Old Gods of Appalachia - Bumper Crop
Episode Date: October 31, 2021Stuck covering the night shift, Ada Spivey was having a hard time finding her Halloween spirit. It found her instead. A standalone tale set in the world of Old Gods of Appalachia.CW: Horticultural hor...ror. Brief mention of DUI accidents and other holiday injuries. Pet endangerment (he's fine; he lived to a ripe old age and passed peacefully in his sleep).Written by Cam CollinsNarrated by Steve ShellSound design by Steve ShellProduced by Cam Collins and Steve ShellInstrumental intro music by Landon BloodOutro Music: “If the Beast Should Hunt Us” by Lonesome Wyatt and Rachel BrookeLEARN 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 and is distributed by Rusty Quill. 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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Old Gods of Appalachia is a horrid.
anthology podcast and therefore may contain material not suitable for all audiences.
So listener discretion is advised.
Bumper Crop.
A tale for the season.
Mavisdale, Virginia, 1975.
The first of the pumpkins appeared in Aida Spivey's Yard seven days before Halloween.
Her shift at the hospital had ended at five,
and she just pulled into the driveway in her new Volkswagen rabbit when she spotted it,
almost glowing in the waning October sunlight,
a ripe, fat pumpkin,
sitting right in the middle of her yard, which was strange,
because she had not planted any pumpkin vines.
Ada was a gardener,
not some farmer scraping by on handouts from the church,
and what she could coax out of the dirt like her mama was,
she had applied herself in school,
as principal Vance at Mavisdale High used to say,
and earned a scholarship to what was at the time
the newly opened college over in Glaymorgan,
where she'd earned her nursing degree.
The work was hard and the hours were long,
and in point of fact, Ada didn't really like it much,
but the money was good,
and she never had to depend on anybody for anything.
When Ada had returned to Mavisdale to look after
Mama in her final years.
She'd bought a tall, narrow Victorian-style house on the edge of town bordering the woods
and filled her yard with flowers.
She had no interest in planting vegetables,
which she could easily purchase at the produce aisle at the Bigley-Wiggly.
Particularly gaudy orange gorge with spindly, tangling vines that would choke out her begonias,
it must have somehow spread from Gary Jesse's place up the road.
He grew pumpkins, sold him on the side of the road right by his mailbox.
She'd have to speak to him about that.
He should be more careful.
But that could wait.
Right now, the important thing was to dig it up.
The pumpkin had to go.
While someone might misinterpret it as a festive nod to the upcoming holiday
and bring trick-or-treaters to her door,
Ada would not be doling out candy to any little goblins this year.
She had to cover second shift for Cindy Akerd,
who was getting married Saturday and would be honeymoon in Mexico next week.
The hospital administration had better not
think this was going to become a permanent change just because Cindy was married now that wasn't
ada's problem she'd paid her dues had worked the long nights and covered the miss shifts management always
presumed an unmarried woman could just drop whatever she was doing and pick up the slack whenever they
was short-staffed and ada had always stepped up without complaint but she'd earned her spot on the day shift
by god and if anybody thought she was giving it up they had another thing coming ada heaved a tired sigh
She'd been on her feet since early morning
And she'd really been looking forward to her evening ritual
Of sitting down at the kitchen table
To read the paper over a cup of coffee and a cigarette
One of the two she allowed herself per day
Before she cooked dinner
She let herself in the back door
Dropped her pocketbook on the counter
And took a moment to open a can of wet food
For her big white-footed Siamese cat Simon
And pay the required toll and ear scratches
Then she exchanged her uniform
For something more appropriate for yard work
A pair of faded old jeans she'd had since college and a Mavistel Bears t-shirt.
Fetched a shovel from the garden shed and headed back outside to remove the offending gourd.
The pumpkin itself was easily dispatched.
Ada simply chucked it in the big trash bin by the kitchen door.
The vine was another matter.
It seemed to wind all through her garden.
Wrapping delicate tendrils around brightly colored mums and sending creepers all through her prize rose bushes,
the sun had set by the time she managed to trace the sprawling thing back to what she thought was its source,
several yards into the woods behind the house,
and it was nearly full dark by the time she'd rooted the thing out to her satisfaction.
