Old Gods of Appalachia - Episode 58: Opportunity Knocks
Episode Date: November 30, 2023“I told you to be quick, young ones. Best you run.”CW: Gunshot, kidnapping, threats of physical harm, industrial doors slamming, sound of a man screaming in the distance, gore, death, dismembermen...t and sounds of consumption by a monster, mention of death of a parent due to cancer. Written by Cam Collins Narrated 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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So listener discretion is advised.
In the cavernous room, far beneath the mountains of West Virginia,
Jade Louise Benton sipped at a glass of water while the man questioning her looked over his notes
and the folks in the gallery milled about chatting quietly.
It had been a long day.
And with everyone clearly growing tired and peckish,
the Harbinger had signaled the bailiff for a brief recess.
Refreshments have been provided for the witnesses
and for the representatives of the green and the dark ham sandwiches,
coffee, and water.
The assembled looky-loos were on their own, apparently,
and appeared that some had come prepared with snacks.
while others were just out of luck.
The man facing trial had been afforded no such accommodation.
At least not until the smartly dressed woman seated beside him and made a fuss on his behalf.
The five women who comprised the Rock's council filed back into the chamber,
and the folks in the gallery returned to their seats.
The bailiff struck her staff ceremonially against the stone floor,
each thrust reverberating through the space in a way,
that hurt Jade's sensitive ears.
She grimaced and quickly polished off the last of her glass of water,
which was whisked away by one of the white-sashed attendants who moved about the room.
Hiram Cook rose from the table where he had sat conferring with the representative of the dark,
Miss Gray, and approached the front of the room.
Er, uh, you're ready to continue, Miss Benton?
Jade nodded, and Hiram regarded her with a serious expression.
Now, it has been your testimony and that of Miss Metters before you that this man,
a Arabis Kane, kidnapped the three of you.
Yes, sir, so he did.
Hiram nodded thoughtfully.
Well, Miss Benton, it seems a curse to me, and I'm sure the others assembled here.
Hiram's arm swept around in a gesture encompassing the council, the assorted witnesses,
the onlookers, and presumably the mountain itself, that this man could make.
managed to hold hostage three such capable young folks as yourselves.
Weirwolves, I'm told, are mighty strong.
You, yourself, in fact, have testified to your cousin Anthony's colossal strength.
The three of you together?
Again, one man?
Hiram chuckled, shaking his head.
I don't mind saying, Miss Benton, it just don't seem likely.
Jade felt a flush creep up her chest, staining her neck and cheeks of bright pink.
They hadn't wanted any part of this.
They didn't know this J.T. Fields from Adam.
They only agreed because Mr. Cook had promised
that he could help Anthony find his wolf,
and now the man had the gall to stand here and call her a liar.
I just told you it wasn't just one man.
Jade snapped.
Mr. Kane had a mess of folks working for him.
If you broke the rules, he'd said one of his three lackeys
to have a little talk with you.
If you were lucky, it was just Granny Cloud.
Hell, even the Goliath weren't too bad.
Maybe he'd give you a black eye, something like that.
but he never did no permanent harm.
After all, you wouldn't want to damage the talent.
But if you weren't lucky, he'd send the eater round to your bunk.
Jade shuddered.
Ain't nobody wanted that.
So, Erbis Cain used this eater as a sort of enforcer to keep folks in line.
And you're telling me, you three were so afraid of this fellow
you didn't try to escape.
At that, Jade laughed out loud.
Of course we escaped.
We wouldn't be here if we hadn't, now would we?
We got away.
It just took some time because, yes, we were afraid of him.
Of it.
The eater ain't some feller.
I don't know what it is, but I'm telling you,
there's some things in this world a lot scarier than wolves, Mr. Cook.
These old roots run and dusty bones.
dark and hungry branches
split and new blood flows
A ghost of a past
You thought rise the haunt the young
The shadow falls
The judgment comes
Treads off my friend
Amongst your fellow
Think you're born your word
Lest you get what you deserve
In Jade Louise Benton did not tell
Hiram Cook in the denizens of the green
And the inner dark gathered at the rock
Was that being with the traveling marvels hadn't been all bad?
