Old Gods of Appalachia - Episode 93: The Woman in Room Sixteen
Episode Date: February 12, 2026In the summer of 1928, a mysterious stranger seeks help and healing at Woodhaven Sanitorium.CW: References to death by illness, historical hospital settings, eye/mouth related gore, loss of bodily aut...onomy/control, death by mutilation, decapitation, and monster; monster and crying sounds.Written by Steve ShellProduced and edited by Cam Collins and Steve ShellNarrated and performed by Steve ShellSound design by Steve ShellThe voice of Wally Gentry: Don MartinIntro music: “The Land Unknown (The Where the Light Don’t Reach Verses)” written and performed by Landon BloodOutro music: “Sick and Alone” 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.Buy t-shirts, hoodies, mugs, and other Old Gods merch.CLASSIC MERCH: merch.oldgodsofappalachia.comTOUR MERCH & SPECIALTY ITEMS: oldgodsmerch.com.Transcripts available on our website at www.oldgodsofappalachia.com/episodes.© 2026 DeepNerd Media. All rights reserved. No part of this audio production or its written transcript may be used or reproduced in any manner for the purpose of training artificial intelligence technologies or systems.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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Woodhaven Sanatorium 1928.
Wally Gentry hummed a jaunty tune as he slid his time card into its numbered slot on the wall
and walked to look himself over in the staff locker room mirror.
His white slacks and white button-up shirt were immaculate.
His shoes were shined, his hair perfectly quaffed,
and his tidy mustache groomed and waxed.
He could have passed for a waiter in a fine restaurant up in Tipton
or down the mountain in Asheville,
bringing fancy food to rich folks and just raking in the tips.
To be fair, he did serve some of the richest folks in the whole US of A here at the sanatorium.
They just happened to be choking on their last breaths rather than choking down fancy
cocktails and caviar.
Wally had been working out here in the middle of nowhere for so long he was almost ready to
start waiting tables just for a change of pace.
Almost.
Normally, clocking in at four on a Wednesday would fill him with dread, as it meant he was
here till midnight and would have to make the lonely trip back down the mountain in the
middle of the night.
After dinner, he'd help settle the residents into their rooms for the night and send them
off to Dreamland.
Then he would scrub, mop, and tidy up all the comments.
common areas to the facility for the next day.
As an orderly, keeping things in tip-top shape was his job.
With the exception of the occasional call for restroom assistance or Miss Haversham in
room seven needing her fifth glass of water, while he would spend the rest of his evening
sitting at the nurse's station with Wanda and Peggy, gossiping and playing cards until Phyllis and
Bert showed up to relieve them. On the whole, the job was a cakewalk, and he knew he should be
grateful to have it.
All the same he'd given his notice to Miss Marjorie two weeks ago.
Tonight was his last shift here at the glue factory as he'd come to think of it.
The place where wealthy families sent their thoroughbreds when they'd run their final miles.
Doc Robinson and his wife Marjorie had opened the place 15 years ago,
when Sanatoria had been all the rage in western North Carolina.
The clean air of the Blue Ridge had been touted as a cure-all for various and sundry afflictions.
In the middle of the tuberculosis pandemic, the papers were calling the white death due to the bloodless pallor of folks suffering from it.
People were willing to try anything.
At one point, there had been 900 beds available across the region, and over 25 properly outfitted sanatoriums and sanitariums in Cone County alone,
not to mention a number of boarding houses that lacked proper medical staff, but offered access to sundex and that allegedly magical mountain air.
During the years when the disease ravaged lives across Appalachia and the country as a whole,
Woodhaven had provided the best care possible given their remote location,
managing to stay afloat despite rising competition from folks with far deeper pockets than a country doctor and his wife.
In the years following the Great War,
the Army had established a TB treatment facility in the East Asheville community of Otein,
which the state eventually took over and built into a truly impressive facility,
buying out old Doc Gruner's place and three other treatment centers in East Asheville to make room for its new campus.
As the new state hospital grew, so did the need for qualified staff.
And that was where Wally Gentry's future lay.
His starting pay was five whole cents more per hour than he made now,
and he'd be working alongside of some of the state's best qualified doctors and nurses.
Hell, maybe he'd even get to witness them find a cure for this awful plague.
