Old Gods of Appalachia - Cheap Meat
Episode Date: October 31, 2022On October 31st, 1972, an old pick up truck carried an even older man down the mountain to do his tradin' at the Cas Walker's in Stonega, VA. He never asked for no trouble. Y'all just remember th...at. CW: Sound of screeching breaks/ sudden car horn with no impact, discussion of butchery of meat in a grocery store, mutilation, gore, physical assault (non sexual), disfigurement, death(s) by exsanguination.Written by Steve Shell and Cam CollinsNarrated by Steve ShellSound design by Steve ShellProduced and edited by Cam Collins and Steve ShellIntro music: “50 Second Instrumental” written and performed by Landon BloodOutro music: “If The Beasts Should Hunt Us” by Lonesome Wyatte and Rachel BrookeSpecial equipment consideration provided by Lauten Audio.Returning sponsor: Sucreabeille – Visit sucreabeille.com and use the code LOVEGODS. Spend $25 anywhere in the store and add a dram of “Attempted Murder” to your cart to get that dram free.LEARN 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.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,
I want to help us keep the home fires burning,
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Right about now.
Well, hey there, family.
Normally this is where I do my prescripted ad for our season long sponsor, Sukrabe,
but I actually wanted to take this time to thank Sukrabe and Andrea,
who traveled all the way to Asheville, North Carolina,
for one of our live shows this past October of 2022,
and brought with her special samples of the Unknown Rhodes Fragrance
that's going to be coming from Sukra Bay in the very near future.
Sucher Bay has been a ride or die sponsor with us since the beginning,
and we thoroughly appreciate them and all that they've done for us in creating fragrances and magnificent,
just family vibes amongst their community and ours.
So why don't you head on over to sucrebeye.com, pick yourself out something nice,
and use the code love gods to participate in the special offer,
the details of which you will find over there on sucribay.com.
Sucrebe, you are family, and we thank you.
Welcome to the dark side.
Y'all smell awesome.
Old Gods of Appalachia is a horror anthology podcast and therefore may contain material not suitable for all audiences.
Seriously, family, this is the Halloween episode.
Brace yourselves.
So listener discretion is advised.
Meet a tale for the season.
Stonaga, Virginia, 1972.
It had rained for three days before he came off the mountain,
and that left everything shrouded in a soft haziness
that made his old bones groaned
and made driving that much more of a chore.
It was like the whole damn world was covered in cobwebs,
and that made it harder to perceive the finer details of things,
and maybe that was a blessing.
He didn't know.
Nor did he much care right now
as he peered for the dirty windshield of his old Chevy pickup truck,
glaring out of the patchy asphalt that gleamed like a tarry black tongue as it wound its way down little stony mountain.
The week's rain had beaten most of autumn's splendor off the trees and slicked the twisting roads with a perilous combination of rain, wet leaves, and oil.
It had been a tense drive, and he didn't look much forward to the return trip either, resenting the whole miserable chore.
He didn't like coming off the mountain at all because that meant people.
and people tended to stare or ask questions or get too close and getting too close to someone like him.
Well, that was a bad idea.
He'd minded his own business these last several years, seeing how long he could keep his own company.
And while it hadn't been easy, it had brought him a small form of peace.
He'd left Tennessee and come up the mountain to disappear into the coal tank.
and hollers a goodly while back, and he found that the further he got from his old stomping
grounds, the easier it was to just be.
He didn't feel those feelings that pushed him to take rash and often inadvisable actions with the same
intensity. He had a little house, such as it was, and a little bit of land around it.
It was far back enough from the road that he didn't get many trespassers or door knockers.
Just him and the woods and the quiet, and that was just fine.
Most of the time.
As he made the last turn into Stoneaga, his stomach ground, and he sighed.
He didn't eat much these days, but he did require the occasional bite of something,
and that meant he had to make the drive down the mountain to do his trading at the Caz Walkers on the south end of town.
A dense fog drove off the pavement as he drove the narrow streets of Stoneaga, Virginia.
But the weather did not deter the evening's last few trick-or-treaters as they scurried from door to door in their damp costumes.
Soddened muddy capes fashioned from Mamaw's old bed sheets dragging on the ground behind.
A pint-sized ghost darted into the street in front of him and he slammed on the brakes, laying on the horn in irritation.
Up ahead, the little grocery store burned with the fluorescent light that cut through the fog like a bad dream.
A tattered orange and black paper banner hung over the double-glass door.
exhorting customers to have a happy Halloween.
He hated coming here.
Hell, he hated coming into any town at all anymore.
Everything was so bright.
Every little detail thrown into stark relief,
a man just couldn't hide nothing anymore.
