Old Gods of Appalachia - Episode 65: Debt Collections
Episode Date: March 21, 2024Paid in full.CW: Gore, monster/animal attack sounds, death by monster, pregnancy, birth of a child.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.
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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 our whole.
horror anthology podcast and therefore may contain material not suitable for all audiences so listener
discretion is advised the night was cool and clear a million stars twinkling brightly overhead
against the blanket of moonless velvety darkness as the old Ford rumbled down the blacktop
the cab was silent
Save for the puttering of the engine, that weeping of the young woman in the back seat.
June Gilbert, born June Norris, pressed a soft white cotton handkerchief to her face.
The man in the driver's seat had offered it to her without comment,
and she was grateful for this small mercy.
She wasn't ready to hear anyone tell her how sorry they were,
how he was with the angels now.
or any of the other empty platitude she knew would be coming,
least of all from the man she had married.
The moment she couldn't even bear to look at Trevor,
whose poor judgment had cost her daddy his life and made her an orphan.
The hang-dog expression of pity and guilt she had seen in his eyes
when her tears began to fall made her want to scream.
She saw it again.
She was pretty sure she would put.
punch him in his sad, stupid face, and so she kept her head down. Eyes on her lap, lest she caused Mr.
Fields to run off the road. The man in question, riding shotgun next to their benefactor, glanced
over his shoulder at his wife again and chewed his lip anxiously. Trevor had never been
this close to a death in his family. His daddy and mama were happy and healthy back home
Hazel County and while he'd lost his brothers in the war there'd been no caskets to bury no dead bodies to
see it was almost like they went and moved somewhere else and just never visited so he didn't know
quite what to say to poor Junie who had already lost so much in her short life as he watched her tears
fall though he felt obligated to say something what was it folks always said at funerals
He's in a better place, something like that.
As he opened his mouth to speak, though,
Jack caught his eye.
The older man frowned and gave him a subtle but firm shake of his head.
And for once in Trevor Gilbert's life, wisdom prevailed.
And he shut his mouth and turned his eyes back to the road ahead.
Wonders never ceased, the man who styled himself chivaled.
J.T. Fields thought with a sort of grim relief.
His grip on the steering wheel relaxing just a hair.
The last look Miss Junie had shot her husband had been none too friendly,
and the last thing he needed was to have two lovebirds bickering in the cramped confines of the Ford.
It happened, old Taley Pose, until last time Jack had seen him,
something strange, something bad.
He had heard rumors to that effect.
Rumors that he might have laughed off had their source been anything but him.
He was grateful now for the warning, though clearly he had still underestimated the danger.
If he had been taken completely off guard, he might have lost all three of his charges in the confrontation at the barn.
Moving forward, he would exercise more caution.
He only had a couple more hours to go, and then he could wash his hands of this whole mess and be rid of his debt to Marcy Walker as well, and wouldn't that be a comfort?
Jack was not in the business of incurring dance.
Other folks owed him, not the other way around.
No one favors to witches was best avoided whenever possible.
It just wasn't sound business practice, family.
He steered the fore down the Enkiew Ribbon of Highway heading south toward Tennessee.
It was a quiet night.
He'd seen only a handful of cars passed and there were no others behind him.
A glance in his rearview mirror told him.
him they were shapes flitted through the trees on either side of the road, moving faster than any
forest creature had any right to keeping pace with the truck.
Oh, they weren't out of the woods yet, not by a long shot. Miles, a lean, sinuous creature
slinked from the shadows of the weather-worn barn on the outskirts of Copper Ridge.
Its eyes flickered with a low, smoldering flame as it licked blood from its inside.
narrow mouth.
It squinted its unnaturally
glowing eyes, peering
toward the horizon where it could sense
the pieces of itself that had sent on
in pursuit of the truck.
Just keeping eyes on
his property, and they would do
nothing more until he joined
them to take what he was
owed.