Sure, he'd still be washing out bedpans and wheeling people to and fro,
but a facility that size offered opportunities for advancement,
and Wally planned to start climbing that ladder.
Soon enough, he reckoned, he'd be managing the folks doing the scrubbing and the wheeling.
Anything would beat spinning his wheels up here on the mountain,
playing cards and waiting for the next sickly old bird to die
so he could plant them in the bone yard out back.
With the sort of deep and contented sigh that is only possible
on the last day of a truly hated job,
while he walked out the locker room and headed down the hall around the corner to the nurses station,
Nurse Peggy was already there, speaking with the smartly dressed woman that Wally didn't recognize.
From Peggy's rapt expression, whatever the newcomer was sharing had her riveted attention.
Wally found himself looking forward to one last juicy bit of gossip as he strolled up,
leaning against the nurse's station countertop to greet the pair with the smile.
Evening ladies, if you're going to need to back up and fill me in.
Oh, hey Wally, no, you've not missed anything, honey.
This is Miss Carter from the state hospital.
hospital. She's here to pick up any personal effects we have in storage for Mr. Blackburn, Ms. Garner,
Ms. Rubinstein, and Mr. Webster. They're all transferring down to the new respiratory ward in O-Teen.
Well, y'all are just cleaning us out now, ain't you? I would say I'll miss them, but I'm heading
down there myself. Kind of nice they'll have a familiar face to help them feel at home.
I don't think they have a treatment for the chronically smart-assed. Wally put a hand to his chest in
mock offense. I'll have you know my condition is untreatable, but no, I mean to say I've
accepted a position at the new hospital. I'll start next week. The tall woman Peggy had introduced
looked Wally up and down, her expression unimpressed, and her tone dismissive. We do need more
janitorial staff. I'm sure they'll be glad to have you. She half turned her back on the
orderly and returned her attention to Peggy Rogers. Miss Rogers, if you could sign here,
acknowledging that you've released these patients' personal effects.
An initial here.
Mm-hmm.
Perfect.
All right, that's all I need.
We'll have a transport up here in the next couple hours to collect these folks.
Thank you.
Miss Carter took the clipboard she held into her bag,
then turned and proceeded down the hall to the front doors without a backward glance.
Wally scowled after her.
Janitorial staffed my big toe.
I'm an orderly, damn it.
That was just rude.
Wally snatched the page she still held from Peggy's hand
and turned the transfer paperwork over.
Shoot, that clears out rooms
1, 2, 4, and 6.
Mm-hmm, and Ms. Fletcher passed over the weekend.
Oh, she did not.
She seemed like she was doing a little better, the poor thing.
She did?
So that's room number 9 empty.
Getting a little lonesome around here.
Doc say anything about it?
I bet Ms. Marjorie has a bee in her bonnet.
Oh, she has, but not about any of this mess.
We had a new admin yesterday on the private wing.
We did not.
We did. Wally hurried around to the other side of the nurses station to peer over Pekke's shoulder, looking for any sign of admission paperwork.
Is this another one of her charity cases?
Nope. I think this one has money. Money? She was dropped off by a chauffeur, I think.
Miss Marjorie's been all hush-hush about it, though. You know how she can be.
Oh, she had a driver, eh? Was it a fancy car? I always love seeing them bring them big, shiny cars all the way up the mountain.
and they just stand there looking at all the dirt that gets on them like they don't know what to do with themselves.
Tickles me to death.
I didn't see the car.
Did see the driver, though.
Big fella, a darker complexion?
Peggy drawled, running her fingertip across the back of her hand to make sure Wally got her drift.
Shoot, they just got the help to bring her up here, not even a family member to see her off.
That's cold, but that's money for you.
What's her name?
Wally Gentry casually picked up a manila folder.
from the desk and had just begun to peruse the admittance sheet within when a voice stopped him dead.
Put that down, Mr. Gentry. That is confidential patient information. It is no business of yours.
I was just asking her name, ma'am. I want to make sure to get off on the right foot with the new patient.
Marjorie Robinson ignored the moustachioed orderly for the moment and turned her simmering fury on the
nurse behind the counter. Nurse Rogers, would you care to explain to me while you're sharing private documents with a member of the
custodial staff.