He felt old.
Felt how his skin was about to tear off its bones.
He was so wound up.
There wasn't much he could do about the first two,
but the last complaint.
Well, he had options, but those were messy and tiresome as well.
He didn't know if he had the juice in his batteries for such a mess,
so he kept his head down and kept moving.
He pushed those thoughts away as he leaned into the heavy door
with its flat metal bar and dirty glass,
slipping into the store with the hood of his army surplus jacket pulled up over his head.
The tobogging under that was pulled low to his brow.
he kept his head down.
Like he said, he did not like eye contact.
He would not abide it.
Not now.
He just wanted to pick up the two items he needed and be on his way.
Grabbed himself a buggy from the cart return to the front of the store
and pushed it down the first aisle.
He came to past the display featuring bags of various fun-sized candies
already marked down in anticipation of the next holiday
barreling down on them like a freight train.
The butcher's counter was located in the back corner of the store.
The butcher was always relegated to the back of the shop.
Nobody in this new age of sterilized, brightly lit supermarkets
wanted to see how their meat was cut,
how men made their living putting blade to bone.
They took them away in the back,
out of sight, out of mind.
Oh, everybody loved.
loved a good steak, but nobody wanted to think about how it got to the plate, not him.
Truth be told, he could tell you stroke for stroke how to butcher pertinent or anything just from memory,
but he could stand there all day at the counter and watch the big man in the white apron saw
and trim and slice all day.
The steady, methodical work made him feel calm, peaceful even.
Now, the big new Pailas on the other end of town had all the meat out front wrapped in plastic and tucked into neat, shiny, white refrigerator bins, but you couldn't see the work being done.
At the Pailess, they kept all the must and fuss entirely behind closed doors or behind two-way glass so they could see you.
But you couldn't see them.
He hated that.
To be seen by people or things he couldn't see back or he couldn't stop from watching him.
As much as he hated coming to town, he'd drive just a little bit further out.
to Cass Walker's because the butcher's got to practice their art out in the open as was right and proper.
He stopped to watch as a young man working the counter finished cleaning the knives and the slicer,
neatly packing the tools of his trade away for the night.
He watched with fascination as the blood sluiced from each razor's sharp implement,
washed away in a swirl of water and life's most vital juices down the big metal sink.
The boy looked up and noticed him.
Uh, hey, sir, we're done cutting for the day.
The butcher told him.
He gestured to the neatly wrapped packages of fresh meat displayed in the cold case.
Everything you see wrapped up there is fresh, though.
Cut up myself today, you help yourself.
Oh, uh, yes, thank you.
Damn it.
Had he stood there too long?
Did the boy notice the way he was.
staring at the knives.
Did he see his face?
Would he need to...
No.
Boy was going about his business.
He didn't even give him a second glance.
Of course not.
When he looked more closely, the butcher boy was quite obviously hurrying.
Probably an anticipation of a Halloween party or some other evening entertainment.
Well, that was good, wasn't it?
Christ, why was the world so bright now?
A man couldn't even lurk under a bridge without being noticed.
and if you needed to go to town to trade, you had to walk under lights brighter than a god-forsaken sun.
It was too much, and he'd come from a simpler time.
Long gone.
Awkwardly, he turned his buggy.
Of course, he got the one with a sticky, squeaky wheel, and he made his way along the counter,
peering into the bins at fat T-bones and bloody red New York strips.
His stomach growled.
Not exactly.
He just admired the craftsmanship.
As he gazed down at the spread laid out before him, he noticed.
how expensive the meat had become
compared to how little cash he carried in his
wallet. Now he could solve
that problem easily enough too,
but it had been a while
since he needed to go that route.
Keeping his own company
had kept him relatively at peace, but that piece
hadn't paid the bills. He picked up a pack
of graying, wafer-thin, sirloins,
marked, reduced for quick sale,
manager special, with green stickers
plastered over the original price tag.
He could afford these and still pick up the second item on his brief list.
It would run him just about dry, but it couldn't be helped.
Needs must when the devil drives, after all.
He made his way over to the aisle where the tall coolers lined the walls.
The first held your household staples, milk, and cheese, and eggs.
And then as you moved down the aisle, the next featured orange juice, fruit cocktails, and the line.
The third, all the way down at the end of the aisle by the door to the restrooms,
carefully monitored by an unsmiling manager who glanced out occasionally from behind a glass door marked staff.
Was where they kept the beer.
He'd watched folks try to hurry in, grab a six-pack, and scurry back out for somebody from church saw them.