Breathing heavy from the effort, Ada leading on her shovel and pushed her glasses back up into their proper place,
wiping the sweat from her face with her fingers and readjusting the frames.
She was tired and hungry
And the last thing she felt like doing at this point
Was cooking
She thought she might treat herself tonight
Just kick up her feet and order a pizza
Hell maybe even cuddle up on the couch
With a glass of wine and her cat
And stay up to watch the ABC Friday night movie
She didn't work again till Monday
She could live a little
Ada returned her shovel to the garden shed
And headed back into the kitchen
To look up the number of her pizza hut
While she paged to the phone
book she made note of Gary Jesse's number as well. She'd ring him tomorrow about the errant
pumpkin in her yard. Next morning, Ada allowed herself a little lie in, snuggling down under the
quilts her memo had made until Simon indignantly stomped up onto her chest and howled for
his breakfast. Yeah, yeah, you're obviously starving to death, she'd chuckled, nudging 15 pounds of
fur and entitlement off her bed so she could sit up and shove her feet into a pair of fuzzy slippers.
She'd felt warm enough last night, but it was chilly this morning.
She pulled a cozy fleece robe off the hook on the back of her closet door,
wrapped it around herself and patted carefully downstairs,
Simon twiding around her ankles the whole way down,
clearly intent on helping her reach the kitchen faster by way of knocking her down them on her backside.
Aid opened a can of his favorite chicken liver paté,
scooped it out into a ceramic bowl with little cat faces painted on the side,
and deposited it in its usual spot on the floor.
She noticed a few soggy stray morsels of the dry kibbles
she left out for him while she was at work in his water dish
and thus carried it to the sink to rinse and refill.
As she stood at the sink scrubbing the bowl with a dishrag,
she glanced out the wind into the backyard.
And noticed three plump, round, orange shapes.
Ada blinked,
and wiped the sleep from the corners of her eyes
that couldn't be right that there'd only been one pumpkin last night and she dug up the vine
she left her glasses upstairs on the nightstand surely she was mistaken ada returned the clean bowl of water
to the floor for simon loaded up the coffee maker with fresh grounds and water and set it to percolate
then padded back upstairs to find her glasses she brushed her teeth and her hair pulled on a pair of jeans
a t-shirt and a long wool cardigan shoved her feet into her kid's sneakers and went back downstairs to figure
out what she'd actually seen through the kitchen window.
What she'd seen were pumpkins.
As she walked through the backyard with a fresh cup of coffee in her hand,
she counted not three, but nine, fat, round, pumpkins and the golden October sunshine.
This was just ridiculous.
Ada stomp back into the house and reached for the phone book where she'd scribbled down
Gary Jessie's number on the cover.
She dialed the Jesse's house and after her,
a few rings, Gary himself answered the phone. Mr. Jesse, this is Ada Spivey from down the road.
Oh, yes, um, what could I do for you? We have a problem. We do. What problem is that?
It's your pumpkins. They're infiltrating my yard. They're what now? Gary sputtered, not quite covering an
incredulous chuckle. This is no laughing matter, Mr. Jesse. Ada snapped. They're everywhere.
Just come over and take a look for yourself, and then you can tell me what you plan to do about it.
All right, all right.
I'm happy to come take a look for you, Miss Bivey, and please just call me Gary.
I reckon I can be there in the next 20 minutes or so if that's all right with you.
Thank you.
Yes, that'll be fine.
I'll see you shortly.
Gary Jesse was as good as his word.
Within 20 minutes, he rolled into Ada's driveway in a dusty blue and white two-tone Ford F-100 pickup.
Ada didn't know Gary well.
He was close to her age, maybe a few years younger,
and wore the farmer's fall uniform of work boots and jeans
that had seen better days with a brown flannel shirt
and a paps blue ribbon gimmee cap.
She knew he was divorced and had a couple of kids that he saw on the weekends,
although there was no evidence of them today.
