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Portrait of an old woman Baba Yaga with blood dripping from her mouth
What happens when the Baba Yaga woods have to make way for progress?

The first harvester and forwarder arrived as if on cue, despite the horde of protesters.  The gas pipeline was going through.  Both sides had played politics and the bureaucratic duel had spanned months into years but eventually the commercial interests won out.  The resource was just too valuable and too badly needed by the growing urban populace.  After finalizing the path the pipeline would take to make as many people as happy as possible (because let’s face it, this was more about minimizing complaints and gaining political leverage than about the environmental impacts or honoring Indigenous Peoples), plans were in action to bring the project to fruition.

As the deforestation crew descended upon the scene, the well positioned riot-gear-outfitted guardsman made sure they were as unhindered as possible, breaking up the crowd as they moved through.  The protesters stepped or were shoved aside, still continuing to chant and brandish signs.  All except for one – she was an elderly woman, with long white hair flowing in wispy tendrils about her gaunt frame in a sort of ethereal otherworldly manner.  She wore loose fitting peasant’s clothes that bespoke a long-gone era and leaned against her solid wooden walking staff, her moss green eyes steeled on the oncoming procession.  How she had managed to evade the wall of guardsmen was anyone’s guess.  The monster machines were forced to stop.

“C’mon Grandma,” the crewman called out from the harvester.  The name on his pale blue shirt simply read Bill.  “We have a restraining order against you folks.  This is happening whether you like it or not.  You don’t want to get dragged off to jail, do you?”  One of the riot-gear guardsmen took a step forward.

 The woman smiled knowingly and cackled loudly, her shrill voice echoing through the crowd and the path and the earth and the sky like a primordial spirit unleashed.  The world around her fell deathly quiet.  She raised a gnarled hand and extended a crooked finger to point at the crewman named Bill.  She spoke slowly and gleefully, “To Hell with you.”

Bill rolled his eyes and revved the engine of the mechanical behemoth in response, perhaps to persuade the old woman to move along.  He’d listened to too many slurs today already; he was just trying to do his job.  It may not have been pretty, but it was progress, and everyone just needed to step out of the way so he could get on with it.  As the riot-gear-outfitted guardsman closed in to escort the old woman from the path, she mysteriously vanished in a cloud of pale green smoke.

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***

Bill woke with a start.  He had been amazed that the crew was able to get to the site so uneventfully.  There hadn’t been any protesters and the few stragglers that had remained had stayed remarkably out of the way, chanting, singing and brandishing signs from afar.  The site itself was well guarded from the perimeter, perhaps more so than was necessary since everything was just quietly waiting for the demolition to start.  Bill had expected more backlash, as was evidenced by his recurring nightmares from before the job had even started.  But the protesters never entered the woods.  It had all been too easy.

It was 2 AM and the world was still enveloped in thick, heavy darkness.  Bill knew he should try to get another couple hours of sleep before the grueling day ahead of him, but something wasn’t quite right.  That old woman, her icy gaze seemed to bore a hole straight into his soul.  He couldn’t seem to get her out of his head.

Suddenly and without any warning, a piercing shriek rang through the forest like a throaty impish laugh.

Bill was on his feet before he even realized he had leapt out of bed.  He warily stared at the trailer door.  The wind howled through the trees in the distance.  A familiar voice behind him called out, “What was that?”

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“I dunno Sid,” Bill answered, “maybe an owl.”

Sid was sitting up in his bunk, rubbing his eyes.  “Not like any owl I’ve ever heard…”  He turned to Bill, “Can’t sleep, eh?”

“It’s nothing.”  Bill returned to his bunk.  “Let’s try to get some more rest.  Big day tomorrow.”

“Sure thing, boss,” Sid murmured as he rolled over.

Bill lay in bed staring at the trailer ceiling.  As he drifted back to sleep he heard an unnerving cackle float through the wilderness.  To Hell with you, he thought to himself as he succumbed to slumber.

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***

The next day, after coffee, the crew went to work.  They began work on the deforestation of the first swatch of trees bearing spray painted X marks from the survey team who had demarcated their route.  All they needed to do now was follow the signs and clear the debris.

