Old Gods of Appalachia - Episode 56: The Traveling Marvels
Episode Date: November 2, 2023There are many threats to children who wander alone into these woods. Even those who may be wolves.CW: Carnival ambience, chicken sounds, description/discussion of exploitative treatment of the disabl...ed, brief description of the killing of chickens, snakes and other small animals, gore, monster noises.Written by Cam Collins and Steve ShellNarrated by Steve ShellSound design by Steve ShellProduced and edited by Cam Collins and Steve ShellThe voice of Erebus Cain: Darren MarshallIntro music: “The Land Unknown (The Bloody Roots Verses)” written and performed by Landon BloodOutro music: “Atonement” written and performed by Jon Charles DwyerSpecial equipment consideration provided by Lauten Audio.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,
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Right about now.
Old Gods of Appalachia is a lot of...
a horror anthology podcast and therefore may contain material not suitable for all audiences.
So listener discretion is advised.
Araba's cane was a sort of man who oozes into your life like a grease stain on a good
shirt that you don't notice until it's far too late to scrub out.
He was a sort of oily interloper who squelched ten.
his way through people's lives until they found themselves befouled with the whole of his being.
From his noxious disingenuous demeanor to the outright horrifying nature of his life's work,
relatively little was known about the origin of the man who styled himself Arabis Cain,
except for the fact that his name was neither Aribus nor Cain.
both being affectations adopted in the interest of his chosen profession.
Some said he come from down in Arkansas,
where he was wanted for unspeakable crimes against the good people of the Ozarks.
Others say he hailed from some big city or another up north, maybe.
As folks around here just don't do the sort of things he did.
Born Herbert Guthrie,
According to investigators who had serious questions about his work,
Erebus Kane was the proprietor of a business so distasteful
that few would admit to patronizing it.
But shamefully, many did.
That enterprise was known as Erebus Cain's Travel and Marvels,
an exhibition of the wondrous, the perverse, and the forgotten.
It was a freak show family.
An attraction that latched itself on to the odd carnival or circus
and wormed its way through the small towns and backroads of our great nation,
freak shows at the time were exploitative showcases of the disabled,
the uniquely proportioned,
and folks who turned to showing off the things that got them labeled undesirable
by many in order to make a living wage.
Conjoined twins.
Folks with glandular or hormonal imbalances that rendered them overly hairy,
too tall, too short, too fat, or too frail, regularly found their way to the rosters of these grotesque theatrical displays.
Now, the amount of agency enjoyed by these folks varied.
From those who worked as contractors fairly paid by reputable outfits to others who lived as outright prisoners to their employers and captors.
And everything along the spectrum in between.
Arabis Cain's exhibits, however,
were a little different.
While some side shows might chill your bones
or offer the titillating thrill of the taboo,
the traveling marvels tended to haunt people.
If you ask someone what the best part of the show was,
they might not be able to put their finger on it.
Having difficulty recalling exactly what they had experienced
in the collection of old tents or the dimly lit courtyard at their center,
what they could tell you was it was
kinds of messed up.
Exhibits came and went as time passed.
Some sold fewer and fewer tickets until their contracts were terminated,
sometimes in a rather final fashion.
Others died in their cages,
surrounded by their own filth and the voyeuristic gaze of folks
who had nothing better to do and lacked the common sense to find something.
The world's oldest woman,
the vampire of Hall Creek,
and the son of the Minotaur
they'd all come and gone
their signage disposed of
their living quarters hosed out and repurposed
for whatever new wonder was set to replace them
there were three
however
who had traveled with Kane
wherever he went
they were his signature attractions
and they had been with him
for a long, long time
gaze if you will
upon the immense form of
the Goliath.
Far more than your average man with a pituitary issue, as you might have seen elsewhere.
Ladies and gentlemen, you will find no medical trickery here.
No mirrors, no illusions.
The Goliath is a genuine giant.
The Goliath stood well over nine feet tall, with shoulders as broad as a hay wagon, arms
layered in thick, ropy muscle and hands.
