Old Gods of Appalachia - Episode 15: A Funeral in Pine
Episode Date: November 5, 2020The county had taken a narrow little valley and dug themselves a reservoir to provide drinking water for the whole town and then some. As pretty as the lake and the surrounding woods were, it was stil...l something wedged into nature by the hands of men — water stolen from rivers and collected here like a dragon’s hoard, grounds that had lain untouched for centuries carved up and reshaped to serve human desires, seals broken and reset — all to meet the needs of the encroaching horde of townsfolk and hillfolk alike. Acts such as these have consequences, family.Trust that they do.CW: References to church services, death of a child, dog barking, monster sounds.Written by Steve ShellSound design by Steve ShellNarrated by Steve ShellIntro 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.
Also, this is part two of a three-part
story. So if you ain't
listen to part one, go back
and do that. We'll meet you right here.
Oh, and listener discretion
is advised.
Before we begin our journey today,
family,
a word on Death Island.
As Florida
The Chabshire already explained Death Island is in fact not an island.
Most of the year you'd be hard-pressed to call it anything more than a grove of old pine trees on the edge of a reservoir.
Fancy word like Peninsula wouldn't even come into play.
But once the summer rains come and the lake was up, the water did indeed rise like conquering armies around three sides of that shattered glen.
The perpetual carpet of pine needles seemed to taint everything.
on the ground with a rust of blood stains.
And the shadows that spun from overhead painted the ground like prophecies,
each one showing the precise placement of the next layer
to be added to the sound-stealing cushion of evergreen that was everywhere.
Countless packs of boys had deemed it hideout and fortress,
clubhouse and sanctum sanctorum.
It was a quiet place perfect for sword-fighting with sticks
and the swearing of blood oaths.
It was a place you could tell your deepest and darkest because what happened and what was said there stayed there.
It was a place for the young to be young, away from the prine eyes of the grown folk, at least in the daylight.
The island had a way of letting you know when your time there was up.
The wind would kick up off the reservoir and it'd suddenly be too cold to enjoy whatever it was you'd been enjoying.
The shadows would loom long and deep
And any illusion of safety
You might have been entertaining
Was quickly swept away
There was always the rumor amongst the younger boys
About the roving bunches of older boys
Who would come to places like the island to drink
And fight and carry on in the darkness
Tales of young lovers come here to do the devil's business as well
And there'd been times as their boys were leaving
And the woods were darkening
they'd hear laughter and the crash into branches in the distance
and they'd hustle even faster along the scant trail
thinking they were just missing the cook or Connor boys
or any of the other rougher-necked older kids
who could make their lives much harder at the drop of a hat.
They had no idea how wrong they were.
Even a hard nail like Brad Connor wouldn't dare set foot on the island after dark
or even be up on the cliffs up above it
and even a ladies man like Charlie Cook
would never dream of trying to bring a girl to the island at night.
All it took was that haunted old groves showing you its teeth once
to make all the aforementioned pastime sound as stupid as cussing deer in Bible study
at Rising Creek Baptist when Deacon Walter Ray Shepard was in charge of the reading.
Much like the island itself, Dallas Shepard's daddy was not a force to be trifled with.
escaping his notice was not something easily done neither
Dallas Christopher
Walter Ray had called as his only boy had started off in the opposite direction from home
at the end of services that Sunday morning
where do you think you're going
uh... Shane's Papal said I could come over for Sunday dinner if that was all right with y'all
we might go play behind their house sir if that's okay
Walter Ray was a man you always called sir
He kept a tight house
When you had six girls
ranging an age from baby in arms
To old enough to have their own baby in arms
You had to
Or so the deacon believed
He also knew there were days
When he had to let his only boy breathe
And will you be back for Sunday night service
On time and not a minute late?