As Bill began to down a nearby pine with the harvester, cutting through the trunk effortlessly to topple the tree to the side, he saw a flash of movement out of the corner of his eye.  He caught a glimpse of what appeared to be an old woman in peasant’s clothes as she darted unnaturally in and out of the trees to his left, disappearing behind and betwixt trunks.  It couldn’t be, surely he was imagining things…  He paused and turned the key in the ignition.

Sid’s voice echoed over the radio from the forwarder, “Something wrong, boss?”

“Nothing,” Bill replied.  “I’ve just got to see what that was…”

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The rest of the team was working on another ridge nearby where they continued what they were doing.  There was no call for help, no need for follow up; Bill was on top of it.

Bill got out of the machine and traversed the muddy broken path up the hill to the stand of trees where he had beheld the vision.  He peered behind the evergreen where he had last seen the old woman and was greeted by a skull on a pike.  He leapt backwards, slipping on some moss and falling to the ground.  As he rose, he looked up at the skull pike again: it was nothing more than a fallen branch.  He stood and fingered the drying needles, scattering them to the breeze.  The wind mocked him, whispering in an ancient and shrill sigh, “To Hell with you.”

Bill turned to return to the harvester and was immediately confronted by the old woman from his dream, standing between him and the sleeping mechanical monster.  She stared through him, her icy green gaze penetrating his very soul.  Her wild white hair whisked to and fro about her shoulders as she stepped toward him.  She smiled, “How nice of you to come, just in time for dinner.”  She ran her tongue along her razor-sharp teeth, filed to dagger-like points.

Bill turned to run and slipped on the muddy moss-encrusted mound.  He slid down the hill and into a small previously unseen ravine off to the side of their work site.  A hidden pocket in the earth engulfed him.  He found himself sprawled in a muddy pit with his head reeling, roots trailing the edges of the earthen walls of his prison.  A cackle greeted him from the darkness just behind his field of vision.

Bill pivoted to find another skull on a pike.  He backpeddled into the other wall of the pit, skinning his hand on a rock, and blinked.  Not a skull, but a root wrapped around a smooth stone embedded in the dirt, greeted him.  He shook his head and called out, “This isn’t funny…  Whoever you are, we have a restraining order.  You aren’t to set foot on these premises.”

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The hoarse giggle resounded through the pit and the earth in response.  “No, you are mistaken,” it laughed.  “It is I who have the restraining order against you.  Only a fool enters a witch’s wood and expects to leave alive.”

“Who…  Who are you?” Bill called out to the empty tomb.

“You may call me Babushka Ježibaba,” the old woman trilled, reappearing out of the shadows right before him.  Her nostrils flared wide as she sniffed him up and down and smiled through her serrated grimace, “We feast tonight, my sisters…”

The old woman grappled Bill by the throat and pulled him towards her in a sweeping motion, effortlessly overpowering him.  She leapt from the pit into the gaping door of a house on stilted chicken legs, which took off into the deep woods away from the mechanized mayhem of the construction zone.  “Welcome to Hell,” she crowed as they bounded out of sight…

***

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“Bill,” Sid called out as he came upon the abandoned harvester.  “Where are you?”

No answer.  The crew was packing it in for the day and Bill had scarcely even touched his section.  His radio stretched idly on its cord, dangling above his empty seat.  Sid glanced to the left and saw what appeared to be an old woman weaving in and out of the trees off to the side.  “To Hell with you,” the wind whispered as he left the harvester cab and squinted at the vision.

“Bill, you over there?” Sid shouted as he hurriedly followed the elusive presence into the woods…

red nail polish blood drips from the mouth of a porcelain figurine of an old woman in peasant clothes
Bloody Baba Yaga sculpture by Jennifer Weigel

Read X Marks the Spot, another eco-horror tale by Jennifer Weigel, here on Haunted MTL.

Check out more of Jennifer Weigel’s writing here at Jennifer Weigel Words.

portrait of the artist in crow skull headdress backlit by the sun
Portrait of myself with dark makeup and crow skull headdress, backlit by the sun.

