1 00:00:10,480 --> 00:00:13,000 Speaker 1: It had just gone nine o'clock in the evening of 2 00:00:13,039 --> 00:00:18,160 Speaker 1: fourteenth September nineteen ninety four when Cynthia heard the explosion. 3 00:00:19,239 --> 00:00:22,600 Speaker 1: Startled from her paperwork. She turned to the window and 4 00:00:22,680 --> 00:00:26,040 Speaker 1: hurriedly scanned the horizon for any sign of an attack. 5 00:00:27,200 --> 00:00:31,800 Speaker 1: Though it had been over fourteen years since Zimbabwean independence, 6 00:00:32,320 --> 00:00:35,720 Speaker 1: the years hadn't been easy, mired in the social and 7 00:00:35,760 --> 00:00:40,200 Speaker 1: political upheaval one might expect of a post colonial nation 8 00:00:40,720 --> 00:00:45,400 Speaker 1: grappling with the complications of the past. The affluent and 9 00:00:45,479 --> 00:00:49,479 Speaker 1: leafy suburb of Mount Pleasant where Cynthia lived, was an 10 00:00:49,479 --> 00:00:54,920 Speaker 1: exclusive district of North Harari, Zimbabwe's capital, and home to 11 00:00:55,000 --> 00:00:58,640 Speaker 1: some of the city's wealthiest residents, including a number of 12 00:00:58,680 --> 00:01:04,040 Speaker 1: dignitaries and government officials. That the former Ethiopian dictator Harley 13 00:01:04,200 --> 00:01:07,800 Speaker 1: Mariam men Gistu lived nearby was as good a reason 14 00:01:07,840 --> 00:01:11,520 Speaker 1: as any to suspect, as Cynthia did, that what had 15 00:01:11,600 --> 00:01:16,319 Speaker 1: just rattled her window panes was a bomb. Unable to 16 00:01:16,360 --> 00:01:19,640 Speaker 1: see anything from her desk, Cynthia made her way out 17 00:01:19,680 --> 00:01:22,959 Speaker 1: to the garden. There she was joined by her friend 18 00:01:23,240 --> 00:01:27,560 Speaker 1: and granddaughter, who'd also heard the bang. As they scanned 19 00:01:27,600 --> 00:01:31,679 Speaker 1: the dusk sky together for evidence. Of an explosion. They 20 00:01:31,720 --> 00:01:35,440 Speaker 1: were surprised to see no thick plumes of smoke or 21 00:01:35,480 --> 00:01:40,560 Speaker 1: flashing emergency lights, and instead of sirens, they heard only 22 00:01:40,600 --> 00:01:44,280 Speaker 1: the gentle trickling of water through the filter system of 23 00:01:44,319 --> 00:01:49,160 Speaker 1: Cynthia's swimming pool. If anything, it was all a little 24 00:01:49,200 --> 00:01:56,040 Speaker 1: too quiet. Even the neighborhood dogs seemed unnaturally stilled. Ever, 25 00:01:56,160 --> 00:01:59,240 Speaker 1: eager to get to the bottom of things, the curious 26 00:01:59,280 --> 00:02:02,320 Speaker 1: Cynthia beckoned the others to join her in her car. 27 00:02:03,320 --> 00:02:06,640 Speaker 1: Moments later, the three of them sped off in search 28 00:02:06,760 --> 00:02:09,760 Speaker 1: of the source of the explosion. As they trolled the 29 00:02:09,800 --> 00:02:14,600 Speaker 1: neighborhood for any sign of damage. Back in Cynthia's home, 30 00:02:15,080 --> 00:02:20,840 Speaker 1: her telephone began to ring. You're listening to Unexplained and 31 00:02:20,960 --> 00:02:32,760 Speaker 1: I'm Richard McLean Smith. Cynthia Hind was born in South 32 00:02:32,800 --> 00:02:37,040 Speaker 1: Africa in the nineteen twenties. At some point she moved 33 00:02:37,080 --> 00:02:39,920 Speaker 1: to northern England, where she lived for a number of 34 00:02:40,040 --> 00:02:43,960 Speaker 1: years with her husband and two children, before moving to 35 00:02:44,040 --> 00:02:48,840 Speaker 1: the Mashonaland region of Southeast Africa, where she helped run 36 00:02:48,919 --> 00:02:54,720 Speaker 1: her father's furniture business. Cynthia's true passion, however, was writing, 37 00:02:55,200 --> 00:02:59,880 Speaker 1: and what fascinated her more than anything else was the paranormal. 38 00:03:00,880 --> 00:03:05,359 Speaker 1: Although primarily a writer of short stories for radio and magazines, 39 00:03:05,840 --> 00:03:10,720 Speaker 1: in nineteen sixty six, Cynthia secured an interview with apparent 40 00:03:10,919 --> 00:03:16,160 Speaker 1: alien abductee Elizabeth Clara. She'd been hooked on the UFO 41 00:03:16,320 --> 00:03:23,120 Speaker 1: phenomenon ever since. In nineteen fifty six, Elizabeth Clara alleged 42 00:03:23,240 --> 00:03:27,720 Speaker 1: that she'd been having an affair with an astrophysicist named Akon, 43 00:03:28,320 --> 00:03:32,200 Speaker 1: who traveled to Earth from a distant planet known as Meton. 