And of course, she knew he had that pumpkin patch,
because he sold the damn things on the side of the road every autumn.
The thoughts soured Ada's mood,
her lips pressing into a thin line as she stepped out of the kitchen door,
to meet her visitor in the driveway.
She did not invite him in.
Instead, closing the door behind her
and walking over to the truck to meet him.
Gary politely took off his cap, nodded to her.
More to Miss Spivey.
It would be, Ada said bitterly,
if it wasn't for your pumpkins.
I'm not rightly sure I understand, ma'am, forgive me,
but I don't seem to recall you buying one of my pumpkins,
and if you did, I believe you.
And if there's something wrong with it,
I'll be happy to replace it.
I didn't buy any pumpkins, Gary, Jesse.
They're in my yard.
Your damn vines have infested my property.
You planted some invasive species, and they're choking off my flowers.
No, ma'am, I haven't, Gary said, sounding puzzled.
I have autumn golds and jackal aners and some sugar pumpkins and baby pams for later in the season,
you know, for pies and such, but it's a jumbo varietals that can be a problem,
and I don't plant any of those.
They're just too much trouble.
too few people want to buy a 50-pound pumpkin.
Well, whatever variety they are, they're here.
They've invaded. Just look.
Ada walked around Gary's truck leading him from the driveway into the back garden.
Where the unwelcome vine sprawled laden with plump orange fruit.
There was just one last night when I got home from work, she explained.
I dug that one up.
Had to go all the way back in the woods behind the house to find the source.
But see, this morning there are nine more.
This is a serious problem, Mr. Jesse.
Pushing his ball cap up on his head, Gary knelt to examine one of the pumpkins.
His fingers carefully inspecting the smooth, bright orange fruit and the leaves and vines,
which were streaked with veins of green so dark, he looked almost black.
When he got to his feet, he slipped his hands into the back pockets of his jeans
and rocked back on his heels, gazing out over her backyard.
his expression troubled.
Well, Ada demanded.
Gary's side.
Well, ma'am, it's not for the doubt your story, but that's just not possible.
What's not possible?
It takes more than three months for a pumpkin vine to mature, Miss Spivey.
I put mine down in June to be sure they'd be ready for fall.
Pumpkins this size?
I'm not sure what kind they are.
They sort of look like Big Tom's or Jumping Jacks, maybe,
but those don't have these dark veins running through the vines.
Anyway, this size, you're looking at four months.
If you pulled the vine up last night, it can't possibly have regrown this fast.
Are you sure you didn't just miss these?
I didn't miss anything.
I went all over my garden last night to make sure there weren't any more vines
strangling my flowers.
Well, at least I thought I did, she acknowledged.
I'd just gotten off work and it was getting dark.
Well, the other thing is that there,
They're not coming from my property, ma'am.
Of course they are.
Where else could they come from?
I certainly didn't plant them.
My farm is down the road from me.
True enough, Gary said with the nod.
But it's on the other side of the road.
You said they came from the woods behind your house.
Well, that's not my land.
That's CVA property back there, Miss Bobby.
The Cumberland Valley Authority owned all sorts of land in the area
around the Hazel County Reservoir.
Back in the 30s, FDR had established the CVA to address flooding problems in the region
as a part of a series of public infrastructure projects meant to get folks back to work during the Depression.
The men put in charge of this particular project had some interesting ideas about addressing flooding,
such as sinking entire towns beneath the waters of huge man-made reservoirs and hydroelectric power plants.
Hazel County's reservoir held no ghost towns in its depth.
thankfully, the very thought sent a shiver up aida's spine.
But these days the CVA was mighty secretive about its projects
and protective of its property.
Folks were expected to shut up, pay their lot bills in a timely fashion,
and mind the no trespassing signs.
Those who ignored them signs would be escorted off CVA land at gunpoint,
or worse, at least according to the local rumor meal, that is.
Well, what would the CVA want with pumpkins?
Ada mused.
I don't know, ma'am, but you best be careful how far into them would you go.
Gary rubbed his chin contemptibly.
You need some help clearing those out, Miss Spivey?
