Old Gods of Appalachia - A Once-Told Tale: The Wolf Sisters Part Three
Episode Date: April 16, 2020The Walker Sisters and their man Melvin journey into the darkest night Baker's Gap, TN has known in thirty years in this thrilling finale to The Wolf Sisters series, originally performed live on Disco...rd.CW: Frank discussion of historical racism and treatment of migrant workers, depictions of period racism, cult activity, shapeshifting, supernatural animal violence, gore, dismemberment of a dead body, references to the KKK (pejorative), spiritual/demonic possession themed elements, references to historical sex work, references to the death of an adult child.Written by Steve ShellSound design by Steve ShellNarrated by Steve ShellThe voice of Miss Darla: Stephanie Hickling BeckmanIntro music: "The Land Unknown," written and performed by Landon BloodOutro music: "I Cannot Escape the Darkness," written and performed by Those Poor BastardsLEARN MORE ABOUT OLD GODS OF APPALACHIA: www.oldgodsofappalachia.comCOMPLETE YOUR SOCIAL MEDIA RITUAL:FacebookInstagramTwitterBlueskySUPPORT THE SHOW:Join us over at THE HOLLER to enjoy ad-free episodes, access exclusive storylines and more.Find t-shirts, hoodies, mugs, and other Old Gods merch at www.teepublic.com/stores/oldgodsofappalachia.Transcripts available on our website at www.oldgodsofappalachia.com/episodes.Old Gods of Appalachia is a production of DeepNerd Media. All rights reserved.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/old-gods-of-appalachia. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Well, hey there, family, if you love Old Gods of Appalachia,
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Right about now, Old Gods of Appalachia is a horror,
anthology podcast and therefore may contain material not suitable for all audiences.
So listener discretion is advised.
Building a prison is a tricky thing.
When you seek to hold those too dangerous to be allowed amongst the rest of us,
you do your very best to deny them contact with the sky.
To deny them purchase within the soil, to deny them the blessed kiss of rain or river,
the damnedest of the dam must be shut away from all things good and green.
But no builder's hand is ever perfect.
No structure is ever truly impregnable.
So when our beloved mountains were raised to the exalted stars
and then lowered to seal in the darkness that sleeps beneath such security was sought.
And it's comforting to think that that potential portal was pressed shut
that every lock turned closed for all eternity
and that every crack in each counted cornerstone
was filled and sealed tight.
Comforting indeed, but it's also a lie.
Along an ancient continental margin in the foothills,
darkness had found ventilation
from the time the old things first began dreaming.
Darkness had pushed up through the bedrock
and into the black soil.
of what would one day be Baker's Gap, Tennessee.
Around 1902, before the railroads came and Baker's Gap,
what then called Rossville for the local landowner,
was barely a town at all.
There was a man who came to live in the place
where the shadow pulled like creek water.
A stranger from somewhere not of these hills,
from up north maybe, but nobody knows or remembers,
and slept in a snug little holler
that was a sharp drop of white.
from the brand new cut roads.
He came there to make a stead for himself,
to eventually send away for his family,
but that never happened.
But he kept to himself and cut timber
and cleared the land that he claimed to have a deed to
and tried not to go into town.
But in the dark of the night, he heard voices.
And he heard songs that let him deeper into the trees
where the earth grew black.
and rich. He would wake some mornings just standing there. Barefoot toes clutching the rich loam.
His body shivering cold in the morning dew. Some said he was actually a godly man and feared
temptation, the temptation of women especially. Some said he was born with a dead heart, never knew
love. But give the man a crumb of credit, he tried to stay away, but he tried to stay away, but he was
but after a time going into town could not be avoided.
And William, call me Bill Huff,
made his first contact with the town of Rosville.
A nervous and an awkward man,
he had no way with people in the light of day,
but at night.
With a drink or two in him
and the song of the night on his lips,
it was like he was a different man altogether.
