Old Gods of Appalachia - Episode 6: The Witch Queen Chapter II: Doubt
Episode Date: December 26, 2019"To live forever and keep this land..." was the promise made. What happens when a promise is kept but with a vile and broken spirit?CW: Physical trauma as a result of a fall, descriptions of occult pr...actices, implied death of a family by monster violence.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.
It's a horror anthology podcast
and therefore may contain material
not suitable for all audiences.
So listener discretion is advised.
Winter in Appalachia
is one of the most beautiful ways
that a man could ever die.
The silence of a snow-covered mountain top
is breathtaking in more than a few ways.
You see, the mountains of the Cumberland
will present you like an altar
to a slate and death-colored sky.
The wind knows your name,
but it only speaks it when you have no more need of it.
The cold of that December is a slow seduction,
a crystallizing respirations that fills the body
with a white burning numbness,
this frozen purgatory,
this middle hell,
this cellar where a body is set,
so a spring thaw can return it to the earth.
Well, this is where Timothy Vanover,
of the logging camp turned incipient town, a yellow oak,
found himself on the day after Christmas in 1821.
Brother Tim, still sprine of eye at the ripe old age of 27,
had been hunting, trying to clear his head from a disorienting few days.
He had not counted on the snoburned.
No picking back up, much less a second full-on storm.
But when all was said and done, it had blown through,
painted the world a blinding shade of heaven that erased all track
and would have spun the compass of the most-seasoned traveler.
Tim Vanover was not the world's most-season traveler.
In fact, he hated traveling,
hated wandering in these woods foraging and hunting for food
when the supply wagons were delayed by snow.
He'd only come here on the behest of his father-in-law to be, now his father-in-law, in fact,
to scout a potential logging territory.
He'd done the initial outlay and returned to New York,
and as a reward, been allowed to marry Albert Dunaway's daughter, Clara.
Then he returned here without her to get things up and running along with her know-it-all brother Anson, Dunaway.
Yellow Oak was a solid encampment of veteran woodsmen and foresters,
and what started out as a tent-driven town now had real buildings
was feeling more and more like a place of trade and commerce every day.
Wives were being sent for, children brought in, houses being established.
And it was to that tune.
There was absolutely no correspondence and zero warning.
Clara Vanover had arrived in Yellow Oak.
Now it's said that absence makes the heart grow fonder,
but to Tim's perception it seemed like his absence
that just made Claire grow.
More than likely was his brief visit home for a honeymoon,
because when Clara Vanover made her way off the wagon,
her body was swollen and glowing,
full up with their child.
But Tim had never wanted to be a father if he was honest.
His own old man had been a thieving drunk
who left Tim and his mama to fend for themselves,
so he didn't feel like he had a lot to go on in ways of example.
But here he was.
And after two solid days,
waiting on his flower of a wife hand and foot and worried about everything from her not making it
through the labor to the baby not even being his to how badly he would in fact fail as a father
he decided he had to get out of the house had to get out of the town at least for a day or
he might run for real now tim had never hunted a day in his life but a hunting he would go
See, Tim was good with measuring
And he was good with figures
And he was usually pretty good at being careful
Now you think the measuring part might help and figure out
That he was only a half mile away from camp when he got lost
And it was just obscured by the next rise in the snowfall
But it didn't
And you might think that since Tim Vanover
Was usually one of the most cautious
And logistically prepared people ever to ride south
That he might have dressed warmer
Brought better supplies
But he didn't
He rushed out of town
So quick he'd woefully underpacked
And didn't think it would get that cold
But it did
You also might have thought that he would remember
That there were two trails back home
Two trails that he himself had surveyed
When the site was established
One that led back to town from the deeper woods
It rounded right
Into a tight curve
But then the road widened back out
To a safe spot
And then there was the one that went to the left.
It looked similar, but petered out into a drop-off that was a surefire way to break your neck.
I'll give you two guesses which one our distracted brother Timothy chose.
Hell, the first one won't even count.
So there he lay.
Baby on the way, back likely broken.
The white arms of a mountain winter opening to take him home.
He closed his eyes and prepared to sleep his last when he heard footsteps approaching through the snow and a woman's voice.
Hello!
Oi! There! You!
Are you dead?
He don't look dead. Not yet, anyway.
Does he smell dead, Bartholomew?
Tim's senses were overwhelmed by the heat and musk of a massive animal.