Chittering, furry tails
slithered toward him across the grass like
sleek furred lamprey eels,
swimming through the blood-warm waters of a distance,
ocean. Twelve tendrils of blood-soaked fur and needle teeth arrayed themselves behind the
murderous creature that was currently picking Kevin Norris' flesh from between his teeth.
And had done some damage, but nothing that wouldn't heal with a full belly and little rest.
Nothing at all, no indeed. Mr. Poe's orange eyes flared as the first of its tails.
Its fur matted and dripping with blood, arced into the air to land on his rump.
reattaching itself with a tiny grunt.
Five more followed suit,
each transforming from a dominion of horror
into a shadowy bottle-brushed plume
in a single graceful movement.
Felt the dark power well within him
as six of his beautiful tales rejoined his flesh.
Drawing on his increased resources,
the thing that had been molded into Mr. Poe
out of the clay of old Taley Poe
exerted just a little will
And three new tails blossomed from his backside to replace those the old man had damaged beyond repair.
Nine swirling, writhing tails now fanned out behind the tiny monster, and he grinned.
Nine.
Like an inky streak of lighten across the night black fields, he raced after his quarry,
following the trail left by the servants he had sent on ahead.
These nine would carry him.
forth to put an end to this foolishness, for he was owed a debt. And Mr. Poe never failed to collect.
One way or another, Mr. Poe, always.
a pass you thought long buried rise the haunt of the young the shadow falls the judgment comes
treads off my friend amongst your fellow think you're born your words to get you
the pains had begun not long after they left hazel county at first june gilbert couldn't even quite
characterize them as such it was more of a tight feeling of
sense of tension that would eventually lessen and dissipate,
but as they bounced along the back roads of Appalachia
in one conveyance or another,
the sensations had become increasingly painful,
and June had to accept that she was indeed experiencing contractions.
She hadn't been afraid.
Grant Marcy had explained the entire process to her when she visited last
to confirm her pregnancy.
June knew what to expect,
and based on everything Marcy had told her,
she knew she had a ways to go before her labor.
began in earnest. She had decided it was best not to mention it to Trevor and Mr. Fields,
not yet. Men could not be relied upon to remain calm in these situations at the best of times,
and Trevor had been nervous enough even before they left home. Best to keep it to herself until the
matter became truly pressing. The shock of losing her daddy had taken her mind off things for a while,
but as they raced through the darkness and her tears dried and a numb, empty feeling settled over her
heart, the pain lances through her abdomen returned with a vengeance.
June settled into the back seat as comfortably as she could and focused on breathing like
Aunt Marcy had suggested.
She thought back to their visit and carefully began reviewing all the steps that Marcy had
explained in her head as a means of both preparing herself and keeping her mind off the fact that
her daddy would never get to meet his grandchild.
As June wrought gently from side to side, reschedual.
persuading herself in the hope of relieving some of the tension in her back.
Jack's gaze met hers in the rearview mirror.
You okay, Miss June?
He asked with some concern.
And the young woman nodded.
I'm all right, she answered with a fleeting attempt at a smile.
But her voice sounded thin, and to Jack's eyes,
her face looked as pale as the moon in the starlit darkness.
He didn't like it.
Not one bit, but he let her be.
pressing his foot on the gas and coaxed the needle just a little further to the right of the speedometer,
the sooner he could get to Marcy Walker, the better.
And it was with relief that over an hour later Jack turned the forward off the main highway
and onto a familiar Tulane County Road that wound into the tree.
It was not his first visit to Big Gap Road or to the sprawling three-story structure
constructed of native stone and thick logs that lay at its end.
Though the business he came to conduct had never been that,
house as usual custom. Jack remembered fondly the days when on any given evening all the windows
would be a glow, the air filled with the scent of jasmine, and the sounds of laughter and music
filtering across the yard through the open windows. The convivial atmosphere would carry into the
wee hours when the last drink had been served, the last hand of cards played, and the last
customer seemed to the door. The atmosphere tonight was nothing like those halcyondees.