Ada raised an eyebrow, and he quickly held up his hands to forestall her.
I meant what I said.
These are not my pumpkins, but I thought I'd offer.
It's the neighborly thing to do.
Ada sighed.
No, that's all right.
I can take care of it on my own, I guess, but I appreciate the offer.
Gary nodded politely and told her to call anytime if she needed anything.
Then he hopped back in his ford and backed out of her driveway.
Ada glanced at her watch.
It was going on 10 o'clock.
It would take her the better part of the day to clear out the rest of these vines,
and she had really hoped to catch a matinee at the hazel cinema this weekend,
maybe tomorrow.
But she'd best get to work.
Saturday evening, Ada made a big pot of chili for supper
and portioned out the leftovers to take with her to work for dinner for the rest of the week.
She watched TV for a while and tossed a toy mouse to Simon for a while.
He loved to fetch just like a dog and it always made her laugh.
Then, exhausted from the day's yard work, she took a glass of sweet tea and booked to bed.
At least she thought she'd be able to salvage her Sunday.
Sunday morning, Ada was up early to knock out some chores around the house,
washing her uniforms for the week ahead and sweeping and mopping all the floors.
She dumped Simon's litter box and replaced it with fresh litter,
stripped her bed, washed the linens, and carried them out back to hang on the line and dry out in the sun.
It was then that she saw them.
More pumpkins.
Many more pumpkins.
Gary Jesse had told her it wasn't possible, yet there they were.
Ada carried the linen basket back into her house.
She could throw the sheets in the dryer when her uniforms were done.
picked up the phone and dialed Gary's number.
Ten minutes later, Gary parked his pickup in the driveway behind Ada's little red VW.
She was waiting for him on the back steps and met him at the door as he stepped down from the cab.
The two walked around the truck and Gary stopped, staring.
That's a lot of pumpkins, he commented.
There were nearly 30 this morning.
The vines snaking through Ada's roses, her crescent.
The pony bushes that were dined down for the winter, choking flowers and entangling her fledgling crape mertles.
The pumpkins themselves were as large as ever, fat and round and bright as tangerines.
I thought you said they can't grow this fast.
They can't.
I mean, they shouldn't be able to.
Hell, I've never seen anything like this.
So much for the Sunday matinee, Ada said with a grim chuckle.
Gary shook his head.
look, let me help you with this.
I don't, I know you don't want to accept help, Miss Bivey, but this?
Gary waved a hand at the tangled vines infesting her garden.
This is not a one-woman job, ma'am.
I'd feel awful about you being stuck with this all on your own, please.
Let me give you a hand.
Ada gritted her teeth, took a deep breath, and grudgingly nodded her head.
She may have been stubborn, but she was no fool.
Perhaps there was something she'd missed,
and Gary was an experienced farmer.
Surely he could manage to root out the problem.
She fetched her shovel, a spade, and some garden shears from the shed,
and the two of them set to free in her plants from the strangling grasp of the wild pumpkin vines.
They loaded the pumpkins into the bed of Gary's pickup,
and he said he'd take him to the dump just to make sure the seeds couldn't take root again next spring,
and they attempted once again to trace the vines back to their source,
following their snaking tendrils back into the woods behind Ada's house.
house, the further they walked. The darker the green of the vines became. The dark veins, Gary
had pointed out yesterday, growing wider until the whole vine was nearly black. They sprawled deep into
the woods, twining around tree roots and choking brambles. Ada and Gary followed the vines as far
as they could a good quarter mile into the murky woods until their path was barred by a high
fence topped with barbed wire signs were posted along its length at regular intervals cumberland valley
authority no trespassing government property you were right ada acknowledged frowning what now is there anything i can do
Gary sighed
Not much
We can shop off the vines here at the edge of the fence
Then I'd recommend you call the CVA in the morning
So they did what they could
And ate a rose Monday morning to make that call
Though she'd slept poorly
And her muscles ached from all the hard labor
And all she wanted to do
Was crawl back under the covers with her cat
But she took care of Simon first
As she always did
Feeling his food bowl freshening as water
Then she made a pot of coffee
Drink the first cup standing at the counter
by the percolator and poured herself another, thus fortified.
