After 6 Generations of Drinking From the Cursed Well, The Family’s Eyes Turned Black
There are things in this country that do not show up on any map. There are hollows that the road does not bend toward and names that the census has never carried twice. I am going to tell you about one of those tonight, and I want you to do something for me before we go in. Wherever you are listening from, leave the name of your town in the comments below. I like to know who is down in the dark with me—new listener, old listener, all the same here. A note before this one begins: if what you are about to hear is the kind of story you would want more of, I have put ten of them into an audiobook, The Hollow Files, five hours, ten counties, same voice as the one you are listening to now. You will find the link in the description and at the top of the comments. Now then, the story.
In the spring of 1798, a man named Cornelius Threlkeld walked west out of the Shenandoah Valley with a wife, two oxen, and one cracked iron pot. He was 31 years old. He had no money, no people waiting for him, and only the vaguest idea of where he was going. What he had was a piece of paper from a land office in Winchester that promised him 160 acres on the far side of a ridge nobody had bothered to name. He found the ridge in late June. He found the hollow on the other side of it in early July, and he found the well, near as anyone could tell, three days after that.
The well was already there when Cornelius arrived. That was the thing nobody talked about later when the talking started. The stones around the mouth were the size of a man’s chest, fitted together without mortar, and worn smooth in a way that did not fit the hundred or so years white settlers had been in that part of the country. Cornelius noted the well in his almanac in a neat hand. He wrote, “Good water, cold, deep, no need to dig.” He did not write anything about who might have stacked those stones or when, or why a well would be there at all in a hollow with no sign of any cabin, any clearing, or any old hearthstones. He was a practical man. The well saved him weeks of work in a season where weeks of work could mean the difference between living and not.
I have read his almanac. It survived. The Threlkelds, for all their other strangenesses, were keepers. They kept records the way some families keep silver. I found Cornelius’s almanac in the county museum two ridges over, in a glass case on loan from a man in Pikeville who claimed to be a distant cousin and who would not return my letters when I tried to write to him in 1955. The almanac is a small book, the size of my hand. Cornelius wrote in iron gall ink in a tight, even script, and the entries from that first summer are the entries of a man too busy and too tired to imagine anything.
Tuesday, cleared the lower ground, found chestnut roots harder than expected. Wednesday, Drusilla unwell from the heat, gave her water from the well, which steadied her. Thursday, the well water is cold even in this weather. The cold goes through a tin cup. I do not understand how in a hollow this shallow the water is this cold.
That last entry is the only thing he ever wrote about the well that was not simply useful, and he did not go back to it. He did not speculate. He moved on to the chestnut roots and the lower ground and the question of whether he could get a second mule before winter. He drank from it that first afternoon on his knees, scooping the water up in his hat. His wife, Drusilla Threlkeld, drank from it that evening from a tin cup. By the end of that first summer, they had a cabin, a garden, and the beginnings of what people in the next county would come to call Stone Penny Hollow. The name did not come from Cornelius; he never named the place. The name came later from a peddler who said the stones around that well looked like big flat coins stacked on edge, the kind you would find in a dead man’s pocket.
I should tell you what Cornelius looked like because it matters in a way that will not become clear until later. He was a long, narrow man, pale across the cheekbones, hair the color of wet rope, and his eyes were a particular shade of light brown—the kind of brown that goes almost yellow in certain light, like a held-up glass of cider. There is a portrait of him hanging in the county museum two ridges over, painted in 1811 by a traveling man who took a meal and a bed in exchange for the work. You can still see those eyes in the painting behind the cracked varnish. That is important. Hold on to it.
Cornelius and Drusilla had one son who lived past his first winter. They named him Absalom. He was born in the spring of 1803 in the cabin in the hollow, drank well water from a bottle his mother soaked a rag in, and grew up tall and quiet and useful. Drusilla, for her part, lived a long life by the standards of that country and that time. She died in 1847 in her late 70s, having outlived her husband by nine years. There is one record of her speech that survives. A neighbor’s son, a man named Eldridge Burchem, who later moved to Ohio and became a printer, wrote down a story about visiting the hollow as a young man in the 1830s and hearing the old woman, Drusilla Threlkeld, say of her well, “The water remembers everybody who drinks it.” He thought she was making a joke. He laughed. “She did not laugh,” he wrote, “and she did not look at him when he laughed. And he never went back to the hollow again.” Which is the recurring shape of every outsider’s account of Stone Penny Hollow that I have ever been able to find. They go in. Something small happens. They do not go back.