That part was more complicated to explain, family.
The fact was,
Erebus Cain didn't treat the members of the bone-picking string band too badly.
They became a star attraction after all.
To Erebus Cain, the three young wolves were valuable assets,
and it was in his best interest to keep them pacified,
so he never had to send his muscle to have a talk with them.
When Cain returned to the warehouse as promised the next day,
he came bearing both honeyed words and paper sacks loaded with breakfast.
As the rolling door rattled open on its chain,
he peered in at the spot the three of them had camped out for the night,
settled on a couple of old mattresses and piles of blankets they'd salvaged
from the depths of the storage building.
They watched him warily.
Uncertain how Airbus would react when he discovered Anthony had escaped his shackle,
but he had merely chuckled.
Got them off him, did you?
Clever.
He spoke to Clover in the fond tones of a benevolent uncle
as the Goliath ever at his side,
passed out the bags of food
along with the thermos of popping hot coffee they would have to share.
My sincerest apologies for the rough accommodations, my young friends.
You've caught us rather at loose ends,
as our last run was, well, cut unexpectedly short.
but I believe our luck is about to change, not just mine, but yours as well.
As Jade, Anthony, and Clover tore into the bacon and eggs and sausage and biscuits,
more fit and fair for three young wolves than the previous night's canned beans.
Erebus Kane had spoken in nigh poetic tones of how he'd heard their playing from his
office above the warehouse the night before and had been moved to tears by their talents.
He said he would love to offer them a permanent place with the sideshow as its new headline attraction,
with all the pay and benefits commensurate with that lofty position.
Room and board are included, of course.
Three hot meals a day and all the popcorn you can stomach.
You'll see the whole of this great country,
alongside the finest troop of entertainers you'll ever have the privilege to meet.
We're like a little family here at the Traveling Marvels.
I'm sure you'll fit right in.
Jade had wanted to go home.
She was sure their parents were worried,
but Anthony was still convinced he would not be welcomed back
after his attack on his daddy,
and she would not abandon him.
Besides that, truth to tell,
it was easy to get caught up in Ere of his cane's enthusiasm.
The man was, after all, a veteran of the stage and a season promoter.
The confidence he professed for their nascent musical career was flattering.
And if his stage was not quite the sort whose boards were once tread by their grandfather,
it was one that could perhaps provide a showcase for their more unique gifts.
As for Clover, while she was more than a little skeptical of the showman's promises,
and more than a little resentful of the treatment she had received thus far.
She had to admit that before Kane had learned her secret,
she had enjoyed the time she'd spent on the road with the sideshow.
Hell, she'd consider her asking the man if he needed any spare hands.
Clover had spent most of her young life being shuttled between one place and the next.
She was used to life on the road and found it agreed with her.
If one town didn't suit her fancy, there was always the potential for something better just around the next bend.
But it was a lonesome sort of existence, and she had appreciated the camaraderie Airbus' crew seemed to share.
The traveling marvels was indeed a place where outcasts were embraced and accepted.
That was one of the very few things, as it would turn out, that Arabis Kane did not lie about.
The young musicians were allowed to keep the instruments they had discovered the night before,
and Kane set them to work practicing.
They spent the better part of a month learning songs and getting to know the sideshow's other attractions.
There was a set of conjoined twins, Lucy and Lola,
and the bearded lady, Miss Josephine, who functioned as sort of a house mother
for the dancers of the burlese troop providing choreography, costume design,
and a shoulder to cry on in what seemed to be equal measure.
There was Manfred the contortionist,
a skinny man whose pale skin was completely hairless,
who told jokes so corny,
Jade thought even her dad would be ashamed.
The sideshow, of course, did not operate with performers alone.
It was also home to a number of other folks
who worked behind the scenes to make the whole show possible.
There were ticket sellers and cooks and ride operators
and a few hard-looking men who kept the crowds
from putting hands on the dancers
or otherwise harassing the talent.
Anthony's favorite of these was the side show's engineer.