She reached for the phone, which hung on the wall by the door.
Through the kitchen door windows, she could see into the backyard.
It was once again filled with pumpkins in even greater numbers than before.
Instead of phoning the CVA, Ada dialed Gary's number.
As soon as he picked up, she blurted out, they're back.
Gary sighed.
I know.
I drove by to check first thing this morning.
There's even more than there were yesterday.
Ada chuckled humorlessly.
I feel like I'm going crazy.
You're not.
We both saw them.
I don't know what's going on here, but call the power company.
They're coming from those woods that are on CVA land,
so it's their responsibility to solve the problem.
I will.
When she hung up with Gary, Ada placed her call to the CVA
and was of course immediately placed on hold.
Wedging the phone between her ear and shoulders,
she sat down at the kitchen table with her back to the door
and sipped her coffee and waited to speak to someone who might help her.
When she sat there for about an hour, the line went dead.
She realized she'd been cut off.
Undeterred, Ada got up to refill her coffee cup and dialed again.
And so it went all through the afternoon
as she tried and failed to speak with someone at the power company about the pumpkins.
Eventually, she had to give up and get ready for work.
She would just have to try again tomorrow.
By the next day, there were even more pumpkins.
And her attempts to contact the CVA were met with more of the same.
It was late Tuesday afternoon before Ada was finally able to get through to somebody.
A young woman who seemed unable to grasp the true scope of the problem,
but who promised her supervisor would return Ada's call the next day.
Ada had gritted her teeth and thanked her and trudged upstairs to get ready for work.
Wednesday came and went with no call from the CVA,
and the pumpkin vines continued to grow.
They had reached the driveway now,
and wound their way around the pretty wrought iron cafe table and chairs
she'd placed beneath the sugar maple at the northeast corner of the house,
and deposited one of their orange progeny right on the tabletop.
Ada almost thought she could hear them multiplying in the night,
rustling through the fallen leaves as they snaked out of the tree line,
stretching and coiling their way around everything in their path,
fat orange spawn bursting forth.
But she hadn't been sleeping well,
and it was most likely just a bad dream, she told herself.
But on Thursday, Ada woke to find a ripe, fleshy pumpkins sitting on her back steps,
just outside the kitchen door, almost as if it were taunting her.
Those weird black-veined vines wrapped around the handrails, delicate tendrils,
reaching toward her doorknob.
They had begun to creep up the backside of the house,
grasping for purchase along the edges of her window panes and shutters,
twining around her posts and gutters,
Ada hauled off and kicked the fat orange gourd as hard as she could,
putting it off the top of the stairs and across the driveway,
where it rolled to a stop at the edge of the grass.
Gary stopped by that afternoon to check on her.
He'd been calling every day, but this was the first time he'd seen it for himself since Monday.
Ada invited him inside and led him to the living room,
where at least she wouldn't have to look.
look at the ever-spreading vines. Jesus Christ, Ada, he exclaimed this is getting out of hand.
I know. Have you had any look with the CVA? Oh, they finally got back to me today. Aed aside.
Some man called, let me, I wrote his name down, some man named Ralph Barrow. He said they'd have
someone come out tomorrow morning. You might want to consider talking to a lawyer, Gary said
gently. At this rate, you could be looking at serious property damage. I know, I'm thinking about
that. We'll see what happens tomorrow. If they don't come, I'll do that. Gary offered to help cut
away the vines that had reached the house, and she accepted. When Ada tried to follow him outside,
pulling on her gardening gloves, he waved her off. Now, I know you've got to work tonight, girl.
You get on in the house and rest. Let me take care of this. And so she did. By Halloween morning,
however, the pumpkin vines had returned. They coiled around the handrails on the
the back steps and climbed up her chimney and twined around the gutters and draped across the eaves.
Wide, lobed leaves, bobbed gently in the breeze outside Ada's windows.
Long tendrils had wrapped themselves around the back doorknob, so she had to go out the front
door, fetch the garden shears from the shed, and cut the vines away to open the kitchen door.