They could crush a grown man.
skull. His skin was a dense and dusty gray as though he were carved from stone and his hair and beard
were thick and tangled and hung to his waist like a leonine shroud. Descended from the giant folk that
roamed these hills centuries ago, a terror to both the Cherokee and those who came before them.
Why this specimen here is rumored to be a direct descendant of the mighty Judicolor
himself. The giant's name was not Goliath, nor was he a descendant of the legendary
lightning chuck and titan described in Cherokee legend. He was a descendant of a quiet,
if embittered people who had chosen not to truck with the likes of men centuries ago.
The passing of the giants from our world is a sad story, family,
and how the Goliath was delivered into the clutches of Erebus Cain as sadder
still, but that's a tale for another time.
Just not right now.
Across the way from the Goliath,
sat a tent dyed a deep and luxurious shade of purple.
Tremmed in some shiny gold fabric and embroidered with constellations,
worked in gold thread,
an ornately painted sign was propped outside as discreetly closed tent flaps,
advertising the services of one granny cloud.
Oracle to the stars, auger of fate,
and practitioner of the ancient art of divination.
One customer at a time, adults only, no refund.
Granny Cloud's performance was more of a subtle nature
than most of Cain's attractions,
appealing to customers of discriminating tastes.
More than some 25-cent peddler of fortunes,
Granny Cloud possessed a true gift for prophecy.
One, it was said she had nurtured
with the study of divinatory practices from around the globe.
Her insight into the wisdom of the tarot was without peer.
Though it was said, she favored the simple deck of playing cards
she'd learned to read at her granddaddy's knee.
She could throw the bones and cast lots as accurately as the disciples of Christ himself.
She could read the lines of fate etched into the pattern of a handful of cowrie shells
or channel spirits from the beyond of the situation called for it.
Bibliomancy and Giamancy were well known to her.
If a customer was willing to pay extra for her cleaning bill,
she would interpret the signs from the entrails of a chicken or a rat or even a goat if you were feeling spending.
Upon entering her tent, you would find her reclining in a comfortable gilt-framed chair
upholstered in velvet before a round table draped simply in a spotless white linen cloth.
Granny Cloud was a striking woman with a mass of silver hair piled atop her head,
secured with jeweled combs and a face
whose line spoke of character and wit.
She had one eye of brilliant blue
and another of murky green
and a smile as crafty as a cat.
It was clear she had once been a great beauty
though whether that had been three decades ago
or a hundred
none would dare to guess.
She would invite customers to sit
and fix them with that versicolor gaze,
and for long moments,
Granny Cloud would say nothing at all.
She would sit silent, seeming not even to breathe,
looking not at you, but into you.
Unconcerned by any social prohibitions regarding staring,
the only sound of the room, the rhythmic tick,
of a clock that sat atop a carved ebidid cabinet behind her.
If nerves or poor judgment overcome them
And they ventured a question or cracked a joke in a blink
Granny Cloud would produce a will-a-switch from beneath the tablecloth
And wrap them across the knuckles with a snap and a sharp
No
And no more would be said
While the patron nursed their bruised fingers
And awaited her pronouncement
After some indeterminate period
Which varied from one client to the next
Granny Cloud would nod and say,
We should have a cup of tea,
or the bones free him her prize.
Sometimes the number she quoted was too high
and the customer would walk away disappointed.
Some folks come with their hearts set on one method or another.
Yemen, she found, tended to be particularly enchanted with the tarot.
While lawyers were convinced true prophecy
could only be glimpsed in blood and viscerized,
and for an added V, she would accommodate their whims.
Granny Cloud recommended the method she sensed
would give her the clearest vision for the individual in question.
If they wished her to work a little harder
and were willing to pay for the privilege, it were no matter to her.
Once her price had been met, Granny Cloud would tuck the money into her dress
and asked the question her client wished to answer one question only.
That was the deal.