Dallas failed to hide a smile
It's fourth Sunday sir
No evening service on fourth Sunday
Walter Ray thought about this for a minute
Or pretended to
Nobody knew the service schedule better than Walter
He helped write the dang thing after all
Well so it is
Ain't you the lucky one
Are your chores done
Dallas gave in and smiled even bigger
He'd been expecting this
Yes sir my room is clean
The porches are swept and Sam has water and food
And you won't find no dog leavings in the yard neither
Walter Ray you smiled back at his boy
and your mama said it was okay
you're sure Shane asked his papal
Dallas was about to explode
waiting for the official go ahead
and he was pretty sure his daddy was enjoying
dragging it out but
that was all right
daddies needed their own weird old person
kind of fun sometimes he guessed
all right then go on
but go get Sam and take him with you
so time out in the woods will do him good
he's already over at Shane
Dallas called as he sped into the distance toward his cousin's house,
where he knew most of the crew would already be assembled.
Once he arrived, the journey to Death Island would begin.
For the rest of the Baker's Gap Boys,
the journey out to Shane Shepard's house could be a hall.
On a usual visit to the island, they just meet there.
Dallas lived close enough to Shane.
they usually meet up at old flat top overlooking the east edge of the lake.
Archie and Curtis lived on the north side
and might have had the shortest path straight to the island,
but it was also the most treacherous.
Floyd and Cowboy lived out closer to town
and thus would have a long straight walkout Burnside Mountain
at the end of which they'd be the only ones to enter the reservoir through its main gate.
Today was special, though.
Since it was Cowboys' first trip to the island,
It was agreed.
They would meet at Shane's house and eat first.
Marie Duncan, Shane's mama's mama, was the mamma of all memos.
If Memaw Duncan fixed your Sunday plate, you ate like a prince.
Fried chicken, fresh corn, mashed taters,
whole plate of green onions, cucumbers, and sliced maters on the table,
and some green beans cooked for so long and so slow with a ham hawk,
they were practically a pork product themselves.
A dinner like that would render the grownest of men into a deep and restful food coma.
But the metabolism of boys of a certain age is an ever-burning furnace that knows no rest.
So with full bellies and full hearts, our boys set out on their grand sojour.
The important thing to remember is you have to listen to us carefully, kid.
extolled Archie from the head of the pack as they crossed the Shepherd property line
ducking under a well-stretched barbed wire fence.
From here on we are in the lands of the wild, unclaimed by any man,
and kept in check only by Mother Nature herself.
Or Jackson County Public Works, Arch.
This is county land, and you know, unclaimed and unmarked by any boundary.
Archie went on, shooting Shane a dirty look.
Shane laughed and covered his mouth.
Archie ain't all the way wrong, little brother, Floyd said kindly.
Just walk where we walk and be careful and you'll be fine.
It is real easy to get lost once we get on the back side of the lake, so you stick by me.
Got it?
Got it, Cowboys said excitedly.
Of all the new things his family and friends had included him in, this was by far the best.
The woods seemed to grow thicker and the trees taller as they moved over the hill for what passed for the
dam. An obviously man-made edge of the lake that had the shoreline on one side and a drop off
down to three drainage pools on the other. The county had taken a narrow little valley and dug
themselves a reservoir to provide drinking water for the whole town and then some. As pretty as
the lake and the surrounding woods were, it was still something wedged into nature by the hands
of men. Water stolen from rivers and collected here like a dragon's
Horde, grounds that had lain untouched and unseen for centuries, carved up and reshaped to serve
human desires. Seals broken and reset. All to meet the needs of the encroaching horde of
townsfolk and hill folk alike. Acts such as these have consequences, family. Trust that they do.
They'd gone another half mile or so off the dam when Kurt called a stop. Kurt was the most
cautious of the lot. Archie was the most knowledgeable about the woods and how to get by in them,
but he got comfortable and forgot to remind others of things he knew automatic sometimes.
Kirk pointed out a stretch of rocks along the shore that extended out across a narrow corner of the lake.
