Old Gods of Appalachia - Episode 64: Last Stand at Copper Ridge
Episode Date: March 7, 2024A stand is made, and the shadow falls.CW: Gore, fire, disfiguring burns, sounds of burning, monster/animal attack sounds, death by monster, gunshot sounds, pregnancy. Written by Cam Collins and Steve ...ShellNarrated by Steve ShellSound design by Steve ShellProduced and edited by Cam Collins and Steve ShellIntro 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Well, hey there, family, if you love Old Gods of Appalachia,
I want to help us keep the home fires burning,
but maybe aren't comfortable with the monthly commitment.
Well, you can still support us via the ACAS supporter feature.
No gift too large, no gift too small.
Just click on the link in the show description,
and you too can toss your tithe in the collection plate.
Feel free to go ahead and do that.
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.
The living are not meant to travel the ways of the dead.
And thus the road June Gilbert traversed with her husband, her father, and their strange benefactor did not make for a pleasant journey.
The ancient cart creaked and rattled its way down a deeply rudded path that wound into the gathering gloom ahead of them.
It was the strangest sensation to Jim.
She could see Mr. Fields, her daddy, and her husband.
She could see the wood frame of the cart around them and the scratchy old blanket that lined it for her comfort.
But she could not see five feet beyond their means of conveyance as they trundled along.
The man they called Jack hummed what sounded like an old funeral hymn under his breath as he drove the cart.
His eyes set straight ahead, as if the mules' heads were the sights of some precision rifle,
and he was taking careful aim at whatever lay ahead.
Mr. Fields, she called from the back of the cart.
You can call me Jack, sweetheart. Everything all right back there? You need something?
She leaned forward as best she could, bracing her weight on her elbows.
Where are we? Who were those boys?
And if you'll pardon my French, just what the hell is going on?
Jack chuckled.
Your French is impeccable, Miss June.
Our friends back there, none of whom who have been young for a very long time,
were once just like you.
Living people, I mean.
Children who died in mine explosions or other disasters,
mainly due to negligence and mismanagement and neglect.
Those poor souls are, well, whatever they are.
They're not really ghosts.
Not exactly.
They're packing a lot more heat than your typical farmhouse door slamer.
Though where that power comes from, I can't say for certain.
But anyway, those boys are just filled to the brim with rage,
and so they remain here, dedicating themselves to seeking vengeance.
typically on other folks that would harm children or allow harm to come to them.
As for where we are, well, we're currently traveling what's known by some as the ways of the dead,
a backroad of sorts between our world and others, including the other side,
or at least this part of it, their part, the territory of the boy and his ilk.
Old Kev shuddered and gazed into the inky blackness that surrounded them.
So are we dead right now?
Is this like the road to hell or something?
Jack glanced over his shoulder with an incredulous scow.
Are you listening to me at all, boy?
There ain't no road to hell here nor heaven either.
There are whole towns and other places within yon shadows that are lost our side of things,
along with the people who filled them, but you go look at it.
Looking for the devil or the Lord on this road?
You're going to be sadly disappointed,
which is not to give you the idea it ain't dangerous.
Wander off the path here and you might slip through the other side of the veil
and leave our world entire.
Worse as if on cue, a small crowd blossomed from the darkness.
They were not boys, but grown men.
Their uniforms were covered in dust and blood.
Their faces.
them that still had them
were burned and blackened
overcooked meat
stuck to a bone griddle
the shredded flaps of skin
hanging from their faces
still sizzling in the shadowy mist
who had none
marched blindly onward
offering charred naked skulls
to anyone who might witness
the men did not acknowledge
the cart or its occupants
save for the wide birth they gave
it shifting to the other side of the road
as if by instinct.
As the cart passed,
they disappeared once again
into the devouring.
I grunted thoughtfully.
Must be getting close to Esau County.
And boys look like they come from Tacoma.
Old Kev stared into the darkness after him.
His voice was grim when he spoke.
I heard things about Tacoma.
Seemed like it was always one accident or another with that place.
Government needs to do something about that one.
And a bunch more to be.
fair.
Government ain't going to do shit till the people rise up and demanded, Jack said.
And most of them need the paycheck too bad to speak up and the ones that do, he shrugged.
And old Kev grunted in agreement.
They both knew the fate that often awaited those who opposed the mind.
For a while, all was quiet as they passed ever more groups of dead men and women hovering by the roadside,
all of whom appeared to have died in horrible ways.
They rolled through not one, but three towns,
where fire smoldered silently in the dark,
forever trapped in the act of burning in the space between worlds.
