Orlin Wood
70 pages
English

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70 pages
English

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Description

One place. One family. One mystery. Orlin Wood.In 1788, Zechariah Orlin stumbled out of the forest and collapsed in front of a hunting party. That moment marked the beginning of a cursed family, and the legend of Orlin Wood. From phantom voices and mysterious apparitions, to unexplained disappearances and unearthly scenes that cause the bravest of men to question their courage, Orlin Wood is a place that will haunt you.That is, should you dare to enter.A new collection of short horror from the author of The Rivers Webb.

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Publié par
Date de parution 01 janvier 0001
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781611874327
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0186€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Table of Contents
Copyright
ORLIN WOOD
Dedication
Mr. Orlin
Bird Watching
A Murder at Orlin Wood
The Yellow-Eyed Man
Far from the Battle
The Argument
A Revel by Firelight
A Matter of Family Honor
The Hunting Party
Campfires and Cowardice
Not Welcome Here
Poets, Mystics, Dreamers, and Doubters
Sound Logic and Badger Holes
The Storyteller
Bee Keeping
Good Intentions
A Simple Cabin in the Woods
Yankees in The Wood
Marital Issues
When the Trees Speak
Psuche
Tin Roof in a Storm
On the Way to Jefferdsville
A Hometown Welcome
Orlin Wood
By Jeremy K. Tyler

Copyright 2012 by Jeremy K. Tyler
Cover Copyright 2012 by Ginny Glass and Untreed Reads Publishing
The author is hereby established as the sole holder of the copyright. Either the publisher (Untreed Reads) or author may enforce copyrights to the fullest extent.

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be resold, reproduced or transmitted by any means in any form or given away to other people without specific permission from the author and/or publisher. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to the living or dead is entirely coincidental.

