Welcome to Night Vale - 195 - Silas the Thief, Part 1

Episode Date: October 1, 2021

The prisoner reveals his secrets. (Part 1 of 2) The voice of Silas is Jonathan Atkinson. Weather: “Drink from the Well” by Stöj Snak http://stojsnak.bandcamp.com Transcript available at htt...p://welcometonightvale.com/transcripts Patreon is how we exist! If you can, please help us keep making this show: http://patreon.com/welcometonightvale/ 2022 US TOUR DATES ANNOUNCED! March 27 - June 24, we’ll be all over America with “The Haunting of Night Vale” Tickets on sale now! http://welcometonightvale.com/live Get Joseph Fink’s new novel, THE HALLOWEEN MOON https://www.welcometonightvale.com/books#halloweenmoon Music: Disparition http://disparition.bandcamp.com 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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Starting point is 00:00:04 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
Starting point is 00:00:48 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 Jacica 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
Starting point is 00:01:15 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.
Starting point is 00:01:33 It's 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.
Starting point is 00:01:56 Saving those children is how we all go home. From, binge all episodes exclusively on Paramount Plus. This is Not Your Home. This is my prison. Wash your hands before you touch me. I don't like the way you fuss over me. I never have. I'm not what you think I am, but you don't care.
Starting point is 00:02:40 You only see what you want to see. And yes, fine. Yes, I'm sick. And I appreciate your attention, but call someone with a medical degree. Rapping your arms around me and sobbing isn't helping. is putting your hands on my face. It's just an infection. It's mild.
Starting point is 00:03:03 Also, I have a fever. And I'm not digesting my food very well. I'm old. Older than I should be. I'm not supposed to be here, but you wouldn't know that. Would you even care if you did? Trapped in this prison, it's humid always. And the lighting is poor.
Starting point is 00:03:24 Actually, those are the nicer qualities of this place. It smells of urine and worse. But I do thank you for feeding me every day. I used to eat at the finest restaurants. Santrein and I went to El Bougi one summer in Rosses. We've dined at Quintonil and WD50 and White Rabbit and Narisawa. We had an $1,800 bottle of Bordeaux at Don Julio in Buenos Aires. It was not the most expensive bottle of wine we ever ordered, but it was the first unreasonably priced bottle.
Starting point is 00:04:11 Saint-Réin said, Silas, it's too much. And I said, counterpoint love, it's never enough. She smiled when the glass was poured, but it was one of those tight, polite smile. I hated her for that. I wish I had told her in the moment. Years pass, and people die and disappear, and you never have the chance to tell them what a difference they made in your life. How much you truly despised them. But, in Buenos Aires, I said nothing. We were still flying high from the Museo Nacional dees Artes in Santiago.
Starting point is 00:04:55 Have you ever seen Ludwig Detmann's paintings? Of course you haven't. Look at you. You've probably never even left Nightvale, let alone the country. Well, if you don't know Detman, he's a German impressionist. There's a real Van Gogh essence to his work. A simpler mind, in fact, might assume that what you were seeing was a van Gogh, but it is not. Detman's paintings were far less pretentious.
Starting point is 00:05:28 He valued color over form, which accentuated nature's true face, rather than the rigid techniques of Cézanne or the dull-eyed blobs of Degas. That was rude. I like Cazanne and Degas just fine. Van Gogh, too. Adored them, in fact, but I never stole one of their works. So, perhaps, it's just sour grapes. But could I get my hands on a Ludwig Detman?
Starting point is 00:06:00 I could, and I did. As Santran and I overindulged in wine that cost perhaps more than you pay in rent, Detman's oil painting, Picnic, was hidden inside the attic of a Parque-Bustamante condo. This condo was owned by an American investor named Curtis Schwab. Curtis Schwab does not exist.
Starting point is 00:06:28 He and his money and his paperwork were manufactured by Santrein. She was very good at manipulation, that witch. I don't say witch derisively, by the way. Well, I do, a bit, but also she was literally a witch. I thought the whole thing was ludicrous. First, it was tarot cards. then palm readings, then charts and tinctures and herbs and recitations. She stopped celebrating Christmas and instead wanted to honor solstice each December and June.
