Welcome to Night Vale - 175 - The October Monologues
Episode Date: October 1, 2020It is October, and, once again, something is different. The voice of The Faceless Old Woman is Mara Wilson. The voice of Michelle Nguyen is Kate Jones. The voice of Steve Carlsberg is Hal Lublin.... Weather: It varies, depending on where you are and when. Livestream of GHOST STORIES on October 29: https://noonchorus.com/welcome-to-night-vale/ Transcript available at http://welcometonightvale.com/transcripts You can also support the Night Vale Patreon, to help us keep making this show: 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.bandcamp 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
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Howdy y'all. It is Jeffrey Craneer. I'm not sure which episode of Welcome to Nightville you're listening to, but I am speaking to you from April of 2026, and I'm here to tell you we're going to be in Europe. If you want to see Nightville live and you're going to be in Europe, come check us out at the end of May. We're going to be in Edinburgh on May the 27th. We will be in Manchester on the 28th, London on the 29th, and Amsterdam on May the 30th. Just go to Welcome to Nightville.com slash live to see the show dates and to get your tickets. This is a
our newest Nightville live show Murder Night in Blood Forest. It is so much fun. Please come check it out.
Also, coming up this month here in April, it is the return of Alice Isn't Dead, brand new episodes of our other crazy hit podcast.
This is written by Joseph Fink, produced and with music by Dysperition and starring Jacique and Nicole.
So make sure you are still subscribed to Alice Isn't Dead and go get those on April the 13th as new episodes come out.
Finally, speaking of other shows, do you want to hear us talk about other things?
things. We have three other really great chat shows. First of all, there's Good Morning Nightvale
for all of your Nightvale needs. You can hear Hal, Meg, and Symphony talk about every single
episode in order of Welcome to Nightvale. Also, we have Random Horror Number Nine. That is me
and Nightville star Cecil Baldwin talking about horror movies one at a time in a random order. And then
Joseph and Meg do best, worst, which is a really fun podcast where they look at hit TV shows and they
review the best rated on IMDB, the worst rated on IMDB, and if you're a Patreon member,
they will review the middleest rated on IMDB.
So check out all of those at nightfallpresents.com or just wherever you get your podcast.
And hey, thanks.
The trees are dying again.
You know it.
I know it.
The trees know it.
They have known it for decades, centuries in some cases.
The shiver of cyclic symbolic symbolic death.
A rattle in the cold night air, a rustle in the footsteps of a hungry deer.
It is October and something is different.
It is October and the trees draw the crackling red and orange curtain on the year's final act.
It is October and so, listeners, dear listeners.
Night Vale Community Radio is proud to introduce the October monologues.
I am lonely.
Oh, I see people.
I see lots of people every day.
I see you right now.
I see you, Caleb, sitting in your rolling desk chair hunched over your computer.
I am a faceless old woman who secretly lives in your home watching you download yet another video game, Caleb.
But seeing people and being with people are different things.
Different ideas altogether.
I miss touch, most of all.
A father's hand, a friend's arms, a lover's chest.
I still touch, am touched.
But it is not the same.
It is not a mutual touch.
My touch is unwelcome, unfriendly, unwanted.
Yet I touch because I love.
And I love you, Caleb.
I do. I know you don't believe me, after what I did to you tonight, but I do.
My love is not romantic, nor maternal. It's not platonic, either.
I love you the way a deer loves a cornfield. It is safe. It is nourishing. It is in its DNA to want to be there.
To hide, to eat, to play.
You're very much like a cornstalk, Caleb.
You are loved and you are benign.
Better than benign.
You are a contribution to this world.
The cornstalk is unaware that a deer loves it so much
that it will bend it and stomp it until its edible morsels spill out from its crumpled, empty husk.
The cornstalks, there are so many cornstalks.
Do not understand that they are so loved by the deer as to be devoured.
You've seen a kitten before, Caleb.
I know you have.
Sometimes kittens are so cute
So, so, so, so cute
That you want to put them in your mouth
Do you understand that kind of love, Caleb?
That kind of touch?
You do not
No one does
And this is why I am lonely
But I think you know that
You're different
You're lonely too
That's not what makes you different
We're all lonely in our own way
you're different, Caleb, because you know I am here.
You see me even when I do not want to be seen.
No one has been able to do that in at least 200 years.
Sometimes you speak to me.
Not in terror, not in rage.
I have heard many of these voices in my life
from those who feared and detested my presence.
No, you ask me my name.
I won't tell you, not yet.
You tell me about your day.
I'm sorry your new boss is so mean.
I will rectify this,
and last night you prepared a dinner for me.
You're not a good cook.
I can smell that much.
But it was your gesture of generosity that touched me.
You made cassio et pepe,
a recipe you learned from TikTok,
and you prepared a bowl just for me.
You waited to see if I would appear,
and when I did not,
you told me you understood wanting to eat alone,
so you left it for me on the dining room table
as you went to play the new flight simulator.
Few men have ever been this kind to me
without being frightened into it first,
or without using their kindness as a disguise.