He also knew they'd move the beer cooler down by the manager's office several years ago,
cause the local hooligans from down in the bottom
had a long history of trying to steal beer
long before they reached illegal age.
Shame, shame.
Well, he knew no such shame.
Not caring who saw,
he pulled the cooler door open
and grabbed the cheapest six-pack he could find.
The beer wasn't for him.
It was for his guest.
He never knew for sure when she might drop by,
but tonight of all nights,
when the veils between the worlds were thin enough,
you could slice them with a butter knife.
Huh, was a solid possibility.
And she required him to have cold beer ready and waiting no exceptions.
The cashier barely glanced at him as she rang up his meager purchases.
He could understand that.
He wouldn't want to look at him either.
He knew he appeared old.
Maybe sick.
He didn't care.
Thunder rumbled.
and a soft rain began to fall as he made his way back to his truck.
He just pulled open the driver's side door when it slammed shut,
the handle torn from his hand, the skin beneath it tearing as well.
God damn it.
Hey, papal, what you got there?
The boys had come out of nowhere.
All three wore cheap Halloween masks,
the kinds you get at the five and dime,
made out a flimsy plait.
with an elastic string to hold them in place on your head.
A wolfman, a grinning skull,
and a vacantly cheerful clown with a bald head
and tufts of cherry red hair glued at the temples.
The biggest one, he of the creepy smiling clown mask,
had kicked the truck door shut.
His two smaller companions hovered by...
Well, look at the air, Harley!
One of the smaller boys,
the one in the wolfman mask honked in a nasal voice.
Old fellas done bought us a six-pack.
I do love me some Milwaukee's Beast.
Man, that shit's nasty, skull mass complained.
Could we at least have some Budweiser?
Boys, we don't look gift horses in the mouth.
The big one shouted.
Come on now, old timer.
We'll just take these off your hands.
Boy, if you know what's good for you and your friends,
you'll walk away and walk away now, he warned.
Peering into the dark, empty socket.
of the clown mask at the boy, Harley.
This one must surely be Harley.
Oh man, Harley, do you hear him?
We better run while we can.
The boys laughed.
The sound crawled up his spine like a bucket of spiders.
Who raised these children?
He didn't think there were many wolves left in the Isle County,
but he could be wrong.
Hey, Harley snapped, drawing him out of his musing
back to the matter at hand.
I ain't got all night here.
Give us a suds and we won't hurt you.
But if you make us get rough,
we can get rough.
To demonstrate his point,
Harley Robinette pushed the thin old man
so that his body banged against the truck.
He could hear the blow,
knocked the wind from the old timer with a wheeze,
and that excited Harley.
He just loves seeing the fear
and someone's eyes hearing the pain and their voice
so he pushed the old geezer again,
and he bounced off the truck
and hit the ground at all fours.
Blood was in the water now, and Harley swung a kick into the old man's ribs and then took his foot to the back of his head.
The kick was hard enough to bounce his face off the pavement, but not hard enough to crack his skull.
There was a dry.
Terry.
Harley kicked again, but there was no satisfying grunt of pain from the thin figure who still crouched in all fours just a steady laughter, gradually rising in volume.
Hey, hey, Harley, stop!
The one in the skull mass stammered.
swapping ineffectively at Harley's arm.
You're going to kill him.
About six-pack ain't worth going to jail over, man.
Come on, quit it.
Harley shrugged him off.
You're laughing at me, old man?
You think this is funny?
Nobody fucking laughed at Harley Robinette.
Harley reared back for another kick,
but this time the old man moved out of the way,
giving Harley's foot a shove.
Harley overbalanced and fell on his ass.
The old man was on his feet in a second.
Faster than a guy his age should have been able to move.
faster than Harley could have done it himself
and he loomed over the boy,
punching him three times,
quicker and greased lightning.
The first blow fractured the young man's cheekbone.
The second broke his nose
and the third shattered his orbital bump.
It all happened in the span of about two seconds.
The other boys rushed to Harley's aid,
but the old man ducked and spun away behind them.
Each of the boys felt a bright stinging sensation
of something whisked up the back of his leg,
sharper than a serpent's tooth,
and through denim and flesh and tending with ease,
and the boys fell to the ground, sobbing.
The bee team dealt with.
The old man returned to his original attacker
and grabbed him by the hair.
Hall and Harley Robinette up off the ground
in a display of strength.
None of them could have matched for all their youth
as Harley dangled in his grip choking.
The toes of his dirty sneakers scuffing to the ground,
he directed a question to them in a manner
that suggested a magician addressing his audience.
Black masks, boys?
Well, you get a load of mine.
Transferring Harley's weight to one hand,
he used the other to push the toboggan back over his head,
letting it fall to the street.
