Welcome to Night Vale - 270 - Deeper Than Purpose, Older Than Thought

Episode Date: June 15, 2025

Now is not the time for panic. Now is the time for despair. Weather: "Radio Down" by Caged Animals Original episode art by ⁠⁠Jessica Hayworth⁠⁠ ⁠Episode transcripts⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠�...� 2025-26 TOUR DATES⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠Tix on sale now⁠⁠⁠⁠! ⁠⁠UNLICENSED Season 3⁠⁠⁠⁠ is here! ⁠⁠Only on Audible⁠⁠ Pre-order the ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Welcome to Night Vale Roleplaying Game⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Get the ⁠⁠⁠⁠Night Vale newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠ for news and stories ⁠⁠Patreon⁠⁠⁠⁠ is how we exist⁠⁠! Music: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Disparition⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Logo: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Rob Wilson⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Written by Joseph Fink, Jeffrey Cranor & Brie Williams Narrated by Cecil Baldwin Follow us on ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠BlueSky⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠TikTok⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠Tumblr⁠⁠⁠⁠, and ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠ A production of ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Night Vale Presents⁠⁠⁠ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:04 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. 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 Nightveil needs. You can hear Hal, Meg, and Symphony talk about every single
Starting point is 00:01:13 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 Nightvillepresents.com or just wherever you get your podcast. And hey, thanks. You live, you learn. You die. You also learn. You just don't hold on to the lesson for very long. Welcome to Nightvale. All is in chaos. All is in ruins. The worst has come to be, and the worst of the worst might yet to be.
Starting point is 00:02:31 The supply chain into Nightvale has completely broken down under the weight of our existential otherness. No trucks can find their way through these strange backroads that lead to our doors. The shelves of the Rouths are bare, no frozen yogurt, no provincial herb mix, no edible clings, no edible cling film. All the necessities of life that we assumed would be on hand forever, gone. What are we to do without sweet baby rays barbecue sweet-flavored cough drops?
Starting point is 00:03:05 Or whole fish flown in daily from high-end Japanese seafood markets, as we are accustomed to? Now is not the time for panic, no. The time for panic was a few weeks ago, when there was still anything we could do. about this. Now is the time for despair. Real lamenting hours, if you know what I mean. City Council, speaking from their underground bunker where they have been hoarding food over the last few years, put out a statement reminding people that the City Council is fine and, quote,
Starting point is 00:03:40 well, sucks for the rest of you. None of that seems great, if I'm honest, but I'm a reporter and must stay impartial, so maybe it's actually good? Who am I to say? Meanwhile, Steve Carlsberg, my friend and brother-in-law, is leading the men who are not tall and the men who are not short through town, a silent procession. They are leaving behind labyrinth, which sought to use them toward unknown and inhuman ends. They are leaving behind their generic labels and asserting each of their specific identities. Gathered outside of town in the desert, Steve calls upon them one by one, and they tell their stories.
Starting point is 00:04:30 A man who is not tall steps forward. My name is Yosef. I was born and raised in Philadelphia, and then on my 40th birthday I woke up, and I was in the passenger seat of a labyrinth truck. I didn't know why this had happened to me, but I also did not know how to resist the inextricable tide of change. And so, over the years, I have taken part in unforgivable things. I have buried crates in the desert, from which I could hear the faint but terrible sounds of fingernails clawing at wood. I don't understand anything I have
Starting point is 00:05:06 done or that has been done to me, but I never knew how to stop until now. A man who is not short now speaks. My name is Christine. I have always lived here in Night Vale. I actually wanted to work for Labyrinth. I remember seeing their trucks as a child so secret and yet so important. I wanted to be secret and important too. And so I traded away everything that made me myself and became what they needed me to be. Once I drove my neighbor to the desert. I slit his throat. I did this because I knew Labyrinth needed me to. My partner, who I now know is named Dennis, watched impassively as I did it. We have been made monstrous.
