Old Gods of Appalachia - Episode 26: Welcome to Paradise
Episode Date: May 20, 2021He had always wanted to come here, to this diamond in the rough wedged in-between kissin’ cousins of a state line: Paradise — a city split down the middle between the Commonwealth of Virginia... and the State of Tennessee — was a bustling town in the early winter of 1928.CW: Discussion of historical slavery and military desertion, human trafficking, assault and robbery.Written by Cam Collins and Steve ShellNarrated by Steve ShellSound design by Steve ShellProduced by Cam Collins and Steve ShellIntro Music: “The Land Unknown (The Hollow Heart Verses)” written and performed by Landon BloodOutro Music: “God’s Dark Heaven” 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 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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Well, hey there, family, if you love Old Gods of Appalachia,
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Right about now.
Old Gods of Appalachia is a whole.
horror anthology podcast and therefore may contain material not suitable for all audiences.
So listen to discretion is advice.
Might not have noticed him if you saw him ambled into town on that first day.
You might have seen the rolled up shirt sleeves and simple brown work pants and simpler black
suspenders holding them up and dismissed the slightly dirty face you'd seen a thousand times over
and the crowds of workers making their way through the booms and busts of Appalachian coal towns.
Maybe he took your ticket as you boarded a train.
Or let you hitch a ride on his timber truck.
He was probably the one you lost to at cards in that backwoods moonshiner shack
you never could finds your way back to.
On occasion, he was the bartender who served you that one shot too many
that you blamed for all your troubles.
He was anyone, and he was everyone.
He was ever faced you'd ever forget, but his name was one you'd always remember.
Always, family, trust that.
And he'd always wanted to come here to this diamond in the rough wedged in between kissing cousins of a state line, paradise.
A city split down the middle between the Commonwealth of Virginia and the state of Tennessee.
was a bustling town in the early winter of 1928.
The railroads had brought industry, progress, even tourism to this liminal community,
whose beautiful new train station was fast becoming a hub for both shipping and travelers.
The previous summer had seen the recording of a number of hit records by young musicians
pioneering a new style of music that was becoming mighty popular with folks hereabouts.
They just called it country.
And although Prohibition may have officially closed the doors of Paradise as many saloons,
it had spawned a number of swanky speakeasies and put money in many pockets from the bootleggers
who passed their goods through town.
The little city was just filled with a sense of excitement like it was right on the cusp of something big.
And it was just the sort of place where a man.
man like him could thrive.
Now, he'd been known by any number of names and faces over the course of time, a silver-tonged
good for a little more than getting into trouble, and as often not leading other folks
there with him.
There was little he loved more than thumbing his nose at the high and mighty folk who thought
they had something like power.
And if those folks were your trouble like his not, he could be just a sort of help you
were looking for if you caught him in the right mood anyway.
Trickster and thief, the stories that his adventures had been handed down for generations,
even written down now and again.
Some might say he would weave schemes like an old spider, waiting to catch him some nice
juicy flies, and others would say at the first side of trouble, he'd lie out yipping at the
moon like an old coyote.
And those things might be true, family.
but in paradise
if you're looking to rent a cheap house
that may or may not be sound, dry-rodded,
or built atop an old graveyard
or trade a horse
or find the best shine in town
well you could find this man in a small office
in the E.W. King build.
See, back in the winter in 1928,
he went by the name of Mr. J.T. Fields
the third.
Though to most folks who got to know him,
He was simply
Jack
And so I've
No time to rest these weird
song
And my heart goes hollow
Best not to walk these
Wood best stick to the roads
The out of the shadow
Best get on home
Throughout the history of Appalachia
And some would say over in the old country too
There has always been
A Jack
A Jack be nimble, a Jack be quick, a Jack done sold you a whole pallet of candlesticks that were never his to sell in the first place, and the police have some questions for you, family.
He had walked these hills for generations before the things that now slept beneath them come, and he intended to walk them along after they were gone, and that was a day that couldn't come soon enough for Jack.
See, most things that walk this earth by day or by night
were sensible when it come to making deals.
It's common knowledge.
Sometimes you end up on the long end of the stick
and sometimes you get the short.
People understood that.
Not them black-hearted haunts.
No, sir.
And when his dealings with one of them went, Sair,
Jack ended up with the whole stick shove where the sun sure we didn't shine,
and trapped him in a body that was slowly dying and rotten
and would have left him that way till the end of everything come.
Then some months ago a certain holler witch had done Jack a great favor,
little did she know it at the time, by releasing him,
from the prison that old deer had made of his body.
It hurt like hell and he wouldn't sign up for it again,
but at least he was free.
And there's more to that story, family.
