Old Gods of Appalachia - Episode 78: The Horror of Babylon
Episode Date: March 20, 2025On a mission, Polly Barrow finds an unexpected ally in the dead streets of Tourniquet.CW: Family strife, discussion of monster based kinks and the unnatural conception of a child, risk of harm by weat...her related motor accident.Written by Steve Shell and Cam CollinsNarrated by Steve ShellSound design by Steve ShellProduced and edited by Cam Collins and Steve ShellThe voice of Polly Barrow: Tracey Johnston CrumThe voice of Brother Bartholomew: Dr. Ray ChristianThe voice of Conrad Barrow: Cecil BaldwinThe voice of Benual Barrow: Brandon BentleyIntro music: “The Land Unknown (The Home is Nowhere Verses-Traditional)” written and performed by Landon BloodOutro music: “God's Dark Heaven” by Those Poor BastardsSpecial equipment consideration provided by Lauten Audio.LEARN MORE ABOUT OLD GODS OF APPALACHIA: www.oldgodsofappalachia.comCOMPLETE YOUR SOCIAL MEDIA RITUAL:FacebookInstagramBlueskySUPPORT 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 oldgodsmerch.com.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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Feel free to go ahead and do that.
Right about now.
Old Gods of Appalachia is a lot of the same.
a horror anthology podcast and therefore may contain material not suitable for all audiences.
So listener discretion is advised.
Polly Barrow and the two hollow men who were her closest associates,
Enracus Crane and Johann Churchman, had driven deep into the wintry backwoods of Prince
County.
Stop it in Kingston to trade their fine limousine for a brand,
new fort half-ton pickup with tires wrapped in heavy chains that would allow them to navigate the
snow-packed rural backroads of West Virginia.
They were headed toward a mass grave of depleted mines and coalfields that once promised
baro-mineral resources riches beyond imagination.
After a year of digging strange, incombustible lumps of inert coal from one field and
pumping naturally occurring asphalt that would explode at so much at a heat,
word from another, such dreams of profit died on the vine, like unpicked tomatoes in a particularly
dry season. The road to tourniquet West Virginia was no longer maintained by the county, it would not
last for much longer. The frozen roadways that snaked around and through the mountains of
Central West Virginia were certainly beautiful in their icy crystalline glory, but they were
equally deadly.
Johan Churchman was well aware of the dangers, and though they were all certain to walk away from any
violence so mundane as a car crash, such an accident would cost them time and trouble.
Thus his driving was measured, cautious, and tediously slow.
Bally Barrow had passed the time on the long drive reading over the message she'd received
from her older brother, Conrad.
According to his memo, their father,
had assigned each of the metastatic complete
while he was immersed in the unknowable depths
beneath Barrowhouse, where he retreated to commune with those
who sleep beneath.
Her lovely face creased into an incredulous scowl
as she mockingly read the end of her brother's telegram.
Consider it our gift to you,
to allow you to behold our father's true face in private.
We also thought you best suited for this errand
as you were capable, durable, and cunning enough
to deal with whatever may be left inside of Babylon,
and the most likely of the three of us
to return with Father's portrait in one piece.
Who the hell does he think he is dealing with?
I mean, really, sending me out into the wilds of West Virginia again,
to tourniquet, no less.
He knows I can't verify this task with daddy,
nor can I risk of failing him again.
Normally, I'd just ignore him,
but I do believe the old boy might have me properly hemmed in here.
Thoughts on the matter, Mr. Crane?
Enrique's Crane, first among Polly Barrow's hollow men did not turn,
but kept his eyes out the passenger-side window,
scanning the surrounding countryside for any threats.
When he spoke over his shoulder,
it was with a familiar deference.
I do not know, ma'am.
There is a portrait of your father there, though.
I have seen it.
Oh, have you now, Henrikas?
I have heard the stories about Babylon.
You never struck me as the type
who would patronize such a
disreputable establishment.
Yes, ma'am.
Though I have never partaken
of the pleasures on offer at Babylon,
I have provided security for your father and his guests there many times.
I never got to go.
By the time my schedule had any flexibility at all,
the town was a husk of its former self,
and Babylon was considered horribly unfashionable.
Or was it unfathomably horrible?
Potato potato.
But imagine, an entire nightclub in the middle of nowhere,
to those with discriminating tastes and pleasures of the flesh.
I heard there was a whole dance floor dedicated to erotic vivisection.
Oh, can you picture it, Mr. Cray?
I would rather not.
Mr. Crain?