I'll do respect, ma'am.
I'm an orderly, not a...
Do you treat patients, Mr. Gentry?
Are you trained and licensed to administer treatment to those entrusted to our care?
Well, I...
While I appreciate your hard work, you are not a nurse, and you are certainly not a doctor.
Therefore, all information provided to you is on a need-to-know basis.
When it comes to the patient in room 16, all you need to know.
is that she is outside your purview.
The nursing staff will see to her needs.
Are we clear?
Yes, ma'am.
Good.
Nurse Rogers, please see to it that the patients being discharged
are ready for transport well before the people from the state hospital arrive.
Understood?
Yes, we didn't mean no disrespect, man.
But Marjorie Robinson had already stormed off down the hall,
heading upstairs to the second floor.
Well, what crawled up her ass and died?
You know how she is about folks coming on that private wing.
I guess you'd think we had gosh-durn royalty stashed up there.
Wait, do you think the new ad meant somebody famous or something?
Wally Gentry held up his hands, palms out, and shook his head.
Don't ask me, girl.
It's my last shift, and I've already got on her bad side.
That's one headache I do not need.
So, like she said, I do not need to know.
woods go quiet
And you think you
Told every tale you know
And old flame blooms
To reshape
the darkness
So you lock your eyes
On the trembling glow
The faces you find
They're so familiar
They could almost speak
Their stories fall where the light
won't reach
And you can feed the fire to curse the darkness when the voices call.
But in the end long shadows.
Marjorie Robinson was simply trying her level best to make it through the day.
With the state hospital swooping into poach four of their clientele and two more nurses,
not to mention the cheeky but competent Mr. Gentry and a hellish handbasket full of bills that needed paying,
one might be tempted to think that the prospect of a new admission represented a bride.
spot in an otherwise dreadful week. The private wing never really brought in any money,
though. Granted, those three little rooms tucked away in the back hallway off the laundry room on
the second floor hadn't been meant to turn a profit. What they usually did bring in was trouble,
and she simply did not need that right now. What they referred to as the private wing had been
built to provide care for folks who served the green, as well as those in the region who otherwise
could not afford medical care. The land Woodhaven was built on had been in Marjorie's family
for at least four generations. They had built a cabin on this land that had served as a gathering
place for some of the most powerful Green Touch bloodlines in all of Appalachia. And Marjorie had
inherited it from her grandmother, Henrietta Sargent. Marjorie had been raised in the ways of
granny medicine before she went off to school to become a nurse. When she married her husband,
a man of science, and an MD to boot, they dedicated their lives to help her.
helping ordinary folks in the mountains, as well as aiding the servants of the green
in their struggle against the many faces of the inner dark.
It was in this spirit they had built Woodhaven,
in an effort to give folks a place to heal and recover from whatever plague had laid them low.
It was a sanatorium founded on the bones of folk healing
and constructed on the principles of curing the sick through science and medicine.
The three beds on the so-called private wing
serve those suffering from the sort of ailments the average physician
couldn't begin to comprehend.
Their cases ranged from practitioners who over-exerted themselves to the point of needing care to recover
to hapless locals who'd been attacked walking in the woods at night, bleeding out from bites of things with too many mouths and venomous teeth.
The staff, most of whom didn't need to know the finer points of these cases, were simply told that these patients had requested privacy
and would be tended to by only one or two members of staff.
Everybody knew that good old Doc Robinson and Miss Marjorie kept rooms for folks who didn't have anybody to look after them or couldn't afford care elsewhere,
so it was assumed that these patients simply felt embarrassed by the necessity of accepting charity.
Usually, Marjorie and her husband had some sort of connection to the patients requiring this level of discretion.
They either knew the patient's family or someone in the community with whom they were acquainted had referred them to the Robinson's.
In any case, there was usually some point of contact they could reach out to should be.
things go sideways.
This was not the case
with the woman in room 16.
She'd been
dropped off by a tall, well-dressed
black man.
He'd bypassed the reception area altogether,
somehow finding Marjorie
as she'd emerged from the dining room after lunch.
He had not spoken.
He merely reached into the pocket of his suit jacket
and handed her a folded note.
Marjorie could see her name
written on it in sharp, blocky letters.
When she looked up from the note, the man was gone.