Also by Jeremy K. Tyler and Untreed Reads Publishing
The Rivers Webb

http://www.untreedreads.com
ORLIN WOOD
Jeremy K. Tyler
Dedication
This book is dedicated to the memory of my dear friend, Mary Griffith. She was one of my first fans, when my works were just rambling thoughts on paper, and a dearer friend than I deserved. This will be the first of my books she never got to read, but I like to think she would have enjoyed it.
Mr. Orlin
As long as I can remember, Grandma would tell me about Orlin Wood. I can recall hundreds of stories about strange visitors appearing out of the woods on dark nights, only to disappear back into the morning fog; or over-confident adventurers setting off on hunting trips under a blood moon, running afoul of things unknowable and unspeakable. Mostly, though, Grandma’s stories were about family. Our family had lived on the edge of Orlin Wood for over 275 years, and we’ve had more adventures, mishaps, disasters, and just plain weird things happen than any other family in the county. Not really surprising, since the woods were named after my family.
My great-great-great-great grandfather, Zechariah, was the first Orlin. At least, he’s the first Orlin any of us know about. The way my grandmother tells the story, it was back in 1788, when he came stumbling out of the woods on the dreariest day of the year, right about dusk, and collapsed in front of a group of hunters. Since no one recognized him, and he was far too incoherent to make any sense, there was a bit of an argument as to what to do with him. But the eldest member of the party, a Mr Tennison, was a devout Christian who had lived a very severe and uncompromising life of service, and insisted that they make a litter and carry the man to his farmhouse.
For three days, the mystery man drifted in and out of sleep, muttering a single word, “Orlin,” over and over again. They could only assume that he was trying to communicate his name, so the family took to referring to him as Mr. Orlin. The man had a strange effect on people, even in his delirium. He seemed to extract a feeling of compassion and good will from those who lingered by his bedside-particularly, Elizabeth, the farmer’s youngest daughter. Since her older brothers and sisters all had work to do around the farm, Mr. Orlin’s care fell mainly into her gentle hands.
She watched over him as a mother watches over her firstborn child, and when, on that fourth day, he finally opened his eyes and the light of intelligence held firm, she burst into tears of joy. As my grandmother says, and she knows an awful lot about this sort of thing, “you can’t take care of someone and not love them, at least a little bit.” Sure enough, by the time Mr. Orlin woke, Elizabeth had fallen in love, and nothing-not even his personality-would sway her from it.
The odd thing was, upon waking, Mr. Orlin was no more well informed about who he was than the rest of them. He seemed to know a good deal about carpentry, farming, hunting, and even tracking; and what’s more, he seemed to have had, at one point, a fairly thorough Christian upbringing, since he was able to discuss the Bible in depth with Mr. Tennison. But he could not, for the life of him, remember where he had learned any of it.
It was Mr. Tennison that gave him the name Zechariah. He thought it was a fitting name for a good Christian man. The two of them spent a great deal of time together, hunting, fishing, talking about the Bible. And, when they would sit at table in the cool of the evening, Elizabeth was always certain to place herself as close to Zechariah as possible, asking about their day, listening with rapt fascination, regardless how mundane the answer was.
As I said before, Mr. Tennison was a stern man, and very pious, but he dearly loved his daughter, and he was very fond of Zechariah, so when the subject of their courting came up, he consented. And when the issue of their marriage was brought up, he couldn’t be happier. Mr. Tennison went as far as to help the two newlyweds build a small farm of their own, at the edge of the woods, not far from the spot where Zechariah first appeared. So far, it sounds like a real sweet love story-except that, as Grandma puts it, there was something a little off about Zechariah Orlin, something that only Elizabeth saw. He seemed a likeable sort to everyone, and was often invited to go hunting with the other farmers in the area, but whenever he would go, he would always come home angry and in a foul temper. Often, Elizabeth would wake to find him standing on their porch, his gaze fixed on the woods, with an expression on his face that terrified her. Worst of all, though, was the way he would disappear for hours at a time, out in those woods, only to come tromping home, refusing to talk about where he had been, or what he had been doing.
Elizabeth continuously worried. Her greatest fear was that he would someday remember the life he had before he emerged from the woods, and want to return to it. Certainly, his actions seemed to give her fears some credit. But, for the most part, he remained devoted, even affectionate, in a way.
They had four children together, through years of plenty and years of struggle. They saw a run of diphtheria that claimed many lives in the nearby town, and the life of their second born daughter. They fought the weather when a hurricane threatened to destroy their home. They defended themselves against an Indian raid, and Zechariah even helped to save a neighbor’s farm from fire one hot summer night. They lived their lives. They were a part of a community. But people couldn’t help but notice something…unsettling, about Mr. Orlin.
When things happened, Zechariah seemed to know ahead of time. He had mysteriously delayed his regular stop into town for supplies the very week when people started to fall prey to diphtheria. In fact, the only reason his daughter was taken was that she had been on a church picnic with several of the girls from town. And, they all remembered the night that several Comanche raiders, driven from their own lands by drought, had come to steal horses and cattle. It was Zechariah who had raised the alarm and gotten a group together to face them down. The funny thing was, he had gotten the men together before the raiding party was anywhere near the homesteads. And, when a neighbor’s farm had caught on fire one night, Zechariah was there, in the middle of the night, as if he had known that his help would be needed. This, in and of itself, might cause people to be suspicious. When you threw in Zechariah’s strange past-or lack of one-it’s no surprise that some people started to whisper whenever he walked past.
But it was a cold winter morning, a few hours before dawn, that would change everything. That morning, Elizabeth awoke from a nightmare, to find her husband away from their bed. She searched, but could not find him anywhere in the house, nor could she find him on the porch. Throwing on a heavy coat, she ventured out into the night air to search the farm. She found him by their barn, and he was not alone. She stopped at a distance, as he was obviously in the midst of a heated argument with the mysterious man before him. The stranger was in a curious frock, similar to the sort worn by the pastor of their church. His face seemed to be draped in shadow, regardless of which way he was standing, and most curious of all, Elizabeth would later be unable to recall a single clear descriptive fact about the man’s face, height, build, or any other indicator about him, despite the fact that she had stood there for over an hour, watching, before returning to the house.
She desperately wanted to confront her husband about the incident, but a sort of dread would creep up on her whenever she thought of broaching the subject, so she kept silent. But over the next few weeks, she would awaken in the night to find him away from bed, again, and again, by the barn, and again, arguing with the dark stranger. In town, people spoke of a strange presence. A sense of dark foreboding, a hint of the netherworld. There were plenty of ways of describing it, but the one phrase everyone seemed to agree on, was evil. The younger folks laughed it off as the superstition of old folks, but even they had a certain nervousness about them when they did.
Even church became a place of darkness. The pastor’s sermons, once filled with light and

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