Something larger than just about anything he'd ever been around.
He breathed deep and deep.
almost gagged. His eyes closed time. What was that a horse? A bull? The heat and nearness was tremendous
as he felt a huge snout nuzzle him and give a loud. Tim opened his eyes wider than he ever
thought he could to see a bear the size of his worst nightmare moving away from him. Not just the
largest bear to ever live, but a bear in the company of a woman. A young woman, no, she couldn't
mean more than 20. Maybe.
She had her hair bundled up under a woolen hood.
Her face was only visible because she'd unwrapped a scarf so she'd be able to speak
to a bear.
Tim knew he was dying now, or had died, or had lost his senses and was on his way to dying,
but he watched as this woman...
Girl? It was hard to tell her age, but he watched as she removed that hood and shook out a mane
a russety hair that framed her pale face and made her gray eyes shine.
Oh, you're not dead at all?
She exclaimed, and she leaned down and cupped his chin hard, looking into his eyes.
Her face and hair and sweet scent overpowering his senses as much as the bear had.
Wait, where did the bear go?
There had been a bear, hadn't there?
But right now, she was all he could process.
Her eyes were like flint.
seeking and questioning seemed to mind beyond his understandingly behind them her features were not delicate or finely made as his pig of a father-in-law would say
but there was a fierce nobility to this young woman a survivor's grace i think we can move him he heard her say oh but first then timothy felt a glass jar being tipped to his lips
and he swallowed and everything was warm and his vision grew soft around the edges.
He watched as she wrestled her hair back under her hood and rewrapped the scarf around her mouth.
And she's more than beautiful, as drows and mind offered.
Well, she's downright regal, you know, like a queen.
I can't stay now in the land of her.
She'd gotten the man back to the little town that had sprung up down by the bend
and what they were calling the clinch river.
She'd had Bartholomew go home first, so not to scare the folks,
but she'd hobbled up by herself with the broken man on a sled and giving him back to his people.
Her heart swooned when she saw his wife go to pieces when she saw him.
Oh, that girl was eight months in, if anything, that she looked fit to pop right there.
She asked the boss at the gate if they had a doctor to look to the woman and the man.
Place like this might, they'd gone from tents to sheds to real buildings in just a few years.
They said they had a doctor who come in every three months and a granny to tend to the man or deliver the baby if it came to that before then.
She'd met their granny before.
She'd found her gathering in the far corner of her valley, and they knew each other that way on sight.
looked like an older woman who had much of the knowledge but only some of the gift.
She was not a threat, but she was not a friend either.
They traded pleds and trees if not names, greeted each other as sister, and the woman
had apologized if she'd crossed any of her lines, she had not, but she thanked her all the same.
The woman would not meet her eyes, though.
In an earlier day when she was younger, she might have took that as a warning sign.
But now, in the 65th year of walking these hills, our good daughter Dooley knew it wasn't the other woman's fault.
It was on her.
She could smell it on her, she bet.
She had accepted the deal offered by the dark and the stag.
She had been allowed to grow to her 19th year.
and in fact had not aged one day past it.
Hell, she was old enough to be a granny herself by now,
and her hair remained as lush and full in its red-brown glory.
Her face untouched by time or weather.
Her body stayed young and spry and fertile.
She'd cut her hands and wrists and arms a thousand times over by accident
and on purpose.
bore not a single scar
fire
refused to burn her
cold was merely a discomfort
the magic of what this land was
and what lay beneath this land
healed her
kept her young and strong
but it kept her for itself
now she knew the yellow oak had a granny
she had no idea why she'd even asked
it was not like she didn't have
plenty of her own chores to do, a garden to tend, animals to raise and feed and butcher when
it was time. She wanted for nothing. She had a desire or need like food, clothing, tools,
hell, even like beer or liquor. It would just appear, wrapped in brown paper on her porch the next
day. Well, that was another thing. She had a porch. She had a proper house now. But that
a little shed she'd been abandoning as a girl had not been torn down, but had been built onto,
in some places built around.
See, early one morning in her 20th year, not long after she'd stopped aging and she realized it,
six men emerged from the forest who did not speak.
Men with blank eyes and slack jaws, who had clearly walked miles without food or water,
They gave her a letter written in a sprawling black script.
It was not signed and in the future they never would be.
But this letter explained these men were hers and they were to make her comfortable
and she could use them however she wished.
She swore she heard the beast's blush rousing laugh when she read that last bit.