44 00:03:33,440 --> 00:03:38,120 Speaker 1: Cynthia was dubious of Clara's story, but also fascinated as 45 00:03:38,120 --> 00:03:41,640 Speaker 1: to why she would make up such an extraordinary claim 46 00:03:41,720 --> 00:03:47,080 Speaker 1: if it wasn't true. Cynthia's resultant article was eventually published 47 00:03:47,080 --> 00:03:51,720 Speaker 1: in nineteen sixty nine in Fate, a popular American magazine 48 00:03:51,960 --> 00:03:56,960 Speaker 1: specializing in the possibility of the paranormal. Her life would 49 00:03:57,040 --> 00:04:01,480 Speaker 1: never be the same again with us. In weeks, Cynthia 50 00:04:01,840 --> 00:04:06,600 Speaker 1: found herself inundated with letters from countless others desperate to 51 00:04:06,720 --> 00:04:11,960 Speaker 1: share their various supposed UFO experiences from around the continent. 52 00:04:12,760 --> 00:04:17,560 Speaker 1: Representatives of a newly established American organization known as the 53 00:04:17,680 --> 00:04:22,200 Speaker 1: Mutual UFO Network or MOUFON, were also quick to get 54 00:04:22,240 --> 00:04:27,360 Speaker 1: in touch. MOUFON originating from an earlier group known as 55 00:04:27,400 --> 00:04:32,280 Speaker 1: the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization was established to bring a 56 00:04:32,320 --> 00:04:37,839 Speaker 1: measured scientific approach to the investigation of UFOs. They wrote 57 00:04:37,839 --> 00:04:41,240 Speaker 1: to Cynthia asking if she'd like to conduct research on 58 00:04:41,320 --> 00:04:46,039 Speaker 1: their behalf excited at the prospect of developing a relationship 59 00:04:46,240 --> 00:04:51,680 Speaker 1: with someone operating from the African continent, but Cynthia was reluctant. 60 00:04:52,560 --> 00:04:55,880 Speaker 1: She was only really interested in the personal angle behind 61 00:04:55,960 --> 00:05:00,400 Speaker 1: the phenomena, rather than the phenomena itself. Being at the 62 00:05:00,440 --> 00:05:03,440 Speaker 1: start of her career, she was also wary of the 63 00:05:03,480 --> 00:05:07,200 Speaker 1: inevitable ridicule and stigma that might be attached to her 64 00:05:07,640 --> 00:05:11,960 Speaker 1: if she associated with a group like the Mutual UFO Network. 65 00:05:13,080 --> 00:05:18,080 Speaker 1: In the end, Cynthia reasoned that simply presenting personal accounts 66 00:05:18,160 --> 00:05:22,360 Speaker 1: or supposed UFO experiences was not the same as saying 67 00:05:22,480 --> 00:05:25,400 Speaker 1: she believed in them herself, and as far as she 68 00:05:25,600 --> 00:05:30,160 Speaker 1: was concerned, it was all relevant to understanding the UFO phenomena, 69 00:05:30,480 --> 00:05:36,400 Speaker 1: whether the origins were unearthly or not. Cynthia accepted MUFON's 70 00:05:36,440 --> 00:05:40,080 Speaker 1: invitation to write for them in nineteen seventy four, after 71 00:05:40,120 --> 00:05:44,279 Speaker 1: which she was appointed an official field researcher for the 72 00:05:44,320 --> 00:05:48,800 Speaker 1: next few years, she investigated all manner of alleged UFO 73 00:05:48,960 --> 00:06:00,120 Speaker 1: sightings from across Africa. In July nineteen seventy eight eight, 74 00:06:00,800 --> 00:06:05,760 Speaker 1: Cynthia traveled to Dayton, Ohio to attend her first MUFON conference. 75 00:06:06,560 --> 00:06:10,920 Speaker 1: She was utterly spellbound by the speakers in attendants giant 76 00:06:11,000 --> 00:06:15,000 Speaker 1: names in ufology such as j. Allen Heineck, the US 77 00:06:15,040 --> 00:06:20,479 Speaker 1: Air Force's own UFO investigator, and Major Donald Keiho, a 78 00:06:20,600 --> 00:06:24,480 Speaker 1: leader in the field, to name a few. She felt 79 00:06:24,480 --> 00:06:28,080 Speaker 1: at home among the other members of MOUFON, whom she 80 00:06:28,160 --> 00:06:31,200 Speaker 1: was pleased to discover were not at all like the 81 00:06:31,240 --> 00:06:37,160 Speaker 1: deluded crack pots she'd first imagined. Many were learned individuals 82 00:06:37,520 --> 00:06:43,840 Speaker 1: with distinguished academic records in physics, psychiatry, geology, and medicine. 