The Hall of Wonders - podcast episode cover

The Hall of Wonders

Oct 22, 202114 min
--:--
--:--
Listen in podcast apps:
Metacast
Spotify
Youtube
RSS
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

Civil War creature story amidst the ruins of post-Civil War Charleston, where a mysterious apothecary builds a marine attraction like no other.

For more strange Southern folktales, including stories not on the podcast, visit https://themoonlitroad.com

Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/themoonlitroad and X/Twitter https://www.x.com/themoonlitroad

"The Hall of Wonders" was written and told by Thomas E. Fuller

Audio Production: Henry Howard

The Moonlit Road Podcast is a production of The Moonlit Road, LLC.

 

Transcript

(Transcribed by TurboScribe.ai. Go Unlimited to remove this message.) It was in March of 1867, after the Civil War was truly lost, that Dr. Rembrandt Kavanaugh arrived in Charleston. He was what folks used to call a carpetbagger, a Yankee who'd come down south after the war looking for easy pickings. Folks remember him as a slim, elegant man with one blue eye and one green and the sharpest, whitest teeth anyone ever saw.

Now, Dr. Kavanaugh was an apothecary, a provider of prescriptions, potions, and pills. He set up operations down near the docks, figuring to provide services to the sailors off the Union warships that still filled the harbor, as well as selling overpriced drugs to the town folks of what was left of Charleston. But his plan didn't work. The sailors and soldiers had their own apothecaries, and most of the town folk were flat broke.

Now, an ordinary man would have cut his losses and headed out west. But Dr. Kavanaugh wasn't an ordinary man. He had a mind as bright and fractured as the gears of a nickel-plated watch. He set all those gears and wheels turning, and they ticked and ticked and ticked, until finally his blue eye flashed and his green eye flashed and his white teeth shone like a shark's. To sell things, he had to give people a good reason to come into his shop. He needed a gimmick.

So the next day, Dr. Kavanaugh rode out into the harbor and went from boat to boat, talking to the captains and leaving his business card. Then he went back into the city and placed the biggest sheet glass order anyone could remember. After that, he hired some men to move his apothecary from the ground floor of his building up to the second floor. Folks thought he'd clearly lost his mind. They didn't know how right they were.

Now, soon as the apothecary was moved, the glass workers went in, and there were all sorts of banging and knocking about. And while that was going on, sailors started sneaking into Dr. Kavanaugh's place, loaded with all sorts of little jars and boxes stuffed under their coats. Well, all of this got the town folks' curiosity up. Folks who wouldn't normally go down to the docks found all kinds of excuses to wander by that apothecary.

But they found the windows covered up with black curtains, and all anyone could see were the sailors and glass workers going in, coming out. And Dr. Kavanaugh stood there grinning, with his blue eye flashing and his green eye flashing, his teeth white and sharp. Then the sign appeared. It was right there in the big front window, smack in the middle of a brass easel. Ten days to the Hall of Wonders. The next day it said nine days to the Hall of Wonders. Then eight days to the Hall of...

Well, you get the idea. Finally, it was opening day, and most of Charleston was crowded into narrow King Street in front of Dr. Kavanaugh's shop. It was late June, and the heat was so fierce you could almost taste it. Door finally opened, and Dr. Kavanaugh himself come out and told folks they were going to see something they'd never seen before or ever would again, and all it was going to cost them was a single copper penny.

He could have told them it was one thin dime, or one Yankee dollar, or even a gold double eagle, and they would have forked it over. Every one of them lined up, dug out their pennies, and marched right into Dr. Kavanaugh's Hall of Wonders. Now every room in that ground floor had been ripped out, and there was some kind of magic lantern thing up on the ceiling that made it look like it was underwater. Slowly, the walls began to glow, and folks gasped, and looked, and gasped some more.

What they saw was fish, hundreds of fish in hundreds of colors, swimming around in little glass tanks that covered the walls. Now the folks had seen fish before on a plate on the end of a hook, but not swimming around freely inside a room. All those glass tanks were marked with the names of the fish and where they come from, and the only sound was the water splashing back and forth as if the audience were swimming in the middle of the ocean. Dr. Kavanaugh suddenly appeared without saying a word.

He pointed to the back of the Hall of Wonders. Slowly, heavy velvet drapes pulled back, and it was gasping time again. They saw one great sheet of glass that must have cost more than the rest of the tanks combined. Behind it was nothing but murky emerald water. Dr. Kavanaugh then pointed to a sign on a brass easel. There was just one word there. Mermaid.

Folks crowded forward and stared into the murky depths for what seemed like hours, and just when everyone was nearly cross-eyed, it seemed like something flickered in all that opaque green, a flash of silver like a salmon's tail, a gleam of yellow like golden hair, a hint of a body as pale and perfect as ivory, and then it was gone. And Isaac Sims, Dr. Kavanaugh's assistant, suddenly ushered the folks out so the next group of folks could come in.