I think you genuinely understand
your own quiet desperation among the mass of men,
and in turn, you understand others, too.
I don't trust the kindness of men, Caleb.
I don't trust the kindness of women, either,
or anyone else's kindness to be truthful,
but I especially do not trust men's kindness.
There are exceptions.
Andre, whose kindness was loyalty and honesty.
And Albert, although his was a much different kind of kindness.
But Caleb, 23-year-old, unshaven, video-game-loving, boss-hating aimless Caleb,
your kindness frightens me.
I'm scared of what you want.
What it is you plan to take from me,
Kind men have stolen my childhood, my morals, my money, my love, my life, and my family.
What will you take from me, Caleb, that I have not already lost?
I am afraid.
I am afraid to respond to your gentle bait of friendship,
because I am afraid you will take my loneliness from me.
I am lonely, and that is a choice I have made for myself.
one day, Caleb, you will die.
I know exactly when.
It will not be at my hand,
although I will do nothing to stop it.
It is my fate, my path, to know such things.
And in your death, you will return my loneliness to me,
and it will be a horror to behold, bloody and misshapen.
My loneliness, not recognizing its former owner,
will howl an unholy and unceasing cry.
And I will not be it.
able to bear it. This is what I fear, Caleb. And this is why I took the bowl of
Kashiue Pepe you left from me and hurled it against the wall, just missing your cheek.
I'm not sad that you screamed at me. I'm happy that you did so. This is how it has to be.
We are not enemies, Caleb. No, no. I love you deeply. Deeper than you can know.
I am your dear Caleb, and you are my corn.
The fiery flash of fall leaves stuns us, captivates us, fireworks in slow motion,
or the crackling embers of a finishing flame.
Upon the leaves are written instructions for how to make oxygen, how to give life,
with every exhalation, how to find flair in fading grace, and
how to raise new life by falling to your death.
The leaves know they will return again, so much will return again.
We return now to the October monologues.
There's this new song I like, but I don't want to tell you what it is.
I find it kind of embarrassing.
Usually I love to talk about my favorite music.
There was that summer I was obsessed with the new single by St. Vincent.
The single came in the form of a glazed vase containing three blue flowers.
Only one was ever made, and I got the only copy.
I found it very catchy, but the flowers eventually died.
Or the year I spent listening over and over to that new Janelle Monet album.
Ah, I forget the name!
But the cover was a black and white picture of a well,
and if you didn't share it with someone else in seven days, you would die.
Of course, no one ever died.
because the album was so good, people just couldn't stop telling their friends to listen.
My favorite song of all time is a blank cassette tape still in its plastic wrapper.
It was owned by a man named Gary Choi.
He was a real estate lawyer, reasonably successful, but he always dreamed of being a singer-songwriter.
He dreamed all the time of quitting his job and writing songs, but he had never even written one song.
Then one day, in a fit of optimism and energy, he bought this cassette.
intending to make his first demo.
But the day got away from him,
and then the week, and then the rest of his life,
and he never quit being a lawyer,
and he never even wrote one song.
This blank cassette tape, still in its rapper,
contains the potential of all the songs he could have written
but never did,
which is better and more powerful
than any song anyone's actually managed to write.
The potential of a thing is always more perfect
than the reality of the thing.
However, and this is the thing,
the crucial drawback. The potential is absolutely useless and the reality, however imperfect, can
be quite useful. Anyway, I like to hold Gary Choi's unwritten demo and imagine what it would be like.
Hold on. Sorry. There's a customer. Welcome to Dark Al record. What? No. No. No. Okay. Bye.
Sorry about that. Some people are so unreasonable.
I don't even know what a Taylor Swift is.
But there's a new song I like, and it's not cool like my other favorite songs.
It's not a song that fits the kind of image I like to project.
When I put on my mirrored leggings, my extra long dorts, and my really big hat, people expect something from me.
They expect me to be on the cutting edge.
They expect me only to be into bands that aren't popular yet, or will never be popular,
or that frankly don't know how to play their instruments very well.
And the song I like now, it's not any of those things.
It's ordinary.
It's popular.
I don't want to say what it is.
Remember when I only listened to the sounds of bees buzzing?
That was a good summer.
Of course, I got stung once or twice or 30 times.
Hold on, sorry. There's a customer.
Welcome to Dark Al Record.
Sorry about that. I'm tired of being cool.
I was going to say trying to be cool, but trying implies the possibility of failure,
and there has never been a moment where I failed to be cool.
But here's the hard truth I've come up against.
Being cool is a young person's game.
And that's not because young people are better or more interested.
than older people. God no. God no. God no. It's that coolness itself is a concept tied to youth.
Coolness is a reactionary manifestation of insecurity. The more insecure you are, the cooler you need to be. It's colorful plumage.
But as I've gotten older, I no longer need flashy plumage. I just want to sit in the comfort of who I am and not worry about what that looks like from the outside.
side. Anyway, I can't stop listening to Karma Police by Radiohead. It's just a good song, you know?