By the time Absalom was a grown man in the 1820s, the hollow had four families in it. By the time he buried his father in the 1830s, it had eleven. And by the time Absalom himself was an old man putting his own son, Lorenzo, in charge of the homestead, the hollow was a small, sealed-off community of maybe 60 people, almost all of them either Threlkelds or married into the Threlkelds or beholden to the Threlkelds in some way the law down in the county seat had never quite figured out how to write down. They all drank from the well. That was the first rule of the hollow and nobody had to say it out loud. You could keep a cistern for the wash, you could catch rain for the garden, but the water you drank, the water you cooked with, the water you gave to anybody who came up sick—that water came from the stone well in the middle of the hollow, the Threlkeld well, the well Cornelius had found in 1798, which is to say, the well that had been waiting in that hollow for nobody knew how long before that.
In 1842, a Methodist circuit rider passed through Stone Penny Hollow on his way to a camp meeting in Logan County. His name was Reverend Phineas Ott. He kept a journal and the journal eventually made its way into the archives of a small Bible college in Ohio where I read it on a microfilm reader in the autumn of 1956. That is how I know what I know about this family, that and what came after. The Reverend Ott wrote about the hollow in a careful, worried hand. He said the people there were polite. He said they fed him well. He said the cabins were clean and the people were respectful and the singing in the little log chapel on Sunday was, in his exact words, “more solemn than is the custom even among the most pious mountain congregations.” But he wrote one other thing. He wrote, “The eyes of the Threlkeld family disturb me. Old Absalom and his son Lorenzo and Lorenzo’s wife and even the cousins married in have a sameness about the eye that I cannot explain. The color is wrong somehow. As if the brown of an ordinary eye had been steeped too long in a pot and turned the color of strong tea and then turned again toward something I have no word for.”
He wrote more than that, actually. I read every page of his journal. The microfilm was scratched and the ink was faded and there were entries I had to puzzle over with a magnifying lens for an hour at a time. But there was one passage that has stayed with me and I want to read it to you now, more or less the way he wrote it: “Sunday evening in the Threlkeld house, Absalom the patriarch asked me if I had ever drawn water from a well so deep that the bucket came back colder than the air around it. I said I had not. He smiled in the firelight and said, ‘Then you have never had real water, Reverend.'” He said it kindly. There was no boast in it. He said it the way a man tells a younger man that the younger man has never tasted the apples from the high orchard. And his eyes in the firelight were not the eyes of any man I have met in a long life of meeting men.
That was 1842. Generation two and generation three. Forty-some years into the drinking. I want you to think about that for a moment. Because Cornelius’s eyes had been the color of cider in 1811 when the traveling man painted him. By 1842, the eyes of his son and his grandson had gone past tea into something Reverend Ott could not name. And nobody in the hollow had noticed because the change had happened slow over two generations, and because they all had the same eyes now looking at each other every morning. And there was nobody from outside who stayed long enough to see what they were becoming—nobody except Reverend Ott. And he left after three nights and never came back and only wrote about it in a journal nobody read until 114 years later when a county surveyor from over in Mingo started asking questions.
There were others, too. I want you to know I did not build this whole story on one Methodist preacher’s journal. In the years between 1941 and 1956, I found four more outside accounts of Stone Penny Hollow. A peddler’s bill of sale from 1861 with a note on the back. A surveyor’s report from 1888 with a hand-drawn map and a paragraph the surveyor had crossed out so hard the paper had torn underneath. A Pinkerton field memo from 1903 when a railroad company had briefly considered running a spur up that valley and had sent a man to look at the population. A letter from a county doctor in 1922, who had been called up to the hollow to treat a case of pneumonia, and who never sent another bill for his services, and never returned anybody’s letters about it. Every single one of them said the same thing in different words: the eyes. The eyes are wrong.
The peddler in 1861 wrote, “They none of them look quite at you. They look just past you the way a cat looks at a corner.” The surveyor in 1888 crossed out, but did not erase, the words, “I do not believe these people see what I see when I look at them.” The Pinkerton man in 1903 wrote in his clipped professional hand, “It is hard to bear, the family is uniform in feature and in gaze to a degree I have seen only in inbred populations, and even then, not to this extent. I do not recommend the railroad spur.” The county doctor in 1922 wrote in a letter to his wife that ended up in the local historical society after his death, “Mary, I will not be going back up there. The wife of the man with the pneumonia thanked me for my work and walked me to my buggy, and the whole way she did not blink. I counted. We were together a quarter of an hour. She did not blink one time. I do not know what to make of this, and I do not wish to make anything of it. I will be home for supper. Kiss the dogs.”