A short, wiry little feller with a scruffy ginger beard and thinning hair,
he perpetually kept hidden under a flat cap known as the marvelous mechanic.
Mike O'Connell was his name,
and he had been with the side show since he was around Anthony's age.
Mike was a mechanical genius and a sly wit,
a convivial cut-up who was absolutely essential to keeping the whole operation running.
Then, of course, that was how everyone referred to Erebus Cain's closest associates,
privately if they knew what was good for them.
The Goliath was one of them, along with the sideshow's fortune-teller, Granny Cloud,
an austere woman who kept mostly to herself, and of course, there was the eater.
Nobody talked about it, and nobody used its name.
It was spoken of only in whispers and referred to then only as it, or him.
depending on who was doing the whispering.
At first, the young wolves couldn't quite understand
what everybody seemed to find so scary about the geek,
but they would learn.
They spent about a month in the little compound
where the sideshow made camp in between gigs
before Erebus announced he had struck a deal
with a carnival based out of Florida.
And they would be traveling south
to meet up with it on the outskirts of Mobile
as it made its way north.
Kane had scrounged up a batter-old camper
from a salvage yard up near Harbour,
to serve as a mobile accommodation for the bone-picking string band.
When he totered into the fenced-in lot surrounded the warehouse,
all busted up from some wreck or another,
folks immediately began debating just how much money had been lost
on what was clearly a bad investment.
But somehow, Mike O'Connell, the marvelous mechanic himself,
had managed to work one of his miracles on the old junker.
And within a week, she was running like a top.
He hitched it to one of the trucks,
not currently towing anything else,
and soon they were on their way.
The early performances of the dog-faced boy and the bone-picking string band did not quite pan out as Arabis Kane had hoped.
Audiences were too focused on Anthony's appearance to pay much attention to the music.
And when the band simply ignored their shouted questions and taunts, they tended to get a little rowdy,
a situation only exacerbated by the beers that were allowed to sell any time they traveled through a wet county.
It wasn't until their third performance was derailed when security was forced to remove a dozen men from their team.
that Anthony had seized upon the solution to their problem.
Remember in that first night they'd spent at the warehouse,
joking around and haphazardly assembled costumes,
he sought out the ladies of the burlesque troop for a wardrobe consultation.
The next evening, when the bone-picking string band took the stage,
the sight that greeted the audience was one that would become their calling card.
Two women, one on fiddle and the other with a guitar,
dressed in severe black-collar dresses,
buttoned up to the neck and wide-brimmed black-haired.
alongside a tall, lanky figure draped in a voluminous black veil,
and holding the most beautiful banjo the crowd had ever seen.
For a moment, the house fell silent, not quite knowing what to expect.
In the back of the room, Anthony's eyes found Miss Josephine, who nodded encouragingly.
Next to them, he spotted Arabis cane, his brows lowered into an ugly scowl,
clearly not pleased with this new look.
The band then lost into an eerie rendition of
In the Shadow of the Pines.
Clover and Jade's voices rising in planet of harmony
and he had no more thoughts to spare
for whatever Cain might think of his outfit.
He was transported by the song
just as surely as the folks gathered around the stage
listening and rapt attention.
And when they played the final note,
the tent erupted with applause.
Clover shot Jade a brief grin
before they launched into the night.
next song and the next and the next and by their final and upbeat crowd pleaser the audience was stomping
their feet hooting and hollering in a far different fashion from the reception they'd received at their first few gigs
as the piece reached his crescendo anthony whipped off his veil and all three members of the band threw back their heads
and howled the crowd exploded cheering and clapping and calling for an encore which they were happy to provide
There were no more heckling, no ugly slurs or beer cans hurled at the stage, only thunderous applause.
And perhaps the loudest was that of Erebus Cain, who was now grinning from ear to ear.
After that, things were all right for a time.
If not so glorious as they had been led to believe,
Kane had neglected to mention on that fateful morning when he released them from the warehouse
that the room and board he promised would be deducted from their wages.
little of which they had actually seen.
While others were paid promptly every Friday morning,
either a flat rate or a portion of ticket sales distributed by Granny Cloud,
the three young wolves received a few dollars allowance,
alongside a balance sheet which showed the compensation they were owed
minus room and board and this weekly allotment.