Jack pulled up to the wide space at the end of Big Gap Road where folks who visited the Walker House were accustomed to park their cars.
He could see that right away.
Tonight his was the only vehicle in evidence, and up the hill he could see that the house was shuttered.
Only a single lamp glowing in the front window by the door, though the porch light had been turned on to illuminate their path.
There was no music nor laughter, nor even the chirp of crickets or the gentle sigh of the wind.
Big Gap holler was dark and eerily quiet.
End of the line, folks, Jack announced as he parked the ford as close to the well-tended path
that led beneath an intricately worked wrought iron arbor up to the house.
Trevor squinted up at said arbor that arched gracefully over the hedgelined walkway.
Pleasant evenings, he pronounced thoughtfully, reading the elegant script fused between metal leaves and decorative flourishes.
He favored Jack with a shrewd look.
What kind of place is this, Mr. Fields?
Jack glanced back at June, who sighed from the back seat.
My Aunt Marcy used to run a parlor house, Trevor, she explained.
But it's been closed for years.
June wasn't sure why she never told Trevor about Aunt Marcy's previous profession.
It wasn't a Trevor was the sort of person who would judge her for it,
or even be particularly scandalized by Marcy herself.
No, Miss Mama might be another matter.
He just hadn't come up naturally in conversation,
and it was an awkward subject to raise.
With one thing and another, she had eventually forgotten that he didn't know.
June had known since she was old enough to understand what a brothel was,
and while her daddy seemed to hold no ill will toward Marcy,
it was obvious at that point why her aunts had always visited them,
and not the other way around.
but it hadn't been a big deal, and those days were long past anyhow,
and now here they were, and if Trevor had a problem with it, she thought,
he'd have to make peace with the idea real quick,
because this was the only place their baby could be delivered safely,
and she was pretty sure they didn't have much time left.
Oh, Trevor said, his eyes wide, his tone won't of mild surprise.
She could see from his expression that he had no idea how to react to the information.
which she reasoned was a damn sight better
that how some folks might respond.
Jack took pity on the boy.
That was more than a decade back, he clarified.
These days, Miss Walker is the county's most sought-after midwife or so I hear.
She's expecting us.
Come on now, let's get your wife up to the house.
The first of those strange, chittering cries they had heard outside the bar
and reached them the moment Jack opened the driver's side door.
They were still distant.
but getting louder and closer every second as he turned to help June from the back of the truck.
Her feet had no more touched the ground than she suddenly felt a rush of fluid down her thighs,
followed by a sharp pain in her abdomen.
She gripped Jack's hand and their eyes met in mutual understanding.
I got you, he said, one arm sliding behind her waist to support her.
Everything's going to be just fine, Miss June.
As the next contraction rolled over her on a wave,
of pain. June couldn't help
but cry out her knees buckling.
Junie? Trevor cried.
Dropping the bags he'd been pulling from the back
of the ford and hurrying to her side.
His eyes were wide with terror as
he clasped her hand.
She assured him. It's just
the baby's coming as all.
It's all perfectly normal. I'll be fine.
Get the bag, son. Jack said.
I got her. To both their relief,
Trevor didn't argue. He bobbed his head
in a nod and picked up the suitcase as he
dropped and followed the two of them under the arbor and up the path toward the carved wooden columns
and stout walls of the house, once known as pleasant evenings. Behind them, the screeching, loom-like
cackle of the strange creatures they had seen that the barn rang out again, growing ever closer,
glancing over Jack's shoulder, June saw a lie at the shadow, moving through the trees. They're
coming! she whimpered, and Jack all but lifted her off her feet as he propelled her up the hill
toward her aunt's house. He was strong for a man his age, far stronger than he appeared.
Trevor jogged alongside them, lugging the suitcases, his breathing heavy. As they reached the bottom
of the stairs, June was seized by another contraction that nearly took her off her feet, and Jack paused
for a moment to consider the steep incline ahead of him. I think it's best if I carry you the rest of
the way, Miss June? He said almost apologetically, and then he hooked an arm behind her knees and hoisted
her into his arms. Besides
him, Trevor dropped the bags he'd hauled from the car,
his forehead creasing in a frown.
