Welcome to Night Vale - 169 - The Whittler
Episode Date: June 1, 2020An old man sits on the steps of the old General Store whistling a lonesome tune. Weather: “Embroidery Stars” by Carrie Elkin http://carrieelkin.com/ Black Lives Matter. Donate where you can to... support social justice initiatives: https://www.thecut.com/2020/05/george-floyd-protests-how-to-help-where-to-donate.html You can also support the Night Vale Patreon: http://patreon.com/welcometonightvale/ Rescheduled tour dates for 2020: http://www.welcometonightvale.com/live/ Our third novel, The Faceless Old Woman Who Secretly Lives in Your Home, is out now: http://www.welcometonightvale.com/books/ Music: Disparition http://disparition.band Logo: Rob Wilson http://robwilsonwork.com Written by Joseph Fink & Jeffrey Cranor. Narrated by Cecil Baldwin. http://welcometonightvale.com Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram. Check out our books, live shows, store, membership program, and official recap show. Produced by Night Vale Presents. http://nightvalepresents.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, Nightville, it is Jeffrey Craneer speaking to you from April of 2026 with a couple of cool things coming up.
First off, we're going to be in Europe touring our newest Nightville live show, Murder Night in Blood Forest.
We're going to be in Edinburgh, UK, on May 27th.
We'll be in Manchester on the 28th. We will be in London on May 29th, and we will be in Amsterdam on May the 30th.
You can get tickets for these shows at Welcome to Nightville.com slash live, and hopefully we'll have more.
shows coming up later this year. Who knows? Just get on our newsletter. Go to Welcome
to Nightville.com. Sign up for our newsletter. We will send you emails twice a month to let you know
all of the news that you need to know about Welcome to Nightville. One of the big news things to tell you
right now is that our other hit podcast, Alice Isn't Dead, is coming back on April the 13th, written by
Joseph Fink, produced by Disparition and starring Jacique and Nicole. More episodes of Alice
Isn't Dead return on April the 13th. So make sure you are
still subscribe to that podcast. Finally, do you want some cool nightbale merch? Go to welcome to
nightville.com, click on store, and we have all kinds of cool t-shirts, things for the summer,
tank tops, beach towels. And if you like coffee mugs, if you want calendars, if you want backpacks,
all kinds of cool stuff there. So check out Welcome to Nightville.com and click on store,
click on live. If you want to see our live shows, we will see you in Europe. And hey, thanks.
dream starts somewhere. At first, it's just potential. But over time with the right support and a few
breakthroughs, it becomes something more. Make RBC Training Ground your breakthrough moment. Start your
journey to Team Canada today at rbc trainingground.ca.crainingground.ca. Let us go then, you and I,
when the evening is spread out against the sky and pick up some del taco for dinner. Welcome to
Nightvale. Beyond our town,
Past the sand wastes, in the scrublands sits the old general store, an oaken cabin-style A-frame
with box windows and a covered patio. On the porch there sits a swinging bench and upon that bench
sits an elderly man, his face crumpled like a discarded letter, his eyes like tire tracks
hidden beneath the shady brim of a straw cowboy hat. The old man holds a block of elmwood,
the size of a potato in his right hand.
And in his left, a carving jack.
He whittles away at the knot of wood,
shaving off small corners, making detailed lines and indentations.
The wood is all his world.
And this world is quiet in his lap,
on his bench, on his patio,
before his general store amid the scrublands
past the sand wastes which curl about night veil
like the gentle but calloused hands of a father holding a newborn.
As the old man whittles, he whistles, sad songs with no words.
But all those who hear the notes know they are about loss,
that they are about loneliness.
But no one hears those notes, not yet.
No one sees the old whittler, nor his general store far out in an unenough.
uninhabited stretch of desert. Not yet. If they did, they would wonder how an old general store
which was not there yesterday was suddenly here today, a shop that by all accounts had weathered
decades of abuse of heat, wind, and isolation. They would hear his sad song, and the universal
language of wistful sorrow would hide from them their understanding of time. Let's have a look now at
sports. This Saturday night, the Night Vale High School Scorpions basketball team begins the district
tournament. The Scorpions, having finished the season 18-2, earned the number one seed this year,
but face some tough competition in their bracket. In the first round, they must battle another
basketball team. This is logical, because most basketball tournaments feature other basketball teams.
But the other basketball team is considered weaker than the Nightville Scorpions because a series of
accumulated numbers indicates this is so.
Should the scorpions make it out of the first round and into the semifinals,
they would likely battle the number four seed, nature.
A tougher matchup, to be sure, as nature is unpredictable and ubiquitous.