When they questioned the practice,
they were told the bulk of their pay was being held in trust,
owing to the fact that they were not yet of legal age.
Wouldn't want you to spend it all in one place, now would we?
We have to think about your future.
Is your weekly stipend not enough?
Do you find yourselves wanting?
Kane asked, and upon reflection, the honest answer was no.
The amount doled out to each of them each week by Granny Cloud
had been enough to cover what few expenses they had,
toil of trees and other necessities picked up in town when needed,
the occasional paperback book or candy bar or some other tree.
Clover, however, was having none of it.
That ain't the point, she told him flatly.
You owe us. It's right there on the balance sheet, and it's growing every week.
My dear, that is entirely my point.
Kane told her in a patronizing tone.
I am looking out for your best interests.
If you find yourselves in need of something specific,
by all means come to me and we'll discuss.
He would entertain no further argument, and the Goliath showed them politely but firmly out of the management tent.
Pecuniary discontent aside, the bone-picking string band was seeing the whole wide country.
They roamed the deep south during the winter months, spending time on the beach in Florida and the Gulf Coasts
and wandering the streets of New Orleans during Mardi Gras.
A time when folks didn't glance twice at Anthony's, they weave between throngs of tourists,
assuming his furry face was part of a costume.
dawn for the festivities.
In the summer, they headed north to the Midwest.
The sideshow opened in its tents beneath starry skies that stretched all the way to the horizon
as if the vast maw of space might swallow them up at any moment.
They saw the Great Lakes and the Grand Canyon, Mount Rushmore and Mount Hood
and far stranger things all across the wide expanse of North America.
And eventually, they saw the eater.
By this time, of course, they had technically seen the eaters.
show. The performance he put on for the curious and the crass who wandered through the flaps of his
tent every evening, sooner or later you saw everybody run through their routine in a side show.
It was unsettling. No doubt about that. It was understandable while the threat of a visit from
the eater persuaded the rag-tag assortment of outsiders and oddities that formed the traveling
marvels to mind their peas and cues. But the three wolves,
weren't really afraid.
Surely they thought Mr. Kane wouldn't actually send the eater after a member of his own
troop.
They were, after all, valuable commodities.
Talented performers and hardworking crew members, everyone played their part, and everybody
was needed.
But Airbus Kane was not a man to forgive in subordination.
If sending the eater to pay someone a visit was tantamount cutting off his nose to spite his
face, then by God, he'd just do without a nose.
The dog daves of summer were upon them, and the sideshow was winding its way through
Missouri, heading back east for a brief stop at their base of operations when it happened.
They set up camp on the banks of the Missouri River just outside of Kansas City and were hastily
erecting tents and stages and booths when a stranger wandered into their midst. He was young.
somewhere in his twenties probably and incongruously dressed for the occasion in a plain gray suit and tie he moved among them looking around but not speaking to anyone until the fortune-teller granny cloud spotted him outside her tent and signaled to the goliah
excuse me young man she called out to him ma'am me yes you uh the traveling marvels is not yet open
for business to hear. I'm afraid it can be
hazardous for patrons
to be on site while we're making
preparations. I'm going
to have to ask you to come back this
evening. The young
man was not in fact
a potential customer.
His name was Sean O'Connell
and he was looking for his
older brother Michael.
As it turned out, Kansas City was the
marvelous mechanics hometown.
His brother had heard the side show
was in town and come to find him because
their mother was gravely ill.
He had written letters, Sean explained,
but it seemed none of them had found their way to the traveling show.
No, they didn't, Mike had said with a reassuring glance
in the direction of Erebus Cain's tent.
It was a curious thing as Erebus employed a courier to see to it
that important mail found its way into their hands,
no matter where in the country they might happen to be.
Then Mike smiled and clapped his younger brother on the show,
shoulder and marched over to the management tent to inform the boss he would need to be absent from work
for a matter of days, perhaps a week.
Erbis Kane, forbid it.
How could they possibly function without their mechanic to assist with assembly of stages,
rides, and other attractions every night?