Hold on. Sorry, there's a customer. You'll never catch me alive. An abundance of words. Words falling,
fluttering to the earth. Words crunching beneath our feet. They were beautiful once, the words.
Now they are beginning to rot, to wilt, to compost, to ferment new growth,
to fertilize new words growing upon great trunks of paragraphs and chapters,
but not now. Those will come later.
Now the words sputter and drop in spiraling arcs to the ground.
Here, then, are the final few brightly painted words falling upon you now,
the October monologues.
What does it mean to be believed?
I've always known that Nightvale isn't like other places.
As long as I can remember, I could see that.
I could also see that no one else could see it.
I was alone in my knowledge.
Knowledge may be power, but power is often lonely.
My grandfather knew he could see that I was like him.
Steve, he would say,
us Carlsbergs have always been the town pariahs,
but just because they hate you doesn't mean they're right.
I would sit at night as a kid and listen to Cecil on the radio.
He was the same age as he is now, and at the time he seemed so wise.
But I would hear him dismiss what I knew shouldn't be dismissed.
I would hear him cover up which should be uncovered,
and I would know with a child's certainty that it was wrong.
I loved him still.
Everyone in town loves Cecil.
It is possible to love someone who you know was doing wrong.
It's terribly easy, in fact.
What does it mean to be believed?
As a teenager, I started trying to express what I saw about the world.
I gave a presentation in my social studies class called Night Vale.
There's literally nowhere like it.
And I thought it was informative.
The class all plugged their ears in unison.
The teacher stopped me a minute in,
glancing nervously at the eight surveillance cameras monitoring the classroom.
Are you trying to get us all killed?
The teacher hissed at me.
I remember that her breath smelled like strutely.
strawberry jolly ranchers, and there was a loose crumb of mascara in the sweat of her temples.
No, I said. I didn't know what to say. It's not the kind of question that demands a sincere answer.
The report earned me a trip to the principal's office, and then the re-education pit, which honestly
is not as bad as its name. I mean, almost not as bad. It's pretty bad. It's a pit for re-education.
So, certainly learned something.
from that re-education, I learned that you're equally likely to be punished for being right as you are
for being wrong. What does it mean to be believed? I was a young man entering the workforce,
and I had long ago learned to hide away what I knew about our city. I had learned the handshake
and the smile, the nod and the necktie, all the signifiers that hid what I truly signified.
All of life is a code, and I had been taught the key against my will. I got a job as a bank teller at
the last bank of Nightvale. I studied with great interest the townsfolk who came and went there.
I learned about their lives and their secrets and what kind of money they made from the
whispered deals out back in quiet parking lots just before the sun went down, pulled up next to
a black sedan that contained their handler who they only knew by a false first name. But I couldn't
forget what I knew, even if I learned a play act that I had. What I know shapes who I am. I can't
close my eyes. Not to this town I love. This weird and secret town I love. What does it mean to be
believed? Then I married into the family of Cecil Palmer, host of Nightvale Community Radio.
And he hated me because he could see that I knew. And after all these years, my mask had slipped a
little. I had lost my interest in hiding. I wanted to speak the truth as I knew it. Nothing could be
more threatening to Cecil. His life and livelihood depended on speaking the truth as the city council
wanted it, or as the vague yet menacing government agencies crafted it, and here I was,
pointing out to him the sky. There are glowing arrows in the sky. There are dotted lines and
arrows and circles. The sky is a chart that explains the entire world.
I tried to tell him, and this only made him hate me more.
I tried to share who I was with him, and this only made him recoil.
Abby listened to my stories, but she never shared my enthusiasm for the truth.
Let it lie, she would say, let it lie.
But that's the point. I can't let it lie, and I can't lie.
We've done that for too long.
We've let our town sit heavy under the weight of euphemism and half-truth.
And unless someone just said what they saw for once,
we would be crushed eventually by that weight.
And then it all changed.
I wasn't alone.
The others saw that we lived in a weird place.
And do you know what?
We kept existing.
Our world didn't end merely because we dared acknowledge it.
Cecil and I are friends now.
I haven't forgotten how he treated me.
But I understand it.
And I forgive it.
Forgiveness and understanding are not the same as forgetting.
What does it mean to be believed?
It means everything.
It means all.
And as the leaves are done, so are the October monologues.
All that can be said has been said.
And all that can be said will be said again.
Welcome to Nightvale as a production of Nightvale Presents.
It is written by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Craneer and produced by disparition.
The voice of Night Vale is Cecil Waldwin.
The voice of the faceless old woman was Mara Wilson.
The voice of Michelle Wynne was Kate Jones.
The voice of Steve Carlsberg was Hal Lublin.
Original music by Dyspiration.
All of it can be found at disperition.
Bancamp.com.
Comments, questions, email us at info at welcome to nightvail.com.
Or follow us on Twitter at Nightville Radio.
Or don't.
I don't know.
Live your life your way.
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We're going to bring the spooky right to your home.
Today's proverb, listen, it might seem like everything's bad right now.
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