Four men, four different decades, four different reasons to be in that hollow. All four of them wrote down some version of “the eyes are wrong,” and then went home and tried very hard never to think about it again. That county surveyor is me. My name is Hollis Marbury, and in the winter of 1958, I was 56 years old, and I had been measuring boundary lines and copying deeds in three counties of Southern West Virginia for 31 years. I had been to Stone Penny Hollow exactly once before, in the summer of 1941 on a routine survey, and I had left in a hurry. And I had not been back since.
I am going to tell you why. But first, I want to tell you about generation four and generation five, because the eyes kept changing and the people in the hollow kept not noticing, and the well kept doing whatever the well was doing. Lorenzo Threlkeld, generation three, married a woman from outside the hollow in 1851. Her name was Marcelina Quillen, from a French-descended family down near the Big Sandy. The hollow people called her the “outside wife,” even after she had been there 20 years. She was the last person to marry into the Threlkelds from any meaningful distance. After her, the family started looking inward. Cousins, second cousins—the kind of marriages a county clerk approves with a tight mouth and does not write down too clearly.
Marcelina had brown eyes when she came to the hollow. A normal walnut brown. Within five years of drinking from the well every day, her eyes had gone dark enough that her own sister, visiting in 1856, refused to sit across the table from her at supper. Her sister said in a letter that is still in the Quillen family papers, “Marcelina’s eyes are not the eyes I remember. They have a kind of muddy bottom to them, as if something is moving under the surface. I do not say this lightly. I will not be returning to that hollow.” The sister never did. The letter is longer than that one quotation. I want to read you a little more of it because of all the documents I have read about Stone Penny Hollow, this is the one that has hurt me the most. Marcelina’s sister was named Constance Quillen, and she was 26 years old. And she had walked 20 miles up from the Big Sandy in good shoes that were ruined by the time she got there. And she was writing to her mother by candle the same night she got back home:
“Mama, she does not remember our father. She does not remember the song he used to sing us when we churned. I asked her to sing it with me, and she looked at me a long while, and then she sang a little of it. But the words were not right, and the tune was not right, and I do not believe she was singing what I was singing at all. She was singing what the people in that hollow sing, which is the same tune in everybody’s mouth, and no words I could pick out. Her husband was kind to me. The old people were kind to me. The cousins were kind to me. They were all kind to me. I did not feel hated, and I did not feel feared. I felt looked at. I felt looked at the way a deer feels looked at in a clearing when there is no wind and no sound, and the deer cannot tell where the looking is coming from, but the deer knows it is being looked at, and the deer knows it has to leave. I left. I do not believe Marcelina knows I left. I do not believe Marcelina was, in the parts of her that matter, in that house with me at any time during the three days I spent there. Something else was in that house, something that wore her dress and her hair and her ring and her voice. I will not be going back. Please do not ask me to.”
The sister never did go back. She married a hardware merchant in Catlettsburg, Kentucky, and she lived to be 81, and she never spoke of Marcelina again, even when her own relatives asked. Her granddaughter sold the family papers to a college library in 1943. And that is how I read the letter in the spring of 1955, sitting in a reading room with a green-shaded lamp and a sandwich in my coat pocket I had forgotten about. And Marcelina lived another 41 years in Stone Penny Hollow and bore four offspring, all of whom were born with eyes the color of wet bark. And none of whom ever questioned it once they came of age because everybody they saw every day had eyes the same.
Generation four was a man named Purnell Threlkeld, born in 1861, who took over the homestead in the 1880s. By the time Purnell was a grown man, the hollow had stopped sending its young people out to take work in the county seat. A school teacher three miles down the ridge had asked in 1879 why the Threlkeld cousins all looked at her the same way. She used those exact words in a letter to the county superintendent. “They all look at me the same way as if they were one person divided into eleven bodies and the one person did not like what it was seeing.” The superintendent wrote back and told her to mind the Lord’s work and stop writing fanciful letters. She quit at the end of that term. After that, the hollow taught its own.
Purnell married his second cousin, a woman named Verena Threlkeld, in 1886. They had three sons. The middle son was named Wendell, born in 1894. And Wendell is generation five. And Wendell is where the thing that had been happening in that well started, near as I can tell, to come up out of the water and look around. Let me take a breath here before what comes next. If this voice is one you would want to spend more time with, I keep a longer collection, The Hollow Files, ten cases, five hours, the same kind of quiet trouble I am telling you about now. The link is in the description below and pinned at the top of the comments. Let us go back to the story.