She had no idea why she blushed.
why she blushed.
She had no use for men that way.
She had no use for women that way either.
Solitude suited her in that way, it seemed.
I didn't keep her from being lonely, though.
The six men, as she came to call them, were poor company.
They did not speak, but they would listen
and do whatever she asked.
She learned, though, that she had to be very careful
when she told them what to do.
Once she told them to fetch wood and build her a new privy, and off into the woods they went.
Two hours later they come back with wood that had already been painted with nails jutting from it,
clearly torn from an existing house, and the men's hands were bloody,
their faces spattered with it, and she told them to stand still and not move.
She proceeded to make the hour-long walk to where a new homestead had appeared about a year earlier
and the next big holler over.
She found the young family there dead.
Even the children.
Beaten and strangled.
Pieces of the front porch and door had been torn away.
Torn away and carried to her valley.
She swore and ran back to her land
to find the six men standing there
exactly where she told them to stay,
blinking stupidly into the sun.
Her blood boiled.
She wanted to tear them limb from limb and burned them alive, but she knew this wasn't their fault.
Hell, she doubted there were men left in those bodies.
This was its doing, and it would answer for it.
Maybe not today, but soon enough.
And that day, she tasked the six men with cutting trees and sawing woods to build that new privy,
this time to stay in her sight while they did it.
When they were done, they just dropped their tools,
bowed to her like courtly gentlemen,
and ambled back into the woods and disappeared.
Over the years, they built her a whole new house around her little shack,
and she knew it was very important that it remained standing,
rotten wood, old iron nails, and all.
It became the center of her most sacred space.
More room for drying herbs and tables for other work,
if she could move her bed and belongings elsewhere.
There had been a time
when she believed she had made the right choice
because there were unnatural things happening in this place
and there were unjust and unclean men doing them.
The letters led her to these men
and she dealt with them to protect the land like she promised.
Little dog bane and the water supply of the surveyors
who would have dug up a hillside for the minerals
buried the worst of them.
set the rest puking home to warn others.
And that creeping fungus that ate the tents and the clothes
of the men who came to lay out lines for a church camp,
they went home with holes in their feet if they still had feet at all.
Those things were easy, even enjoyable at times.
But the other things, rituals, readings.
Things she did not understand or sometimes even remember all of,
times where her body was more conduit than creator, and by the time she'd reached her 30th year,
she'd come to dread them. She became less confident in her choice. She had begun to truly doubt,
and then there was Last Harbor. Last Harbor, so named because the seafarer and men who
settled there thought they were, in fact, settling there for good, had been a settlement.
to the far south and east of her land.
The letter the six men had brought her
said was that she was to go and live there for half a year.
To leave most of her belongings in the valley,
take only what she needed.
She would watch and observe.
Should they need her to act to protect the land?
She'd know.
She was to present herself as a young midwife and herb gatherer.
She'd lost her husband in the flood last spring
and had no place to go.
They would agree to let her stay.
They would not question nor harm her.
Certainly no man would be allowed to touch her.
She was to wait and to watch.
They would tell her what was next.
She was overjoyed.
To live amongst people again?
Well, that might feed her soul, she thought.
Maybe even to find the company of another of her kind to talk with, to practice with.
Could this be her reward for all the ugly,
things she'd been made to do for these years that had passed like rainwater.
She packed one of her mother's trunks and stepped outside to find a cart waiting,
a cart drawn by a cold black draft horse and being driven by the youngest of the six men.
She locked up her house and set her wars and set out for last harbor,
not knowing that neither she nor these woods would ever be the same once she returned.
Happy holidays family
I hope you've had a grand and peaceful time of celebration over the past few days
hope your bellies are full and your heart is blazing
and everyone is safe and warm inside
Not that it's that cold out here in North Carolina
I can tell you that much right now
Did you expect to be back with young daughter Dooley so soon
I didn't think you did
I thought it would be a delightful Christmas present
To hide her under your tree
Now don't worry
There's more to come
You definitely need to know all about Last Harbor
Things are going to change in the New Year family
They most certainly are
But I appreciate y'all staying with me this far
And I know you're going to see us
The rest of the way home, ain't you?
So what I thought
Old Gods of Appalachia
is a production of deep nerd media.
Our intro music is written and performed by Land and Blood.
Our outro music is by those poor bastards.
Today's story was written and performed by Steve Shell.
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