A Strange Night.

Reported by ce5now_Investigator_001.


Mr. D was living in a rural setting in North Carolina in the summer of 2006. The house sat on an acre of land and the backyard bordered a large cow pasture. Sometime between 1 and 2 AM his dog, a miniature schnauzer, started going ballistic, barking furiously at the foot of the bed. Mr. D has never seen his dog act like this, neither before nor since this night. Thinking there was a mouse or something, he got up and picked up the mattress to look under it. There was nothing unusual and finally the dog calmed down and Mr. D went back to sleep. About two hours later (3 or 4 AM) the dog repeated his furious barking. Mr. D again looked under the bed, then put his dog out in the hall and went back to sleep.

When Mr. D woke up, his head was at the foot of the bed. The nightstand was knocked over and the lamp was on the ground. The window was opened and the AC was on. The window was high enough off the ground, that from the outside one would require a ladder to reach it. He was sure that when he went to sleep the AC was off and the window was shut. He then noticed a bit of blood on the pillow and went into the bathroom to find a perfectly round scoop taken out of his forehead, about the size of a pencil eraser. He always shaves and washes his face before bed, therefore is positive that the scoop was not there when he went to bed. He then proceeded to take a shower and when he went to soap his shoulder, felt an intense burning. He got out of the shower to find a rectangle 3/8 inch by 1/2 inch where the skin had been pealed off. The area had very even and clear delineation, being perfectly rectangular and having only a thin layer of skin evenly removed.

These wounds did not heal properly, remaining raw for several months. and when they kind of healed, he still had a red spot on his forehead and a dark red patch on his shoulder. About a year and a half later, a doctor recommended he have a biopsy for cancer, along with an old cigarette burn on his wrist. The two marks from the event described above were cancerous, the old burn scar on his wrist was not. He had the two marks completely removed during the cancer treatment.

Commentary:

I have no reason to doubt the story occurred as told. Mr. D was hesitant to relate it and had only bad reactions when he tried to tell it previously. Shortly after it happened, he told a doctor, who claimed he must have wounded himself the previous day and not noticed anything before going to sleep, which Mr. D found absurd. Mr. D could not find a rational explanation for what had happened. He could not think he had a nightmare, because he had no memory of having one, but wondered if perhaps that was the case; except, why would his dog freak out twice in the same night, without apparent cause and contrary to his nature.

Obviously, using primitive logic, one could call it a Poltergeist or evil spirit, since the table was flipped, the window was opened, and the AC was turned on. Although one may speculate on many hard to believe causes for all the effects, this account has the familiar signs of an physical alien abduction: the remote location, the actions of his dog, and the skin samples having been taken. If Mr. D were to have this happen again, he stated he would have investigated more: looking things over more carefully, photographing his missing skin, searching outside his window for any sign and in the cow pasture for signs that a ship might have landed.

(c)2009 ce5now_Investigator_001 All Rights Reserved
No portion of this account can be used or referred to
without prior written agreement (to avoid misuse).

E-Mail: C. E. 5 Now

Return to C. E. 5 Now


Valid HTML 4.01 Transitional