Wendell Threlkeld, born 1894 in the cabin his great-grandfather Cornelius had built 96 years before. He was the first of the line to be photographed. A traveling photographer came through the hollow in 1914 on a swing through the coal camps looking for portraits to sell to the company stores. He stopped at the hollow because somebody on the road told him there was an old place up there with strange people who might pay for a picture. He set up his camera in the dooryard. He took 12 plates that afternoon. He developed them that night in a wagon two ridges away, and he wrote in his ledger the next morning the words, “I will not be selling these.”
His name was Lemuel Streke, and he was a working photographer out of Bluefield, and his ledger is in the same county museum that holds Cornelius’s almanac on the same loan from the same uncommunicative cousin in Pikeville. Lemuel Streke’s handwriting is hurried. He was a busy man. He took portraits at fairs and weddings and funerals and Sunday afternoons in the yards of new brick houses where the man of the family had just bought his first suit. He charged a dollar a plate and printed in black and white because color photography was something he had read about but had not yet seen. His entry for the day at Stone Penny Hollow is six lines long, and I have it more or less by heart:
“Threlkeld place, top of the hollow, family of nine, three old, six middle. Sat them in the yard. The light was bad. I told them to look at the camera and they did, all of them. Without me needing to ask twice. The plates came out clean. The plates came out cleaner than any plates I have ever taken. I am not going to develop the second six. I am not going to sell the first six. I am giving them away to anybody who wants one. I am leaving for Welch in the morning. I am not going back up that hollow.”
That was the end of the entry. I have one of those photographs. I bought it from a junk dealer in Charleston in 1949 for 40 cents. I did not know what it was when I bought it. It was just an old tintype in a cracked paper sleeve. And on the back in pencil, somebody had written “Threlkeld family, Stone Penny Hollow, 1914.” In the photograph, there are nine people. Purnell, the father, standing in the back. Verena, the mother, sitting in a straight chair in front of him. Three grown sons and two grown daughters arranged around them. A grandmother on the left in a black dress. That would have been Marcelina, the outside wife from generation three, then about 70 years old. And an old man, very thin, sitting in the place of honor on the right. That was Lorenzo, generation three. Born 1828. In 1914, he would have been 86 years old. He had outlived his brothers, his cousins, two of his own grown offspring. He was the oldest living person in the hollow.
I want you to picture this photograph. Nine people, Sunday clothes, a summer dooryard, the cabin behind them, and every single one of them has the same eyes—not similar eyes, the same eyes. Black as the bottom of a kettle, no iris visible, or if there is an iris, it is the same color as the pupil. So, you cannot tell where one starts and the other ends. There is still some white showing at the corners in the old man, Lorenzo, and a little in Purnell, but in the younger ones, in Wendell and his brothers and sisters, the white has gone almost gray, like the inside of an oyster shell. And they are all looking right at the camera, all nine of them, the same look. I kept that photograph in the bottom drawer of my desk for nine years before I went up to Stone Penny Hollow to ask my questions in person. It took me that long to work up to it. It took me that long partly because of what had happened in 1941.
In the summer of 1941, I was 39 years old, a county surveyor four years into the job, and I was sent up to Stone Penny Hollow to walk a property line that the state was trying to settle for tax purposes. The Threlkelds had not paid taxes on the hollow in some time. Nobody in the county records office could remember the last assessment. The land had a kind of bureaucratic fog around it. Every clerk who had tried to put a number on it had quit or transferred or just let the file slide to the bottom of the pile. I was the new man. They gave me the file. I drove up there on a Tuesday in July. I parked my truck at the end of the county road where the hollow road turned to ruts, and the ruts turned to a track, and the track turned to nothing. And I walked the last mile and a quarter with a transit on my shoulder and a sandwich in my pocket.
It was high summer. It should have been loud—cicadas, birds, the creek down the bottom of the hollow running over its stones. There was none of that. There was no sound in Stone Penny Hollow that day except my own boots on the dirt, and eventually the sound of a woman somewhere singing a hymn very slowly, without words. I want you to picture the walk in. The track went down off the ridge in long shallow switchbacks. There were beech trees on either side, their bark the gray silver color of an old nickel. The ground under the beeches was bare, no undergrowth, no ferns, no mountain laurel, just smooth packed earth, the way the ground gets under a tree where animals have been bedding down for a long time, except there were no animals.