Nature's style of play is best described as capricious and random,
sometimes showcasing an array of flashy skills like sunny days,
crystalline lakes and otters.
But nature is a lockdown defrable.
offensive force with effective momentum stoppers like lightning, quicksand, and poison ivy.
And in the finals, the favorites to compete for the title are Nightvale High School versus themselves.
Perhaps the toughest battle of them all, as each player must confront their harmful secrets,
painful pasts, and darkest nightmares.
Themselves are able to match the pace and power of Nightbale's offensive and defensive sets,
and we expect an excellent game.
Good luck, Scorpions.
Most days the scrublands are absent of humans, unapproachable and hostile.
Today is not most days, as a line of Nightville citizens has formed outside of the general store
to see the old Whitler and his wood menagerie.
Parents ask for photos of their children with his work, and he only whistles and nods
nearly imperceptibly.
It could almost be interpreted as a slight twitch of the neck, rather than,
than an affirming nod, but interpretations grow liberal when want is high.
Fathers and mothers snap pictures on their phones of children accepting gifts of wood figurines from the old man.
The kids stare into the thin black ellipses that pass for his eyes, searching for the charming
smile of elderly approval. But instead, seeing every single constellation of the night sky inside slits as
thin as thistles and as black as tar. The historic expansion of the universe cannot be fully understood
in words or even human thought, but it can be comprehended in the eyes of the tanned, wrinkled stranger.
The old Whitler does not charge a penny for any of his work. He does not smile, nor accept the many
thank yous out of the young ones by their manner-minded handlers, nor does he accept
requests. Children have many mascots, heroes, and cartoons that they love to possess via
keepsake totems, and they repeatedly ask the old man for whittled representations of their
favorite things like Pokemon characters or one of Pixar's anthropomorphic cars or even Ted Allen,
host of Food Network's long-running cooking competition chopped. But the old Whitler only
He carves what he carves.
And he carves tiny horses, little cowboys, old tiny wagons, armadillos, tigers,
tractors, almost anything you can think of.
He finishes his sculpture of a koala bear and hands it to Amber Akinje, who looks at her husband,
Wilson Levy, who is holding their sobbing, screaming 16-month-old baby, Flora.
The couple smiles together, never knowing that this balsa koala is everything.
they could have ever wanted beyond a loving family.
Wilson begins to cry at the simple beauty of this craft.
Amber begins to cry at the feeling of being understood,
and young Flora stops crying as she fawns over the six-inch-tall antipedean marsupial,
cartoonishly gnawing on a eucalyptus leaf.
The Whitler also carves people, small human figures, yes,
like firefighters and ballerinas and clowns, but also actual people.
Harrison Kipp told the old man he wished to be happier in his own skin,
and the old Whitler grabbed Harrison's cheeks and brought Harrison's round, soft face before his own crinkled countenance,
and Harrison screamed.
He screamed in fear of what the old man was about to do.
He also screamed in joyous anticipation, and the two screams were discordant, like adjacent keys pressed simultaneously on a church organ.
The old whittler pressed his knife against Harrison's chin
and began to pull the blade back
using the force of his thumb and the trunk of his forefinger.
He repeated throughout Harrison's assenting and defiant shouts
and after a few moments,
Harrison stopped yelling and stood.
His jaw squarer, his nose thinner and longer,
his shoulders broader,
and Harrison smiled.
Soon, the Whitler began carving houses, roads, and city buildings.
They were larger than the koala, much larger,
for they were full-sized renditions of these things.
He sliced and sawed away at block after block of red oak,
hackberry and beechwood, forming new arteries of city travel,
whole blocks of residences, and even cultural landmarks.
and venues, and the town of Nightvale, in a single late morning, began to expand into the
distant and uninhabitable scrublands of our desert. Let's have a look now at horoscopes.
Gemini. Barry yourself in your work today, Gemini. Pile that garbage high and rest your
weary head beneath its odorous but comforting weight. Cancer. No more Mr. Nice Guy, Cancer.
Today, you are Mrs. Disinterested Lady.
Get out there and be uninvolved in everything.
Leo.
You're the talk of the town, Leo.
Word after word is about you, and it is juicy.
Like a rare steak.
Like a blood orange.
Juicy like 2008 couture.
You should hear what they're saying.
Virgo.
You are not what you seem to.
to be Virgo. You seem to be a blackberry shrub, overreaching and prickly. But really, you are
a human, squishy, and small. Continue to be the thorny fruit-bearing bush, though.