And it said that he did yield to temptation and ended up at the local saloon and the company of a young lady.
It has said he did partake in her services.
It is also said that he paid in good coin and retreated to the woods with his supplies of the day and his good name that same night.
And after that one trip to town, and let's face it, sometimes it just takes that one trip.
Mr. Huff became a weekend regular at that parlor house.
called on the same girl week after week,
a raven-haired flare named Juanita,
who spoke of her home in the south as she moved atop him.
He brought her gifts, carried himself like a suitor,
made her feel like a queen.
He arrived one night, though,
to be told Juanita hadn't been in her room when morning call came,
and that all of her things were gone.
Had he seen her? Had he talked her into leaving?
But Bill Huff was confused and said he was there for his set appointment time and had no reason to think she had plans to leave.
Wouldn't she tell him her best customer and tempers flared, but Bill Huff seemed genuinely heartbroken.
So management believed him and he went his way.
A month passed and Bill Huff was back in town.
calling on the other parlor house that had opened on the far side of what passed for town
where he met and became a regular of another young girl named Judith
now he would call on her in the exact same way with flowers and gifts
just like a proper courtier before putting down his coin to sate what urged him
and sure enough several weeks in one Saturday night
a confused and befuddled Bill Huff showed up to call on his face
favorite companion to find her gone. Her room stripped. Her person missing. But this time the
questions were harder for Mr. Bill as this was a different sort of parlor house run by a different
sort of people if you get my meaning. Now it took three men to subdue him because it was said
Bill fought like a demon before they dragged him back to the house in the deep little holler where
he'd lived and found both girls there dead.
strangled.
Tucked into bed together as neat as you please, the bed encircled with dead nettles,
and something that surely wouldn't paint.
Now, Juanita had been dead long enough to stink, but she looked as pretty and preserved as the day she came to work in Roswell.
Except for the necklace of bruises around her throat, Judith was much the same, still in her best working lingerie.
Her neck is shadow of purple and black where she died and the lover's clover.
of Bill Huff. The men strung Bill Huff up right there beside his house and buried him and the two
women behind it. The local papers, such as it was, screamed all about love triangles and the
deviltry worked by women of ill repute, and the hauler was renamed Lovers Clutch. And the darkness
that soaked the soil there drank up the death that tread on it. Now legend says if you come
on a new moon and walk backwards into the clutch and turn around
real quick, you can still see Bill choking the life out of Juanito while Judy watches him terrified
from the door of his house, which still stands there. Well, it's the biggest building in that
three-quarter circle of building still standing in the clutch to this day. Now, those with the true
gift can't help but see the dead sometimes, but to live in that house. Haunted by death,
built on a wellspring of hunger and oblivion. Well, that might be a heart. Well, that my heart.
might change a person, might it not, family?
When Nesmi Jimenez first came to Baker's Gap
and moved into the house with the woman that helped her come
and been living in, the voices and visitations
weren't scary at first.
She was a brouhaha in her blood,
and she knew that it was sometimes her burden
to see the restless dead.
But when she brought her own blood there,
her Dolores, her cousin, she said,
and she had watched him fall in with Jubal Walker.
The women who walked the clutch at night began to tell her different things,
as did the voice that came from beneath the earth.
We'll come back to that, though, family.
Melvin Blevins was a man of simple means.
He had grown up in these mountains, had raised a family in these mountains,
rightly believed he would one day die in these mountains.
and he'd made choices in his life that had brought that belief closer to reality more than a few times.
He'd worked in doghole mines in Virginia, cut timber without law groups in Tennessee.
Then he met as Clara, and everything changed.
He'd never loved someone so much as he did this tiny little ball of sunshine,
and he knows she was too good for him.
Didn't care.
Counted himself lucky, and Clara bore him two girls.
Irene and Vera.
Now, Irene married a boy
respectable like over in Cumberland
and moved off, but her little sister
Vera was far from the marrying
kind. Wild as a bobcat and bitter as a
preacher's wife, Vera ran off from home
and never looked back.
