Old Gods of Appalachia - Springtime in Boggs Holler – Chapter Two: Hunger Pains
Episode Date: December 16, 2021Melvin Blevins and young Cowboy run afoul of the locals.CW: monster violence, mutilation, death by auto accident, earthquake sounds, worms, mucus, endangerment of a child, attempted kidnapping.Written... by Steve Shell Narrated by Steve Shell Produced by Cam Collins and Steve Shell The voice of Glory Ann Boggs: Allison Mullins Intro Music: “Springtime in The Holler” by Landon Blood Outro Music: “I Cannot Escape The Darkness” by Those Poor Bastards 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 https://www.oldgodsofappalachia.com/episodes.Today's sponsor was Sucreabeille - https://sucreabeille.com. Spend $25 and use the code TESSERACTOG to receive a free dram.Old Gods of Appalachia is a production of DeepNerd Media and is distributed by Rusty Quill. 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,
I want to help us keep the home fires burning,
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Right about now.
Springtime in Boggs Hall.
an all-new story set in the same world as old gods of Appalachia, which is a horror anthology
podcast and therefore may contain material not suitable for all audiences. The story takes place
following the events of the scenic route in season two and precedes the events of Build
Mama a coffin. Chapter 2. Hunger Pate. Esau County, Virginia.
1927. Melvin Blevins sat on the tailgate of his truck and waited at the mouth of Boggs Holler.
Seemed like that had been his primary function lately. Drive places and wait.
He didn't mind much when the walkers was involved to shoot, especially when young Mr. Cowboy was the one they was helping.
Melvin had taken a shine to the little feller, especially since he was a youngan that needed help due to
to the influence of spooky things that were beyond his control.
Melvin understood that firsthand.
That little man needed him.
He would be front and center every time.
Melvin had arrived at Boggs' holler with Miss Walker and the boy before sunup,
and they decided to sleep a bit before calling on this Miss Boggs.
When they woke to find that the boy had wandered off onto the Boggs property,
Miss Ellie had told Melvin to stay with the truck in case he came back.
She'd pressed a smooth pebble from the creek by the Walker House into his palm
and showed him one just like it hung on a string around her neck.
If his little rock stayed cool, all was well and he could stay where he was and keep watch.
If it got hot, then he'd better come quick and come expecting trouble.
The stones worked both ways, so if he ran into any sort of problem,
Ellie would know to come running as well.
Melvin had tucked the thing into his shirt pocket, so he'd
feel right away if there was any change.
But the pebble had stayed cool throughout the morning.
He'd polished off a light breakfast of bold eggs and ham from the provisions that had held him
for a while, but Melvin was a man of a greater carriage, and as the morning wore on, he began
to feel a bit peckish.
He was sorely tempted to have a nibble at the sandwiches they'd set aside for lunch, just in
case such hospitality wasn't offered them at the Boggs' homestead.
He was practicing his willpower, contemplating whether it would be all right to go ahead and have just one of the sandwiches, just his own portion, no more, when he noticed the other truck.
It was an old rattlebang thing, older even than his trusty old gal.
It's painted a flat black, not the gleaming ebony that rolled off the factory floor, probably a farm paint job.
It had pulled off to the side of the road.
about 30 yards away, steam whistling like a tea kettle from its radiator.
Melvin watched as two men climbed from the cab and made their way around to examine the problem.
He resisted the urge to mosey across the road and offer his expertise.
While his beloved Bertha was an older model whose slightly rusty body had seen better days,
he kept her engine running in tip-top shape.
These were strangers, though.
and they weren't back in the gap
where he knew everybody and everybody knew him
never know what kind of nonsense
you might run into out here in the boonies
Melvin had run with his share of moonshiner's
back in the day
and narrow back roads like this
were just the sort they liked to use
to ferry their wares around the mountains
and men like that
don't take kindly to being approached by strangers
the pairs seem to be pushing the truck
further off the road
and were getting dangerously
close to the edge of the drop-off over there, but they just kept pushing, checking under the hood,
and then scooting it a little further. Melvin strained to make out the model of the truck,
looked like a Ford Model TT with the wooden slats built up on the sides. He thought it likely
these were legitimate working men, seeing as how they were doing whatever it was they were doing
there in the broad daylight. Hell, they're probably on the job right now. Melvin's intermechanic
twitched again as the men pushed the truck even further from the road. If they weren't careful,
it was going to go right over the edge of the embankment. Melvin couldn't stand to watch any longer.