Starting point is 00:06:00 Is there any way back for us? Finally, Steve says, I am a man who is not short, and I am Steve Carlsberg, and I know the way back. It is by speaking loudly and repeatedly the actuality of our individual lives. The more individual we are, the less hold labyrinth has on us. And somewhere, a crow caws a sharp bark in the evening air. On an office wall, a door appears. A woman who is both not tall and not short steps out of it.
Starting point is 00:06:46 a look of sad determination on her face. The supply chain crisis is, of course, not only affecting food. Toilet paper is obviously a no-go, but really, you should have joined the go outside and spray at it with the garden hose revolution when you have the chance. It's time we caught up with the rest of the world. And it's almost impossible to find double A batteries. Although, weirdly, there are more AAA batteries than ever. We are practically swimming in those useless things. Other core essentials that have become impossible to find?
Starting point is 00:07:27 Printer paper. Laser discs, wiffle bats, scratching posts, horse figurines. I repeat, you cannot find horse figurine one in the town of Night Vale. Gordon Moreno, former PTA president and current head of the Night Vale, Consumers Association, announced he had something to say, and then screamed for several continuous minutes into the microphone until he passed out from lack of air. He is currently resting in our break room, although every time he wakes up, he just starts screaming again. Frantic Nightvale citizens are standing at the edge of town, waving glow sticks, and shouting, here, truck, here
Starting point is 00:08:11 truck, to try to help trucks find their way to night veil, but all to no avail. Soon enough, we will have nothing left to eat except AAA batteries, and those things taste terrible. Out in the desert, Steve speaks to the people of Labyrinth. They will not let us go peacefully. We have always known that. We are the milk they churn into the butter of oppression. or, you know, a better metaphor than that. He directs the men who are not tall and the men who are not short to construct barricades and keep watch for any approaching danger.
Starting point is 00:08:55 Other groups try to teach each other martial combat. I think you put your thumb inside your hand when you punch, says a man who is not short, helpfully. So your thumb is protected. Everyone else nods eagerly. Steve does not take part in this training. He sees something that makes him lose interest in everything else. It is Abby, his wife, and Janice, his daughter.
Starting point is 00:09:26 They have come not in an unmarked black sedan nor a box truck with the labyrinth logo on the side, but in the family hatchback. The family embraces. here at the edge of everything at the turn of history. I'm sorry. I lost myself even for a moment. And I'm sorry that in finding myself, I have put you in danger, Steve says.
Starting point is 00:09:58 Yeah, man, it sucks, says Janice. It really does, says Abby. You shouldn't have done that, and it has made our life a lot harder. Steve nods. I know. I can only try to find my way back to you. And to do that, I must face this. Sounds like some macho BS, but go off, King, says Janice.
Starting point is 00:10:27 Please be home for dinner, says Abby. They get back in the hatchback. They leave Steve in the desert. He is more scared, less focused than before. But the great task in front of him remains. Back in town, a woman who is not tall and not short passes the moonlight all night diner. A man rolls around in the parking lot.
Starting point is 00:10:56 Mud womb, the man says. Mud womb! She reaches down and touches the man on the forehead. The man makes a shuddering gasp, and then he dies. She leaves the body on the dusty asphalt and continues her slow, unstoppable walk toward the sand wastes, toward Steve. Word is in now that not only are food and basic consumables unavailable due to the complete collapse of the supply chain into Night Vale, but even day-to-day items like washers, dryers, laptop computers, and wood chippers are nowhere to be found. I bought a laptop just last week, so obviously I have been thinking that it's time for me to get a new one.
Starting point is 00:11:49 But everywhere I looked, the Ralph's, the worst buy, Diana's computer and Crab Shack, they're all out of stock. Now I'm stuck with this antique machine that can barely open an internet browser in half a second. It makes me feel less than, honestly, and that's the supply chain's fault. Susan Escobar, the second-grade scrying teacher at Knightville Elementary School, has been in the market for a new stove. I don't want nothing fancy, she said, unprompted, to a passerby who mistakenly made eye contact. Just a cherry red gas range. As to be gas. I don't believe in electricity, on account of the Lord.