He'd heard from time to time
that she'd been selling
what God gave her all over East Tennessee
and up to West Virginia and back.
He'd gone looking for her a few times
in the houses up by East.
saw her over in Kawani.
Never found her, though.
I found girls that
knew her, told him that
Veer had got in with the house up in Keystone
West Virginia when she first ran
away and got treated real rough.
It was bad.
And from that point, she was determined just
to make it on her own.
Now, Melvin tried to tell himself
that she was gone, and he'd probably
never see her again.
But then word come that she was
back in Baker's Gap, and
working at that house out in the big valley.
Pleasant evenings.
He made himself stay away.
He knew if she wanted to see her family.
She knew how to get home.
Then a boy come.
Middle of the night, boy come running,
told him Vera was hurt.
Hurt real bad and asking for him.
And he rode out as fast as he could,
but she was gone before he got there.
Turns out the house she left in West Virginia
and the part of Keystone called Ash Bottom
didn't take kindly to losing its girls.
Vera hadn't been working at pleasant evenings at all.
She'd been sent there to hide.
How that man got in the house was a mystery to all involved.
He did not, however, get out.
The owner of the house, Miss Walker,
had offered to let him have what was left of the man
who took Vera's life,
but there wasn't much left in that shoebox.
So he declined.
Miss Walker, he couldn't call her Marcy then.
He came now, had been kind and gracious,
and not at all what he expected.
She paid for Vera's funeral.
Offered to pay him and his wife a handsome son for their loss,
but he declined.
She told him Vera had come on the run from Ashbottom
and the houses up there were rough.
Sometimes it was said they were.
was actually company owned.
Vera had come across one of her other sisters
on the West Virginia Virginia line,
and she'd helped her get to pleasant evenings
knowing she'd be safe there.
Or so everybody thought.
Melvin had never forgotten Marcy Walker's kindness
and so a month of the day that they buried Vera.
He showed up and volunteered to help around the house
in any way he could in terms of keeping the girls safe.
At around 6'4 foot 6 and 330-some-odd pounds,
Melvin was a force, and he did just as he intended,
doing his best to make sure no one else's little girl or boy ended up like his vera.
He saw how Marcy Walker treated her girls and boys too.
Saw how she adapted when the house had to change after that railroad man thing.
He would march into hell and back for that woman.
Thought his wife would too.
Out here, family comes in many forms.
So here Melvin stood.
the dirt outside the Rising Creek Baptist Church,
waiting on that good-for-nothing-nought-Syismore to show up and get his.
He'd hung a lantern on the hook by the church door
and stood in the thin circle of light by the steps.
Now, Larry had beat on his wife Sadie and their little boy Dennis for too long,
and if there was anyone he was almost willing to let these women take,
it'd be Larry.
But hell, if he could knock some sense into him,
well, that's a good time for everybody.
Slung over Melvin's shoulder was a leather bag holding things he had kept in a bow.
under his bed since Vera passed.
He hadn't been able to stand looking at him till now.
And I was getting late enough,
that Melvin was starting to worry that Larry turned yelling and decided not to come.
Went out of nowhere, the other big man came shuffling into sight
and fell into Melvin's arms.
Blood spilling down the front of Larry's freshly torn throat.
Melvin gasped and let the bulk of Larry's seismic to the ground,
wiping his now bloody hands on his overalls on the ground to get him dry.
He kept his back to the church steps and looked out into the darkness.
He reached into his shirt and pulled out the medicine pouch Marcy Walker had made for him the Christmas before.
She told him it could protect him from the spooky things that she and her family dealt with.
Melvin had not believed in witches or magic and haints until that business with the railroad man and the local magistrate.
But now he believed, sure enough.
He heard the sounds of pause and claws on the walls.
roared in the brush, the panting growls of a pack of wolves that were all around.