83 00:06:44,400 --> 00:06:48,120 Speaker 1: In nineteen eighty one, Cynthia returned to the conference to 84 00:06:48,160 --> 00:06:52,080 Speaker 1: present her own paper on African encounters, where she rubbed 85 00:06:52,120 --> 00:06:56,720 Speaker 1: shoulders with the likes of retired nuclear physicist turned euthologist 86 00:06:57,200 --> 00:07:01,680 Speaker 1: Stanton Friedman. Friedman is thought to be the first civilian 87 00:07:01,880 --> 00:07:06,000 Speaker 1: to document the site of the infamous Roswell incident, an 88 00:07:06,040 --> 00:07:10,280 Speaker 1: alleged cover up of an alien spacecraft that supposedly crash 89 00:07:10,400 --> 00:07:15,440 Speaker 1: landed in nineteen forty seven in Roswell, New Mexico. By 90 00:07:15,480 --> 00:07:20,440 Speaker 1: the time she published her first book, UFOs African Encounters 91 00:07:20,560 --> 00:07:24,240 Speaker 1: in nineteen eighty two, Cynthia had become somewhat of an 92 00:07:24,280 --> 00:07:28,280 Speaker 1: authority on the subject and was regularly invited on TV 93 00:07:28,440 --> 00:07:32,760 Speaker 1: and radio to talk about her research. It was this 94 00:07:32,920 --> 00:07:38,280 Speaker 1: reputation that explained the incessant phone calls that hadn't stopped 95 00:07:38,680 --> 00:07:42,960 Speaker 1: since Cynthia left the house that strange September night in 96 00:07:43,080 --> 00:07:48,080 Speaker 1: nineteen ninety four. On returning home, she picked up the 97 00:07:48,080 --> 00:07:51,720 Speaker 1: first of many calls that night, as various friends and 98 00:07:51,760 --> 00:07:55,760 Speaker 1: acquaintances rang her up, eager to share their stories of 99 00:07:55,800 --> 00:08:00,960 Speaker 1: that evening's peculiar events. It hadn't been a boy, at 100 00:08:01,080 --> 00:08:05,080 Speaker 1: least not one exploding on the ground, but rather something 101 00:08:05,200 --> 00:08:10,800 Speaker 1: unusual that had taken place high above the land. Strange lights, 102 00:08:10,880 --> 00:08:14,760 Speaker 1: they kept saying, streaking across the sky in a parade 103 00:08:14,840 --> 00:08:19,440 Speaker 1: of color and sparkle, like a giant Roman candle shooting 104 00:08:19,480 --> 00:08:24,840 Speaker 1: out across the heavens. Cynthia worked tirelessly, scribbling down each 105 00:08:24,880 --> 00:08:29,960 Speaker 1: report as it came in, but could barely keep up. Eventually, 106 00:08:30,240 --> 00:08:33,520 Speaker 1: she called the editor of the local herald paper with 107 00:08:33,600 --> 00:08:36,760 Speaker 1: whom she had a good relationship, to see if they'd 108 00:08:36,800 --> 00:08:41,560 Speaker 1: heard anything too. As Cynthia expected, they had also been 109 00:08:41,600 --> 00:08:46,520 Speaker 1: inundated by calls from as far away as Johannesburg attesting 110 00:08:46,640 --> 00:08:51,920 Speaker 1: to the strange lights. Her enthusiasm, however, was soon dampened 111 00:08:52,200 --> 00:08:57,360 Speaker 1: after learning that their origins had already been determined. As 112 00:08:57,360 --> 00:09:02,680 Speaker 1: the editor explained, it was simply a meteorite shower, extraordinary 113 00:09:02,880 --> 00:09:06,240 Speaker 1: and beautiful in its own right, no doubt, but not 114 00:09:06,600 --> 00:09:10,960 Speaker 1: what Cynthia had been hoping for. Yet, as the cause 115 00:09:11,080 --> 00:09:16,040 Speaker 1: continued late into the night, Cynthia couldn't escape the feeling 116 00:09:16,480 --> 00:09:31,000 Speaker 1: that perhaps not all was as it seemed. One person 117 00:09:31,120 --> 00:09:35,520 Speaker 1: Cynthia spoke to on that September evening was Vivian Pasco, 118 00:09:36,160 --> 00:09:40,640 Speaker 1: a teacher living in Bulaweyo, over five hours drive west 119 00:09:40,640 --> 00:09:46,520 Speaker 1: of Ferrari. Vivian recounted how at precisely eight point fifty four, 120 00:09:47,000 --> 00:09:49,640 Speaker 1: she stepped out of her cottage for some fresh air 121 00:09:49,960 --> 00:09:53,640 Speaker 1: when she caught sight of something moving in the clouds above. 122 00:09:54,880 --> 00:09:58,400 Speaker 1: Looking northwards, she watched for over a minute as what 123 00:09:58,559 --> 00:10:04,120 Speaker 1: she described as flashing, shimmering and smeary lights moved low 124 00:10:04,160 --> 00:10:09,560 Speaker 1: across the sky, heading south towards some nearby hills. Then 125 00:10:09,640 --> 00:10:13,319 Speaker 1: there was the report from a mister Alexander, a specialist 126 00:10:13,360 --> 00:10:18,040 Speaker 1: in aircraft fire prevention, who along with a friend, spotted 127 00:10:18,120 --> 00:10:21,600 Speaker 1: what they assumed to be an aeroplane in distress with 128 00:10:21,800 --> 00:10:27,160 Speaker 1: flames shooting off the wing, describing a quote cluster of 129 00:10:27,280 --> 00:10:31,520 Speaker 1: small white lights extending across the fuselage from one wing 130 00:10:31,600 --> 00:10:35,880 Speaker 1: to another. They watched as the apparent craft, similar in 131 00:10:36,040 --> 00:10:40,400 Speaker 1: size to a seven four seven jumbo jet, moved silently 132 00:10:40,679 --> 00:10:44,880 Speaker 1: from north to south at a low altitude, barely twenty 133 00:10:44,960 --> 00:10:51,239 Speaker 1: meters above the tree tops. Intriguingly, as it moved, said Alexander, 134 00:10:51,800 --> 00:10:56,560 Speaker 1: it kept a level flight path. Cynthia thought this a 135 00:10:56,600 --> 00:11:01,680 Speaker 1: little strange for a meteor shower. Even more strange, however, 136 00:11:02,160 --> 00:11:06,240 Speaker 1: was that the main object, according to Alexander, appeared to 137 00:11:06,240 --> 00:11:11,200 Speaker 1: be metallic in nature. Many sightings came in from the 138 00:11:11,240 --> 00:11:15,600 Speaker 1: shores of Lake Cariba, a popular tourist destination in the 139 00:11:15,640 --> 00:11:19,920 Speaker 1: northwest of Zimbabwe. Alexander Law, who was staying at the 140 00:11:19,960 --> 00:11:24,280 Speaker 1: lakeside Cutty Sark Hotel, first saw it as a white 141 00:11:24,400 --> 00:11:29,760 Speaker 1: light growing on the horizon. Soon after he realized it 142 00:11:29,920 --> 00:11:33,040 Speaker 1: was in fact moving with what he counted to be 143 00:11:33,640 --> 00:11:39,079 Speaker 1: fourteen other lights flashing around it. Looking closer, he was 144 00:11:39,160 --> 00:11:42,720 Speaker 1: able to make out a dark center in the primary object, 145 00:11:43,120 --> 00:11:47,120 Speaker 1: as well as a long orange tail that streamed behind it. 146 00:11:48,160 --> 00:11:52,160 Speaker 1: Similar accounts flooded in from the region, with many reporting 147 00:11:52,480 --> 00:11:58,959 Speaker 1: that the objects had been observed changing direction. Cynthia worked 148 00:11:59,000 --> 00:12:01,840 Speaker 1: hard to make a recD cord of the sightings, but 149 00:12:01,920 --> 00:12:06,199 Speaker 1: with most media outlets happy to accept the meteorite explanation, 150 00:12:06,679 --> 00:12:10,680 Speaker 1: the event seemed destined to become little more than a 151 00:12:10,760 --> 00:12:18,640 Speaker 1: forgotten celestial quirk. That was until something completely unexpected came 152 00:12:18,679 --> 00:12:29,280 Speaker 1: to light. Children pour into the playground in a blur 153 00:12:29,440 --> 00:12:34,240 Speaker 1: of khaki shorts, sky blue dresses, and bright red jumpers, 154 00:12:34,280 --> 00:12:38,040 Speaker 1: spilling out into the acres of scrub with wild abandon 155 00:12:38,400 --> 00:12:44,560 Speaker 1: before finally coalescing into more orderly groups. Some whiz around 156 00:12:44,760 --> 00:12:48,680 Speaker 1: chasing balls or play on the seesaw and climbing frames, 157 00:12:49,120 --> 00:12:52,680 Speaker 1: while others are content to just huddle together under the 158 00:12:52,720 --> 00:12:57,360 Speaker 1: shade of the big eucalyptus tree. It's a beautiful late 159 00:12:57,440 --> 00:13:02,840 Speaker 1: winter day without a cloud in the sky. Allison, a 160 00:13:02,840 --> 00:13:08,040 Speaker 1: physiotherapist volunteering in the school talk shop outside, can't help 161 00:13:08,080 --> 00:13:11,800 Speaker 1: but smile as she watches the children shriek and giggle 162 00:13:11,840 --> 00:13:15,600 Speaker 1: about in the bright morning sun. There's a little more 163 00:13:15,640 --> 00:13:18,680 Speaker 1: crackle than usual in the air that morning, owing to 164 00:13:18,720 --> 00:13:22,200 Speaker 1: the fact that the teachers are still gathered inside for 165 00:13:22,280 --> 00:13:26,600 Speaker 1: an early term staff meeting, giving the pupils free reign 166 00:13:26,720 --> 00:13:30,880 Speaker 1: of the field. It had been left to Allison, whose 167 00:13:30,920 --> 00:13:34,600 Speaker 1: ten year old daughter Fifi attends the school, to single 168 00:13:34,679 --> 00:13:40,080 Speaker 1: handedly supervise the two hundred and fifty odd children. Built 169 00:13:40,120 --> 00:13:44,320 Speaker 1: in nineteen ninety one, aerial school was constructed on the 170 00:13:44,360 --> 00:13:47,920 Speaker 1: site of an old farm roughly twenty miles east of 171 00:13:48,000 --> 00:13:52,239 Speaker 1: Ferrari in the town of Ruwa, a small rural community 172 00:13:52,559 --> 00:13:55,679 Speaker 1: that also serves as a municipal hub for the many 173 00:13:55,840 --> 00:14:01,800 Speaker 1: surrounding homesteads. As a fee paying facility, its pupils, aged 174 00:14:01,960 --> 00:14:06,680 Speaker 1: six to thirteen, come from the wealthier parts of Zimbabwean society. 