Trevor squinted back at the last of these as they left it behind,
returning to the enveloping void.
Where are we?
And a sour glance from Jackie quickly,
clarified, I mean, in relation to our world?
If we're close to Esau County, even Grant County,
I ain't never heard of that many towns that close together burning down like that.
Jack shrugged.
The ways might carry us in a general direction from point A to point B,
but they don't precisely map to the living side of things.
You got to remember, son, those towns are long dead.
They didn't all go up at once.
One might have burned,
last year, another 100 years ago.
Even if it was recent, you might never hear about it.
There's lots of these mining operations get away with
and the deep hills that don't never make the news.
My cousin Bell lost her whole family when Barlow burned over in Kentucky.
June offered.
Daddy said there was never a peep about it in the papers.
That's a place best not spoken of, Miss June.
Jack cautioned.
Out here, you say something's name loud enough?
It might answer, and y'all don't want to.
none of what happened over there.
Trust me on that.
On that note, the cart rolled to a gentle stop
as the mules came to a fork in the road.
They sniffed the air and listened.
Long ears twitching, turning this way and that.
June listened too, but heard nothing.
Not the sound of the wind nor the chirp of crickets in the night,
but the gentle beasts apparently received some answer
that eluded her ears,
because after a moment they veered down the left-hand path, resuming their steady gate.
You tell them to go out way, asked old Kev, eyeing the mules and then Jack with equal suspicion.
I ain't done nothing but hold the reins and keep my eyes on the road.
Our friends here have been told where to take us, and I have no choice but to trust in them.
I think we're closing in on our destination, though, so you won't have to worry about it much longer.
A hillside emerged from the darkness as they entered this final stretch.
A loathing with dead weeds and brambles covering its ancient hide.
A top it, a man sat bound to a chair.
Soaked to the bone, laughing and wailing in equal measure.
A tall thin woman stood behind him ladling water from a bucket over his head
so that it ran down through his long white hair, down his face and into the
rough thatch of a beard.
Drink your water, Darby.
You'll feel better.
She cried loudly.
A man responded with what sounded old Kibb like a Pentecostal preacher
speaking in tongues as he quaked and writhed and cackled in the chair.
Everyone turned their eyes to Jack who simply shook his head.
Don't even ask.
He sighed.
However, the appearance of Caroline and Darby back there tells me roughly
where we are, and I think this might be the end of the line for us, or as far as the mules can
carry us at any rate. The pair slowed to a halt, snorting, and began cropping the grass
at their feet. A gentle breeze began to blow as Jack stepped down from the cart. Trevor hopped
out of the back and reached for Junie's hands. As he lowered her carefully to the ground, the wind
picked up, increasing in velocity, till it began to stir the coal dust and the mules' shaggy
manes, whipping the black residue into the air and swirling eddies. June's eyes watered,
and she raised her hand to shield them, and when the wind finally died down again, and she lowered
her hand, she saw that the mules were gone, carried off in the gale, and the sun was shining
and low in the sky, just as I thought, Jack said with satisfaction.
Copper Ridge, or at least nearabouts, which means our luck is holding.
Y'all get ready to move. We got a little ways to walk, but it's not far, Miss June, I promise.
When we get there, I should be able to arrange us a ride, but we still got miles to go before we sleep.
Trevor and Kevin hoisted the packs containing their meager belongings onto their back,
and the three of them followed the older man into the low,
of Grant County.
Think you're wrong your word, lest you get you.
Man who styled himself J.T. Fields of Dorchester was as good as his word.
The walk wasn't too far, nor was it particularly arges.
The path he navigated led them across wide stretches of farmland,
where herds of cows basting the warmth of the late afternoon sun,
chewing their cud, watching the quartet pass with little interest,
Jack appeared to know the route well
As he directed them unerringly to breaks in fences or gates left open
So there would be no need for June to crawl under said fences or be hoisted over
The sun was just sinking below the mountains in the distance
When they came to a barren field occupied only by a sagging barn
Red paint long ago faded to rusty orange
That crouched at the edge of the woods on its far side
Unlike the others they passed,
though the field was bordered by a sturdy, well-kept fins,
broken only by an iron gate outfitted with a heavy chain and stout padlock.
Jack produced a heavy ring of keys from his pocket and fit one into the lock.
It opened with a faint click, and he unwound the chain and swung the gate wide,
gesturing them through.
Step lively, folks, and head for yon barn, he instructed, glancing up toward the fading orange glow on the horizon.
I'll be with you just as soon as I lock up.
Hearing a hint of urgency creep into his voice,
the little family hurried across the stretch of flat sparse grass.