Starting point is 00:12:33 But there is no stove to be had, gas or otherwise. Not anywhere Susan has looked, and she says she has looked everywhere. I've even tried scrying, she told me, although I hadn't asked. But the bones are silent. If there were a stove, those bones would find them, but the trucks won't come. She shivered, even though the afternoon was blisteringly hot. The trucks won't come, she muttered again. The sun starts to set, and the shadows of the people of labyrinth stretch far out from
Starting point is 00:13:13 their bodies. Steve stands at the top of a hill and his shadow casts itself all the way to the bottom. He is watching a woman who is both not tall and not short as she picks her way, steadily, up to him. She does not cast any shadow at all. The barricades do not slow her and not a single one of the brave talking people of Labyrinth make a move to defend themselves. Finally, she reaches Steve. He tenses, but she merely meets his eyes steadily. Behind her eyes, there is a chasm of deep time that makes him feel like vomiting.
Starting point is 00:14:03 The people of Labyrinth shudder in quiet fear, as the woman and Steve face each other. Somewhere On the radio A man says something About the weather With the radio down And the high beams on
Starting point is 00:14:40 We're riding round With the radio down All the way to Hawtholm You breathe and laugh And talking in you I'm hypnotic trip With my head on
Starting point is 00:15:26 When you're here right now, you see... When you're pretty, you're braced some of course of recreat. Always in trying to negotiate and do and make these exchanges. The appellee Negoti-Titre TD you can't renew with this instinct that, with without operation
Starting point is 00:18:17 gratite, no amount of minimum, and no free mensuel. You're made for negotiate, and the TD is there for you help. Biennue at board via Rai.
Starting point is 00:18:27 Embarked and profite. Embarked and relaxes. Ciro-te. Bookine. Oh, that also. And profite. Viaray, the voice that we love. The woman who was both not tall and not short, sighs.
Starting point is 00:18:47 Her sigh sounds like brittle paper tearing. Her eyes water a little in the sandy air. She says, When the first molecule formed, it was at that moment that labyrinth came into this world. Before sentience, before lungs, we are deeper than purpose. We are older than thought. And without us, you would be nothing. With us, you are also nothing, but a nothing that serves a greater good. You foolishly presume you can separate yourself from us, but can you separate yourself from a scattering of clouds? From the grains of sand under your feet? She waves one hand. Have a look at this now. Steve and the people of Labyrinth groan as a strong image of a burning cactus next to a rock
Starting point is 00:19:51 shaped like a pit viper wriggles its way into their minds. Then the image of ants crawling along the frame of a rusted Chevy truck. Then the stars, ancient. and pitiless, hundreds, then thousands, then millions and eternity of stars, and not a single one, shining upon life. These images push through their mind like the trampling of a panicked crowd. The people of Labyrinth stagger. Steve falls to his knees. As easily as that, she says.
Starting point is 00:20:34 as easily as that it can be done. And yet, here you all are, rebelling against this natural order. What do you have to say for yourselves? Steve is silent for several seconds. He needs to put himself back in order and shake off her terrible visions. Finally, still on his knees.
Starting point is 00:21:05 He speaks. Yes, we are only human, he says. I am only human and you are something else, something bigger, something more powerful. I don't know what it is and I don't want to know. But we are human. And that is its own vital thing. Our lives are so brief and they matter so much. They matter all the more for how quickly they pass.
Starting point is 00:21:44 Steve rises to his feet. The woman looks up at him coolly. We would not stand in the way of Labyrinth, he says. But neither can we remain in your driver's seats and office chairs. We cannot stop the machine, but we do not need to help it run. We are neither not tall nor not short, but we each of us have names and lives. And in this moment, we are reclaiming those lives and those names. Now, do what you will to us.