She asked for no clarification, sought no details that might aid her and merely guessing at what folks wanted to hear.
Granny Cloud's visions were clear, and she delivered them without provocation or sentiment, whether for good or for ill.
Your business partner is cheating you.
Your wife is sleeping with your brother.
This match is a good one.
You'll enjoy a long life and have many children.
If you marry that man, he'll kill you within the year.
Some of Granny Cloud's predictions saved lives.
Others ended them.
The outcome was none of her concern.
Her job was to see the truth and speak it.
What folks did with the information she gave them was their business.
It was this rigid objectivity that endeared Granny Cloud to Erebus Kane.
He was not a man who liked to gamble.
Leastways, not unless he could be certain of stacking the odds in his own very fact,
favor, Granny Cloud was ever his ace in the hole.
Now, the third among Arabis Cain's favorites was one of a sort you'd find at many such
tawdry spectacles, under various yet similar monikers.
The cannibal.
The maniac.
A geek was often nothing special to look at when they first stepped on to the stage.
Lots of them looked a lot like you and me.
At least until they got down to business.
A geek's job was to remind everyone how lucky they were to be normal,
to be free of unnatural compulsions toward violence or bloodshed.
Shetting blood, however, was what a geek did best.
Traditionally, the geek stage show involved the performer in question,
biting the heads off chickens, snakes, or other smaller critters and drinking their blood,
then leering and bloody-faced at an audience while growling and hissing.
like a wild beast.
Some were known for eating and occasionally regurgitating inedible items such as tin cans or metal
screws, choking down things that would shred the insides of most folks, and then puking them
back up with a crimson grin was just another night on the stage for these folks with
unusual talents.
Geek shows always ended.
Erebus Kane had found all these talents and more in one neat package.
The eater
The eater was, like many
of the side shows attraction,
a little different from your standard
mutilator of poultry.
This was no broken tooth
and bloody maud madman to howl and froth
at the marks.
The eater was much, much worse.
When folks purchased a ticket to see the eater of bones,
they were admonished to keep their hands behind their backs
or in their pockets, no open-toed shoes,
were allowed.
A thick white line was chalked around the edge of the stage
and signs that each corner advised a crowd
that anyone attempting to step over it did so with their own peril.
Airbus Canes traveling marvels would not be held liable
for damages to property or persons that crossed that white line.
Don't offer the old boy any temptation,
and everyone will go home with the same number of digits
and little pink piggies as they came in with.
Wouldn't want anything to happen to those things,
fingers, would we, madam?
You have such lovely hands.
Erebus would confide to the crowds as they filed in the drab and dingy tent
that was always set up in the furthest corner of the grounds occupied by the traveling marvels.
Upon entering the dimly lit space and gathering around the low stage,
someone in the tittering parties of Lucky Loo's would invariably comment on the smell.
The smell was part of the experience, Erebus would tell them.
But they'd still complain, holding their noses or covering their mouths.
Yet they always stayed.
Right on through to the bloody inn.
Now, they would be confused at first because there was nothing but an empty wooden stage.
The aforementioned white line chopped heavily onto the ground around its perimeter,
bright in the dank shadows of the room.
The eater of bones was not to be seen, at least not directly.
It would appear on stage.
without fanfare or warning.
To the novice attendee, it looked as though a short man
and perhaps a tall child had wandered on stage
wearing a filthy sheet over its head,
like a ghost costume at the Halloween.
Aribus could almost count down to the second
when the rubs would notice that no feet protruded from beneath the moldering shroud,
that it was, in fact, floating a good six inches off the ground.
By the time they realized this, though,
the first chickens would be released onto the stage,
and meet that stained old drapery,
would live in the nightmares of any who heard them for the rest of their lives.
And if anyone accidentally got a peek under the covers,
well, that was their problem.
It was said that some folks wound up confined to an asylum
after seeing what lurked beneath the eaters' veil.
Most were fortunate enough to forget the whole evening at the carnival,
but those who did not, well, the less spoken of them, the better family.