Libra. You seek balance, Libra, but you are as lopsided as a wealth disparity graph in an
economist's classroom. Share your worth, distribute your value fairly and compassionately,
Libra, for the villagers are sharpening their tools.
Scorpio.
Hey, Steve.
Love you, pal.
Sagittarius.
Your opacity in relationships is going to be your downfall, Sagittarius.
You're an obsidian monolith, towering over everyone, absorbing all light, except the faint
reflection of those who want to know what glows inside your stony facade.
You don't have to be a diamond, Sagittarius, or even quartz.
Just try for salt lick, okay?
I think you can achieve that.
Capricorn.
Oh, the games you play, Capricorn.
You wicked little sea goat.
You naughty Caprene ocean dweller with your horns and scales,
vexing us with your riddles and labyrinthian logic.
The stars offer no advice for you, Capricorn.
Only envious praise.
Aquarius.
Put your money where your mouth is.
But wash that money first, Aquarius.
It's been in so many other people's mouths.
Ever since we added Jolly Ranchers as legal currency.
Pisces.
You're swimming upstream, Pisces?
Figuratively speaking, of course.
I mean, you're a human who does not need to actually swim upstream for food or a mate.
Get out of the metaphorical stream and avoid the damage you're going to do to your
body and soul. Except for you, Tim. You're a woodchuck who is literally swimming upstream.
I don't like you, Tim, because you are eating my tulips. You can drown.
Aries. Fake it till you pretend to make it, Ares.
Taurus. Don't hide your feelings, Taurus. Frame them. Display them ostentatiously on the wall.
Mount them on plinths behind velvet-roped stanchions.
Curate an exhibit of your feelings.
Taurus?
Charge admission.
And now the news.
The Nightfail City Council deliberated today on whether the old Whitler in front of the old general store
in the scrublands was friend or foe to our town.
Those voices arguing in favor of the old man celebrated the huge municipal expansion
he was creating so quickly onto undeveloped land.
This new infrastructure would have taken us dozens of years
and millions of dollars to deploy,
and he has accomplished it all in half a day.
These voices all said in unison.
Plus, they added,
he whittled a little army man for my kid,
a bracelet for my wife, and a sweater for our cat.
It's everything we ever wanted!
The dissenting voices, and they were few,
could only argue that he failed to acquire proper permits
for any of this construction, let alone an outdoor vendors' license, which is mandatory
even for giveaways, accepting restaurant samples, marketing promotions, and military dispersion
of chemtrails. The many-voiced, unibodied creature that is the city council,
huffed in nearly unanimous support for this old man, his sad whistling, his prolific whittling,
and his beneficence to our city. Did you see? said three of the three of the men. He said the
the voices that inside the general store there's everything you could ever need. Cans,
boxes, shelves, counters, walls. It's amazing. Everything is carved from a single block of wood,
and it's all connected, no glue or bolts or rivets anywhere. He's a deft hand,
concurred four other voices. How does he even find single blocks of wood that huge? Wonder,
solo voice aloud. Whatever, the entire city council roared in unison, that old man is a superb
Whitler. And now, financial news. Everything's fine. It's just dandy. Thank you for asking.
And now back to our top story. Out in the scrublands, an entire wooden suburb has grown from the
withered hands and sharp knife of the old Whitler,
who has, for the first time today, moved from the porch of his general store.
He stands now upon a stage, a round platform at the center of a great amphitheater,
which he personally carved deep into the cracked red rock of the desert floor.
The people of Nightville gather and sit on wood plank rows,
which curve in a semicircle around the old man on the stage.
Each person in attendance holds in their hands a whittled object given to them as they entered the audience space.
The items are all different, esoteric and unique.
Each item an unexpected gift of the whittler.
Each item, the very thing they have always wanted, even if it was never what they thought they wanted.
They hold gently their presence, protecting them with their very lives.
The Whitler, with his straw hat, still shading his keyhole eyes and river-bend mouth,
stands before the people of Night Vale who sit in an arena of his own making,
each cradling a beloved statuette of his own making.
The old man reaches out and takes the hand of his bride.
She, of course, is of his own making as well.
She is carved of weeping cedar.
Her veil, though entirely wood, is somehow translucent,
and her sorrowful eyes are faintly visible
behind the intricate work of the Whitler's blade.
The old man whistles once again,
and the crowd whistles along with him.
They know the song now.
It lives in them like longing, like blood, like a soul.
They know every word of the wordless dirge,
and the notes of loneliness spread across the scrublands to the mountain's edge
and echo back in the key of hope,
with a lilt of contentment and satisfaction.
They will only be happy when he is happy,
and he is indeed happy.