He made up his mind, hopped off his tailgate, and started across the road towards the two men.
Hey, fellas, y'all need some help? I'm happy to take a look at her if you need.
The two men turned and gaped at Melvin as he approached. He stopped mid-stride, holding up his hands to show he wasn't armed.
This vantage also afforded him a closer look at the truck and its occupants.
On the door of the truck was stenciled in pale flaking letters,
White Family Produce Company.
The two men standing by the busted truck looked like they could do with a good plate of greens themselves.
Melvin thought they might be kin.
Both had skin that was a pale, almost papery white.
The taller of the two,
looked like a big man who'd lost a lot of weight from a bad sickness, his skin hung off his face
like a rubbery mask. The other man was skinny and pale as bones wrapped in butcher paper and
held together with rubber bands. His eyes were dark and sharp behind silver-framed spectacles.
Both were dressed for day labor, the bigger man in overalls and a white undershirt, and the smaller
feller and worked breeches with suspenders over a white button-up.
The thin man stepped forward, meeting Melvin in the middle of the road.
Well, hey there, friend.
I don't know what happened.
We was plugging along just fine.
Then whoop didly do, there she blows.
His dark eyes sparkled as he laughed.
The cadence of his speech was hypnotic, almost musical.
Melvin found himself chuckling along with him.
Christopher over here is downright useless with machines.
but I fancy myself a middle-in-hand at keeping the mechanical mechanic.
But if you'd like to take a look, well, I ain't again it.
The thin man's bottomless eyes met Melvin's and held him for a moment.
And then another.
Melvin tore his eyes away from the little fella's gaze.
There was something off about the man.
He couldn't quite put a name to it, but Melvin knew off when he felt it.
He hesitated and gestured at the name stenciled on the door of the truck.
So, uh, y'all farmers?
The thin man grinned widely.
I am not a farmer myself, sir.
No, but my family is one of the biggest providers of local produce and sundry goods and all of Esau County.
Surely you've heard of white family produce.
Our property's out Esserville way.
My granny White's been out there for years bringing nourishment from the earth to people as far away as Stoneaga or
even out towards paradise if need calls,
a Byron White.
At your service.
This feller could run his gob a mile a minute like a salesman.
Or a boss.
Melvin, of course, trusted neither.
He narrowed his eyes and nodded slightly.
Uh, might have heard of it.
I ain't from around here.
The man reached out and slapped Melvin on the shoulder.
His touch was cold.
Melvin could feel it through his shirt sleeve.
No, sir, you ain't, are you?
I'd remember a big strong one like you.
Yes, indeed.
You get to know most people when you live in the little towns like this, don't you?
That little laugh.
Melvin didn't laugh with him this time.
He found the man's words hard to follow,
and he begun to feel fuzzy at it.
He didn't like it.
He didn't like this fast-talking bugger one bit,
but people in need were people in need.
And Melvin's still.
started to walk toward the truck, but the man stopped him, proffering his hand.
I'm sorry, I didn't get your name, friend.
Uh, me?
Melvin's head was very cloudy, and he had to reach for his name.
Uh, my name is Mr. Blevens.
Melvin's head snapped up at the sound of cowboy's voice.
I don't think you want to shake that man's hand.
You need to trust me.
Come back towards me, please.
sir? The boy extended his hand, and Melvin unsteadily turned towards him.
Cowboy? What are you doing back out here? Why aren't you with Miss? Melvin felt woozy on his
feet all the sudden. Call me Caleb, Mr. Blevens. Do you understand now? Melvin's eyes went wider.