You never wanted to strap someone down, still screaming and breathing,
and split them open, and then shove your hands in and start pulling things out
just to see what happens?
I...
To eat their own, ma'am.
I'm told there was a little voyeur's amphitheater
that surrounded a place called
the Well of Remembrance.
Patrons would bring an offering,
some pathetic human, I assume,
and they would be forced to walk through a sort of gauntlet.
The well would make them live through the most soul-crushing torments
of their lives over and over,
over again, while the audience watch them suffer and slowly fall to pieces, and of course, eventually die.
I am positively green with envy that you got to see such things, Mr. Crane.
It was an experience, ma'am, to be sure. I am concerned, however.
Your brother must know that Babylon has not been safe, not even for our kind.
for many years.
I would not dare to speak ill of anyone in your family, but...
He's trying to kill me. I know.
And yet still we go.
Of course we go, Mr. Crane.
I wouldn't respect Conrad if he didn't try to kill me at least three times a year.
I don't respect Benuel at all, so I expect him to try even harder.
It's nice to confirm the last remaining portrait of Daddy is...
hanging in the foyer, though.
Is it true
that he had all images
of himself removed from Barrow House
when he went below? He did, ma'am,
removed and burned.
Most of the artists
were killed. He wanted
no dimnant of what he called his
lesser form to remain.
The portrait in Babylon
was likely overlooked because your father
had long since become bored
with its entertainments.
Or perhaps by the time it was
remembered, the place had become far too dangerous.
Well, then, let's go see my daddy's handsome face before it's too late.
Mr. Churchman, the next turn should be our last.
And the light gets swallowed, and there ain't no place that feels like home.
The one turn and cast your eyes to the wand and keep your foot on the gas, your eyes.
Straightforward mind and best leave them goes behind
When the heart grows cold, home is nowhere
Out as well heart was caused
Hours behind Polly Barrow and her loyal underlings
Her siblings made their own way
Through the treacherous winter night
Conrad had insisted they set out for tourniquet at once
They would not hurry
As their sister would require time to reach the place herself
and once she was inside Babylon,
who knew how long it would take for the place to devour her.
Still, they must verify she had been properly dealt with,
once and for all.
At the wheel of one of the company's fleet of Fords
was a slender man in a dark suit.
His gloved near-skeletal hands gripping the wheel at ten and two,
his eyes locked on the road.
I don't understand why we're traveling,
like this, Conrad. I could have opened the ways of the dead and had us there in no time. Instead,
we're packed like sardines in this infernal contraption. As the truck's wheels skidded on a patch of ice,
its rear-in, fish-tailing for a moment. Benuel shot his brother a sour look. Do you want to join me in the
afterlife, dear brother? Why are you letting that old thing drive anyway? He never drove father anywhere.
The hollow man behind the wheel briefly narrowed his eyes at Benuel in the rearview mirror,
but showed no other reaction.
Marcus Trench had been E.P. Barrow's personal hollow man,
one of the earliest to volunteer to be hollowed,
and had passed into Conrad's service upon his father's ascension.
Mr. Trench is a man of many talents.
He is perfectly capable of getting us to our destination.
Father had a whole staff of servants that catered to his needs,
but I find such frivolous expenditures unnecessary.
We are in good hands, brother.
Thank you, sir.
The hollow man's voice was like gravel being raked over an open wound.
I hate being cooped up like this.
Are you sure I can't just go on ahead?
I could pass right through the side of this mountain and meet you there.
No.
The collapse of Babylon.
has rendered the entire region unstable.
Who knows what might happen if you passed through the mountain
and came out too close to the town.
It might decide you were an offering or worse.
No, this is a family matter,
and we will suffer through it together.
It's similar to the new protocol I've been developing
with the cattle in the lower offices.
I put them in miserable situations where the only way out is to work as a unit
in order to comply with senseless, petty instructions that yield no real result
other than meeting some arbitrary goal that we don't actually measure.
It breaks their spirits in a whole new way
and all but ensures their utter compliance.
I call it team building.
It's providing extraordinary results.
We will see this through together, or, much like the lads in accounts receivable, we will die trying.
In the deep snows of West Virginia, Johan Churchman drew his party's vehicle to a careful stop on what was once the vibrant bustling downtown of Turnicott, West Virginia.
The sun hung low in the sky as the horizon called it to its bosom.
The air growing ever colder.
Little evidence remained of the public houses and brothels that had lined the main thoroughfare
of what was essentially a red light district the size of an Appalachian coal town.