Starting point is 00:07:08 Equinoxes too. I haven't gone to Mass since I was a boy, so I shouldn't have cared, but it was the principle of the matter. To me, Christmas is Christmas. Regardless of your thoughts on Jesus, it is the time of year we have all agreed to honor giving and family and love. It is a time for gathering together, eating, and talking. Santren loved to point out how selfish and limited my worldview was. Who is this all who agreed on Christmas?
Starting point is 00:07:43 Who counts as getting to decide, she would ask. But so what? I think Christmas is beyond religion. It just is. Silas, Sondland would lecture me. Solstice is important to me. It means something to me spiritually. What does it matter if you celebrate in the exact same ways only under a different name?
Starting point is 00:08:11 I wince knowing she was right. They're only a few days apart. It's just the way she said it. She was taking something from me just to take it. She was always doing that. I didn't recognize it at first because reading my tea leaves seemed harmless. A parlor game, like a newspaper horoscope or picking up a lucky penny. Rituals are good, yes, but effective?
Starting point is 00:08:45 Scientifically provable? Absolutely not. I was a fool to doubt that witch. She prayed to the sun. Sometimes she prayed to the trees, sometimes to the universe itself. She asked for things like alignment. I told her she should ask for a key code
Starting point is 00:09:09 to the Tate Modern's vault, and she scoffed. She always scoffed at my jokes. They're just jokes, I would say. Semantics, she would reply. But before the occult, before all of this, before I got put here trapped in this awful place, this pit of despair, before my body turned on me, before you doaded on my every movement, my every heartbeat. Did I mention that I appreciate the attention you pay me,
Starting point is 00:09:46 But I also resent it. I do not like how close you come to me. I can smell your breath. Before any of this, we were happy. We were brilliant. We were thieves. And we were very good at it. There's no one way to steal an artwork.
Starting point is 00:10:14 Every thief is different. Every gallery is different. Every security detail, different. I can only tell you how I would steal an artwork, how we would. I can tell you this now because who's going to know? I don't look the same. I don't have the same name. Anyone who knew Silas well enough to arrest him thinks he's dead.
Starting point is 00:10:40 Silas was last seen at the J.P. Morgan Library in New York City. I was only there as a visitor, mind you. and then taking a train to Montauk Long Island. From there, anyone who cared enough to look would have accounts of me hiring a cab to a cottage along the beach. And after that, nothing. Maybe I escaped to Europe or Canada. Maybe I threw myself into a cold and turbulent sea
Starting point is 00:11:09 somewhere on a rocky shore. Maybe I was murdered. Well, all those assumptions are wrong. My story is much worse. Please, don't touch my legs. Stop! Stop! Stop it! I do not like that!
Starting point is 00:11:28 I'm sorry for kicking you. I know you are only trying to help, and you cannot understand me, but do look in my eyes. Read my body language. Know that I do not like your touch. And after all these years, imprisoned in this terrible place,
Starting point is 00:11:46 I still do. Do not trust you. Did you understand me? Just now. You let go. Thank you. You should wash that cut I just gave you in cold water. You should also get some antibiotic ointment for your wound.
Starting point is 00:12:11 I'm not feeling well. I apologize. But do not touch me ever again. Where was I? Stealing artwork. Yes. While Sandrine was a master of forgery, I was a master of disguise. Disguise, mind you, is not about costumes and makeup.
Starting point is 00:12:34 Those are important tools, of course, but disguise is about motion, how you carry yourself. If you move with confidence, if you speak with confidence, people will believe you. Or better yet, they won't have to believe you. because they won't even notice you. First, you go to the museum for reconnaissance. You dress like a common tourist. Don't look too interested in the art. Not that anyone thinks you are going to steal the art,
Starting point is 00:13:09 but act too fascinated with a painting and someone might talk to you. Oh, you a big Kandinsky fan too? They might ask. And now you have a witness. Someone who remembers your face. someone who can talk to the police later. Find the work you want. Study the quickest or least objectionable egress.
Starting point is 00:13:32 Also, wear a wig and glasses. Nothing gaudy. It should look normal and natural to anyone standing near you. A baseball hat is also okay, but only in America or Canada. Pay close attention to how the dosin stress. When you return to the museum, go on a busy day. The staff will have less time for questions on a busy day. Dress like a docent, you should be able to get all the materials you need at any chain clothing store.