On the other side, you got your first look into the deeper woods as the land faded back into the
shadow of the trees, tantalizing view for any size sense of adventure.
Right here, said Kurt, pushing his hair out of his face.
This right here's copperhead den, snakes sometimes.
You've got to be careful.
Watch where you step.
You'll end up walking on water like Jesus over here.
He nodded toward Archie.
I saved y'all's life running across the water like that, Archie sneered.
Y'all had stumbled right in there and got bit.
Kurt tried to stay serious in his explaining,
but the image of Archie running across the surface of the lake like a
Cacky-clad cries screaming,
Snake! Snake!
Was too funny to not at least grin at.
Kurt straightened his face.
Either way.
Be careful here.
We ain't seen none the past few times,
but you never know.
Dallas whistled from the rear of the group.
And out of the woods closest to them
shot a fireplug-sized canine projectile
that nearly collided with Shane,
coming instead to a dead stop at his feet.
Shane, lost in his own daydreams as he often was, yelled in surprise.
Sam!
Sam was a beagle mix who was older than the boys themselves.
Blind as a day is long and thick-necked as a log,
Sam had been Dallas's guardian angel most of his life.
He was an old soldier who was too good of a boy to know how few years he probably had left.
Oh, Lord, I hate it when he does that, whined Shane. Dallas laughed.
He loves you too.
Hey, Sam, cowboy cried.
And sure enough, the blind old boy sauntered over for head pettings and ear rubbins and general spoiling before Dallas called him.
Go on, boy, see what's out there.
And like a shot, Sam ran off up ahead and around the rocks,
giving them a wide berth as he disappeared up the hill into the woods of the backside of the lake.
The journey across Copperheads den proved uneventful, however.
as any snakes in the vicinity
apparently had other business that day.
And the boys touched down on the entrance
to the woods proper on the far side of the lake.
This would be officially out of bounds
for any place they'd be allowed to play at their age.
Last chance to turn back, Archie teased.
No way, said Cowboy,
as he pushed past the taller boy
and into the shadows of the path.
This part of the trip,
where the road, the path, and sometimes the lake were all out of view,
and all you saw were big rocks and bigger trees.
It's like entering a strange new world of color and texture.
Mushrooms grew wild at the base of trees like the fins of some great dry land fish.
Mosses of various colors crawled across fallen trees and cliff-sized rocks.
The sun played through the green,
painting a mosaic of dappled light and jesus.
shadow on the path before it. Cowboy was beside himself with joy. He'd spent his first couple of weeks
in and around Baker's Gap, sleeping in old woodsheds and abandoned lean-toos. The woods were just what was
around him then. Their splendor meaning no more to him than the green grass meant to Larry Collins's
cows. But now, after a season of living indoors again and having school and lessons and chores,
this was an adventure.
This was living.
For the next 20 minutes or so,
the boys climbed the hills that Shane had named
the rock-bone cliffs,
which were, in actuality, enormous rocks
jutting from the hillside, fearsome and bald.
The biggest one's rounded edge
almost looked like a skull, maybe, if you squinted,
but you had to want it real bad.
And as they walked, Shane told them,
the story of old man rockbone
who haunted these cliffs.
A brave explorer and
friend to the Cherokee who lived here
long ago and how he'd been betrayed
and abandoned by his white brothers
and then saved from being mauled by a mountain
cat by the bravery of his native friends
who stitched up his wounds
and treated him like one of their own
Dirk Rockbone swore
that day to guard these cliffs
with his light. Kurt snorted.
Dirk Rockbone.
Shane was about to protest
When he started laughing so hard
He almost fell off the ledge
Rock bone
Easy there cousin
Said Dallas pulling him back
Yeah laughed Archie
You don't want to fall on your dirt rock bone
Family we're just going to leave these boys here
To laugh this out
It might take a minute
The first time one sets foot on Death Island
It's normal to feel like you stepped into a different
world is cool. Maybe from the water being high and the rainwater being cold, maybe from the thick
blanket of pine overhead that all but chokes out the afternoon sun. It feels as if you have walked
into another space rather than through another space. If that makes sense, the island feels like its
very own empty planet. And for boys like ours, that's the close.
closest thing to heaven most of them might ever see.