As the Whitler clutches the hand of his newly carved betrothed,
the clouds part, revealing the happiest thing of all.
The weather.
I've been threading, I've been sowing my future with a high structure,
trying to give it good mean,
I've been looking for space and slow stitching hearts
I've been trying to see something when I've
staying in the night and I've been painting up
Something else here now.
Something new.
From exclusively on Paramount Plus.
It's the series Stephen King calls Scary as Hell.
Everything here is impossible, but it's also real.
Sci-fi vision calls it the best show streaming right now.
We're running out of time and we still don't know the rules.
Don't miss what the movie blog calls something you need to watch.
Saving those children is how we all go home.
From binge all episodes exclusively on Paramount Plus.
Into the scrublands I went.
Myself already as happy as I could ever be,
for I was with my own true love, my husband.
I journeyed to see the Whitler for myself as an effort of journalism,
a chronicler of interesting events.
I wanted for nothing.
My happiness cannot be improved.
Or so I believed.
When I arrived, the Whitler, more than a hundred feet away,
and through a mass of thousands,
greeted me with a nod so unobtrusive,
I believed it to be a trick of the eye.
But from the distance, I could see the whole of the universe
in those dark eyes under dark shadow behind the final violet of sunset.
I knew he meant me.
Carlos and I stepped to the podium,
and the old man opened his palm to reveal an original carving just for me.
I had hoped it was a Nintendo Switch, but it was a seaplane.
Carlos, like a child on Santa's lap,
cooed and asked the old man for a superconducting super-collider,
and the old Whitler, his burlap cheeks heavy with gravity and history,
reached into the breast pocket of his pearl snap shirt,
and handed Carlos a tiny wooden rose.
Carlos hugged his rose to his chest, and I, my seaplane,
the Whitler took the hand again of his bride and gazed upon her.
Her veiled eyes met by his boundless stare.
They stood like that for more than an hour, not speaking.
The only sounds were the circadas chirping and the crowd whistling.
But the tune faded, and soon only the cicadas cut through the silence of a still desert twilight.
And one of us, Larry Leroy, stood and walked onto the stage.
He touched the old man's shoulder
The old man did not turn
He did not speak
He collapsed into black ash
Then his bride
Then the seats beneath us
It all gave way to crumbling
Nothing
Then the buildings and roads
And even the general store turned into ash
Finally every one of our objects
dissipated like Eurydice
Almost free from Hades
A gentle cool breeze arrived to sweep our hope away.
We returned home, wordless,
with occasional whistles of the Whitler's tune
once again in a sad and lonesome key.
Our cherished gifts, we told ourselves,
were nothing more than bibles, ephemera,
however blessed or magical.
They were mere things, not love, not family,
not true joy, they were objects, toys, props, distractions.
They were everything we have ever wanted
because we could hold them, see them, touch them.
We can no longer do that, but we can remember what it was like,
the rough of the wood against the soft of our hand.
Stay tuned next for our new game show, Name All the Nouns!
And as always,
Good night. Nightvale. Good night.
Welcome to Nightvale as a production of Nightvale Presents. It is written by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey
Craner and produced by Disparition. The voice of Night Vale is Cecil Baldwin. Original music by
Disparition. All of it can be found at dispirition.bancamp.com.
This episode's weather was Embroidery Stars by Carrie Elkin. Find out more at Carrie Elkin
com. Comments, questions, email us at info at welcome to nightvail.com or follow us on Twitter
at nightvale radio or watch your cat do a big stretch and encourage her by saying big stretch, big stretch,
big stretch. Check out welcome to night veil.com for more info about our upcoming live stream
production of our classic live show condos. Today's proverb, give a man a fish and he'll wonder what
your deal is. Teach a man to
fish, and I'll ask you once again to please leave him alone.
Hey, Jeffrey Kraner here to tell you about another show from me and my Nightvale co-creator
Joseph Fink. It's called Unlicensed, and it's an L.A. Noir-style mystery set in the outskirts of
present-day Los Angeles. Unlicensed follows two unlicensed private investigators who
small jobs looking into insurance claims and missing property are only the tip of a conspiracy
iceberg. There are already two seasons of unlicensed for you to listen to now with season three
dropping on May 15th. Unlicensed is available exclusively through Audible, free if you already
have that subscription. And if you don't, Audible has a trial membership. And if I know you, and I do,
you can binge all that mystery goodness in a short window. And if you like it, if you liked Unlicensed,
please, please rate and review each season. Our ability to keep making this show is predicated on audience
engagement. So go check out unlicensed, available now only at audible.com.