Halfway down the track, I stopped because I thought I had heard somebody walking behind me. I turned around. The track was empty. I stood there a long minute, the way a man does when he wants to give whatever it was that was not there a chance to be there if it wanted to be. Nothing came. The beeches stood in their silver light. The track went up the way it had come down. I walked on. About a quarter mile farther, I came across a little stone marker by the side of the track, about knee-high, the kind of thing a man would set in the ground to remind himself where the property line ran. There were initials cut into it, badly weathered, and a date: C.T. 1799. Cornelius Threlkeld, the year after he came. I knelt down to look at the stone, and as I knelt, I felt the earth under my knee give very slightly, the way earth gives when there is a hollow space underneath. Not a tree root hollow, a bigger hollow than that. I stood up too fast, and I had the bad sense for just a second of standing on a thin crust of something with the rest of the country dropped out beneath me. That was the first sense I had in 1941 that Stone Penny Hollow was not shaped the way it looked from the road.
The Threlkeld place was at the head of the hollow just like the record said. A two-story log house that had been a cabin once, then been added on to in the 1840s, then again in the 1870s, and looked now like three different houses leaning on each other for support. The roof was shake. The porch had a swing on it. There were no flowers, no garden, no dogs. There was a man on the porch. He stood up when he saw me. He was tall and thin and somewhere in his late 40s in clean overalls and a white shirt, and his name, he told me, was Wendell Threlkeld, generation five, the one who had been a young man in the 1914 photograph. I want to be careful about how I describe Wendell because I have been told over the years that I am a calm man, a reasonable man, a man not given to imagination. I want you to hear me as that man now.
Wendell Threlkeld’s eyes had no whites, none. Not gray, not yellow, not bloodshot, none at all. From corner to corner, top lid to bottom lid, his eyes were the color of dark water in a deep well. There was no pupil distinguishable from iris, no iris distinguishable from sclera. It was just one color all the way across, and the color was nothing I had ever seen in a human face before or since, except in his own children later that same afternoon. He was polite to me. That is the part that took me years to get past. He was polite. He shook my hand. His hand was warm and dry and ordinary. He asked after my drive and my truck and whether I had had my dinner. He asked me inside, and I went because I was 39 years old and I had a job to do and I did not yet know how to be afraid of a polite man in a clean shirt.
The inside of the Threlkeld house was clean. I want to say that because I think people imagine these stories with cobwebs and rot. And that is not what I saw. The floors were swept. The windows were open. There was a pot of beans on the stove and a calendar from the feed store in Welch on the wall, turned to the right month. There were six people in that house: Wendell, Wendell’s wife—a woman named Tessaline, who was also a Threlkeld by birth, his second cousin once removed—Wendell’s mother, Verena, then 72 years old, and three grown sons. The oldest son was about my age, maybe a year or two younger. His name was Garvin, generation six. The other two sons were younger. All six of them had the same eyes as Wendell. All six of them, the mother, the wife, the three grown sons, and Wendell himself. Six pairs of eyes the color of dark water with no white in them anywhere. And all six pairs of eyes were on me the whole time I was in that house.
I want to slow down here. I want to tell you what it is like to be the only person with normal eyes in a room with six people whose eyes are not. It is not at first frightening. That is the strange part. At first it feels only like being noticed. Like you have walked into a hardware store in a small town and the men around the wood stove have stopped their conversation and turned to look at you—the way men in a hardware store do. Friendly enough, but counting you. Taking your measure. It feels like that for about 10 minutes. After 10 minutes, you begin to notice that none of the eyes have looked away. Not once. I sat at a kitchen table with Wendell and his wife and his mother and his three sons, and I drew them my little map of the property line, and I asked them my little questions, and the whole time none of the six of them looked away from me. They did not look at each other. They did not look at the map. They did not look at the cup of water in Tessaline’s hand or the pot of beans on the stove or the calendar on the wall or the door behind me. They looked at me, all six of them, the whole time.
About 20 minutes into it, Tessaline got up and brought me a glass of water. I asked my questions about the property line. I drew the map I had been sent to draw. I drank a glass of water that Tessaline brought me because I had walked a mile and a quarter in the July sun and my mouth was dry and I had not yet put together that the water in the glass was from the well in the dooryard. I should describe that water. I have thought about that water for 17 years, the taste of it. I want to be careful because I know what it sounds like when a man describes a glass of water and makes it sound like more than a glass of water. I am not trying to do that. The water was cold, colder than the air in the house, colder than my hand on the glass, colder than it should have been after sitting on the table for the 10 seconds it took Tessaline to walk it from the bucket to me. And it tasted very faintly of iron—not the iron of rust in a pipe, the iron of blood in a cut on the inside of your cheek.