Even the brick and mortar structures had crumbled under the weight of weather and time.
Some had been crushed by fallen trees years ago.
Others swallowed by sinkholes or struck by lightning and left in ashes.
Snow covered it all now.
A suffocating blanket of white, obscuring all but the strip of the ground beneath the truck's wheels.
The once-busy boardwalk was barely a visible footpath.
The ice-cloaked green encroaching on all sides, slowly erasing the town's existence.
A single building remained largely intact.
A malignant tumor thrust up from the ground in defiance of the healthy growth on all sides.
sides. It was a squat structure painted stovepipe black, with one word stenciled and white
faded letters over the simple iron door. Polly Barrow clapped like a child on Christmas morning,
excitement overcoming her usual icy composure as she stepped from the truck.
A little underwhelming, but still, exciting.
Was the facade any different when you came here with my father, Mr. Crane?
Mr. Crane?
Mr. Crane?
When there was no reply, Polly glanced around her.
To our surprise, the two hollow men.
The only answer came from an onslaught of huge wet snowflakes
that poured from the heavens like powdered sugar on a funnel cane.
Mr. Crane.
Mr. Churchman?
Mr. Churchman!
Mr. Crane!
No one answered her calls.
The heavy cloak of snow swallowing her words in an almost reverent silence.
Looking behind her, she could still see the truck where they'd left it parked on the street,
but there was no sign of either of her men.
Their footprints were rapidly filling with snow,
as if the wintry green itself had reached out and erased her hollow men the same way it was erasing the town of Turniquet.
And now she and Babylon stood facing each other.
Twin monstrosities from different eras built by the same loving hands.
She had begun to take a step toward the door when the smell hit her.
The musk of an animal.
Large and powerful, but more than that.
Infused deep into the scent was the primal heat of the soil of tree sap and the ever-burning sun.
It was the smell of clean running rivers and wind touched by the silvery light of a full moon.
It was the smell.
Holly spun around, drawing on the well of darkness buried deep within her heart,
preparing herself for combat.
Her bone armor tingled beneath her soft pale skin,
ready to erupt at a moment's notice.
She expected a great beast,
or perhaps some witch's snare that her brother had led her into,
but instead,
known was a man.
Fork skin and a darker beard who wore a modest but well-cut suit.
He stared past.
her at the looming black edifice at the end of the street.
There were tears running down his face, and he looked very tired.
He turned eyes upon her that held both sadness and fury,
seeming both puzzled and enraged at her presence.
His voice was low and warm, but there was an edge to it that terrified Polly.
She felt as though she had stumbled upon a wounded animal that was far stronger
and more dangerous than she even as it bled.
Hail, Polly, Elias, called pretty by those who think you wretched.
True heir to the deepest grave, defiler of families, slayer of children,
iron-boned blade of your father, and abomination before the green.
I see you.
Do you now, girl, can you give me a single reason why I should not kill you?
you stand. Polly Barrow. Deadliest weapon in the arsenal of the Barrow family looked up into the face of an
avatar of the green and was lost. He shook her head trying to make sense of the aura that radiated from the figure
before her. He was no mere man and he was simply more than of the green. Somehow he was. She stand
against it.
You see me now, do you, girl?
Look upon me and see the face of all you have set out to dominate and control and
enslave.
See me and see the forest you've burned, the men you've entombed in the mountain's belly.
Do you see the widows and the orphans, the lives you've destroyed?
And for what?
Money?
Power promises whispered to your lunatic father.
While he swings through the darkness in his pretty box,
I will give you one chance, and one chance only, you vile thing, walk away.
I have more important matters to attend to than ridding the world of the likes of you.
The tall man turned from her, his gaze returning to Babylon,
his expression a mask of helpless sadness, framed in lines of disbelief in shame.
So, so you aren't here for me?
What interest have I and one such as you?
You will be dealt with in your own time and without my help, I expect.
I am here to witness the death of this place, to honor it with a...
You are mourning the death of Babylon?
We built this place, and it failed.
From what I can see, it appears, your lot is taking it back.
What is there for a...
you to mourn. You've won!
A flash, a blue-white light illuminated the windows of Babylon, and the ground shook. The black
bricks shuddered, but did not fall. The thing that resides within yon building was once its
own dominion, a living, breathing, sentient part of the green. A wild and dangerous ground that would
torment the minds of men if they wandered into its clutches.
For there are places in this world that men were never meant.
But you and your family were not men.
Not exactly.
You carved this place out of that patch of feral green and bent it to your will.