He'd heard the boy's stories about what happened to his first family in his first life.
had heard the boy tell Miss Ellie that sometimes he thought of himself as cowboy and other times as Caleb.
And how those other times were almost never good times.
Caleb reached out, took Melvin's big hand and his small one and tugged him back to the far side of the road.
Melvin felt almost drunk as he stumbled back towards his truck.
The skinny man in suspenders glared.
As if Caleb had just stepped on his good shoes and called his mama a name.
Melvin saw his hands go to his hips like an old church lady about to tell somebody off.
This is your boy, mister?
Well, if he was my boy, he'd know better than to interrupt grown folks when they're talking.
Viren White declared.
When Caleb had come back to the truck to find Mr. Blevins wandering toward the two strangers,
he had seen the men in the special way he saw sometimes,
where life and death unfolded before him.
What he saw was an abomination.
The bigger of the two men was dead.
Just an empty sack of skin filled with a ghost that wasn't even his.
The man's face, though slack and tired to those who looked at him in the regular way,
contorted in a never-ending scream of agony to Caleb's side.
It scared him a little,
but more than that, it made him feel bad for the poor ghost stuck inside a stranger's body.
The little man in the middle of the road, though, he was a different story.
He did not belong here.
This was not his place, not his life, nor his world.
His face, if you could call it that, was blank and featureless.
No eyes, nose, or mouth to be seen, just a raw, rippling expanse of slimy membrane.
The rest of his body consisted of a twisting mass of great white worms,
thick as a grown man's arm woven into the rough idea of a person.
These worms rithed in a soup of gray sticky icker
that seemed to serve as both lubricant and binding.
There was a power coursing through him,
a cold white light that didn't belong to him
any more than the ghosts belonged inside the body of the other man.
There was no life or death for Caleb to see in this thing
pretending to be a man.
It was from a place where neither concept applied.
The thing did not seem to realize that Caleb could truly see him, though, as he prattled on.
Someone just needs to take you over their knee and teach you some manners, young man.
Your daddy has done a terrible job instilling respect for your elders.
He nodded at Melvin, who had dropped to a knee trying to stop his spinning vision.
Caleb just shook his head.
He ain't my daddy, mister.
Byron White's voice bubbled with glee in response.
Oh, is he not?
No, sir.
My daddy is dead.
Oh, you poor, poor thing, left to be raised by the cold cold world.
No wonder you don't have no manners.
Oh, no mama either.
Oh, I can see that now.
Yes, sir, we whites can spot an orphan a mile away as we can.
Well, we have just a place for little boys who need to learn manners and don't have a family to teach them.
so I think you and your big friend there should just come with us.
Caleb could see the man gathers some of the gray ooze that coated its body on his hand,
and he knew he was about to try to touch him.
Caleb gestured at the marooned vehicle across the road.
I think your truck stopped working because you came too close to Miss Boggs' house.
I don't think the land here likes you.
I don't think Miss Boggs would like you be in here either.
You should probably take your friend and start walking back down the mountain, sir.
Byron White wasn't listening.
In a world where he looked like a skinny little man in glasses, his face grinned.
To Caleb's eyes, the faceless white membrane wrinkled a little.
He reached for Caleb then.
reached for him with that special touch of his that made your body go numb and your color drop
and eventually blew your name out of you like a candle of bedtime.
Caleb felt the cold rise in him.
Felt the place where ice-cold lips once touched his cheek in the dark woods,
planting a splinter of death in the very core of him.
She'd meant to protect him, he thought, and she had.
Near as he could tell, no real harm.
come to him, not by force or even by time.
He never slept, couldn't eat, but he never got so much as a stuff he knows.
And if anybody or anything tried to harm him, her power would rise up in whatever horrible
form it needed to take to protect him.
It was almost as if she stood beside him in those moments, summoning monsters to keep him
safe and destroy and devour everything else around him.
Even when he was supposed to die, he couldn't even seem to do it.
Maybe that made him a monster too.
He didn't know.
But right now, he'd do whatever it took to protect Mr. Blevins and Miss Ellie.
Even if that meant letting this thing hurt him.