She pulled them off the handrails and cleared the steps.
That was a safety hazard, after all, but that was all she had the energy for.
Then she went inside and fed her cat and made coffee and sat at the kitchen table and lit a cigarette
and waited for the Cumberland Valley Authority to come and deal with the problem.
But two o'clock came and went with no sign of any CVA men.
Ada had to get ready for work.
She pulled on her uniform and her white work shoes with her cushioned soles
and stood nervously by the back door.
Simon circled her ankles and walked his paws up her stocking-clad legs,
rowing for attention.
He could sense she was nervous,
and Ada swept him up in her arms
and buried her face in his soft brown fur.
She was almost certain now
she could really hear the vines.
A quiet creaking sound outside her windows
as the thing stretched growing ever longer,
twining and reaching,
searching for a way inside.
And she didn't want to leave.
She told herself that was crazy.
It was just some vines, after all,
but that nagging anxious feeling just wouldn't go away.
But it was a quarter to three,
and she'd be late if she didn't leave now.
So she set the plump siamese down on the floor,
gave him a final scrimge behind the ear,
and headed out to her car.
Ada's shift at Mavisdale Regional was long and exhausting.
It was Halloween, after all,
and with every holiday, people got stupid.
They cut themselves carving jackal anions
and set fire to their costumes,
to light them. They tripped over their costumes and fell downstairs. They poked people in the eye
with plastic swords or wands or what have you, and of course they drank too much at parties and wrecked
their cars. Second shift technically ended at 11, but she got tied up stabilizing a teenager who'd
snatched a Reese cup from his little sister's candy hall when he knew full well he was allergic to peanuts,
and it was nearly midnight by the time she finally clocked out. Ada had never quite been able to shake
the nervous feeling she'd had about leaving that afternoon.
And as she turned out of the parking lot and onto the road,
that scent swelled into a feeling of dread
that seized her lungs and rose into her throat
and threatened to choke her.
She crossed her fingers hoping she wouldn't get a ticket
and stepped on the gas.
When she reached her house, she swung into the driveway
that curved around back.
She hadn't yet reached a corner of the house
when her headlights lit up a field of bright orange.
as if the graveled lane had been blocked off with road cones.
Ada sat in her car for a moment and stared.
The pumpkin vines had grown even more while she was away.
They'd run rampant over the backside of the house
and now stretched over the roof and embraced the sides.
Windows had cracked under the onslaught,
and the back door was blocked again.
Ada shut off her engine and got out of the car.
Outside, she could easily hear that creaking, rustling sound.
As the vine stretched,
ever reaching for more.
She fished a front door key out of her purse
and walked around to the front of the house to let herself in.
The house was dark.
Darker and usual because the pumpkin vines
blocked the usual glow from the back porch light and silent.
Except for the groaning of the old rafters
under the unaccustomed weight of the thick pumpkin vines.
Simon?
She called into the shadows.
And from somewhere upstairs she heard a crack and a hiss,
Glass shattered, and Ada's heart left into her throat.
Simon!
She raced up the stairs, almost tripping in her haste,
but she gripped the banister and hauled herself back to her feet just in time.
She heard a low growl as she reached the top of the stairs,
followed by the sound of an angry cat down the hall to her bedroom.
She found Simon crouched in the floor, tail lashing,
ready to pounce on the coil of pumpkin vine that had found its way inside by way of the window,
which had fractured under the strain.
As she watched, the vine twitched,
and Simon slapped at it with a hiss.
Nope, we'll have none of that, young man.
Ada laughed, half relieved and half terrified,
as she scooped the indignant Siamese up off the floor
and went to pull his carrier down from the top of the hall closet.
She wrangled the resisting cat into the crate
and lugged him downstairs and out to the car.
She quickly ran back inside to pack up his ascent.
essentials, food, bowls, cat box, and litter, grabbed a couple of toys for good measure and tossed
everything in the trunk. Simon yowled as she backed out of the driveway and peeled down the street.