Oh, shoot, I forgot the one with the stuff for the baby.
He glanced over his shoulder,
down the hill where the ford stood with its door still open.
He saw no sign of the skittering horrors
that had assaulted them in Copper Ridge.
Looking into his wife's pained face,
he thought only of the child who would join them soon,
the tiny person they had wanted so long to complete their family,
and he smiled at it.
I'll be right back, honey, he said, and then he turned and ran from the truck.
Son, wait, Jack said, but it was too late. He was already gone.
Trevor, no! June cried. On the porch above them, the front door swung open, and Marcy Walker stepped outside.
Her sturdy form bathed in the welcoming glow of the porch light. Her hair was twisted around her head in a neat braid, and she wore her usual uniform.
of sturdy hunting boots, men's trousers, and a neat button-up blouse.
She carried her walking stick in her right hand, and her keen eyes took in the situation with a glance.
Her gaze swept down the hill just in time to see Trevor Gilbert.
The nephew-in-law, she had met only a handful of times,
reached into the back of the old Ford parked at the foot of the property.
What is that fool boy doing?
She started to ask, and then Trevor's scream.
And the windows of the Ford were painted in a sun.
sudden spray of red.
Get her in the house!
Marcy ordered, and Jack hauled her wailing knees up the stairs and across the porch.
Trevor Gilbert screams took on a gurgling sound before he finally fell silent.
His lower body convulsed, blood trickling down, his khaki work pants as his legs danced
an involuntary jitterbug, and then suddenly went still.
as his entire lower body fell to the ground
separating from his torso, tearing sound.
For an awful moment, there was nothing but the sounds of ripping flesh and gnawing teeth,
and then the car door swung wide, and a fan of writhed,
leapt gracefully from the back of the...
She watched, something long in snake-light,
yet covered in the same dark fur wriggled from the trees,
leaping onto the creature's back,
where it rejoined its writhing brethren.
The creature made a soft sound,
riddling with evidence satisfaction,
before turning eyes that glowed like hellfire on Marcy Walker.
A face filled with needle's sharp teeth.
It lowered its head and began to advance on it.
Marcy struck her staff on the ground,
and the wards that she and her sister had built and nurtured
for almost 20 years, flaired to live.
life, a cool blue light bathing the front yard in its eerie glow.
The creature hissed in fury, a shade of the wheedling creature he once had been creeping into his voice.
The baby's mine by right. I was promised.
Your bargain is ended, Taley Poe.
Mr. Poe, whatever you call yourself these days, I don't care, Marcy said.
her voice sounded tired
Trevor Gilbert promised you his firstborn
he violated that agreement
by the old compacts his life is forfeit fine
you've collected on that debt
you have no further claim over the babe
who hadn't even drawn breath in this world yet
now take your
whatever those things are and get the hell off my land
Marcy's voice took on a tone
of almost reverence
you are not welcome here
beast
This house is closed to you.
I shut my door against thee and set the bar.
If you leave with your lives that sprawled across the grounds of the Walker House,
shimmered.
So it is.
And so shall it be.
Marcy's lip curled and disgust, and she shook her head as she turned her back on the vicious little beast.
He could throw himself against her wards all night if he wanted.
They would hold.
She had more important things to worry about now.
The baby was coming.
That was all that mattered now.
They could worry about the rest tomorrow.
June Gilbert's delivery was quick and relatively easy as such things go.
And that was at least some small mercy.
Kevin Norris Gilbert.
Named after his grandfather came squawing into the world with the sunrise.
A healthy seven pounds of piss and vinegar and a joy to his
mother's heart.
Junie deserves some measure of happiness.