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Jennifer Weigel is a multi-disciplinary mixed media conceptual artist residing in Kansas USA. Weigel utilizes a wide range of media to convey her ideas, including assemblage, drawing, fibers, installation, jewelry, painting, performance, photography, sculpture, video and writing. You can find more of her work at: https://www.jenniferweigelart.com/ https://www.jenniferweigelprojects.com/ https://jenniferweigelwords.wordpress.com/

Original Series

Nightmarish Nature: Giants Among Spiders

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So, as you may have noticed, we have a special fondness for spiders here on Nightmarish Nature.  Well, they are kind of the spokes-critters for horrifying animalia, perhaps because they are so freakishly different from us.  Or maybe it’s because I find them a little disconcerting for all that I try to take the “you mind your business, I’ll mind mine” approach, at least if they stay outdoors. Or just because I really like to draw spiders for all that I prefer not to find them sharing my home (though I’ll gladly take spiders over other bugs or mice or larger critters who didn’t get an invite).

Anyway, this segment is devoted to the largest Giants Among Spiders, as if you didn’t have enough to worry about already.  And the top place is contested based upon body mass or leg length.  Most of these are tarantulas, which globally take top place among the large arachnids.

Goliath Birdeater Tarantula
I’m hungry… I bet you are…

Goliath Birdeater Tarantula

The Goliath Birdeater Tarantula of South America is the biggest brute of spiderdom, weighing in at over 6 ounces.  They build funnel burrows and are known to eat birds (although rarely), mice, lizards, frogs, and snakes, but largely any big insects including other species of spiders.  They have urticating barbed hairs that they fling at would-be attackers as an irritant to escape.  And people even eat them after they singe the bristles off. Here’s a National Geographic video showing this spider in action, in case you wanted to see a giant spider take out a mouse.

Giant Huntsman Spider drawing by Jennifer Weigel
Creepy crawly at it’s worst…

Giant Huntsman Spider

And with the longest legs, we have the Giant Huntsman Spider of Laos, with a leg-span of 12 inches.  Their legs have twisted joints and they move in a crab-like manner, which furthers their impressive appearance. ‘Cause they’ve got legs, and know how to use ’em.  They prefer to live in underbrush and cave entrances.  These are like the big relatives of their Australian cousins, which we’ve all seen online and developed a healthy aversion to.

Everything's cuter when it's fuzzy, right? tarantula drawing by Jennifer Weigel
Everything’s cuter when it’s fuzzy, right?

Brazilian Salmon Pink Birdeater & Brazilian Giant Tawny Red Tarantulas

Next we have two more South American species: the Brazilian Salmon Pink Birdeater, which boasts one-inch fangs, and the Brazilian Giant Tawny Red, believed to be the longest-lived spider with a lifespan of up to thirty years.   Both are in the tarantula family and have urticating hairs, a word you probably never read much before today unless you are in the hobby.  So apparently South America is not the best travel destination for you if you struggle with arachnophobia, though I suspect you’d figured that out already.  (I wouldn’t recommend Australia or Southeast Asia either.)

Face Size Tarantula drawing by Jennifer Weigel
Face-Size, sorry no Face or Face Hugger for scale

Face Size Tarantula

And finally the Face Size Tarantula, which has a very terror-inducing name reminiscent of the Face Huggers of Alien-glory.  Anyway, these spiders have an 8-inch leg-span and live in India and Sri Lanka.  They look kind of like big hairy wolf spiders with stripey legs, sometimes with pink and daffodil coloring.

If you enjoyed this eight-legged segment of Nightmarish Nature on Giants Among Spiders and their larger than life kin, please check out past segments:

Vampires Among Us

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Perilous Parenting

Freaky Fungus

Worrisome Wasps

Cannibalism

Terrifying Tardigrades

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Reindeer Give Pause

Komodo Dragons

Zombie Snails

Horrifying Humans

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Original Series

AI journey: Little Red Riding Hood, Part 3 Final

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So here is our last installment of our AI journey exploring the idea of Little Red Riding Hood and the Big Bad wolf being one and the same. All of these are based upon the AI generated art and prompts using NightCafe and then created as posters in Canva. Feel free to check out Part 1 and Part 2 of this exploration if you missed them.