No, no, no, this was quite impossible.
He was terribly sorry to hear about Mike's mother.
He would make sure to have flowers sent to her hospital room that very afternoon.
Mike nodded grimly and got back to work.
The show opened right on time and just as the sun set,
and it was a profitable night all around,
particularly for the bone-picking string band.
Kansas City was a town that loved its music,
and folks were excited to come out and witness their unique brand to pick him.
When the crowds dispersed and the gates closed, however,
Mike O'Connell was nowhere to be found.
Kane did not comment publicly on,
on his disappearance, but to the wolf's sensitive ears, his displeasure was evident.
They heard cursing coming from his tent late into the night, long past when everybody else
had gone to bed.
Four days later, on the morning of their final day in Kansas City, Mike returned bright and
early, his cheeks sunken and eyes hollow, though he still greeted everybody with a half-hearted
smile.
His mother had passed, he explained.
after a six-month battle with cancer.
He had spent the week tied up with funeral arrangements
and helping his family seed to the disposition
of what few worldly goods she had possessed.
He was welcomed back by his compatriots in the troop
with hugs and condolences and more than a few furtive glances
in Mr. Kane's direction.
Before everybody got to work preparing to open for the evening,
Erebus Kane said nothing of the incident.
And everything seemed to find.
The sideshow packed itself up after the gates closed,
preparing to move on to St. Louis the following morning.
Once every one had more or less settled in for the night,
Anthony had left their cozy little camper to seek out his friend.
He thought perhaps might welcome some company,
perhaps around a poker or two to take his mind off his greed.
The mechanic usually bedded down in a simple tent at the edge of the camp.
With the big tents surrounding them various ages packed away,
Anthony had a clear line of sight to the tent.
lit from within by an old kerosene lamp about 100 yards across the flat field where they had set up shop.
He was halfway there when the screaming started.
The walls of the tent began to shake and something red splashed against its interior.
Anthony broke into a run, instinctively raising his voice in a howl to alert his packmates that something was wrong,
and Anthony was fast.
But by the time he'd crossed the 50 yards remaining between him and the place where Mike was camped,
The screaming had stopped.
Jade and Clover caught up to him as he slowed approaching the tent.
Now glowing red in the lamplight as if died.
Mike?
Clover called out in a tense voice.
No one answered, though.
Canvas walls that get here wet, tearing sounds.
Inerspersed with Pop, too afraid to reach for the tent flap
as the horrible noises continue.
When the small shelter finally fell silent
and still, and they found the courage to peek inside.
There was nothing left but canvas and grass soaked in blood,
a few fragments of bone and gristle and a solitary pinky finger,
familiar by the crooked middle knuckle and fingernail permanently blackened with grease.
Only later would it occur to them that no one else responded to the screams or Anthony's house,
They knew, had perhaps known from the moment Mike left camp what was coming, the eater.
It was then.
The bone-picking string band knew they had to get out and get far away from Erebus cane.
They just didn't know how.
There was first and foremost the eater to consider, and secondly, there was the itinerant nature of the sideshow itself.
Even if they managed to escape and make their way back home to Esau County, the traveling marvels roamed all across the
country, in particular the South, since that was their base of operations, there was no
guarantee that Arabis Kane wouldn't find them eventually, perhaps by sheer coincidence.
They pondered the question for the better part of a week, though they tried to keep it
amongst themselves. The mood around the sideshow had grown notably less familial,
everyone cagey and suspicious, afraid of being reported to Mr. Kane for even the slightest breach of his
rules, if someone is vital to day-to-day operations as the show's mechanic could be sacrificed,
then no one was indispensable.
Late one night after they shared a gloomy meal in the mess tip before it was packed away
in advance of their departure for the next town, they happened upon Granny Cloud and joined
a cigarette outside the velvety folds of her embroidered tent.
They nodded at her respectfully, prepared to move on to their camper, but she smiled
and waved them over, and to their surprise, invited them inside.
Good evening, my talented young friends.
Would you care to join me for a cup of tea?