She walked onto the front porch to search for a vehicle of some sort, but there was none.
Instead, she found a woman in a wheelchair, who sat dozing quietly wrapped in a quilt.
The note that the man had given her read only, she has done much.
She will sleep and heal on her own.
Keep safe and keep watch.
The woman had looked as if a stiff breeze might knock her.
her over. Marjorie could have easily believed the poor thing was recovering from one of the
many wasting sicknesses they often treated, and there was a shadow about her that said she wasn't
out of the woods just yet. In her estimation, however, the man's note was more or less correct.
What the patient needed now more than anything was rest. Raising as little commotion as possible,
she'd instructed two of her most trusted nurses to take the woman up to room 16. Now,
Now, as the sun set on the 7th of May, Marjorie stared at the woman sleeping there with both pity and unease in her heart.
There was something about this new patient that unsettled her.
The other two rooms on the short hallway were empty, and she couldn't help but feel that was for the best.
She had ordered round-the-clock observation for the woman, and that was the best she could do for now.
Her husband would be done with his work soon, and she knew he was more than ready to drive them down the mountain to the home he had built for her
when they married.
It had been a long day.
And with their rapidly dwindling staff,
tomorrow promised more in the same.
In the peaceful dark of room 16,
Woodhaven's newest resident dream and suffered.
She was walking through the woods in the darkest part of night,
moving deeper into a holler somewhere she could not name,
though if you pressed her, she would have guessed somewhere in Kentucky.
Briars and brambles clung to her skirt.
picking and tearing at the dirty fabric.
Her feet were bare,
but the cold earth did not seem to slow her pace.
Stones, thorns, another sharp bit stabbed at her feet as she trod,
but she felt nothing.
Onward, she trudged.
Her body lumbering forward like a puppet on strings
or like one of those great stilt walkers she'd seen at a fair as a girl.
She was inertia now.
She could not stop if she wanted, and oh, how she wanted.
Her hair hung lank and swung about her face in a ragged mourner's veil.
She was bathed in sweat and grime, and her breath rattled through her chest like the winter wind down a smokeless chimney,
her insides as cold as its unlit heart.
The burden she carried in her arms had been still and cold as a stone on her way through the woman.
Now it riled, causing her steps to slow.
Panic flared in her chest.
She thought if she was careful enough, quiet enough, it would sleep through the night.
She wanted to stop.
She wanted to rest and be still to prevent what she knew was coming.
It had never worked before.
But tonight could be the first time.
Couldn't it?
There was a first time for everything, her ma always said.
She held on to that hope, willing herself to stop,
to refuse to take one.
More step.
There was the briefest moment's hesitation,
but then her body lurched forward again,
emerging from the trees with a crack and a clatter.
A small home.
A two-room cabin.
A chicken run.
The shadow of a barn outpack.
It was no doubt home to one of a countless number of families
trying to carve out their place in these mountains.
Simple folks just doing their best to get by.
She'd had a place like this herself,
So long, her eyes wide in the dim starlight, then stepped into the yard, waiting for the stinging crack of power to wash over her, to be thrown back into the trees scorched and smoking.
She felt no resistance.
She could feel her face stretch into a rictus grin as her feet carried her toward the house.
The things she carried nuzzled against her, seeking succor in her breast.
A wave of revulsion washed through her
And she managed to squirm away from it for a moment
Before something seized her spine
And she lost all sense of her body
Her relief she did not feel the thing latch onto her flesh
Did not feel its awful bony fingers
Her thin bloodless lips
It shifted again
Turning to face the settlement
Eye pitch screen deep, primal
Flickered to life beyond the windows of the little house
And she told her hands to cover the thing's mouth, to silence it, to smother it in the throes of its own foul mulling,
but her hand hung limp at her side.
Death to her commands, the door of the cabin opened.
She screamed inside her head, do not come outside after dark.
Do not answer if you hear something crying outside your house,
not even if it calls your name to the people who live here have no sense.
Who's there?
The woman in the doorway wore a flannel nightdress,
and her bushy brown hair was pulled back.
She held a lantern high peering into the night
and looked back over her shoulder, calling to someone in the house.
Michael?
Michael, get up, dear.
There's somebody in the yard.
I think they need help.