Forget this talk of sheep, it isn't helping..., Dark Fantasy style, Aug. 1, 2023
Dark Fantasy style, Aug. 1, 2023

A non sequitur I know, but I couldn’t resist. If you picked up where we left off you’ll get it.

So what about Little Red Riding Hood as a wolf?, Dark Fantasy, Aug. 1, 2023
Dark Fantasy, Aug. 1, 2023

Seriously?! Again with the cropped off head cop out…

Little Red Riding Hood as a wolf, seriously we want to see her face!, Artistic Portrait, Aug. 1, 2023
Artistic Portrait, Aug. 1, 2023

Finally! That was a journey. And not even worth the result, in my opinion.

Anyway, here is a bonus montage I made out of a bunch of additional Red Riding Hood prompts for an article that never happened…

Little Red Riding Hood AI art montage, Nov. 4, 2023
AI art generated Nov. 4, 2023

Prompts for Montage:

1.) What if Little Red Riding Hood and the Big Bad Wolf were one and the same being?
2.) Her wolf face peering out of her red cloak, fangs dripping with the blood of another victim, lost in the forest and never found.
3.) Little Red Riding Hood closes in for the kill, lunging from her red cloak, her wolf fangs dripping with blood.
4.) I am Little Red Riding Hood. I am the Big Bad Wolf. I am coming for you.
5.) Howling within, the rage sears forth from the red cloak, discarded in the deep woods. Red Riding Hood succumbs to the lycanthropy.
6.) Heaving breaths. Dripping blood. Red Riding Hood is not what she appears. She is a wolf in sheep’s clothing.
7.) Her red cloak masks the fangs hidden below the surface.
8.) It starts with a long sighing breath. Waiting. The wolf within stirs.
9.) Red Riding Hood trembles. She succumbs to the lycanthropy.
10.) The wolf bursts forth from within. It takes over Little Red Riding Hood’s mind, her body, her being.
11.) Red Riding Hood howls. She is ravenous with hunger for blood. The wolf within has taken over. Mind, spirit, body. She feasts on the blood of the moon.
12.) Big Bad Wolf Red Riding Hood ravenous blood moon feast
13.) Blood moon beckons. I. Little Red Big Bad Riding Hood Wolf. Freedom howling night curse.
14.) Beware. Bewolf. BeRedRidingHood. Betwixt. Beyond.
15.) I pad quietly as the forest dissolves around me. Red Riding Hood and Wolf, one and the same.
16.) Wolf within howling dark recesses of the mind, Red Riding Hood lost
17.) Red Riding Hood HOWL wolf bane true existence polymorph within-and-without.
18.) Red howl Riding Wolf dark existence brooding within

So thank you for joining us on another AI art journey. You can still catch the last AI art journey on Haunted MTL here.  To see more such devolutions into AI generated art, check out the Will the Real Jennifer Weigel Please Stand Up? blog.

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AI Journey: Little Red Riding Hood, Part 2

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Continuing our AI journey from last time exploring Little Red Riding Hood herself as the Big Bad Wolf… All of these are based upon the AI generated art and prompts using NightCafe and then created as posters in Canva.

Little Red Riding Hood as a wolf, Sinister style, Aug. 1, 2023
Sinister style, Aug. 1, 2023

How very… Phantom of the Opera predatory… this is definitely not what I had in mind. Maybe something more cutesy?

Little Red Riding Hood woman with wolf head instead of her own, Anime V2 style, Aug. 1, 2023
Anime V2 style, Aug. 1, 2023

Ugh. Maybe not.

Wolf face peering out of red hooded cape, Sinister style, Aug. 1, 2023
Sinister style, Aug. 1, 2023

Wow, that seems like such a cop out, cropping off the head so you don’t have to depict it. And I don’t want to lose the Little Red Riding Hood reference completely.

Wolf in sheep's clothing as Little Red Riding Hood, Artistic Portrait style, Aug. 1, 2023
Artistic Portrait style, Aug. 1, 2023

So no surprise there, I knew that was too many references to work.

And we continued to devolve, join us again next week for the final installment to see how this ended… And again, if you want to catch the last AI art journey, you can find it on Haunted MTL here.  To see more such devolutions into AI generated art, check out the Will the Real Jennifer Weigel Please Stand Up? blog.

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