Besides, there was a sign mounted above the ticket booth stating clearly
that Erebus Cain's traveling marbles bore no responsibility for any injury to the body or mind of its audiences,
and by purchasing a ticket, patrons consented to witness what was on display,
and in doing so absolved the proprietor of all liability in relation there too.
No refunds would be issued, nor were the ticket holders entitled to any form of compensation
if they misjudged the strength of their stomachs or the measure of their mental fortitude.
If anyone asked too many questions,
Kane had a way of removing folks from the premises quickly.
If anything went two sideways.
Well, the eater was usually still a mite peckish, even after a show.
Whatever dwelt beneath that sheet served the owner of a little.
the traveling marvels not only as an attraction, but as an insurance pump.
The other exhibits knew better than to try to run or to give old Erebus any trouble,
lest they wake in the night to find the eater drifting into their sleeping quarters.
On this particular evening, Erebus Kane did not require the services of the eater of bones
nor any other in his employ.
He'd been tracking a potential new exhibit for the better part of a week.
The carnival they were most recently following had been shut down just outside of Harlan
after the county sheriff got stuck at the top of their rickety old Ferris wheel.
It'd been two hours before the carnies were able to get him down.
By which point the old boy was spitting mad,
and Airbus had seen the writing on the wall and had his lot packed up and on the road
heading east out of the bluegrass state,
long before Johnny Law could come sniffing around their end of the midway.
They'd pitch camp just this side of the Kentucky-Virginia line
to figure out the next move, and
Arabis Kane decided to take a little walk in the woods to clear his head.
Spending too much time in close proximity to the freaks
made his thoughts get squirly sometimes.
If he lingered too long in the eater's tent, for example,
he was sure to catch the dream.
It was on this walk he first noticed the signs
of something mighty interest in moving through the woods of Grant County, Virginia.
He spent a few nights sleeping rough,
following the trail through the thick brush before he saw.
spotted it. He couldn't tell exactly what it was, but it was young and it was scared.
He'd acquired a new attraction of similar variety just northwest to here closer to Hazard
when they'd passed through on their way to Harlan. She wasn't quite stage ready yet, and
she'd definitely require some coaching to mold her into a proper showdog, but this young fella here,
hmm, he looked ready-made for display.
Airbus could see the posters pasted all over the next podunk mine in town now. Come see the
Dog-faced boy marvel at nature's cruel handiwork.
He'd not approach the thing just yet.
He didn't want to spook it.
You never knew what freaks like this might do if they were spooked.
Most would just run, and then he'd have to waste time tracking it through the woods again.
And then there were the others.
Freak could be dangerous if it turned on you.
Erbis had learned that lesson the hard way,
and he only had to look at the mirror of scars that twas.
whisked across his flesh like a map to remind him any time he was tempted to forget it.
On the fifth night of watching the boys scamper around,
dragging back kindling and food he'd scavenged from the trash bins of a coal camp a mile or two over the ridge,
Erebus was preparing to make his moon.
When something happened and stopped him dead in his tracks,
a genuine red wolf,
trotted into the clearing where his new friend was tucking into his meager dinner
and stopped about 10 yards from the campfire.
The boy thing froze as he locked eyes with the russet-furred beast.
Erebus didn't dare wolves in this part of the mountains in almost 100 years so far as he knew.
Well, not proper wolves anyway.
The wolf carried her evening meal, a fat rabbit which she sat down at her feet as she gazed upon the boy.
Longest time, the two stared at each other in silence, and Erebus had begun to work,
This wandering predator might have decided his latest prospect made more of a worthy dinner than the bunny
When suddenly the wolf charged at the boy, Arribus choked back a shout but to his wonder she did not attack
Instead she ran up to the boy and allowed him to scruff her around the neck
After a few moments of this the red she-wolf settled on her ground
Threw back her head and with a low howl
Began to change her shape
Erebus Cain could not believe
his luck.
your word
lest you get
you deserve
when her cousin Anthony fled
into the night
Jade Louise Bitten had little other option
but to follow
Anthony could move far faster through the night
than their parents or any other folk
Jade had never seen
Franny or Tessa changed their shape
and she wasn't sure either of the women
could find their wolf anymore
she was the only one in the family
with any hope of catching him up
She was small for a wolf but lithe and quick.