And then the sickly sounds of bones and flesh rearranging itself.
And a woman's voice came from the darkness.
Mr. Blevens, Mr. Blevens.
You are good man.
Why are you out here trying to fight like one of these bad boys?
Hmm?
You're going to try to get us to kill you?
She laughed, and Melvin recognized the rich laughter of the dark, dark-skinned woman.
He'd only seen at the dry goods door a few times.
Her accent spoke of faraway places he didn't know, and she'd always seemed nice enough.
She stepped into the lantern light naked and shiny.
Her whole body greased.
Her curves catching the light and sending it cascading over her like a dark ocean.
Let us have the old drunk's body, Mr. Blevins.
No harm needs to come to you.
You just step away unless you thought you was drawing us away from our home place
so them girls from out at the gap can get in here and mess with our things.
Oh, Melvin, are you a decoy, Mr. Blevins?
Well, I guess I'm something like that, Miss Darla.
Melvin remembered the woman's name from somewhere in his mind.
So y'all weren't supposed to get here till me and Larry were...
Well, uh... huh.
You're early.
So I guess we got some time to kill.
Melvin's hand went to the medicine bag around his neck.
We have things to kill all right, Mr. Nevins.
Said Darla, as her body cracked and writhed and broke until she was no longer woman.
But a lean black wolf.
Two other wolves patted in.
to view, one larger and one smaller than Miss Darla. The smaller was a sandy brown and its muzzle was
smeared in gore. Larry's last dance partner, he guessed. From the other side of the church came three
more smaller red wolves. They looked scrawny and less impressive than the three alpha predators
across the way, but just as eager. Melvin was willing to bet that these were the three women from
the woods, the ones who couldn't change on their own. Melvin had a plan for them.
The other three, well, that would be harder. But the three lesser wolves, he wasn't too worried,
even as the pack began to circle him. I'm warning y'all, Melvin growled. Miss Walker, she doesn't,
she doesn't taught me some tricks. She doesn't give me some things to take care of the likes of y'all. Y'all
y'all better just go on home now. The wolves growled and stopped.
snapped. It sounded almost like laughter.
And one of the three smaller red wolves made a pass at his legs, and Melvin clutching that
medicine bag was suddenly swift enough to avoid it. Then the second, and then the third.
Oh, they're playing with me, Melvin thought. Well, let's see how they like getting played with.
Melvin smooched the air and called, come on, come on, come on now, dogs, what shall got?
And the littlest of the three red wolves took the bait and rushed to attack Melvin.
The pack tensed and then froze as Melvin sprung high into the air,
landing on the small wolf with all of its weight,
and before it could do anything but squeak, he produced from his pocket a small hand-carved comb,
clearly made of bone.
And with it, he began to gently comb the wolf's fur,
like a proud daddy on Sunday morning giving his wife a helping hand.
And just like that, the wolf went limp.
One moment its eyes and jaws were wide,
the next it was slack come to death
and began to shift back into a lovely naked girl.
Pale as starlight, body greased in a foul rendered fat,
sleeping like a baby.
The pack seemed to take a second to process what it was seeing,
but before they could react,
Milva had run the enchanted comb across the scruffs
of the other two smaller wolves
who quickly went limp and fell to the ground, reverting slowly to their original shapes.
Huh, Miss Walker's other sister, Givira, set of these combs and vanity goods that Miss Ellie makes.
Thought they might come in handy.
Rest you all need a little bit of grooming?
I can make you real pretty. Come on now.
The big black wolf was Miss Darla narrowed her eyes and growled at the other two
who sped off into the night in the direction of the clutch.
Miss Darla bared her fangs like nightmares
and prepared to charge Melvin
but found herself looking into a fine silver mirror
it too was carved a bone
and the reflection she saw there made her quivering lips drop
and Melvin's hand in the mirror began to quake
and emit a pale blue light
it grew terrible cold in his hand and he dropped it
and the big wolf looked down into the reflection
mesmerized as a single human hand.