The three of them followed her into the warm confines of the tent
and scrunched together on the padded bench near the door
as she fetched four dainty cups,
edged in gold in a copper tea kettle from a camp stove near the back.
She set cream and sugar in the center of the ornately car,
of round table between them and invited them to help themselves.
Anthony loaded his cup with sugar while Jade started in a bit of both.
Clover took hers black, as did Granny Cloud, who nodded at her approvingly.
They sipped their tea in silence.
Not quite knowing what to say is they thus far had enjoyed little interaction
with the beautiful older woman with her white hair and piercing eyes.
Granny Cloud rarely socialized with the rest of the performers,
preferring to keep to her own devices.
She didn't seem to mind the lack of conversation
as she relaxed into the plush armchair across from them.
As they finished their tea, however,
she reached out for each of their cups,
which she placed on the table in front of her,
setting aside her own and gazing pensively
at the dregs of leaves scattered in the bottom.
There's a change in the air for y'all.
All three of you, she pronounced.
Her eyes narrowed and she nodded thoughtful.
opportunity is blowing on the wind,
but you must be quick to seize it,
quick and clever lest the hour grow too late.
The three of them exchanged a glance.
It was Clover who found the nerve to speak.
Ma'am, you'll pardon me saying, but...
What the hell is that supposed to mean?
Granny Cloud merely shrugged and fixed her with a thin,
feline smile, I suppose you'll find out. I'm afraid my vision is no clearer than that.
It appears those blessed with the wolf are challenging to read.
She lifted the kettle and poured another round of tea and asked. As she settled back into her chair,
she steered the conversation in a less confusing direction. I understand we're headed for Louisville next.
Lovely City, one of my favorites.
Mr. Cain's as well.
Did you know it's home to the Kentucky Derby?
Mr. Cain enjoys horse racing, as I understand it,
there's a race our first night in town.
Mr. Cain will likely be off-ground for the entire evening.
Granny Cloud fixed them with a canny look.
You lock should steer clear of horses.
They're afraid of wolves, you know.
When they had finished their second cups of tea,
Granny Cloud sent the three of them on their way,
siding the late hour and the early morning awaiting them,
and as they walked back to their cozy tin lizzie, however,
Clover glanced back over her shoulder.
At her nudge, Jade and Anthony looked back as well,
just in time to see the hulking form of the Goliath
ducking his head to follow the fortune-teller into the folds of her tent.
The following week found them just outside of Louisville
where they set up camp in a wide field on the edge of a small horse farm.
They were greeted by a tall athletic woman of Amazonian proportions
with lush, dark hair and a bright smile.
She was introduced as their host and owner of the farm,
one of Erebus Kane's oldest friends, Maria Rivas.
Erebus swept her a courtly bow and kissed her hand.
Apparently she would also be his companion at the races.
The two of them bantered back and forth
for a moment about which of them would take the other one's money that night before Kane led her into his tent.
And everybody else began the long day's work of preparing the grounds for the show.
The bone-picking string band worked together to quickly assemble their stage in the tent they performed in
as tonight's full moon meant they would need to play early, just after the gates opened and before that silvery orb climbed over the horizon.
They played their latest set to an appreciative, if sparse, audience.
Folk didn't much like being seen patronizing a sideshow,
so the crowds tended to be heavier at night,
and then headed back to the camper,
where they began hastily stuffing, changes of clothing, some snacks,
and canteens filled with fresh water into a pair of small nap-sacks
they had found in the warehouse the last time they'd made a stop at the sideshow's compound.
The guitar, fiddle, and banter cases went into a huge duffel bag
they had sewn together out of grain sacks and fashioned with straps so that Anthony could carry them on his back.
Tonight they reasoned must be their opportunity Granny Cloud had foreseen.
There would be no better chance to flee than when Erebus Kane was in the city preoccupied with gambling and his pretty companion.
When the moon rose high overhead, Jade and Clover reached for their wolf's shapes and began the brief but painful transition to four legs.
The girls lay panting for a time.
Recovering and drinking water from a small bowl, Anthony sat down for them.