Starting point is 00:14:05 And forge a name tag. These will allow you to get into the back halls of the museum. Make a mental map, particularly of the places docent's aren't allowed. Many of the off-limits offices will not be locked. If they are, the locks are common and easy to pick. Find personnel files for security, find out who patrols at late hours, learn their names, their supervisors, and do a bit of Googling before you show up for work as a museum guard. Sometimes you don't even have to go this far.
Starting point is 00:14:45 You can actually bribe someone to assess. assist you. Sometimes multiple people. A phone call, $1,000, and a Venmo account go a long way. And that's how you steal an artwork. Your mileage may vary. Every job is different. Completely different, in fact. It's harder than it sounds, but Sant'ran and I made it seem easy. And it was. It had gotten easy. Mino helped. Mino was the one who gave us the assignments. Not really so much a boss as a benefactor.
Starting point is 00:15:27 We didn't have to accept every job. Some seemed too dangerous, or didn't pay very well. Or both. Mino wasn't offended if we said no. Once a month, on the 19th, to be precise, Mino would call with a proposal. Our airfare, first class, our hotels, five-star, our car rentals, luxury black sedans and SUVs. These reservations were made under false names, and before we left on any trip, we would receive a package with fake passports and visas.
Starting point is 00:16:08 Mino also sent us 40% payment up front, an advance. Even if we failed, the payment was still ours to keep. Mino considered it an investment. Mino was a model benefactor. We trusted him fully. I wish I had not. But for about 15 years, everything worked perfectly.
Starting point is 00:16:42 We palmed a 4,000-year-old Indonesian charm in Tunis. We walked out the front door of a gallery in Sydney with a Franz von Mides masterpiece. We swiped a Stradivarius from a violinist's apartment in Manhattan while she was in the kitchen making breakfast. Sandrine and I were quite a team. Our movements could never be. correlated. We traveled too far. Took too wide an array of objects for anyone to notice our patterns.
Starting point is 00:17:17 Sandrine would hide the prizes in various bed-a-terre she owned across the world, and then she would deliver them to Mino for the rest of our payment. We were happy, until Mino wanted a Louise Bougois from a sculpture garden in Dallas. I did not want to take any sculpture, I could not carry in one hand or hide in a bag. Sandrine insisted we take it. She adored Louise Bougouat. But we don't get to keep the art, Sandrine, I argued. We steal it for Mino and then we get paid.
Starting point is 00:17:56 We are not collectors. Sandrine didn't care. She just wanted the opportunity, if only for a couple of days, to be in possession of a Bougoir original. Just to have the experience, she said. And I said no. Again and again, it was a ludicrous plan from a ludicrous woman.
Starting point is 00:18:19 And though she argued, she knew that this was my business. We equally split the money, but she was not the man in charge. I was the man in charge. I proposed quitting altogether. We had plenty of money. We might even have enough to buy a bourgeois of our own. We certainly had enough for Sandrine to buy her tarot decks and magic crystals and books of spells. She could be as witchy as the day is long for all I cared.
Starting point is 00:18:52 Why risk it for an object we couldn't lift without hiring others to help? And the more people you know, the more who know you, and I don't want anyone knowing me, Sandrine. It's unsafe. She frowned. It was a frown I had not seen before. And the next morning, she was gone. All of her things were gone too. I followed her.
Starting point is 00:19:24 I should not have, but I did. I knew she had gone to Dallas. I knew she was going to take that sculpture. And I tried to stop her from making a fool of herself and of me. I watched the museum every day. I never saw her enter, but one night I saw her leave, dead on a gurney. I had seen the police arrive without lights or sirens. I had seen them surround the facility.
Starting point is 00:19:58 I had heard a shout, then a gunshot, then several gunshots. And I ran into the street as they wheeled her out. The police forced me back, but I saw her. Bullet wounds to the head and chest. A detective nearby mumbled to another that the suspect opened fire on officers first. I didn't believe that for one second. But there she was. Dead and gone?
Starting point is 00:20:34 That, I believed. I left before the cop started asking me why I looked so interested. As far as they knew, I was just an overly curious pedestrian. On the drive back to my hotel, it began to rain hard. I didn't even turn on the wipers. I let the windshield smear and observed how my ability to see was dependent on the weather. ...aed a shaken foundation, but we're too busy to notice. And when we're done here,
Starting point is 00:21:34 Here we'll leave pretty houses for a world where no one can live. We're always just out of reach. We follow the trails that run kings of the ocean. Replaced our forests with deserts in landfills to ensure a steady growth. We poison the way we say when I and ask us to justify all this mess. Mino didn't reach out for six months. And then, on the 19th of the month, he called.