Black as night reached up out of the mirror,
and Melvin stood stunned as the opening of the mirror
seemed to stretch wide as a whole ass-grown woman climbed from its inky depths.
Melvin could see that it had the same shape and silhouette as Miss Darlin,
but he could see no features, no three dimensions, if you will.
It was like the woman's shadow had stepped from the memory.
mirror. Ms. Darla had already changed her shape and stood facing her shadow as if looking in a
full-length mirror, tears streaming down her face as the shadows started to fill out, started to
take her form, and if a shadow takes your full form, there can only be one of you, and many times
there are not going to be none of you. Before there were two identical women standing in the parking
lot of Rising Creek Baptist, the shadow woman pulled Darry.
into an embrace there was a dim pulse of blue light as the shadow woman passed through
Miss Darla and vanished.
Darla uttered a surprise before her eyes rolled back into her head and she collapsed.
Melvin stood looking awkwardly at the circle of naked greased up women around him before
coming to himself and bolting off after the two wolves that had headed into the darkness
and toward the sisters in the clutch.
In the clutch, the wolf-woman thing glared at Ellie and Marcy
as the howls of two of her sisters sounded in the distance.
At first, Marcy thought the woman was trying to transform to attack them,
but on closer inspection she could see the creature was actively fighting against the change.
I wanted to be upright and in my full mind to meet you, sister.
She growled. Her breath coming in harsher and harsher pants, her muscles straining against the change,
her eyes pleading with something, her body slick with a rotten-smelling layer of grease at her feet or paws or whatever.
The soil itself was trying to latch on to her, writhing up over her feet, up her calves like tendrils of shadow.
Sister, you done wrongs yourself, Marcy said. It's hard enough to take another thing's shape, but
I'm not sure what you are now.
Oh, honey, the things in the earth have tricked you.
You need to let us help you.
Surely you can smell the rot here, honey.
Just tell me what you've done.
The thing's voice changed.
Switching back and forth between Spanish and English,
it told the sisters of a suitor that had come and brought her gifts and brought her candies
and she barely wanted to make him pay.
But the rules were the rules, and then he took her away.
brought her here and then and then the creature's voice shifted again and this time to a younger
things petulant wine i told him i wasn't living in no shack out here in the backwater he'd have to do better
but he got he got mad he got real mad and he and he and he and the voice shifted a third time i brought her here
I brought her here
My Dolores
My girl
My daughter
She cannot know I am her mommy
She cannot she cannot know my shame
So I give her to my mother
Tell her that's her mommy
But she wants to come
She wants to come and work
So I say I am her cousin and they
They take her and they kill her
They strangle her and bury her
here.
Honey, Marcy
began. Delores
Jimenez is good.
She's in Arkansas.
Her and the baby
are fine. No!
The creature wailed.
They tell me the truth.
They tell me.
They tell me.
Marcy and Ellie locked eyes.
And Ellie nodded.
Before the creature
could say another word or even
move which seemed kind of doubtful, but she never can be sure.
Marcy raised her walking stick with both hands and stabbed it into the earth in front of the
creature.
By the bones of the hills that birth us, by the mother's blood and newest moon, by the water that runs
and the fire that burns, by that which loves above the earth, not below, I bind you.
I make you safe.
I make you whole
I make you and name you
Nesmi Jimenez
Light burst from
Marcy's staff and slammed the
wolf creature to its knees
It keened and cried
Bound under the immense gift and will
of Marcy Walker
Ellie moved fast
She saw the creature's feet
The black tangles and splatters
Of the fungus and shadow and waist
It coated the garden
Were being driven back by the light
of the binding, so she drew welling wound back out and went to work cutting the ropes of black
gore, binding the creature to the tainted soil, until nothing but clean earth remained.