Then the wolf boy carefully looped two of the packs around their necks and tied them onto their backs,
slung the sack of instruments over his own shoulders, and the three of them slipped quietly out the rear door of the camper,
relying on the darkness and the roar of the crowds, packing the carnival grounds for cover as they crept around the back side of the camp,
angling for the woods on the edge of the field.
They encountered no one lurking around the scattering of tents and campers that made up the troop's personal quarters.
No one called out.
No one seemed to notice their passing at all as they carefully slipped past the gates and headed toward the welcome shadows of the wolf's green embrace.
They had just made it to the presumed safety of the trees when there was footfall behind them.
The snapping of a branch and a voice rang out.
Now just where do you children think your children think you're.
going. The wolves froze, slowly turning to face Erebus Cain. The man had appeared seemingly
out of nowhere, not 20 feet behind them, the Goliath at his side. He held a pistol in his hand,
the hammer cocked, aimed with a steady hand at Anthony's chest. Noddy puppies. And here I
find myself without a rolled-up newspaper. Anthony tensed and Clover growled as,
As Cain advanced on them, shaking his head and mocked sadness he gestured with his gun.
Come, now.
Back to camp.
He glanced toward the Goliath.
It seems you were right, old friend.
We never should have trusted these mutts.
Arab's cane was interrupted by another voice, echoing cold and imperious through the shadows.
Put the weapon down, Herb.
Now.
With a rustle of leaves as her long skirt swept through the underbrush,
Granny Cloud stepped from the darkness behind Aribus Cain,
gliding along under its dirty sheet, the eater of bones followed.
Arabis Cain turned to one side,
the pistol swinging between the wolves on one side and the fortune teller on the other.
So you're helping them, Annie?
Really?
You must be going soft in your old age.
He spat, glaring at Granny Cloud.
Goliath, get the wolves.
Eater!
Introduce Mrs. Cloud to the fate met by those who show such disloyalty.
The eater, nearly floating silently at Granny's side.
The Goliath, on the other hand, took two long steps to one side,
coming to stand at Granny Cloud's opposite shoulder.
What?
What is this?
Granny Cloud's lips curved into a feral grin.
Why?
Why, it's a coup, Herbert.
What does it look like?
I'm afraid the sideshow is now under new management,
and your position has been eliminated.
She glanced briefly over at the three young wolves,
all but forgotten by Erebus Kane or Herbert Guthrie,
depending on your position.
Her eyes shining bright in the moonlight,
teeth flashing in a wicked smile.
I told you to be quick, young ones.
Best you.
Then she turned back to Erebus Kane,
and the trio began to advance on the oily huckster
who had been their employer and taskmaster
and albatross for far too long.
Arabis raised his pistol and fired,
but the three kept on coming.
Anthony, Jade, and Clover
turned and fled.
Thank you for joining us once again.
It's time to find out how the bone-picking string band
escaped the clutches of one Arabis cane
and his traveling marvels.
Now, how will this reflect on our man Jack once all is said and done?
Is old Hiram Cook ready to be in the bad books of three young,
young and hungry werewolves, he keeps pushing his luck.
Hmm.
I guess you'll have to come back next time.
Find out what comes next in the trial of Mr. J.T. Fields of Paradise.
Now, if you want to keep up with all the latest news out of Esau County, Baker's Gap, Boggs, Holla,
even all the way back up in Barrow, Pennsylvania, and all other points of interest within
the shadow of these, the darkest mountains in the world, then you want to head on over to
old gods of Appalachia.com and follow us on the twisting and shadowy social media.
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and our brand new animal companion focus series, Familiar and Beloved,
are just waiting for you to deepen your knowledge of the lore of this, our Appalachia.
Now, this is your prayer meeting.
You're still on Wednesday night where y'all been, reminder that Old Gods of Appalachia is a production of deep nerd media distributed by Rusty Quill.
Today's episode was written by the one and only Cam Collins.
Our theme song is by Brother Landon Blood, and our outro music, Atonement, is by Brother John Charles Dwyer.
The voice of Erebus Kane was Darren Marshall.
We'll talk to you soon, family. Talk to you real soon.