I drank the whole glass because to not drink it would have been an insult to Tessaline and because at the age of 39, I had not yet learned that an insult to your host can sometimes be the cheapest thing you ever buy. When I set the glass down, all six of them were still looking at me. Verena, the old woman, the mother, said the only words I heard her say the whole afternoon. She said, “Good water, isn’t it?” And I said, “Yes, ma’am, it is.” And she nodded once, slowly, and did not say anything else.
The well. I want to tell you about the well because I went out to look at it before I left. It was in the middle of the dooryard between the house and the springhouse. Stones the size of a man’s chest fitted together without mortar, worn smooth. A wooden cover on a hinge with a bucket and a windlass. The water in it was very far down. I leaned over and looked, and the well went down farther than any well I had ever measured. I have measured a lot of wells. Most hand-dug wells in that country go down 20 feet, 30 at the outside. You hit rock or you hit clay, and you stop. This one went down past where my eyes could follow. The water was black, the way water gets when it is deep enough that no light reaches it. And while I was looking down into it, I had the very clear feeling that something was looking back up at me. Not a person, not an animal, just an attention—a kind of patient noticing far down in the dark.
I stood up too fast. I caught my balance on the windlass. When I turned around, all six of the Threlkelds were standing in the dooryard behind me in a half-circle, watching me look at their well. None of them had made a sound coming out of the house. I left. I want to be honest about this part. I did not finish my work. I lied about it later in the file. I wrote in the property line as best I could from what I had measured, and I fudged the corner I had not gotten to, and I closed the file and put it in the drawer for completed work, and I went home. And I sat in my kitchen, and I shook for about an hour before I could pour myself a cup of coffee. I did not tell my wife about it. I did not tell anybody about it for 15 years.
The water Tessaline had given me to drink stayed in my mouth for three days. I brushed my teeth. I gargled with whiskey. I drank coffee, milk, tomato juice. The taste of that water stayed in my mouth for three days, and then it was gone, and then about a week after that I started having a particular dream. In the dream, I was at the bottom of the well. I was not drowning. I was just down there in the dark, and I was looking up at the small circle of daylight at the top, and there were faces around the circle looking down at me—the Threlkelds, all six of them. And the faces were curious, the way you would be curious looking down at a fish you had just dropped a hook for. I had that dream four nights in a row. Then it stopped. I did not go back to Stone Penny Hollow for 15 years, but I started reading. That is how I found Reverend Ott’s journal, and the schoolteacher’s letter, and the photographer’s ledger, and the 1856 letter from Marcelina’s sister, and the tintype in the junk shop in Charleston. I built a file in the bottom drawer of my desk, and I added to it every year slowly, like a man pulling a thread out of an old sweater and trying not to unravel the whole thing at once. I want to tell you about the reading because the reading is what made me go back.
When you start pulling at these threads, you start to see that the Threlkeld family is not just a family in a vacuum. They are a pattern. You look at the history of the county, and you see that they are woven into it, but only in the shadows. They never served on a jury. They never ran for school board. They never went to the big church in the county seat. They stayed up in their hollow, and they drank their water, and they had their eyes. And the world outside grew up around them, and it did not like them, and it did not understand them, but it did not stop them, because in those mountains, if you leave a man alone on his own land, he is going to stay there as long as the land will have him. And the land seemed to have the Threlkelds. It seemed to want them there.
There was a series of disappearances in the county in the 1890s, when the mines were opening up and people were moving in from out of state. Men who had come up to prospect for coal, men who had come up to sell insurance, men who had come up to look for land. They were never found. And the reports of these disappearances are all tucked away in the same county files that I spent my lunch breaks reading in 1957. A man from Pennsylvania in 1892. A man from Virginia in 1895. A man from Ohio in 1898. And in every single case, the last place they were seen was on the road that leads up into the mountains, specifically the road that leads up to Stone Penny Hollow. Nobody ever went up there to look for them. The law, in those days, was a fickle thing, and the terrain was a killer. If a man went missing in the mountains, you chalked it up to the mountain, and you went on with your day.
But I knew. By 1957, sitting in my office with the radiator hissing and the smell of dust and old paper, I knew exactly what happened to those men. I knew why the Threlkeld family never seemed to be hungry, even when the rest of the county was. I knew why their cabin stayed standing when others fell to ruin. They were not just a family. They were a filter. The well was a filter. And everything that went into the hollow and did not come out, it all went into the well. And the water remembered.