Starting point is 00:24:31 And the month after that, and so on. I didn't take the calls. I was too busy thinking about Saint-Trent's death. It took almost two years before I forgave myself. It wasn't my fault. She wanted her own life. Separate from mine. Fine.
Starting point is 00:24:50 She got what she wanted. She got what she deserved. I helped her. She helped me too, but I showed her that path. I lifted her from the dirt, and she thought that meant she could fly. Mino's monthly calls continued. It was two years and three months before I finally answered and agreed to take another job. On one condition, I told Mino that we get to meet in person. And Mino agreed. Hours later, I landed at JFK.
Starting point is 00:25:30 A car took me to the St. Regis, and the next morning I visited the Morgan, and by early afternoon, I was on a train to Montauk. In a little cabin on the beach, run down and unassuming, I saw Mino for the first time. There was no artwork in the home, nothing even on the walls except cracks and stains. Mino was standing on the back deck looking at the water. It was foggy that morning.
Starting point is 00:26:07 I was confused, disoriented, and when Mino turned around, I gasped. It's hard to imagine why it was so surprising. Looking back, it seems obvious, it was Sandrine the whole time. All 15 years of our perfect life, she was Mino. She faked her death. She did it to get away from me. From my selfishness. My misogyny, my narcissism.
Starting point is 00:26:45 But she missed me, I told myself. This is why she's. she kept calling me. She still loved me. But I believe this. She mocked me, emasculated me, pretended to be my woman. Instead, she was my puppeteer, and when I saw her, I spit on her. She didn't move. She didn't change expression. She said, would you try again? The spit landed right across her deceitful lips. She lifted one hand, and without even touching me, I was cast into the air, across the deck, and plunged into the gray, frigid waters of the Atlantic.
Starting point is 00:27:37 I tried to swim, but I couldn't. I was certain she was drowning me, pulling me under, my lifeless body never to be found. Then I heard her voice. Won't kill you, Silas. I don't want revenge. I want you to learn. And your first lesson is to know what it's like to be alone. Even when you live under the care of another.
Starting point is 00:28:06 Understand? It all went black. Then there was light, dull, flickering, depressing light, and tiled blue walls and the stench of urine, maybe my own. And I became this. This! I hate this. I hate you too.
Starting point is 00:28:28 Leave me alone. Stop touching me, stop feeding me. Stop petting me. I am sick, and there's not a thing you can do about it. Wait, I do. We're taking care of me.
Starting point is 00:28:45 Not your fault that I am here. It's my fault. You're leaving? Already? No, don't go. I'm... Okay. You're gone.
Starting point is 00:29:07 See you tomorrow. Same time. And my name is Silas. Not Koshak. Okay? Okay. Welcome to Nightvale as a production of Nightvale Presents. It is written by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Kraner and produced by Disparition.
Starting point is 00:29:33 The voice of Koshik was Jonathan Atkinson. Original music by Dysperition. All of it can be found at dispirition.bancamp.com. This episode's weather was Drink from the Well by Stowe. Snock. Find more at S-T-O-J-S-N-A-K dot Bancamp.com. Comments, questions, email us at info at welcome to nightvail.com or follow us on Twitter at Nightville Radio or tell a tiny human that she is tired because she doesn't know what that feels like yet. Check out Welcome to Nightvell.com for info about our merch. We have so many spooky things
Starting point is 00:30:14 to take you into spooky season. Today's proverb, true change starts with the person in the mirror. He's standing far behind you, barely visible, is really going to change things. Are you squeamish about horror movies, but kind of want to know what happens? Or are you a horror lover who likes thoughtful conversation about your favorite genre? Join me, Jeffrey Cruehner, and my friend from Welcome to Nightville, Cecil Baldwin, for our weekly podcast, Random Number Generator Horror Podcast Number Nine, where we watch and discuss horror movies in a random order.
Starting point is 00:31:04 Find, here's the short version, Random Horror Nine, wherever you get your podcasts. Boo.

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