Jack secured the gate and followed,
catching up to them as they reached the barn door,
which was similarly protected with a heavy iron padlock.
This one might be a little rusty,
he chuckled nervously and began trying various keys.
The lock was clearly far older,
battered and speckled with rust,
and he jiggled each as he took.
tried fitting it into the mechanism.
He cursed under his breath and glared at the padlock, and then his key turned and the
hasp popped free, easy as you please.
That's more like it, he muttered.
Then he flung the door wide and motioned his charges inside.
Once June, Trevor, and Kevin were safely within, Jack bolted the barn door and lowered
a heavy bar that fit across it.
These were unusual measures for the interior of a barn.
June thought, as were the electric lights that hung overhead, which hummed to life when he flipped
a switch near the door. Gazing around her, she saw that the old structure was in better repair
than the exterior would lead one to believe. Unmarked crates and metal drums and various shapes
and sizes had been stacked neatly along the walls, and a large storage cupboard of the sort that
might hold tools occupied a far corner. It too had been secured with a hefty padlock. In the
center of the room an ancient rust-bitten ford lay shrouded in dust. Just a moment, folks,
and I'll have us on our way. Jack walked over to the vehicle and reached for the driver's side door.
Swang open with an ear, splitting creek that made Trevor wince. Dust rose from the bench seat as
Jack slid into the driver's seat and tried the ignition. The engine chugged and groaned for a moment,
then fell silent. God damn it, Jack muttered under his breath. He emerged from the cab and popped the hood of
the old Ford, rubbing his chin thoughtfully as he peered into its innards.
Maybe a few more moments, Miss June, just to make yourself comfortable.
He called to her and then headed for the storage cover she had noticed before.
Through a high window set in the western corner of the structure, June could see that night
was falling quickly.
Somewhere in the distance, a high keening sound rose on the chilly night breeze.
The call of some animal in the world.
woods. It wasn't an unusual noise. Something like a coyote button. It was wilder and stranger, almost like the
call of a loon. But again, closer to them from the opposite side of the barn came an answering cry.
Then two more from somewhere east of them, followed by three or four to the west. The hair rose on the
back of June's neck and she reached for Trevor. What is that? Her husband asked, glancing over at Kevin.
June's daddy shook his head.
I don't know.
Never heard anything like it before, he answered quietly.
From the far edge of the field came the sound of screaming metal, followed by a thud.
The strange calls rose again, a chittery note entering now that was something akin to laughter.
Jack had returned with an old toolbox which he'd set on the floor by the dusty Hulk of the four.
Lifted his head from under the hood, he listened for a moment to the eerie noise.
is echoing around the valley outside.
Mr. Norris, there is a shotgun in the back of that cupboard over there.
He said indicating the closet from which he'd fetched the tools with a jerk of his head.
Shells are on the top shelf, he called as Kevin Norris hastened to fetch it.
The unearthly cries grew louder and closer as old Kev rifled through the contents of the cupboard
until he found a weathered old sack into which he dumped all four boxes of shells
before slinging it over his shoulder.
He returned to his daughter's side, pulled a handful around from the sack of ammunition,
and began to load the gun with trembling fingers.
The motion seemed to soothe him.
Or perhaps he was comforted by the protection the weapon offered,
and by the time he'd finished, his hands were steady.
In the field, just beyond the barn, the uncanny noises had risen to a near shriek.
It sounded as if they came from just outside the walls,
howling and yipping and screaming,
June clutched Trevor's elbow.
Creatures outside fell silent.
For a long minute, everything was quiet.
Save for a steady stream of muttered curses
and the occasional clank of whatever tool
Jack was wielding against the uncooperative engine.
Daddy?
June whispered, do you think there's sh?
Old Kev held up a hand for silence, listening intently.
A soft screeching sound coming from the far end of the barn
As if some small animal like a cat
Was digging its claws into the weathered wood
Kevin raised the shotgun to his shoulder
Peering into the shadows near the storage cupboard overhead something
Claws scrabbling and one of the eerie cries rose into the night
sounding almost like laughter
June startled her fingers digging into Trevor's arm
Kevin swung the shotgun upward, adjusting his aim,
following the rough position of the scratching noises with his eyes as they continued across the roof.
A high squeal issued from the other side of the barn,
drawing his aim toward the western wall as something drew his claws across one of the glass windows,
positioned high up near the hayloft, and June let out a whimper,
and Trevor pulled her close something heavy against the barn door.
And the three of them swung around to face it, and it came again,
It was as if an army waited outside, attacking a fortress with a battering ram.
The latch splintered in its fittings under the blows, the old wood straining against the iron bar that held the door in place.