And then, out of nowhere, there were ghosts to a bearer of a true gift, seeing the dead,
it didn't always a shock. But to see two different ghosts walk out of the body of a living woman,
well that wasn't something you see every day
so the Walker sisters were taken back of mine
first the long-haired ghost of a young woman
praying for all she was worth in Spanish
eyes cast heavenward
second
the live blonde young woman who had grown up harder
than just about anyone in attendance
cussing and spitting and yelling at somebody they couldn't see
until both women faded into witchlight
and dust. And then what was left
and Nesmi Jimenez.
It was apparently the mother of young
Dolores, not a cousin at all.
A brouhaha with a true gift
living with ghosts and eating and bathing
in darkness that come from beneath
until the only tongue she could speak
was vengeance and murder
in the mouth of wolves.
Her eyes were wracked with pain
as her body was warped and distorted
in this in-between shape. She knew she was dying.
consumed by her own tainted workings.
Please, she seemed to plead as her body started to contort.
Marcy nodded and Ellie stepped back as her sister released the binding
and watched as the lost mother of Dolores
and grandmother to young Joaquin crumbled to dust and fur and bone.
A short while later, a breathless and very much alive, Melvin Blevins rode into the clutch
with his horse and wagon.
The wagon bearing the weight of two sleeping wolves
he'd found on his way to the clutch.
They were headed this way out for blood,
but I found them passed out just like the others,
but they didn't change none.
They got a taste for it.
They'll likely stay this way, said Ellie.
Did the comb and mirror work out okay?
Just like you said, Miss Walker.
Call me Ellie, Melvin.
I feel like we're family now if you're using my workings.
That's fine.
Miss Ellie, yes ma'am.
Marcy Walker sat exhausted on the edge of the cart and looked out over the homestead of the clutch.
What to do with this place now?
The dawn would cleanse a lot of what was still here.
There wasn't a witch or ghost for them to latch on to.
Maybe this place could know some peace.
Might just be best to let the woods take it.
Let the green cleanse it.
Yeah, that feels right.
Let there be green.
Well, hey there, family.
Well, that wraps up our little trilogy here on the Wolf Sisters.
I want to thank everybody who came out for all three weekends that we did live on Discord.
That was phenomenal.
I had the best time getting to know some of y'all on answering questions with Cam
and just sharing fellowship and holding space.
And really, if we look at numbers,
we reached more people in the first two nights of the Discord events
than we would have at our live shows in Marion.
And I know that's not the same thing.
I know it's not.
But it did my heart good to see that many gathered in the name of the old gods
and in the name of this show.
It really, really did.
I really super appreciate y'all.
And I want to continue to thank you for your generosity
on the threadless store and on Patreon
and folks that have just randomly PayPaled us money.
Two out of the three of us are still unemployed
and Lord knows when that can be rectified
with, this is me gesturing vaguely to the world around me
with all this going on.
But we thank you all and we appreciate you.
And if you have to step back on your Patreon pledge family,
believe me, we know where you're coming from,
but we do appreciate you.
You are helping pay rent
and you are helping keep utilities on for some people.
and that means so much to us as a family
and we love you all so much for it.
If you'd like to become a patron on Patreon
and get access to build Mama a Coffin
and some other unique programming we have there
and to get all your episodes a little bit early
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going over to patreon.com slash old gods of Appalachia
you two can unlock the mysteries of the earth
and of the water and of the wind and of the fire
and of the fell and of the holy
and all the things that spiral around my bathtub
when I'm trying to sit in a bubble bath
It smells like sandalwood and jasmine and think about evil creepy stuff.
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We have more exciting stuff to come, family.
this little, this is not season two.
This little trilogy was just some special unique programming
based off of the live shows
and we really hope you've enjoyed it.
Season two is coming.
There is so much creepy stuff going on in season two.
If you heard me alluding to the railroad man
and the local magistrate,
that might turn up in season two.
You never know.
Season two is going to jump all over time
so it's going to be interesting.
We love you.
We appreciate you, family.
And we'll see you real soon.