175 00:14:07,679 --> 00:14:11,600 Speaker 1: They constitute a broad mix of ethnicities and a belly 176 00:14:11,720 --> 00:14:16,319 Speaker 1: and Kranger, among other tribes to first and second generation 177 00:14:16,760 --> 00:14:22,120 Speaker 1: European immigrants. The playground is divided into an area for 178 00:14:22,200 --> 00:14:26,320 Speaker 1: swings and climbing frames used mostly by the younger children, 179 00:14:27,040 --> 00:14:31,760 Speaker 1: and a two acre stretch of dirt and grass. Thick 180 00:14:31,840 --> 00:14:35,560 Speaker 1: scrubland and a line of tall gum trees form a 181 00:14:35,680 --> 00:14:39,320 Speaker 1: natural border at the end of the dirt flat. Beyond 182 00:14:39,400 --> 00:14:44,160 Speaker 1: that runs a dry creek and vast swathes of savannah, 183 00:14:44,600 --> 00:14:48,600 Speaker 1: which merges with a series of low rolling hills sloping 184 00:14:48,640 --> 00:14:53,560 Speaker 1: gently at the horizon. Children from these parts no better 185 00:14:53,680 --> 00:14:59,280 Speaker 1: than to disappear beyond such natural boundaries. After all, there's 186 00:14:59,320 --> 00:15:03,360 Speaker 1: no telling what creatures might be lurking in the tall grass, 187 00:15:03,920 --> 00:15:07,880 Speaker 1: waiting either to pounce with teeth and claw, or to 188 00:15:07,960 --> 00:15:12,200 Speaker 1: defend themselves with deadly venom at the slightest hint of 189 00:15:12,240 --> 00:15:17,240 Speaker 1: a threat. Eleven year old Salma is making her way 190 00:15:17,320 --> 00:15:20,320 Speaker 1: towards her friend Emma at the back of the playground 191 00:15:20,880 --> 00:15:25,440 Speaker 1: when she becomes aware of a loud, buzzing noise. A 192 00:15:25,560 --> 00:15:29,520 Speaker 1: row of wooden utility poles and power cables run under 193 00:15:29,560 --> 00:15:32,440 Speaker 1: the trees at the eastern edge of the playground and 194 00:15:32,600 --> 00:15:37,320 Speaker 1: stretch off into the distant plains. The sound seems to 195 00:15:37,400 --> 00:15:42,640 Speaker 1: be coming from there. Sama signals to Emma to join her, 196 00:15:42,920 --> 00:15:47,040 Speaker 1: and the pair head over to investigate. As they draw 197 00:15:47,080 --> 00:15:52,280 Speaker 1: closer to the trees, the buzzing intensifies when suddenly, a 198 00:15:52,360 --> 00:15:55,840 Speaker 1: flash of light flares up from somewhere in the distance. 199 00:15:56,880 --> 00:16:00,880 Speaker 1: What was that, asks Selma, as the pair turn to 200 00:16:00,920 --> 00:16:05,320 Speaker 1: see where the light had come from. Look, says Emma, 201 00:16:05,720 --> 00:16:09,560 Speaker 1: pointing to the far end of the playground. Salma and 202 00:16:09,600 --> 00:16:13,480 Speaker 1: Emma watch with amusement as a small group of children 203 00:16:13,840 --> 00:16:17,080 Speaker 1: gather by the trees at the edge of the playing field. 204 00:16:17,640 --> 00:16:20,880 Speaker 1: It was as if someone had just called them over. 205 00:16:22,600 --> 00:16:26,320 Speaker 1: Salma and Emma keep watching as more children join them, 206 00:16:26,800 --> 00:16:29,840 Speaker 1: running across to them from all ends of the playground. 207 00:16:31,120 --> 00:16:35,560 Speaker 1: Come on, says Emma, excitedly, grabbing Selma by the hand. 208 00:16:43,120 --> 00:16:47,760 Speaker 1: At the tuck shop, supervisor Alison has just noticed how 209 00:16:47,840 --> 00:16:52,160 Speaker 1: quiet it's become when twelve year old Luke comes tearing 210 00:16:52,240 --> 00:16:58,120 Speaker 1: up to the hut, Come quickly. Allison listens patiently as 211 00:16:58,200 --> 00:17:01,920 Speaker 1: Luke struggles to get his word out, something about a 212 00:17:02,040 --> 00:17:06,360 Speaker 1: tiny man in a black, shiny suit with large eyes 213 00:17:06,800 --> 00:17:12,520 Speaker 1: and a silver lace tied around his forehead. Alison, suspecting 214 00:17:12,560 --> 00:17:14,960 Speaker 1: it might be a trick to lure her away from 215 00:17:14,960 --> 00:17:19,040 Speaker 1: the sweets, has no intention of falling for it, But 216 00:17:19,080 --> 00:17:22,960 Speaker 1: as Luke continues to babble, she becomes aware of the 217 00:17:23,000 --> 00:17:27,520 Speaker 1: faint sound of crying. When she looks up, there are 218 00:17:27,520 --> 00:17:33,120 Speaker 1: more children heading towards her. Some are wide eyed with alarm, 219 00:17:33,520 --> 00:17:38,800 Speaker 1: while others are inconsolable with tears. All arrive with the 220 00:17:38,840 --> 00:17:43,439 Speaker 1: exact same story that some kind of object landed in 221 00:17:43,480 --> 00:17:46,600 Speaker 1: the trees at the back of the playground and two 222 00:17:46,760 --> 00:17:52,160 Speaker 1: little beings with strange eyes wearing silver and black suits 223 00:17:52,200 --> 00:17:57,119 Speaker 1: got out of it. Suddenly concerned by the obvious distress 