I decided in the spring of 1958 that I had to go back. It was not a choice. It was a compulsion. I had to know if the well was still there. I had to know if the family was still there. I had to know if the eyes were still there. I took a week of vacation. I packed my truck with gear—a transit, a camera, a notebook, a canteen, a pistol. My wife asked me why I was taking the pistol, and I told her it was for the snakes. She didn’t believe me, but she didn’t stop me. I don’t think she wanted to know. I think she had sensed the change in me for years, ever since 1941, ever since I had that first taste of the water.
I drove up the mountains. I drove until the road ended, and then I kept driving on the track, my truck groaning under the strain. I got within a mile of the hollow before the axle snapped, and I had to abandon the vehicle. I grabbed my pack, and I hiked the rest of the way. It was October. The leaves were turning, red and gold, and the air was crisp. It should have been a beautiful day. It felt like a funeral.
When I got to the edge of the hollow, it was quiet. The silence was heavier than I remembered, thick and suffocating. The houses looked the same, but worse. They were sinking. The logs were rotting, the chimneys were leaning. It looked like the place was finally dying, or like it was being reclaimed. I walked to the main cabin, the one with the well in the dooryard. It was still there. The well, I mean. The stones were still there, still fitted together, still worn smooth. But the bucket was gone. The windlass was rotted through and sagging. And the cover was wide open.
I approached the well, my heart pounding in my throat. I looked down. It was dark, darker than I remembered. There was no reflection, no glimmer of light, no sense of depth. It was just a hole, a mouth, waiting. I knelt down, the same way I had 17 years before. I leaned over. I looked. And this time, I didn’t feel like something was looking back up at me. This time, I knew. I knew what was down there. I knew what the Threlkelds had been feeding for generations. I knew what the water had been doing to them. It hadn’t been making them into something new. It had been making them into something old.
I stood up and I walked to the cabin door. I knocked. No answer. I pushed the door open. It was unlocked. The house was empty. Not just empty of people, but empty of life. There was no furniture, no beans on the stove, no calendar on the wall. It was just a shell. A hollow. I walked through the rooms, one by one. I saw the marks on the walls, the scratches, the stains. I saw the small, dark room in the back, the one with no windows. And in that room, on the floor, was a pile of things. Jewelry, coins, watches, buttons, keys—the remnants of everyone who had ever gone into that hollow and never come out.
I realized then that the Threlkelds were not a family. They were a cult, a sacrificial machine, built around a dark and ancient hunger that lived in the water. And they had been serving it for nearly two hundred years. And the eyes—the eyes weren’t a mutation. They were a brand. A sign of ownership. A sign that the well had already claimed them.
I left that house and I ran. I ran until I couldn’t run anymore. I hiked back out of the mountains, my breath ragged, my head spinning. I didn’t look back. I didn’t care about my gear. I didn’t care about the truck. I just wanted to be away, to be anywhere else. I drove my wife’s car for two days, not stopping for food or sleep, just driving, chasing the horizon, trying to outrun the memory of that dark, hollow, waiting mouth.
I eventually made it to a town three states away, a town I had never been to before. I started a new life. I got a job as a clerk, I married a woman who didn’t know anything about my past, and I never, ever talked about Stone Penny Hollow. But I still have the dreams. Every now and then, when I’m tired, or when I’m stressed, I find myself back at the bottom of that well, in the dark, with the faces of the Threlkelds looking down at me, waiting for me to join them.
I’m telling you this now because I’m old, and I’m tired of keeping the secret. I’m telling you this because I want someone to know. I want someone to know about the well, and the eyes, and the hollow that the road doesn’t bend toward. And I want you to remember—if you ever find yourself in those mountains, if you ever find a hollow that doesn’t show up on any map, if you ever find a well with stones that look like dead men’s coins—don’t stop. Don’t look. And for the love of God, don’t drink the water.
Because the water remembers. And the water is always hungry. And it is waiting for you, just like it waited for me, and just like it waited for them. And once you’ve looked, once you’ve drunk, there is no going back. You are a part of the hollow, and the hollow is a part of you, and you will never, ever be free again. So, go on with your life, go on with your day, but remember—the things that don’t show up on the map are the things that want to be found.
And they are very, very good at waiting.
The story of the Threlkelds and their dark, hidden well in Stone Penny Hollow became a cautionary tale in the counties surrounding that lost place. People would whisper about it at funerals, during long nights of winter, or when someone would inevitably go missing, wandering too far into the deep woods near the ridge line. The local authorities, when pressed, would simply cite the “instability” of the terrain or the “impossibility of navigation” in that stretch of the mountains. They knew, as those of us who had looked at the records knew, that some areas simply did not want to be surveyed.
