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by EdnaBambrick
Wed Sep 21, 2016 8:04 am
Forum: Never Again!!
Topic: Never sleep with the doors unlocked!
Replies: 34
Views: 9985

Re: Never sleep with the doors unlocked!

mojo84 wrote:I normally hate it when an old thread is resurrected. Not the case with this one.
Great stories are timeless. My crime would have been in NOT resurrecting it. Glad to see it's bringing joy to others.

PS - A little something about me. My grandparents all died early before I was 10. When I got to be a few years older, I used to get on a bus and just ride around. I used the opportunity to talk to strangers and hear their stories. This was in the late 70s in Kansas City so a lot of those stories were from people in their 70s and 80s and had lived through WWI and the depression. Probably the most memorable was a guy that used to rob banks. He said he had good luck outrunning the police until they got radios and could call ahead. He said "It was easy to outrun their cars but he couldn't outrun those radio waves" I guess that's how he got caught and had to pick a new career when he got out of prison.
by EdnaBambrick
Tue Sep 20, 2016 6:32 pm
Forum: Never Again!!
Topic: Never sleep with the doors unlocked!
Replies: 34
Views: 9985

Re: Never sleep with the doors unlocked!

Charles L. Cotton wrote:In 1967, I was 17 years old and enjoyed going to the family cabin in Montgomery County. Our property backed up to the Sam Houston National Forest and the isolation of its 92,000 acres was perfect for hunting, plinking, spending time with a girlfriend and just generally enjoying a much slower pace and simpler time. There literally was no one around for miles. Crime in the area was almost unheard of and neither my parents or my friends’ parents gave a second thought to the kids spending weekends at the cabin. Our little piece of Utopia was shattered in the early morning hours of what was to have been yet another Saturday in the country.

I and a good friend had met two girls at the Huntsville State Park a week earlier and they invited us to come back the next Saturday. Don and I took my ‘68 Mustang Fastback (390 cid/ 4 speed for my fellow gearheads) to the cabin late Friday afternoon and spent some time in the forest plinking on a stock watering tank. We went back to the cabin, fixed dinner and finally went to bed about midnight. The cabin had a full width screen porch on the front with four double beds and ceiling fans. When the weather cooperated, it was great sleeping! It was cool and I loved falling to sleep hearing the sounds of night in a forest. The only door on the porch was a simple screen door with no lock; only a simple hook we never even bothered to latch.

On this fateful evening, I had been sleeping for about 2 hours or so when I woke up with a strange feeling of foreboding. I had never felt the least bit concerned about sleeping on the unlocked porch, but something just wasn’t right. I reached down slowly just to touch my S&W Model 19 .357 mag. and make sure it was there if I needed it. I didn’t have any specific fear, just a this feeling of dread. Just as I touched the Model 19, I turned my head slowly to the left and saw someone standing inside the porch at the foot of Don’s bed. I can’t describe how this felt. This wasn’t just a man, he was the biggest guy I’d ever seen; well over 6 feet tall, probably closer to 6' 5"!

Still pretending to be asleep, I tried to decide what to do. My grip tightened on the Smith and I slowed raised by arm back to the bed, moving as one would move while sleeping and turning over, etc. The last thing I wanted to do was let this guy realize I was awake or that I had a gun. He was silhouetted against the screen and I couldn’t see if he was armed, but he was far to close to Don and any move I made could cause him to attack Don before he had a chance to shoot.

I decided to take the shot, but I had to make sure it wasn’t Don trying to play a joke by standing on a box or something. I couldn’t raise my head off the pillow to look at Don to verify he was still in bed without giving myself away, so the only thing I thought of was to yell Don’s name and see where he was when he responded. It wasn’t a great plan, but it was all I could muster at the time. There was a risk that he would not merely respond, but would raise up in his bed, but I would still have a good shot, if the guy didn’t jump toward Don. I kept thinking, “this can’t be happening!!� How did this guy find us and how did he get in so silently that we didn’t wake up?

Well, I decided I couldn’t just wait until he attacked, so I made my move. I screamed Don’s name and he hollered a terrified “WHAT!!!?� Oh my God, he was laying down - the guy next to his bed was not Don. I raised up in an instant and fired 3 rounds into his chest. He jerked noticeably, but he didn’t go down!! This really can’t be happing to me!! Don started screaming and rolled onto the floor between the two beds as I fired the last three rounds in the revolver. The guy was still upright but was clearly hit. I jumped from the bed, reloaded using a speedstrip and prepared to hammer him again. It’s funny what you think at times like this. My mind was racing and I remembered that Cleveland “Big Cat� Williams had taken 2 or 3 rounds from a DPS Troopers’ S&W Model 28 and still managed to choke the Trooper into unconsciousness. I thought to myself, Big Cat must be out of prison and standing in my cabin! Head shots, I have to take head shots, but I can’t do it in the dark and turning on the light would let him see everything clearly. I had no choice, I had to take head shots so I reached for the light switch with my left hand aiming with my right. As the light came on, it quickly became obvious that all six 357 rounds had found their mark squarely in the center of a nice, brand spanking new western shirt that Don had hung on the cribbing of the cabin wall. The 6' 5" intruder was actually Don’s long-sleeved western shirt hanging on a hanger with his nicely starched Levi’s hanging below. (When I later asked him why he hung the Levi’s from the waist band rather than folding them over the hanger he told me didn’t want to get a crease in them - well, the Levi’s didn’t get creased, but the shirt sure did!)

Don was still screaming and doing a low crawl under my bed, heading for the inner rooms of the cabin. My knees were still shaking and I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry - tears of joy, that is. As he appeared from under my bed, still practicing his “become one with the floor� drill, I calmly asked him why he didn’t simply hang his clothes in the closet like normal people. At first, he had this quizzical look on his face, then he realized what had happened. He couldn’t believe I had shot his new shirt; it was at that point I considered shooting him - not to kill him mind you, just to take off a toe or something. After the adrenalin dump had worn off, we both laughed ourselves sick. Don even wore the shirt to the State Park that night and when people would ask what happed to the shirt, he dryly said “Charles shot me.�

So what does this have to do with unlocked cabins? Not a thing; I had to have something in the subject line and anything on point would have given away the story’s ending.

Since I’ve posted more than once about target identification, I thought it only fair that I tell this story of a time when I didn’t really live what I now preach. I hope you folks enjoyed it.

Regards,
Chas.
I'd "like" this story a million times if I could.

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