And anyway, Mama and Aunt Tessa would have their hands full
tended to Anthony's daddy's wounds.
All the parents would be upset with her, of course.
They would worry and rightly so,
but if there was ever a time for asking forgiveness rather than permission,
Jade figured this was it.
So out the door, she ran into a crisp bottom night,
illuminated by the moon's silvery glow.
Jade had expected to overtake Anthony easily,
four legs generally being better than two.
She hadn't counted on how fast her cousin could move
in the strange, long-limbed half-shape he'd found himself in,
or just how powerfully he was motivated by fear and grief.
And by the time Jade had loped around to the back of the shed,
Anthony was already out of sight.
She cocked her head,
letting her nose and sharp ears lead the way.
His scent was strong on the air,
still coppery with blood from his recent change,
and she could make out the faint rustle of hurried footsteps through the woods
further away than she would have thought possible in so little time.
Jade put her head down and followed him into the trees.
It was a beautiful night.
Clear and cool.
The air filled with the rich scents of loam and wood smoke,
dead leaves and crab apples fermenting in the moist soil.
The moon kissed her fur and the wind tickled her nose
and in spite of everything, Jade's bones sang with a feral joy,
until she had found her wolf.
She had never known freedom, never known her own heart.
She had so looked forward to sharing this with her cousin, her closest friend.
To chasing each other through the woods, their paws pounding silent through the undergrowth,
to teach at him how to stalk rabbits and small prey,
and perhaps learning together how to bring down larger game.
An extra deer or two would not go unappreciated in their family during the long cold months of winter.
Broke Jade's heart to see Anthony struggle so with a transition that had become so natural for her.
Sure, it hurt.
Every time.
But the momentary pain was so little a price to pay for the symphony of sensation that sang through her nerves,
the world, a brilliant tapestry of sound, scent and color, even on two legs.
She felt more alive than she had ever known before the moon called to her.
Now that his body had begun to change, surely there must be some way she could help him feel his way fully into his wolf's skin.
She just had to find him and calm him down.
But finding Anthony was harder than Jade anticipated.
She followed his trail, nose twitching to catch his scent in the dense leaves,
and on the wind until it dead ended at the river that ran through the woods about a mile from the house.
With a grumble of frustration, she waited into the freezing water.
her thick fur growing heavy, but providing some protection from the chill and paddle across to the
other side. Once her paws found purchase, she hopped up onto the shore and shook the water from her
coat. Then she put her nose to the ground again and began walking the river's edge, nostrils
flaring as she scented for Anthony's trail, searching for the spot where he had come across.
No sin. No track. No sign of Anthony at all. Had he doubled back? Jade swam back across to the point
where she had entered the water and began making her way down river on the opposite side,
and still she found no side.
Could he have tried to swim upstream and come across someplace north of there?
It seemed unlikely, but she tried searching the opposite direction just the same in the end.
To her shock, it turned out Anthony had swum or perhaps floated by some means or another miles downstream.
It took her the rest of the night and most of the following day to pick up some trace of him,
by which point she was exhausted and had no choice but to rest.
Moonrise found her up and on the hunt again,
following her cousins sent deep into the mountains.
The trail was long cold by then,
and there were several times she lost it
and needed to double back or scout ahead to find the track again.
It took her the better part of a week to run him down,
by which point she'd pursued him all the way to Grant County,
just this side of the Kentucky line.
She'd found him creeping through a cold camp after dark, digging through the garbage bins for leftover food,
and her heart clenched with sympathetic misery.
He shouldn't have to live like this.
But the strange half-form he still occupied thwarted him in every possible way.