224 00:17:57,119 --> 00:18:01,240 Speaker 1: of the children, Alison looks around for her daughter, Fifi. 225 00:18:02,119 --> 00:18:06,760 Speaker 1: She finally spots her, running towards the tuck shop. Why 226 00:18:06,840 --> 00:18:11,359 Speaker 1: is everyone crying, Alison asks, because of the glowing white 227 00:18:11,440 --> 00:18:16,800 Speaker 1: thing that landed, says Fifi. Allison stares at her daughter 228 00:18:17,280 --> 00:18:22,840 Speaker 1: and finds no trace of mischief in her eyes. Inside 229 00:18:22,920 --> 00:18:27,280 Speaker 1: the school, Headmaster Colin Mackie is just wrapping up the 230 00:18:27,320 --> 00:18:30,760 Speaker 1: meeting when an urgent banging is heard on the staff 231 00:18:30,800 --> 00:18:34,840 Speaker 1: room door. He opens it to find a pupil in 232 00:18:34,920 --> 00:18:38,960 Speaker 1: an agitated state. A ship has landed in the playground, 233 00:18:39,119 --> 00:18:44,320 Speaker 1: he says. Mister Mackie chuckles at the boy, telling him 234 00:18:44,359 --> 00:18:47,240 Speaker 1: to go back outside and at the meeting will be 235 00:18:47,320 --> 00:18:53,280 Speaker 1: over soon, before closing the door. Ten minutes later, the 236 00:18:53,400 --> 00:18:57,800 Speaker 1: teachers emerge into the playground, chatting amiably as they walk 237 00:18:57,880 --> 00:19:02,440 Speaker 1: into the light. Then, one by one, each of them 238 00:19:02,640 --> 00:19:08,880 Speaker 1: falls completely silent. There before them. Instead of children laughing 239 00:19:08,960 --> 00:19:13,639 Speaker 1: and playing as they'd expected, they see instead twenty or 240 00:19:13,680 --> 00:19:18,679 Speaker 1: so pupils huddled together with tears streaming down their faces, 241 00:19:19,080 --> 00:19:23,240 Speaker 1: while other classmates try to console them. Most of the 242 00:19:23,280 --> 00:19:28,359 Speaker 1: others stand around in small groups, deep in conversation. Some 243 00:19:28,880 --> 00:19:34,240 Speaker 1: are still wandering about in a strange days. Allison is 244 00:19:34,320 --> 00:19:38,200 Speaker 1: comforting some of the children when mister Mackie approaches her. 245 00:19:39,520 --> 00:19:43,119 Speaker 1: What on Earth's been going on? He asks, But before 246 00:19:43,160 --> 00:19:48,440 Speaker 1: Alison can explain, the children drown her out, speaking rapidly 247 00:19:48,640 --> 00:19:52,800 Speaker 1: over each other as they try to articulate exactly what 248 00:19:52,840 --> 00:19:58,440 Speaker 1: they've apparently seen. Some say they saw it land, others 249 00:19:58,480 --> 00:20:02,399 Speaker 1: that it was already there when the arrived. They speak 250 00:20:02,480 --> 00:20:05,680 Speaker 1: of how it glinted in the trees and its oddly 251 00:20:05,800 --> 00:20:10,280 Speaker 1: circular shape, but most of all, they just want to 252 00:20:10,320 --> 00:20:13,199 Speaker 1: talk about the two beings that came out of it, 253 00:20:13,840 --> 00:20:18,400 Speaker 1: and their peculiarly large eyes that seemed to wrap around 254 00:20:18,520 --> 00:20:23,120 Speaker 1: their whole face. The teachers can only look to each 255 00:20:23,160 --> 00:20:39,280 Speaker 1: other with complete disbelief. Despite its skepticism, head teacher mister 256 00:20:39,400 --> 00:20:42,080 Speaker 1: Mackie is eager to get to the bottom of it 257 00:20:42,119 --> 00:20:46,040 Speaker 1: all and asks anyone claiming to have seen something to 258 00:20:46,160 --> 00:20:50,960 Speaker 1: follow him into the school hall. With over sixty children 259 00:20:51,080 --> 00:20:55,560 Speaker 1: gathered inside, mister Mackie and two other teachers asked them 260 00:20:55,640 --> 00:20:59,760 Speaker 1: to spread out with paper and pens and draw exactly 261 00:20:59,840 --> 00:21:04,400 Speaker 1: what they saw. For the next thirty minutes, the children 262 00:21:04,600 --> 00:21:10,000 Speaker 1: sit in concentrated silence, sketching and coloring, while the teachers 263 00:21:10,119 --> 00:21:15,200 Speaker 1: talk among themselves, relieved to have finally calm the children down. 264 00:21:15,560 --> 00:21:19,360 Speaker 1: Little attention is given to the array of bizarre saucer 265 00:21:19,520 --> 00:21:24,720 Speaker 1: like shapes and stick figures now appearing simultaneously on pieces 266 00:21:24,760 --> 00:21:30,160 Speaker 1: of paper throughout the hall. After thirty minutes, the children 267 00:21:30,320 --> 00:21:34,040 Speaker 1: hand in their work. The teachers look down at the 268 00:21:34,080 --> 00:21:38,720 Speaker 1: peculiar drawings as they receive them, more amused than anything else. 269 00:21:39,880 --> 00:21:43,240 Speaker 1: As each new drawing comes in, they asked the child, 270 00:21:43,720 --> 00:21:46,640 Speaker 1: was it not a helicopter you saw? Are you sure 271 00:21:46,680 --> 00:21:49,919 Speaker 1: it wasn't just a farm hand from the next door homestead? 