His face was a paper-thin mask of old, fragile skin.
Half of it had been torn away
when Harley kicked his head into the rough asphalt of the parking lot
and bright red muscle oozed.
Scarlet,
blood, but he struck the younger man with looked as though it was encased in a shredded tan glove.
The remains bunched around his wrist, his hand.
As skinless the left side of his face, he snagged the edge of the wrinkled, tattered skin he wore with the fingernail.
Harley Robinette pissed his pants and began to sob.
Laughing, he let the old skin drop to the wet pavement.
Well, shit.
Y'all done made my night.
I guess I should thank you properly.
His free hand dipped into the pocket of the old army surplus jacket and snicked back out,
quick as a snake, and in it he held a curved, its razor-honed edge.
Holly Robinette's throat parted like the Red Sea.
The stroke of the knife so fast, neither of the other boys even saw the cut,
but they saw the results, and they wailed as blood.
gushed down from beneath the clown mask Harley still wore, begging and gibbering for mercy,
and skint Tom looked down at them both and smiled.
His bad mood had lifted almost entirely.
He had his beer, he had his steak, and by morning he'd have three brand new outfit.
But three boys, even boys like these, would be missed.
The wolves or possums or whoever raised them would be right worried about him for sure.
Old Harley's mama would miss her little monster.
Mom could almost see her.
Down on her knees, pray into the heavens for the chance to see her little boy's face just one more time.
Well, Tom thought as he turned to finish his work here in the parking lot of the Caz Walkers,
that can certainly be a rain.
Oh, hey there, family, and happy Halloween, all Halle's Eve, Salwin, whatever day or not it is you keep this time of year, we wish you the very best of it.
And thank you for choosing to spend some of your spooky time here with us this evening when the veil betwixt the world is oh so thin.
And y'all could be doing all kinds of fun stuff, but instead you come to spend time with the family, and we appreciate that.
Now, I know y'all get excited, as do I, when old skint Tom pops back up from time to time, but I got to come clean with you.
Sort of serving your leftovers here.
This story, fun fact, was originally meant to be part of our live show in Radford, Virginia.
But when it came down to putting the show together for time and flow, it just kind of didn't have a home.
So we set it aside and we thought y'all might enjoy it as a little fun-sized treat here on Halloween.
Hope you did.
I mean, it's a full-size Snickers, let's be real.
But speaking of our live shows, we want to thank all y'all who sold out every night of our little four-show tour from the shows.
and my current hometown of Asheville at the Masonic Temple
to the over 700 folks who turned out at Union High School
to welcome us home in Big Stone Gap and Wise County
to that packed house at Radford University.
Just the other night, we appreciate each and every one of you.
We got to meet family we'd only known on the interwebs
and to reconnect with folks back home
and we hadn't seen in some cases like in 25 years.
We made a ton of new friends
and we got to share the stage with the old God's musical family
like Keena Graham, Miguel Olazguaga,
Jacob Moore, John Charles Dwyer, and of course, our Boone Companion,
the man who's been with us since day one, brother Land and Blood,
drove 16 hours one way to play those live shows, play two songs,
and drove 16 hours and said he would do it again,
and we fully, fully believe him.
Now, in Radford, y'all got to spend time with our cousin Jordan Shively of Dred Singles fame,
and in Asheville, Asheville and Wise County,
y'all got Mr. Yuri Lowenthal, Corey Ryan Forrester,
and our special guest for all the dates, Mr. Cecil Baldwin,
self. Thank you to all those people. Holy, I still can't believe that happened.
It was one of the most exciting and terrifying things we've ever done, and we want to thank all
of you that came out to share that very special fellowship with us. Thank you. Thank you,
family. And now for some good news, bad news. Good news is, you may have heard,
Old Gods of Appalachia has been nominated for a World Fantasy Award in the special works category,
and we will be in New Orleans for that convention in early November.
Bad news is due to travel complications and stuff being what it is with airlines,
we will not be able to return for Act 4 of Season 3 until November 17th.
It's a slight delay, just a week, but it's one that will be well worth it.
We promise you, family.
Promise, promise, promise.
Trust me on this.
And I'm going to provide you with some entertainment while we're out as well.
Stay tuned for that.
And now it is my solemn duty to remind you that Old Gods of Appalachia is a production of deep nerd media,
distributed by Rusty Quill.
Today's story was written by Steve Shell and Cam Cod.
Collins and performed by Steve Shell. Our intro music this time around, of course, is by Brother
Land and Blood, and our outro music is by Lonely Wyatt and Rachel Brooke. Talk to you soon,
family. Talk to you real soon.