I hear a baby crying.
A man appeared beside the young woman.
A handsome lad pulling on a shirt and looking past his wife into the darkness of the yard.
His eyes squinted into the night.
searching the mouth.
What are you on about, Julia?
Oh.
Hello there.
Are you lost?
Do you need help?
Silence stretched across the thin scrim of light,
radiating from the woman's lantern over in the blink of an eye.
It was like that sometimes.
Other times it was drawn out and slow,
like some perverse play staged merely to taunt her
to rub her nose and her inability to stop any of this.
But this time, thankfully,
It was fast.
She lunged at the couple, closing the distance at an impossible speed.
The fingers of her left hand lengthened as black as coal and sharp as spear points,
and she shoved them into the hands and he hooked his eyes with her middle tube
and his mouth with her thumb which had grown as thick as a...
Shattered, and the meat of his soft palate came apart like cheese as her hand found purchase in his skull.
Before his wife even had a chance to scream, she slammed him to the ground by his head again and again.
A child punishing a misbehaving rag doll bones shattered of the man's head tore free from the broken and bleeding stalk of his neck.
Wet sound of her husband's body tearing free from his head unlocked the woman's scream.
She stared uncomprehendingly at the bloody specter who had butchered her husband and the strange mulling creature
as she carried on her hip.
It was shaped like a child,
but it was clearly something else,
some horror beyond imagination.
Julie, who had been married
to a handsome young man named Michael,
who had come to live with him here on this quiet farm
to earn their living from the soil
and raise a family, fell weeping to her knees
in a puddle of her bridegroom's blood
as the twisted creations
submerging from it like a tide of tangled vines,
bones, and ard, and beg,
And she woke, sweat-soaked and panting, her heart racing, her mind all tangled up in that awful place.
It took her a moment to realize she was somewhere else.
She was in a proper bed in a tidy little room far from the homestead in eastern Kentucky.
There was a polite knock at the door of her chamber, a courtesy only, she realized,
as the door swung inward before she had time to muster her response.
A woman in starched nurse's whites backed into the room, carrying a tray with a ceramic pitcher and cup balanced upon it.
She turned to set her burden down on the nightstand, and her face was kind.
How you doing, hon? You've been tossing and turning all evening.
And I heard you cry out and figured you must have woke yourself up.
Bad dreams.
Nurse Phyllis offered up her most sympathetic smile, and the woman in the bed nodded warily.
Oh, those are the worst, but you have nothing to fear here, sweetheart. You're safe,
and your folks are going to look after you until you're feeling better.
I'm Nurse Phyllis. I'll be with you on the night shift this week,
so if you wake up and need something, I'm your gal.
Would you like a glass of water, huh?
The woman in room 16 closed her eyes and put her face in her hands for a moment,
and pushed them through her thick red hair, smoothing it away from her face.
She gave a tremulous smile as she raised her head again.
Thank you, Phyllis.
Yes.
Yes, that would be lovely.
Last night I dreamed of darkness.
Last night a dream.
I tried to call my father's day.
Well, hey there, family.
Welcome to the first full story arc of season 6 of old gods of Appalachia longshadow.
Yes, you heard that accent correctly.
And I assume you were picking up on all those breadcrumbs along the way,
connecting all those red threads to bring us to our first full daughter Dooley story since season one.
If you wondered what happened to our beloved Miss Dooley in the wake of the events of season two,
then you're about to find out.
I hope you're ready, family.
I truly hope you are.
Now, if you're really eager to find out what happens next,
you can always get your episodes a day early and add free by subscribing to The Holler.
Kick that tithe up a little bit more, and you'll gain access to a whole library of exclusive stories,
including Bill Mama, a coffin, blackmouth dog, familiar and beloved, and a whole bunch more.
Head on over to Old Gods of Appalachia.com slash the Holler and move into the Holler today.
Family, this is your how do you think a certain bear would take to being called a chauffeur
reminder that Old Gods of Appalach is a production of deep nerd media distributed by Rusty Quill.
Today's story was written by Steve Shell and edited by Cam Collins. Our intro music is by
Brother Landon Blood and our outro music is by those poor bastards. The voice of Wally Gentry was Don
Martin. We'll talk to you soon, family. Talk to you real soon.