272 00:21:50,880 --> 00:21:54,560 Speaker 1: And when each child insists that it wasn't, the teachers 273 00:21:54,600 --> 00:21:59,440 Speaker 1: invariably reply, you've been watching too much TV, or they 274 00:21:59,480 --> 00:22:02,600 Speaker 1: tell them that it was just their imagination and that 275 00:22:02,680 --> 00:22:07,920 Speaker 1: there's no such thing as aliens from outer space. When 276 00:22:08,000 --> 00:22:11,159 Speaker 1: the bell rings for class, the teachers gather up the 277 00:22:11,280 --> 00:22:14,440 Speaker 1: last of the drawings and tell the children to try 278 00:22:14,440 --> 00:22:17,640 Speaker 1: and forget about whatever it was they think they saw. 279 00:22:19,200 --> 00:22:23,120 Speaker 1: But eleven year old Salma knows exactly what she's seen. 280 00:22:24,359 --> 00:22:27,640 Speaker 1: Like many of the kids, her family don't even own 281 00:22:27,720 --> 00:22:31,639 Speaker 1: a TV, and though some of her classmates talked about 282 00:22:31,680 --> 00:22:37,160 Speaker 1: aliens and UFOs, she had never heard those terms before today. 283 00:22:38,400 --> 00:22:41,119 Speaker 1: By the time she makes it home from school, she 284 00:22:41,240 --> 00:22:45,040 Speaker 1: feels she's done nothing but speak about the event all afternoon, 285 00:22:45,960 --> 00:22:48,919 Speaker 1: yet not one of the grown ups has heard a 286 00:22:48,960 --> 00:22:53,160 Speaker 1: word she's been saying. So when her mother asks her 287 00:22:53,200 --> 00:22:57,159 Speaker 1: what's up when she sits down for dinner, Salma is 288 00:22:57,200 --> 00:23:00,679 Speaker 1: reluctant to talk. You won't believe me if I tell you, 289 00:23:01,119 --> 00:23:04,240 Speaker 1: she says, as she pushes her food around the plate. 290 00:23:05,520 --> 00:23:09,960 Speaker 1: None of my teachers do, but her mother perseveres, and 291 00:23:10,080 --> 00:23:22,760 Speaker 1: finally Salma relents. Sama takes a deep breath and then begins. 292 00:23:24,240 --> 00:23:27,080 Speaker 1: She tells her mother first about the flash of light 293 00:23:27,560 --> 00:23:30,720 Speaker 1: and about how when it happened, she and her friend 294 00:23:30,800 --> 00:23:35,000 Speaker 1: Emma had the feeling that time had squished, as if 295 00:23:35,040 --> 00:23:38,879 Speaker 1: it were no longer a part of her thoughts. Sama 296 00:23:39,000 --> 00:23:42,560 Speaker 1: also tells her mother about how when she and Emma 297 00:23:42,720 --> 00:23:45,600 Speaker 1: had reached the crowd of kids gathered at the back 298 00:23:45,640 --> 00:23:49,840 Speaker 1: of the playground. That's when they saw it, a large, 299 00:23:50,080 --> 00:23:54,800 Speaker 1: silverish object on the ground by the trees. She didn't 300 00:23:54,800 --> 00:23:58,359 Speaker 1: know what it was, but it seemed mechanical, like it 301 00:23:58,440 --> 00:24:02,560 Speaker 1: might move away at any moment. Only it didn't look 302 00:24:02,600 --> 00:24:06,080 Speaker 1: to be made from any material that she'd seen before. 303 00:24:07,240 --> 00:24:10,840 Speaker 1: But what she was most transfixed by was the creature 304 00:24:11,160 --> 00:24:14,960 Speaker 1: that stood in the long grass barely five yards away. 305 00:24:16,240 --> 00:24:19,560 Speaker 1: It looked human like, she said, but no taller than 306 00:24:19,560 --> 00:24:22,919 Speaker 1: a child, and its whole body was covered in a 307 00:24:22,960 --> 00:24:27,919 Speaker 1: shiny black suit like a scuba diver. And its face 308 00:24:28,880 --> 00:24:32,720 Speaker 1: she couldn't take her eyes off. Its face, a blank, 309 00:24:32,880 --> 00:24:37,879 Speaker 1: smooth space like the surface of a porcelain jug, although 310 00:24:37,920 --> 00:24:41,840 Speaker 1: it seemed to have no eyes, nose, or mouth. When 311 00:24:41,880 --> 00:24:45,040 Speaker 1: she looked at it, she had the very distinct feeling 312 00:24:45,400 --> 00:24:48,719 Speaker 1: that it was looking directly at her, as if it 313 00:24:48,840 --> 00:24:53,040 Speaker 1: was trying to understand her. She said, it felt like 314 00:24:53,160 --> 00:24:57,520 Speaker 1: it knew me, she tells her mother. What's more, it 315 00:24:57,640 --> 00:25:02,240 Speaker 1: kept jumping back and forth from one place to another, only, 316 00:25:02,440 --> 00:25:07,120 Speaker 1: as she explains, she never saw it actually move, almost 317 00:25:07,200 --> 00:25:12,040 Speaker 1: as though it was only moving whenever she blinked. Were 318 00:25:12,040 --> 00:25:16,960 Speaker 1: you afraid? Her mother asks. Salma looks up suddenly from 319 00:25:17,000 --> 00:25:22,920 Speaker 1: her plate. You believe me, she says hopefully. I don't 320 00:25:22,960 --> 00:25:26,720 Speaker 1: know what it is you saw, but yes, I believe you. 321 00:25:28,040 --> 00:25:34,600 Speaker 1: Salma's mouth burst into a wide grin. No, I wasn't afraid. 