Show the kid around, Floyd. He's your brother.
Archie commanded as he climbed up into a nearby tree and straddled a branch.
Yeah, come on, cowboy. Floyd grinned.
And thus, Cowboy Absher was given the grand tour of Death Island.
The hollowed-out spot were the good swords.
The ones made from trees around the lake were hidden.
The ones they'd driven real nails into as handguards.
Shane's papaw would skin him alive for sneaking his good hammer out in the woods
and wasted perfectly good iron nails like that if he ever found out.
Cowboy had to admit.
They were way better than the sticks they played with in the schoolyard or at home.
He fought several grand duels with his brother and against Shane,
winning some, losing some more.
They showed him the place where they'd all carved their initials into a fallen log
and helped him carve his with the very sharp hunting knife,
that Dallas had snuck out of his house,
that his daddy wouldn't have said no to probably,
because Dallas was a careful boy,
but Dallas still took without asking
because somehow that made it better.
They played adventure,
where they pretended to discover the island
and planned a camp
and had invisible fights with pirates
and the enemy army that pursued them.
Who that enemy army was,
they had no idea.
The magazine Shane got the story from never really said.
They was just referred to as
the enemy, and thus our merry band of boys, were dedicated to their overthrow and defeat.
It was around the third time the enemy had been repelled via the throwing of pine cones and the
brandishing of great swords that Kurt noticed it was getting dark.
It's time start heading back, boys. Dallas, call Sam in.
Dallas whistled three short bursts and the sound of his canine thunderbolt came rattling in the
distance as the old blind boy
deftly navigated his surroundings
before barreling down the hill
and intentionally this time colliding
with Shane taking the smaller boy
off his feet. Dang it, Sam!
What?
Came Kurt's voice from the edge
of the water and then
no.
Oh no.
He seemed to be staring
at something on the cliff behind them.
What? Is it the ghost
of old dirt rock bone? Floyd began.
and shut up, Floyd.
Oh, y'all.
Oh, God, oh God, God, oh God, no, no, no.
Kurt had gone rigid and bawled up his hands
and was pressing them to his eyes.
Kurt, buddy, what's wrong?
Archie looked up at the darkening slopes of the rock-bone cliffs
and felt his stomach drop out of his body entirely.
A night black shadow in the shape of the man
stared back down from the top of the slippery rock.
Sam began to growl.
The boys all gathered around the dog and the frozen boy
looking up at the shadow of Kurt's daddy
as it started to shamble down the side of the hill towards him.
Picked up off the lake and the air grew up.
The light filtering through the trees was all begun.
Sam began to bark,
the thundering bark of the guardian beast he was
as the figures shuffled closer
and a voice roiled across the island.
Curtis, boy, why ain't you working?
We got things to do.
I told you not to go
when you run off your lazy little dog turd friends
and we got work to do.
Curtis was crying now.
His voice shaking as he yelled back,
you ain't my daddy, you ain't, you ain't, you ain't, you ain't, you ain't, you ain't.
You can't make me go back in them woods no more with you.
I ain't burying no more.
I ain't.
I ain't you hear me?
And then a wave of something more than cold slapped down over the entire island like a tidal wave.
And the boys lost their feet.
Only Sam stood stalwart against the driving wave of invisible ice and fear.
His barks sounding like gunshots.
Gunshots that were somehow drowned out by the thing's terrible voice,
I told you, boy, we got work to do.
You better come on with me now, or...
No.
Said a quiet, confident voice that somehow cut through the thing's deafening command.
The boys looked away from Kurt or the shadow
to see that cowboy had stepped out to face it.