And if you're lucky, one of your neighbors
might tell you where you can go and hear it, but not right now. Right now, we're looking at Jack
made new again. You see, after sleeping in the soil of Pine Mountain and bathing in the falls over
there at Little Stoney, our Jack made himself a whole new body. Which just so happened to look
very much like the old one, only this one was greatly improved, the wrinkles and liver spots
erased.
Hair that had gone thin and silver,
once again the thick, glossy, black
of youth. And after
laying low and reacquainting himself
with the joys of running through the treetops
and catching up on the gossip of bears
and possums, he found himself
a simple set of clothes, always simple, y'all.
As our Jack was never one to put on
heirs, no, sir.
And he made his way by the
light of the fading day
to an old bait shot,
with an office in the back in the community of Dorchester and he saw County, Virginia.
He had intended to gather up a few loose odds and ends that he always took with him
when he'd worn out his welcome in a place. There was an axe, a harp, an old slipper,
a bag of beans, and a couple of feathers tethered to a string, and they all fit neatly in a special
burlap poke. He had just lucked up the bait shop and was a little bit of the bait shop and was a
about to take his leave of the fine people of Dorchester when a voice spoke from the gathering dust
hang on now you think you can just show up and tell us he's dead and get out of town without settling
your papaw's debts boy the jingle of tack and the smell of horses greeted jack as he turned
and saw three men approaching him on horseback all tall all thickly bearded and armed
The one who'd spoken brandished a pistol, and the other two a long knife and a pitchfork respectively.
Fellers, now listen, Jack began, looking up at these three would-be highwaymen on their ancient steeds.
I don't know what papal jack owed y'all, but I ain't got no money.
Hell, I come here myself looking to see if the field's family fortune was a real thing or just another wild tale he made up.
Look at him, Will, muttered the man with the knife, clearly the oldest brother, gray streaking his thick, once black beard.
He looks just like him.
If he wasn't so young, I think it was him.
You ain't kidding, said the pitchfork-wielding brother.
I was there when he came and sold daddy than beans.
Told him they'd bring the land back and we'd turn a decent crop,
and they didn't do nothing but dry out the land and kill him.
kill what was growing. Jack held up his hands, still holding his bag of belongings.
Boys, I don't know what to tell you. Ain't none of us seen Papa in years. Hell, we didn't even
know he was here till I heard about him trying to buy up land out by Tom's Creek. Now, seriously,
y'all, I gotta be going. The hell you are, said the brother who'd spoke first, moving his
mount to block Jack's way. Your kin ruined our family.
We was God-fearing people, and your papa was a good-for-nothing snake-oil salesman stealing from decent folks,
so we'll be taking whatever you might have on you, starting with that there bag.
Jack's eyes flashed with anger just for a moment, but that he smiled coolly and laughed.
Good God-fearing folks, were you, Tom Meeter.
How'd you know my name if you don't know, shut up, boy?
I ain't got time for this.
Tom Meeter had more gray in his beard than Brown anymore,
and nobody called him boy in longer than he cared to think about.
He turned his head and saw his brother start to brandish his rusty old pistol with this young man,
but at a look from Jack, it tumbled loosely to the ground.
Your daddy was Thatch Meter, and his daddy was Burl Meter.
Come up his way from Georgia after the war.
bought up all that land north of Guest River.
Our daddy was a war hero, pitchfork began.
Your daddy was a deserter and a coward.
Your granddaddy was worsened him by a mile.
He was a slaver and a killer.
Took whole families apart.
Sold babies out of their mama's arms.
Put men in chains like they wasn't nothing.
Between the two of them,
they had enough blood on their hands and ghosts in their dreams
that the very land refused to yield for them.
They called on every granny around here for help.
Every divine or two.
Ground wouldn't grow, couldn't find no well water.
After people figured out what kind of good God-fearing men they were,
nobody that could help them would.
He ended up selling most of their land to Miss White out there for a pittance.
Kept that little squat out by powder keg for a house
and kept trying to make something grow.
Well, when people wouldn't talk to them,
they started talking to other things.
Making promises, making deals.
Young Jack's voice deepened and aged,
and his eyes grew dark as he told his tale.
I told your granddaddy them beans would bring him whatever he put them in the earth with.
If he put them in with goodness and love, they'd yield him wheat, corn, whole fruit trees,
all he'd ever need for y'all.
If he put them in the ground with blood and hate and hate and out,
anger? Well, then the ground would give him what he give it. That's a lie. Pitchfork, whose given name was
Patrick, muttered weakly. Your daddy begged your papa not to trade with me. Said he'd been out
in Josephine, up hudal, up on Thacker's branch, in the deep places. The dark places, he said,
making deals with things that lived under bridges and down under the swampy parts by the river
to make y'all rich. He told your papal he couldn't pay what I was asking, because he'd already
promised those particular goods to them things. But I told him it was all right that I'd see to the other
parties that I could broker a deal. A bag of magic beans for thatch meter's first three son.