It was too awkward, too clumsy for hunting prey as he might in wolf shape,
yet far too strange for him to venture into human company.
He walked into a Kaz Walker looking like that, some terrified grocer would surely shift.
him. Jade followed Anthony back to his little camp in the woods at a discreet distance,
keeping up wind. She didn't want to spook him, and she couldn't know how sensitive the strange
not-quiet wolf's nose might be. She was pleased to know he had a little campfire going and had
done his best to construct a little shelter in the clearing. Jade watched him in silence for a while,
then slunk quietly away into the darkening woods.
She returned a few minutes later and slowly approached the edge of Anthony's camp,
walking steadily but cautiously into the glow of the firelight,
where she dropped the plump, fluffy rabbit she carried in her jaws.
Anthony froze at the sight of the red wolf that had trotted into his camp.
But then slowly, recognition dawned,
and some approximation of a smile crossed his puppyish face.
He tried to say her name, but his transformed mouth couldn't quite find his way around the consonants,
and what came out was more like.
Hey?
But she yipped encouragingly all the same, bouncing on her front paws.
Anthony grinned and held out his arms to her, and Jade picked up the rabbit and trotted over to him,
dropping her offering at his feet as he ruffled the thick fur around her neck.
She nudged the rabbit toward him again, and her cousin took the hint, smiling with gratitude as he picked through his pile of kindling for a piece of wood that might work for a spit.
It would make a far better meal for him than the crust of some miners left over Samage.
While Anthony fussed about with the rabbit, Jade settled herself onto the ground, turning her senses deep inward into blood and bone and sinew.
and began the slow bone-cracking shift back to her human shape.
And though the air was cold and she had no clothes with which to cover herself,
it would be far easier to talk sense to her cousin if she could, in fact, speak to him.
Understanding her intent, Anthony hurried to her side with an old time-worn quilt,
he must have snatched off somebody's clothesline and draped it over her writhing form
in the interest of both warmth and modesty.
When she had found two legs and fingers again,
Jade wrapped the blanket around herself gratefully
and settled next to her cousin
before the warmth of the campfire.
They had much to discuss.
Erebus Cain,
back slowly out of view of the dogboys camp,
careful to keep himself upwind of the pair.
His first impulse had been to swagger into their camp,
maybe offer a helping hand, but no.
That would be unwise.
This wasn't his first rodeo.
Erebus was familiar with what their kind were capable of,
and he didn't fancy the idea of potentially losing the hand offered in friendship.
The situation had to be handled delicately.
If all went well, he would simply escort his newest exhibits back to camp
and began making introductions, if not.
Well, if the carrot wouldn't work,
best come prepared with an appropriately large,
Oh, hey there, family.
Thank y'all for joining us for this installment of Old Gods of Appalachia Season 4, Root and Branch.
As we delve deeper into the impact our man Jack has had on generations of folk throughout our Appalachia.
There's so much more to come.
Why don't y'all just sit a spin?
Get comfortable.
That's right.
Y'all want something to drink?
All right.
Now, if you want to keep up with what's coming next with us, from live shows to new merchandise and beyond,
we encourage you to head on over to Old Gods of Appalachia.com and follow us on the social media
portals to the nether realms of your choosing. And if you like what we do so much, you want to support
us financially as well as spiritually, you can go on over to patreon.com slash old gods of
Appalachia and for a reasonable monthly or annual sum, gain access to hours and hours
of exclusive storyline content and special extras reserved just for the kinfolk who go that extra mile
for us. We appreciate y'all ever so much. And now it's time.
for that every time I see you down to the grocery store
reminder that old gods of Appalachia
is a production of deep nerd media distributed by
Rusty Quill. Today's story
was written by Cam Collins and Steve
Shell. Our intro music is by
Brother Landon Blood and our outro music
Atonement is by brother John
Charles Dwyer. The voice of
Arabas Kane was Darren Marshall.
Talk to you soon, family.
Talk to you real soon.