You fed it the minds and bones of your victims and your lovers until it lost itself.
You caged it and twisted into something I barely recognize.
When the building falls, it will be loosed upon the world.
and I do not know how to stop the destruction it will cause before it dies.
How do I kill a piece of myself?
I know few of sufficient power and strength that stand against it, and even they would likely.
Polly stared up at the structure thoughtfully.
She had been unaware of Babylon's origins, though it made sense, given the tales she'd heard.
No wonder Conrad had sent her to this place.
He expected she would be consumed by it as so many others before her.
He thought he could tempt her into carelessness with promises of their father's portrait,
and he had nearly succeeded, nearly.
But not quite he had come here, expecting to walk away victorious, and she still planned to.
Yet it wouldn't hurt to have a little insurance policy in her back pocket.
She turned back to the man, observing all the old courtesies as she addressed him.
I see you know my name, strange.
and thus you have me at a disadvantage.
May I know yours?
You know me well enough, Polly Barrel.
But in the interest of conversing with ease,
mortal folks have called me Bartholomew.
You may address me so.
Very well.
I am prepared to offer you a bargain, Bartholomew.
What could you offer that I would want, Miss Barrel?
Polly nodded up at the facade of Babylon.
I was sent here to die.
Oh, it's true.
My brothers have been trying to kill me since the day I took my first steps.
They look at me and see all the love our father never gave them.
They look at their own wretched lives and know that when the great darkness falls,
they will be cast down like all flesh.
There's no shame in it.
It's just how they are.
They can't kill me themselves,
so they are relying on this entity you described to do the job for them.
I came here to...
Well, to make a bit of a point.
It just so happens that our interest coincide.
If you allow me to pass...
I swear to you that I will do my utmost to destroy the cage that imprisons a part of you.
If I have to tear it down, brick by brick.
You believe can stand against it?
Let's just say, I have abundant motivation.
And if you die in the attempt?
Then I die.
I don't anticipate failure.
but if so, I would appreciate it if you'd allow my associates, assuming they're still alive, to leave this place, unmolested.
The things that serve you are whole and will remain unharmed.
Then we have a deal. Shake on it.
The avatar of the green eyed her outstretched hand with distaste and spat on the ground.
My word is enough, but I wish you.
you luck, daughter of Elias.
With a final, grief-stricken glance up at the hulking structure before them, the construct
known to mortals as Bartholomew turned his back on the scene and disappeared into the swirling
snow. Polly Barrow eyed the building, surprised to find that she was smiling, albeit grimly.
She always enjoyed a challenge, and this might even be fun.
She lifted her chin and strode across the snow-packed earth to the black iron door
and grasped the handle in a gloved hand.
Even through the thick fur-lined leather, she could feel the chill that radiated from its surface.
It occurred to her that the latch might be frozen, but it yielded to her slightest touch,
and the door swung open without so much as a creek.
Peering through the open portal, Polly saw nothing but unrelieved, Inky.
She stepped inside behind.
Oh, hey there, family.
My, my, my.
Miss Polly Barrow is up to her eyeballs in trouble this go-round.
The green to the left of her, her siblings to the right,
and here she is stuck in the middle with us.
What secrets lie inside of Babylon do you think?
You all just going to have to come back next time and find out now, won't you?
Wrap this baby up.
I think you will.
Speaking of wrapping up stories, our family over in The Holler
just got the final episode of part three of our anthology of animal companion stories,
familiar and beloved.
That means there are now three complete story arcs featuring Emmeline Underfoot,
the gray ghost of Black Mountain,
that fearless and good boy Sam from over in Baker's Gap,
and now a tale of the Walker's very own house cat Vespartillion.
totaling over six hours of amazing adventures of our furry-footed friends
on top of so much more content available exclusively for paid subscribers,
head on over to Old Gods of Appalachia.com slash The Holler and move on in today.
Now, this is here.
Did you ever think you'd see Pretty Polly Barrow and Brother Bartholomew face-to-face,
reminder that Old Gods of Appalachia is a production of deep nerd media
and is distributed by Rusty Quill.
Our theme song is by Brother Landin Blood,
and our outro music is by Those Poor Bastards.
Today's story was written by Steve Shell and Cam Collins.
The voice of Pretty Polly Barrow is Tracy Johnston Crumb.
The voice of Brother Bartholomew is Dr. Ray Christian.
The voice of Conrad Barrow is Cecil Baldwin.
And the voice of Benuel Barrow is Brandon Bentley.
We'll talk to you soon, family.
Talk to you real soon.