After my final, harrowing trip in 1958, I spent years researching the deep history of that region. I delved into archives that predate the statehood of West Virginia, looking for any mention of people who might have preceded Cornelius Threlkeld. I found fragments of journals from explorers and land agents that hinted at something else—something that was not human—that had supposedly occupied those lands long before the first cabin was raised.
There were accounts from the 1700s of “shifting earth” and “singing hollows” where the water was said to have a consciousness. I suspect that when Cornelius settled that ground, he had not discovered a vacant space, but rather a dormant one. He had, quite literally, opened a door that should have remained sealed. The stones around the well, those perfectly fitted, mortarless blocks, were not the work of any frontier settler. They were a dam, a seal, and when he arrived, he disrupted the equilibrium. He became, inadvertently, the first feeder.
The generational progression that I tracked in my files—the eyes shifting from brown to the muddy, bottomless black—was the visible evidence of a slow, biological transition. It was as if the well was consuming their humanity, drop by drop, replacing their own internal essence with the substance of that dark, deep water. By the time of the 1914 photograph, the transition was near completion. They were no longer entirely of the earth. They were observers, watchers, waiting for something else.
I often wonder about the fate of the Threlkelds after I fled the hollow that day in 1958. Did the “filter” finally become so saturated that it burst? Or did the family simply cease to exist because they had finally merged completely with whatever lived in that dark, cold well? I sometimes find myself looking at a glass of water, the way the light hits it, the way it settles, and I am reminded of the metallic taste that lingered in my mouth for those three agonizing days. I am reminded that the most common, most necessary substance on earth can also be the most deceptive.
There were others who came after me, though they were few. A reporter in 1972 tried to locate the road into the hollow, but he returned a day later, shaken and refusing to speak, his camera smashed beyond repair. A group of hikers in 1984 claimed they heard someone calling their names from the top of the ridge, but when they followed the sound, they found only a circle of silver-barked beech trees and a cold, oppressive stillness. No cabin, no clearing, no well. Just the trees, watching.
I am often asked why I didn’t try to destroy the place, to collapse the well, to burn the cabin to the ground. But how do you destroy a place that is not really there, a place that exists only when it wants to be found? The land in Stone Penny Hollow is not merely a geographic location; it is a point of intersection, a rupture in the ordinary fabric of our world. It doesn’t abide by the laws of land deeds or property lines. It exists in the margins, and it will remain there, quiet and patient, long after my files are burned and my name is forgotten.
So, if you take away nothing else from this story, take this: pay attention to the silence. Pay attention to the places that aren’t on the maps. And if you are ever thirsty in the deep woods, stick to the streams that run under the sun. Avoid the water that sits still, especially the water that comes from the dark. Because there are things in this country that remember us, and they are not waiting for us to leave—they are waiting for us to come back.
The last time I checked the maps, the area was designated as federal forest land, closed to the public, citing environmental hazards. But I know what those “hazards” are. They are not chemical, they are not geological. They are the same hunger that Cornelius Threlkeld felt when he first knelt in the dirt in 1798. That hunger is not mine, and it is not yours, but it is there, and it is always, always, drinking.
I keep the tintype photograph in a box in my attic now, wrapped in velvet, hidden away. I don’t look at it anymore, but I know it’s there. I know the nine people with the black, fathomless eyes are sitting in that summer dooryard, staring out from the paper, still waiting for someone to come by and take their picture, still waiting for someone to ask them what they are seeing in the dark.
And sometimes, in the dead of the night, when the house is quiet and the wind is blowing through the trees outside, I think I hear the faint sound of a hymn, sung very slowly, without any words, echoing from the hollow that does not exist. And I know, with a certainty that chills my blood, that the water is still remembering. It is remembering everyone, and it is waiting for its turn to remember me.
So be careful where you walk. Be careful what you drink. And if you hear a voice calling your name from the shadows, do not answer. Just keep walking, keep moving, and never, ever look back, because the things in the dark have a way of looking back, and their eyes are unlike anything you have ever seen in the light of day.
The story is over, but the memory remains, a cold, iron-tasting residue on the tongue, a warning etched into the marrow of the bone. You are now a part of the lore, a part of the warning, and I hope, for your sake, that you never, ever find yourself in the shadow of Stone Penny Hollow. Because some doors, once opened, can never be shut. Some wells, once fed, can never be drained. And some memories, once remembered by the water, never, ever fade.