Just a little.
just enough to call up her awful awful blessing
he was more than willing
the thing that called itself Byron White
stopped just short of contact with the boy
as the garageer suddenly
for the first time it seemed to really see Caleb
the eyeless face crinkled
finally sensing the shadow that marked the boy
Feeling it pull at the things that slept beneath the earth,
the mass of white worms crafted in the shape of a man convulsed in fear,
and the ground shook again.
Cracks forming as a massive shape pressed its spine against the surface of the mountain from below.
The road bowed up as if an earthbound Leviathan was slithering just under the surface,
circling the boy and the monster, the sound of its coming like a living landslide being born
as whatever dead things that slept outside the wards of Bogs' Holler rose to answer the call of the darkness,
hidden like a watchdog inside the boy.
Caleb was cold, and that was so cold.
Let that thing in the ground rise up and swallow this little worm.
He could let it summon all the death that slept under this mountain, and they were so cold.
Oh, so much. He could feel it rising as the widened ripples of earth flipped the stall truck,
along with poor Christopher, who cowered behind it, off the edge of the embankment where they tumbled
away out of sight with a sicken. As Byron White scuttled away from Caleb, the mountains seemed to calm
itself. And when he was far enough away, the ground went still, but the air stayed cold.
The silence that followed would have stolen the breath from angels.
The two locked eyes for just a moment.
And then Byron White, eldest of the children of Granny White,
taskmaster and mine stealer of the white property,
turned and pounded down the road that led out a bog's holler
like his unnatural life depended on it.
Which it did.
Caleb watched the list.
little man disappear around a bend in the road and let out the breath he didn't know he'd been
holding he'd done it he'd used whatever that woman had done to him to protect his friends and no one
had gotten hurt it was just a lot of noise and show and Caleb's gut clenched and he broke into a cold
sweat as the ground began to tremble once more he felt the thing that had risen to protect him
stirred, felt its desire, no, its need to keep coming, its need to destroy and devour everything
that wasn't Caleb, and the boy thought pushing back against it, but it was so hard, and he was
so tired. It would be so easy just to let it go, let it take what it wanted. Cowboys' knees
turned to water, and he had begun to fold in on himself when he heard Miss Ellie call his name,
and she was there holding him up
the pebbles she'd strung around her neck burning like a tiny sun against her skin
as she hugged him against her
and then he heard another woman's voice
maybe it was Miss Boggs he didn't know
say
it's okay boy you can let go
I got it now
and so he let go
and everything went dark
Well, hey there, family, thank you for joining us for Chapter 2 of Springtime in Boggs-Haller Hunger Pains.
If you're a Patreon supporter and you have experienced Build Mama a Coffin,
then this episode might have hit a little bit different for you than for those of you that haven't made that tithe just yet.
The White family, they are a special kind of something, ain't they, y'all?
If you know, you know, if you don't know, you could find out.
head on over to patreon.com slash old gods of Appalachia,
and you can experience all 17 episodes of Build Mama a Coffin.
And Build Mama a Coffin takes place shortly after the events of Springtime in Boggs Hollers.
So if you want to get in on that, it's a good time to do it.
And for a lot of you who were with us for the original run of Build Mama,
who are waiting week for week for it,
you're seeing the events that will lead up to this.
and I hope you're enjoying the ride.
As always, this is a reminder to complete your social media ritual.
Head on over to Old Gods of Appalachia.com,
and you'll find links to all our social media, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook,
the Discord server.
They're all right there so you can join up and follow along with the rest of the family
where we leak early information and give you hints and clues
of what's coming and what might not be coming.
You never know, we might be slightly unreliable narrators.
But you can check all those out at Old Gods of Appalachia.com.
Old Gods of Appalachia is, of course, a production of deep nerd media distributed by Rusty Quill, produced by Steve Shell and Cam Collins.
Our intro music is by Brother Landon Blood.
Our outro music is by those poor bastards.
Today's story was written and performed by Steve Shell.
The voice of Gloria Ann Boggs was Allison Mullins.
We'll see you soon, family.
See you real soon.