The three men had dropped their weapons and sat slumped loosely.
in their saddles.
They look like they might be sick
or fall over at any given moment.
I mean, he only had the three of you,
but a deal was a deal.
Jack walked around to each man
and placed the reins of their mounts
in their hands, squeezing their limp fingers
so they gripped the leather.
Y'all boys belong to me.
But unfortunately, I must travel life this evening
and I have no use for you,
so I must alter the terms of my
agreement with your father and your grandfather, both of whom have been feeding the worms
for a goodly while, so I'm sure they won't mind. Young Jack cleared his throat and spoke
plainly into the darkening sky. Jack of the Wood, known in this place as Jack Timothy Fields
the third, do relinquish my claims on the lives of the brothers meter and release that contract
to their original purchasers in whatever place they might dwell in this day and time.
Jack cocked his head as if receiving a message as only he could hear nodding in agreement and affirmation.
And then Jack went to each horse and whispered in its ear the place it was to bear its rider.
One to Hudal holler.
one to the bridge out by Josephine
and the last
the oldest boy
out to the very end of Thacker's branch
out to where the trees grew so close
they had to pop in sunlight they said
and then without even a slap on the rump
the horses turn
and carried their riders into the night
none of them ever to be seen
Jack took a deep breath, tossed his poke over his shoulder, and before any other trouble could come calling, vanished into the night, heading south at a speed in the way that only Jack could.
A cold winter's evening in an early 1928 found Jack settling into the cozy little office he'd established, stoking up the fire and the wood stove, heating up a pot of coffee, and gazing out the window as he lit up his pipe.
He hadn't had many appointments today and expected a quiet night.
Maybe he'd read a good book, play a little solitaire.
Maybe drink a little of the moonshine, a farmer had traded him for a mule,
that Jack swore could cut his time at the plow in half come spring.
He was not expecting to see two young folks come trudging up the road through the snow,
spotlit by the street lamps outside.
Much less, the pair of ruffians who came skulking out of the shadows to accost them,
one taking a swing at the boy while the other pushed the girl down in the snow,
grabbed her suitcase, and took off down the street.
Well, wasn't that interesting?
Jack sat down his pipe and reached for his coat.
Why, this could turn out to be a profitable or at least entertaining evening after all.
He thought as he nipped out the door down the back stairs to the street below.
Very entertaining indeed.
I cannot resin the strings hanging down.
from heaven
Hitch for God's dark heaven
Go I through God
Well, hey there family
Welcome, welcome, welcome back to the present
timeline in the winter of 1928
As we venture over to Paradise
A little place you've heard about a few times this season
On the Virginia, Tennessee border
And introducing you to our man Jack.
Now, if you're wondering where you can hear other tales of Jack and some of the mischief he alluded to, well, I'll be happy to tell you you could head on over to our Patreon at patreon.com slash old gods of Appalachia.
Sign up for $10 or more a month, and it would not surprise me if you found a certain trickster hiding within the story of Build Mama a coffin.
Those of you that know that story know the nature of our man, Jack, and know that this is the beginning of some.
Something that is probably not what it seems at all.
Family, it's been a busy couple of weeks over here at Deep Nerd Media,
as you may have heard on our social media or on the live stream,
that we have, in fact, joined the Rusty Quill podcast network,
meaning Rusty Quill is helping us out with advertising, marketing, and distribution.
But that does not mean anybody owns Old Gods of Appalachia,
but myself and Cam Collins and the good folks here at Deep Nerd Media.
We are an Appalachian-based company owned by Appalachian people,
produced by Appalachian people for Appalachian people and the rest of y'all too.
Family is family after all.
We would invite you to join us over at Old Gods of Appalachia.com
where you can find links to all the aforementioned social media,
Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, the Discord server,
all kinds of fun stuff right there.
And the Patreon is there as well if you do wish to catch up on
Build Mama a coffin, door under the floor.
And we also just announced two new pieces of Patreon programming
on our live stream just the other day,
Blackmouth Dog, which is a build mama, a coffin prequel,
as well as porch light,
a new anthology of flash fiction stories
that are completely standalone
and meant to be bite-sized,
easily consumed snippets of spooky stuff
from around the Old God's universe.
Old Gods of Appalachia is a production of deep nerd media
is distributed by Rusty Quill.
Our intro music is by Land and Blood.
Our outro music is by those poor bastards.
Today's story was written by Cam Collins and Steve Shell and performed by Steve Shell.
See you soon, family. See you real soon.