Of course, Dr. Kavanaugh had them ushered through the upstairs apothecary, just in case anyone needed to buy some overpriced medicines on the way out. For the next two weeks, the Hall of Wonders was all anyone in Charleston could talk about. Folks went back again and again, two, three, four times, and the pennies filled the bucket that Isaac Sims passed around. And as Dr. Kavanaugh raised the ticket prices, those pennies turned into nickels, dimes, and dollars.

But each time, before anyone could get a good look at the supposed mermaid, Isaac Sims would hustle everybody out again, and Dr. Kavanaugh would just stand there with his green eye flashing and his blue eye flashing, his teeth white and sharp. It could have gone on forever, well, if it hadn't been for the rain. It started at precisely half past ten on the 3rd of July, 1867. A heavy black squall rolled in from the sea, followed by a drenching shower.

The rain pounded and roared as if the very depths had been lifted up and dropped onto Charleston. And it stayed that way, never ceasing or abating, for well nigh a month. It rained until all the roofs leaked, all the floors oozed, and every street and alley and lane was a fast-moving stream.

All the city's cockroaches, flooded out from their holes under the low-slung houses, swarmed into the streets by the thousands and drowned, along with all the rats trying to escape from the waterlogged ships, and all the cats trying to catch the drowning rats. As the drenching rains continued, the town folks started to get a little strange. No one, not even the oldest elder, could remember a storm like this, and when folks get real miserable, they start looking for someone to blame.

Something had to have set off all this water and punishment. Couldn't be the town folks, for no town with as many churches as Charleston could send that much. Something must have caused it, something that had happened lately. And then Miss Aramta Tucker started to have her visions. Now, Miss Aramta was a local conjurer woman who had had visions all her life. She'd always be seen wandering the streets, chattering away to listeners only she could see.

She was a constant source of amusement for the locals, but this time folks was listening to her. Don't you idiots know nothing? It's that mermaid that's causing all the rain. Don't you know what a mermaid is? Town folk just stood there and shook their heads. A mermaid's a person's been washed out to sea. If they don't drown, they get turned into a mermaid by other mermaids. But once somebody's a mermaid, they can't go back to the human world. They gotta stay in the ocean like other fish.

And that's what that mermaid's trying to do. She's calling on the water to wash her back to sea. Now the rumors and whispers really got started up in Charleston. Suddenly every tavern and saloon had its own expert on mermaids and the powers they had over water. Summon it right up out of the air they could. Make it rain forever if they had a mind. Well, if whatever was in that big glass tank wadded out, then out it was going to come. There was no signal, no plan of action or called arms.

Folks just started pouring out into the rain and heading towards the apothecary. Out of Blackbird Alley they came. Out of Philadelphia Street and Bottle Alley and Danger Court. All of them heading for King Street and the apothecary. They were about a thousand strong when they reached the Hall of Wonders. At the doorway stood Dr. Cavanaugh with his green eye flashing and his blue eye flashing, his teeth sharp and white. It's just a trick, he cried, holding his hands up.

Just wire and wax and pig's bladders full of air and a tank full of green dye. There's no such thing as mermaids, you fools. But the fools were having none of it. Even Isaac Sims, Dr. Cavanaugh's trusted assistant, turned against him. They stormed into the Hall of Wonders and smashed open all the fish tanks. And Isaac Sims strode up to that gleaming glass mermaid tank with a sledgehammer, reared back, and smashed it right in the center.

Now when folks talk about split seconds, they mean the littlest amount of time possible. But a lot can happen in a split second and a lot did. Some folks swear that right before Isaac Sims' hammer shattered all that glass down into shards, something swam up out of the muck. And if it really was wire and wax and pig's bladders, it was an amazing piece of work. It balanced on a sleek tail as silver as a hoarded treasure.

Its body was pale and perfect as ivory and blonde hair as brilliant as spun gold glittered around its head. And then the hammer hit the glass and it exploded into a solid wall of water, more water than could ever have been behind it. And folks swore that whatever was in that tank flowed right into Dr. Cavanaugh's arms. And the waters gushed and roared and swept through the Hall of Wonders and up the chimneys, out the windows and doors, driving folks before it like pieces of driftwood.

When the water finally stopped, folks picked themselves up from off the waterlogged street and stared at the soggy ruin that had been the Hall of Wonders. It sagged and gaped like it was made a wet pasteboard. There was no sign of the apothecary or the mysterious exhibit. But the rain had stopped and the sun was out. That was good enough for most folks. Then the townspeople looked around for Dr. Cavanaugh.

They had every intention of locking him up in the deepest, darkest jail cell in Charleston. But he was nowhere to be found. Through all the streets and back alleys they searched, but there is no sign of him. Finally, the townfolks figured he must have been swept out to sea with the fish. And that was good enough for them. Dr. Cavanaugh was never seen again, but his Hall of Wonders never really went away.

In later years, other folks built similar places in other cities, though they called them something different, uh, aquariums. And people still lined up and paid top dollar to watch hundreds of fish in hundreds of colors swimming around in glass tanks. But should you visit an aquarium, look closely behind the biggest tank in the place. If you see a strange-looking fish with one blue eye and one green and sharp white teeth, watch out. For you may have found Dr. Rembrandt Cavanaugh.

And what's worse, he may have found you.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android
Open in Metacast