my brother had become very ill in his apartment.
Due to the fear around COVID, they decided to kind of stay quarantined from each other
and just communicate through text.
I immediately got my mom to an airport.
She flew to Chicago.
She was by his bedside.
And I had my children.
And we were going to stay with a friend.
And then we were going to make our way back to Michigan.
After I had made it back to Michigan,
I was trying to piece together a timeline
of how my brother could be found collapsed
in his apartment alone in Chicago.
I was trying to kind of come to terms with what happened.
So I asked his friend if he could send me screenshots
of his text messages.
And I was reviewing those text messages.
And then I was going back through my photos,
trying to understand what I was doing around that time
and why I wasn't hearing why my brother was sick
and I wasn't getting text messages from him.
My brother did not want to worry his family,
particularly his mom, and especially with the fear around COVID.
He texted his buddy on September 25th saying that for 24 hours he's had a horrible fever.
He's been shaking uncontrollably, that he's just been really sick.
I realized that on September 24th, going through my photos, was the day that I saw the skull
staring back at me and was the day that I text my husband saying that something bad
was going to happen. I was looking at these photos and I realized that that's also the day that the rooster
crowed itself to death.
That's a really weird coincidence.
These two messages came to me within hours of each other on the same day that my brother
became ill.
So we arrived back to Michigan.
The kids are so happy to be back in their yard running around, playing, finding all their chickens.
And they run to the apple tree that has their swing.
The rooster is now sitting under the apple tree,
fully intact, dug back up.
Nothing had taken it or ripped it apart or eaten it.
It was just waiting for us.
Pretty shocking that the rooster was back.
That the rooster had found its way to the surface again.
I'm always an investigator.
I want to make sense of puzzles and problems.
I want to find solutions and understanding.
So I Googled, what does it mean when a black rooster crows at night?
What does it mean if a black rooster suddenly dies?
According to folklore and old traditions, these are some of the worst omens that you
can receive from the underworld, from the cosmos. They say that black roosters particularly
symbolize death, they symbolize a change for the negative. Just really, really bad news is coming to you
when this happens.
It was just shocking to me that these two messages
came to me within hours of each other
on the same day that my brother became ill.
It was exactly the time that he started becoming sick.
My brother's illness was so severe,
he was in the hospital for 150 days with a brain infection.
He'll never make a recovery.
It was life-altering to the most extreme any family could experience.
Just completely devastating for everybody.
According to folklore, there's nothing that you can do to stop whatever bad is going to happen
when you receive omens like a rooster crowing throughout the night and dying suddenly.
All within hours of each other.
People can have premonitions of their death
or of someone that they love,
something bad is gonna happen.
And maybe there is this subconscious ability
that people have to pick up on these signs
when something bad is gonna happen.
You really need to listen to the omens.
If you feel in your heart that something is going to happen, you should listen to it.
I hope that that dear family hasn't endured anything like that since.
My heart goes out to them.
I'm also kind of freaking out because I swear I recently saw a toothpaste glob on my counter
in the shape of the Taco Bell logo and I hope that that doesn't mean anything bad. Or I wonder if I'm going to come into a great deal
of Taco Bell in my future somehow.
Now that would be an omen I would be very interested in.
I don't think that's how omens work.
Chalupa.
Time for some ads.
And we're back.
Thank you for celebrating Dia de los Muertos with me today here at Radio Rental.
Such a beautiful, beautiful holiday.
I do hope that perchance I might be visited by my late wife, Zilon, during the night.
That would be...
Arousing.
I'd like that reunion, if you know what I mean.
No, I'm not talking about necrophilia.
That's gross, Malachi.
I simply meant her ghost or whatever. It's different. It's not dirty.
It's still monogamy. It's spiritual monogamy. It's totally normal.
It's bone-chilling.
Pun intended.
So long everybody.
Adios amigos de Radio Rental.
Radio Rental is created by Payne Lindsay and brought to you by Tenderfoot TV.
Lead producer is Eric Quintana.
Executive producers are Payne Lindsay and Donald Albright. Hosted by Rainn Wilson as his character, Terry Carnation.
Written and produced by Meredith Stedman.
Additional writing by Mark Loughlin.
Supervising producer is Tracy Kaplan.
Associate producer is JaJa Muhammad.
Editing by Eric Quintana, Mike Rooney,
Steven Perez, and Meredith Stedman.
Sound design by Cooper Skinner,
with additional Sound Design by Stephen Perez
and April Ruha.
Mix and Master by Cooper Skinner,
with additional Mixing by Stephen Perez
and Devin Johnson.
Original Score by Makeup and Vanity Set,
with additional Score by Jay Ragsdale.
Video Editing by Dylan Harrington.
Cover Artwork by Trevor Eyler and Rob Sheridan.
Special thanks to Oren Rosenbaum and the team at UTI,
the Noor Group, Station 16, Beck Media & Marketing,
and the team at Odyssey.
If you have a Radio Rental story that you'd like to share,
please email us at yourscarystory at gmail.com
or contact us via the form on our website,
RadioRentalUSA.com.
Follow us on Instagram and Twitter, at RadioRental.
You can also follow The Illustrious Terry Carnation on social media.
Just search at Terry Carnation.
On behalf of the RadioRental store, we'd love it if you'd subscribe, rate, and review.
Thanks for listening.