Deep in the hills of West Virginia, an old story tells of a lonely mountain spring that once ran clear and cold—until one summer it was said to turn the color of blood. Locals claimed the change came each year on the anniversary of a crime so brutal that the land itself refused to forget it. Passed down through generations and later preserved by folklorist Ruth Ann Musick, the tale remains one of Appalachia’s darkest pieces of mountain lore.
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