She knocked on Gary's door, cat carrier in arms five minutes later. Ada explained what had
happened as quickly as she could, skipping over the part where she and Simon had seen the vine move
because who would believe that? And asked if he could watch Simon for a bit while she took care of things.
Ada, you're both welcome to stay as long as you need
if the house isn't safe for your cat.
Honey, it's not safe for you either.
I got a guest room, and it's not much,
but it's warm and it's a place to lay your head while you sort all this out.
Ada started to shake her head,
but Gary reached out and squeezed her hand.
Please.
Ada was quiet for a long minute.
She hated to rely on other people, but what choice did she have?
All right, she said finally,
but you're charging me rent.
Gary chuckled.
Fine, whatever you say, ma'am.
Ada got to her feet.
I just need to run by the gas station,
grab a few things from the house, and I'll be back.
Gary set up that night waiting
and making friends with Ada's big brown and cream cat,
but Ada herself did not return.
Eventually, he fell asleep on the couch,
and Simon snuggled up beside him
and woke to the cat making biscuits on his lap
and purring loudly for attention, and food, of course,
so he took care of the cat, showered and dressed in fresh clothes,
and took a ride down the road to Ada's place.
He found no sign of Ada,
and little enough of the house.
The stately Victorian was a smoking ruin held up by charred pumpkin vines.
The smell of roasted pumpkin hung heavy in the air.
She had parked her little rabbit at the very end of the dry,
driveway and looking in the windows, Gary could see she'd packed a suitcase and set a box
filled with family photos and knick-knacks and other keepsakes on the back seat. And the car was untouched,
if dusted with a fine coating of ash. The ground was charred all the way back into the woods
behind the house. The yard littered with the blackened remains of pumpkins that had baked
and split open and carbonized in the heat of the blaze.
Gary called the Hazel County Sheriff's Office
and the fire department followed close behind.
He was told the fire marshal found no sign of human remains in the rubble
and all those search teams swept the woods leastways as far as they could get
the CVA not allowing anyone to search on their land
since there was no sign the fence had been breached.
Nobody ever found no sign of Aida Spivey.
The pumpkins though.
Well, the pumpkins recovered.
just fine.
They soon spilled out of the woods again,
burst in forth on lush green vines,
veined with black, plump, and smooth skin,
and almost glowing with ruddy orange malice.
Gary Jesse stopped planting pumpkins after that.
Soed corn instead.
Planted taters and yams and melons.
No squash, though.
No gourds of any kind.
And when he drove past the place where his friend Ada had once
lived. He kept his eyes straight ahead and tried not to notice the pumpkins and prayed they didn't
notice him. Well, hey there, family, and happy Halloween, Harvest or Salwin, whatever you're
celebrating this season. Thank you all for joining us for this Halloween special. I told you all on
social media that Ms. Cam had something both tricky and treaty cooked up for you in that
witchy cauldron of hers and did a lie? No, we didn't. Try not to do that if at all possible.
Family, it's also our birthday. We launched on Halloween of 2019, releasing the prologue for season
one. And this year's birthday converges with another big event. We have broken five million downloads,
plays, whatever you want to call it, five million times. Our episodes collectively have been played
and that's a huge milestone for us.
And we thank you very much for your time and your attention.
We see you and we love you, family.
If you'd like to make that bond a little more tangible,
feel free to head on over to patreon.com slash old gods of Appalachia
and pledge your tithe.
And for $10 or more a month,
you get access to a ton of exclusive storylines
like Build Mama, a coffin, door under the floor,
the upcoming Blackmouth Dog, and a ton of other great stuff.
We're going to be talking about a lot of that as well,
including information about our own.
upcoming role-playing game and the release of season three.
And you can learn about all that by paying attention to this space.
The next thing you hear on the Old Gods of Appalachia feed will be us talking about what's coming in the future and when you can expect it.
Old Gods of Appalachia is a production of deep nerd media and distributed by the Rusty Quill Network.
Today's story was written by Cam Collins and performed by Steve Shell.
Our intro music is by Mr. Landin Blood.
and our outro music is by Lonesome Wyatt and Rachel Brooke.
Talk to you soon, family.
Talk to you real soon.