Marcy Walker thought grimly as she sat at her kitchen table with a strong cup of
carphy. If she had the power to raise the dead, she'd be tempted to resurrect Trevor
Gilbert just to strangle him herself. The damn fool nearly got his wife and child killed,
left her a widder, and got her daddy killed in the bargain.
Marcy sighed to herself. She was tired.
It had been a long night and her heart was heavy with grief for her niece, even as
she cradled the babe to her breast, Junie's eyes had brimmed with tears. The poor girl was exhausted
and heart-sick, and Marcy could only imagine the war that brewed inside her. Joy at the arrival
of the child she'd longed for, battling with the pain of her losses. For her own part, Marcy
needed to rest, but she still had work to do for she could lay down her head. For one, she needed
to make a plan to get June to safety. By the old laws, she and little Kevin should be safe.
But Marcy knew better than to trust that.
The old Taley Poe would likely have gone about his business,
content with his belly full of Trevor,
but something wasn't right about the preacher now.
He'd been making bargains of his own, she'd wager.
Margins with powers far greater than anything he ought to have ever meddled with.
It was best to get the two of them as far away from his reach as possible.
his and who or whatever he might be serving these days.
As Marcy rose to pour herself a second cup,
she heard a soft footfall in the kitchen doorway behind her
and a soft wrap on the doorframe.
Morning to Miss Walker, the man who called himself J.T. Fields these days said quietly.
His voice low in deference to the new mother and child
sleeping just down the hall in the spare bedroom,
she usually reserved for women who delivered their babies under her care.
might I trouble you for a cup of that most excellent smelling Joe
Marcy nodded and took down another cup from the cabinet
she poured a measure for each of them and fetch cream and sugar in case her guest preferred his coffee with either
and Jack nodded his thanks and helped himself to a bit of each
they sat in companionable silence for a moment
each lost in his or her thoughts as they enjoyed their morning beverage it was Jack
who spoke first am I correct in assuming that no one is locked
to hear from anyone named June Gilbert again in this life.
Marcy eyed him warily, but she nodded.
I don't know what happened to that old boy, but I don't trust that Taley Po or Mr. Poe or whatever.
He won't try to come for the two of them and the old laws be damned.
Best to get them far away from here.
I think that's wise, Jack nodded.
He raised an eyebrow.
I might be able to provide some assistance in that area.
Marcy narrowed her eyes.
For a favor owed, she guessed.
A slow smile spread over the older man's face as he took a sip of coffee.
You know me, Miss Walker.
Marcy rolled her eyes trying to suppress a grin.
The old bastard never changed.
Fine, she conceded.
For a favor owed.
And then the two of them set to work.
Hey there, family.
I know, I know, I know.
We did it again.
Tore a young family to shreds
and set a whole bloodline
on a different course
just for your enrichment and entertainment.
On a more serious note,
we know that it's hard
when the darkness takes the character
you might like or identify with
and please know that the death in this episode
was not a moral condemnation of that character.
It's just the raw brutality
that comes from a world filled with monsters.
Not that dead.
similar to our own.
But you might be asking yourself,
what kind of mischief are Mr. J.T. Fields
and Marcy Walker are going to get up to now?
Well, never you mind, family.
Just trust they got the best interest
of that young mama and her little baby in mind.
And if you, like Marcy Walker,
are wondering how Taley Poe became Mr. Poe
when you haven't already,
you can find out by becoming a patron over on Patreon.
For $10 a month, you can gain access to hours
and hours of exclusive stories and programming,
including the brand new origin story special
not worth the bloodshed, how Taley Po became Mr. Poe,
plus that plus tons of other content are waiting for you over at
Patreon.com slash old gods of Appalachia.
And now this is your don't ever go back for the suitcase.
Ain't nothing in that suitcase worth getting eaten over.
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 with a little bit of help from Steve Schell.
Our theme song is by Brother Landon Blood,
and our outro music Atonement, now available in all streaming platforms,
is by brother John Charles Dwyer.
We'll talk to you soon, family.
Talk to you real soon.