322 00:25:35,800 --> 00:25:39,280 Speaker 1: That evening. Throughout the homes of the other sixty odd 323 00:25:39,359 --> 00:25:43,080 Speaker 1: children who also claimed to have seen the extraordinary incident, 324 00:25:43,680 --> 00:25:48,720 Speaker 1: the same conversation took place, despite their teacher's advice to 325 00:25:48,840 --> 00:25:54,040 Speaker 1: forget about it. Like Salma, many other children also felt 326 00:25:54,359 --> 00:25:59,119 Speaker 1: the apparent being had been studying them. Those who were 327 00:25:59,200 --> 00:26:03,160 Speaker 1: left afraid by the whole ordeal endure a sleepless night. 328 00:26:04,040 --> 00:26:07,600 Speaker 1: They stare out of their bedroom windows, terrified at the 329 00:26:07,640 --> 00:26:12,399 Speaker 1: thought of the small, black suited creatures returning to steal 330 00:26:12,480 --> 00:26:16,560 Speaker 1: them from their beds. Those two, afraid to even tell 331 00:26:16,600 --> 00:26:20,800 Speaker 1: their parents are left to suffer their nightmares alone in 332 00:26:20,880 --> 00:26:25,840 Speaker 1: the dark. Others stay up all night, their young minds 333 00:26:25,920 --> 00:26:30,200 Speaker 1: whirring as they try helplessly to piece together what they've seen. 334 00:26:31,440 --> 00:26:35,040 Speaker 1: Perhaps the teachers were right, they think, maybe it really 335 00:26:35,200 --> 00:26:40,600 Speaker 1: was just their imaginations playing tricks on them. That evening, 336 00:26:41,080 --> 00:26:45,040 Speaker 1: back home, in his living room, head teacher mister Mackie 337 00:26:45,440 --> 00:26:49,560 Speaker 1: sifts through the drawings properly for the first time, becoming 338 00:26:49,720 --> 00:26:52,680 Speaker 1: more and more troubled the more of them he sees. 339 00:26:53,600 --> 00:26:57,000 Speaker 1: One after the other, he sees the same set of 340 00:26:57,080 --> 00:27:01,280 Speaker 1: images drawn by each of the children, pictures of some 341 00:27:01,520 --> 00:27:06,800 Speaker 1: kind of craft on the ground and humanoid figures with wide, 342 00:27:07,080 --> 00:27:16,760 Speaker 1: bulbous eyes stretching high around the face. You've been listening 343 00:27:16,800 --> 00:27:22,080 Speaker 1: to Unexplained Season seven, episode seventeen, What Lies in the 344 00:27:22,160 --> 00:27:26,720 Speaker 1: Long Grass Part one, The second and final part, will 345 00:27:26,720 --> 00:27:32,959 Speaker 1: be released next Friday, March eighth. This episode was written 346 00:27:33,000 --> 00:27:36,840 Speaker 1: by Richard mc lean smith. Unexplained as an Avy Club 347 00:27:36,880 --> 00:27:41,560 Speaker 1: Productions podcast created by Richard mc lean Smith. All other 348 00:27:41,640 --> 00:27:45,280 Speaker 1: elements of the podcast, including the music, are also produced 349 00:27:45,280 --> 00:27:49,879 Speaker 1: by me Richard mc lean smith. Unexplained. The book and audiobook, 350 00:27:50,160 --> 00:27:53,280 Speaker 1: with stories never before featured on the show, is now 351 00:27:53,320 --> 00:27:57,080 Speaker 1: available to buy world wide. You can purchase from Amazon, 352 00:27:57,359 --> 00:28:01,440 Speaker 1: Barnes and Noble, water Stones and other books stores. Please 353 00:28:01,480 --> 00:28:05,080 Speaker 1: subscribe to and rate the show wherever you get your podcasts, 354 00:28:05,359 --> 00:28:07,679 Speaker 1: and feel free to get in touch with any thoughts 355 00:28:07,760 --> 00:28:10,959 Speaker 1: or ideas regarding the stories you've heard on the show. 356 00:28:11,240 --> 00:28:13,679 Speaker 1: Perhaps you have an explanation of your own you'd like 357 00:28:13,720 --> 00:28:17,359 Speaker 1: to share. You can find out more at Unexplained podcast 358 00:28:17,440 --> 00:28:21,240 Speaker 1: dot com and reach us online through Twitter at Unexplained 359 00:28:21,320 --> 00:30:20,160 Speaker 1: Pod and Facebook at Facebook dot com, Forward Slash, Unexplained Podcast. 360 00:29:26,000 --> 00:30:01,200 Speaker 2: Thing and t still s