The shadow easily now, seven foot tall and growing.
The thing stopped in mid-sentence.
cocked its head and stared at cowboy.
At least as much as something that has no discernible features can look at anyone or anything.
Kurt's not going home with you.
And you can stop pretending you're his daddy because you're not.
Floyd was terrified.
He wanted to reach out and grab cowboy and put him behind him to protect him.
But Cowboy didn't look afraid.
His eyes had taken on that dreamy cast they had when Floyd first found him in the pasture.
The shadow that was not Kurt's daddy had turned its full attention on Cowboy.
Sam had moved up beside him, snarling protectively.
I see you, Cowboy said.
His voice almost playful.
Oh, I see you, Kurt.
He's not going to hurt you anymore.
He's not going to hurt you anymore because, but before cowboy could say another word,
the shadow lunged forward, and something struck the boy so hard in the face and chest
that he flew backwards and struck the thickest tree on the island with a bone-shattering crack.
And cowboy Absher fell to the ground.
Dead as dead could ever be in stunned silence.
The tree shook with the thing that was not Kurt's daddy's rage,
it screamed and howled in triumph.
It moved towards Cowboys' lifeless form tentatively, though,
as if it was unsure of what it had done or what Cowboy even was
and why he'd even dared to talk back to it that way.
Sam had managed to avoid the things blow
and stood guard over Cowboys' body,
barking for all he was worth,
determined to protect this sweet boy from any further harm.
Sam, no! Dallas screamed.
The thing raised its arm to swathing.
the dog aside and the ground shook. Sam kept barking and growling, teeth bared, blind eyes staring out
into the void, fearless and good. The thing took another step and the ground thundered again
and began to crack. Decades of pine needles carpeting the floor of Death Island shifted and
congealed. The earth tore itself from centuries of black sleep, bringing with it the
bones of animals and men and things that had died or been buried in this land before it had ever been
pushed to one side to make room for a man-made lake. Bones had twisted and rites, crafting themselves
into a shape that in a long bygone era might have been called a wolf, but by the standards of our time
could be named nothing less than a monster. Its head was easily the size of the size of the
of an entire bear. Its body just as thick with a hide of pine needles, earth, bark, and bone,
the angles and proportions of its legs were all wrong. Somehow lupine and feline at the same time,
but tipped in claws, fashioned from the skulls of long-dead raptors that had not graced the skies
of this Appalachia in a thousand years. It had just a massive maw of a massive maw of the
Fangs shaped from stones and roots and petrified bits of tree, and its muzzle was tipped with an immense nose that snorted and snuffled at the air as it stood over Sam and the empty husk of cowboy Abscher and roared.
In the silence that followed, it lowered its head, sniffed almost delicately at Sam, and growled approvingly.
Sam chuffed once and then reluctantly surrendered his post and ran to Dallas,
who threw the ancient dog over his shoulder and screamed for them to run.
Floyd lunged for cowboy's body, but his friends held him back,
pulling him away through the trees,
and the last thing Floyd Absher saw before he finally turned to flee with his friends
was the wolf of Death Island,
lunging at the shadowy thing that had killed his brother
and closing its enormous jaws around the thing's throat.
My family, how you must be cursing my name right now.
Dark times on Death Island, but I mean, are there any other times in a place called Death Island?
I don't think so.
Oh, but family, this was part two of a three-part story.
And if you think we're done with our young friends and the boys of Baker's Gap,
Well, you are sadly mistaken and obviously haven't been paying attention to how we do things around here.
So stay with us now.
Dear ones, beloved ones, please complete your social media ritual.
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We appreciate you and trust me, family.
Sam,
is just fine, just fine.
The rest of them will have to see.
Old Gods of Appalachia is a production of deep nerd media.
Our theme song is by our brother Land and Blood.
Our outro music is by those poor bastards.
Today's story was written and performed by Steve Schell.