There was a moment's pause during which June entertained the fleeting hope.
Perhaps whatever assailed their refuge had given up that the old barn had proven too much for it.
But then it spoke, mystical bad.
The strange, grating sing-song voice was not loud,
and yet it found their ears easily.
Even travel.
A sob escaped June's throat,
and her hands flew protectively to her belly.
Behind them, the truck finally rumbled to light,
and jack slammed the hood shut.
All right, folks, everybody, the bard door explode.
In a rain of kindling as a horde of writhing,
black shapes poured through the shattered portal as if the shadows beyond had come to life.
Junie screamed as waves of oil slick fur, gnashing teeth and razor claws flooded into the space
around them. Get behind me! Old Keb yelled, pushing his daughter between himself and the
Ford as the strange creatures came on. They were like no animal he'd ever seen.
Wrigling shapes like sleep-pelted snakes with fangs and claws. Kevin fired into the throng,
And something viscous and green splattered the walls, more like pawnslimbed and blood,
as several of the creatures disintegrated in a hail of buckshot.
But there were more coming.
The shotgun roared again.
Trevor hefted a long, heavy wrench from Jack's toolbox,
swinging on the creatures like Babe Ruth as they tried to circle around the edges to get to his wife.
The first hit the far wall with a sickening crunch as he laid into the next.
Stinking green ikers soaked his shirt sleeves and pulled it.
their feet. Kevin was reloading
when the first of the wriggling horrors
got to him, leaping onto his
shoulder before he even saw him coming.
It sank tiny needle teeth
into the side of his neck and June
screamed as blood quickly
soaked the arm of his shirt.
Kevin yanked the thing off of him and hurled
it into the far wall. From the corner
of his eye he saw Jack shove the passenger side door open
and he put all the command he could muster into
his voice as he hollered back at his son-in-law.
Boy!
Get her in the truck!
June cried reaching out for him.
Go!
Kevin yelled.
Take her and go!
He slammed shells into the stock and turned back to the riving mob,
the shotgun filling the barn with the thunder like the wrath of an angry god.
Trevor Gilbert hustled his wife into the back of the Ford
and slammed the door behind them.
Jack stomped on the gas and the truck lurched forward,
scattering vicious little beasts in its wake
and crushing those that weren't fast enough to escape under its wheels.
June Gilbert pressed her face to the back window,
watching with mounting horror and grief
as the retreating figure of her father
left alone to face the horde of tiny monstrosities kept fighting.
The ford zipped over the empty field
toward the gate they had come through earlier,
which now sagged open on its hinges,
the chain and padlock that had held it shut a pile of twisted metal on the ground beside it.
Behind them, a final blast of bookshop rang out in the night,
and then the barn fell silent.
Boy, hey there, family, and as promised and foretold,
the road has grown darker and we leave our first loved one by the wayside,
As Kevin Patrick Norris, husband to Agnes Walker Norris, and father to June,
falls in the shadow of Copper Ridge.
Will he be the last in this particular tale to find his way beyond that old black door?
Well, I guess you'll have to come back and find out, now won't you?
I hope you will.
Bet you will.
But I digress.
I want to thank and welcome all of our new Patreon patrons who joined us for the first time
for the very special presentation of Not Worth the Bloodshed,
how Taley Poe became Mr. Poe.
Hope y'all enjoyed that one.
Now, it's not a required bit of lore to understand our current storyline,
but it was a question folks had been asking,
so we answered it in the form of one of the most graphic stories
we've ever told here on Old Gods of Appalachia.
And me personally, I've got to say I'm mighty proud of how the sound design turned out on that one.
I don't get to do many actual in my line of work,
so that was special for me.
And if you aren't a Patreon patron
And you'd like to hear how Taley Poe became
Mr. Poe
And also gain access to hours of exclusive storylines
Like Bill Mama Cawin, Black Mouth Dog,
Familiar and Beloved, and More
You can head on over to patreon.com
Slash Old Gods of Appalachia and Make Your Tithe Today.
And now this is your every time we kill
A Beloved Parental Figure on this show
Stephen Cam drink a fine craft beverage
And Giggle like nine-year-olds
Who Just Carved the word fart
into the Sunday school classroom wall reminder that Old Gods of Appalachia is a production of deep nerd media.
Today's story was written by Cam Collins and Steve Schell.
Our theme music is by brother Land and Blood,
and our outro music, Atonement, now available on all streaming platforms,
as well as on vinyl over at bitter melody records.com, is by brother John Charles Dwyer.
We'll talk to you soon, family.
Talk to you real soon.