Starting point is 00:22:27 He finishes. His lips are dry. He licks them nervously. And this is the answer for all of you, the woman asks. Steve glances at the crowd. No one says anything. Finally, Christine in the front, nods. Emboldened, Steve looks back at the woman.
Starting point is 00:22:50 Yes, he says. She shrugs. Fine. She says, you're all fired. We purchased that self-driving ride share company. What was it? Detour. Because we needed a system that lagged.
Starting point is 00:23:09 the weakness of humans. Only the cold reliability of ghosts who drive cars. Now, please, bury your company IDs and key cards in the sand of the desert. She tilts her head. On a personal note, Steve Carlsberg, you are the only interesting human being I have ever met. Not that interesting. Not more interesting than a supernova, for instance, but a little bit interesting. Done with words, she turns and walks back through the sand wastes toward Labyrinth headquarters at the same steady, slow pace with which she had arrived. Steve begins to laugh. And the crowd laughs, too. They howl with laughter, finally, free, and utterly lost. Steve and the people of Labyrinth turn still laughing with relief and fear and walk back through the sand wastes to their town.
Starting point is 00:24:18 They are only citizens now, like everyone else, but they have made themselves separate from their neighbors, and they don't know what to do next. Janice and Abby are waiting for Steve at the city limits, leaning on the hatchback. He rushes to them, and they embrace again. It's done, he says. I'm only here for you now. I don't know what I'll do for a job or how I'll support the family, but I'll figure out a way. And most importantly, I'll be there every day. I love you. Then he looks up in confusion. Around them, the citizens of Nightvale run here and there, screaming and throwing trash cans and small shrubs. Why is everyone wailing? Steve asks. Have you not noticed that nothing has been able to come into Nightvale for weeks because trucks can't find their way in or out? Says Janice, they get lost. Their navigation systems can no longer handle the strange highways through the desert.
Starting point is 00:25:34 Steve shakes his head. You don't use a navigation system. To drive on those roads, you need a language that come. beyond thought. That happens in places in your brain you didn't even know existed. Well, I guess truck drivers can't do that, says Janice. No, says Steve, but I can. He gestures at the newly unemployed crowd behind him. We all can, which is how Steve and the former members of labyrinth, commandeered the big rigs, left behind by frustrated truck drivers who couldn't find their way out of town. Steve and his people use their innate impulses of movement to cross the desert.
Starting point is 00:26:24 Take Route 900 out of town until you see the tree that looks like your mother weeping, and then make a left on a small dirt road. Eventually you see two old logs that look like they are arm wrestling, And from there, it is a slight right and then a sharp right, and then boom. You're in Omaha. That's just an example. They brought us back food and toilet paper. And finally, a new laptop for me, so I don't have to keep using this thing that is almost eight days old now. Steve is working to organize these drivers into a new company that, due to the complexities of navigation,
Starting point is 00:27:07 will have something of a monopoly on getting goods in and out of Nightville, so I suspect he will do quite well for himself. Maybe he can finally fix his pool that Janice and Abbey have been bothering him about. It's time he put his mind and his energy into the people who care about him most. Meanwhile, the box trucks and cargo vans and unmarked black sedans of Labyrinth are self-driving, using the ghosts of detour. And honestly, they're terrible at it. They keep crashing.
Starting point is 00:27:46 There are like vans on their sides with crates piling out of them on every block. A self-driving is just not a workable system, especially for an ancient, mysterious force, older than breath than thought. But what do I know? I'm just a guy eating a battery. Stay to next for the hollow voice of the universe, eulogizing another year into rest, calling another year into being.
Starting point is 00:28:15 And good night, night veil. Good night. At a little house, on a little street, in the scrying druid housing development. A man named David Lane stands on his front lawn eating a popsicle. He found the box of popsicles in his fridge. They're shaped like SpongeBob Squarepants. From the last time, he had a weekend with his son, which was a while ago. Probably for the best.
Starting point is 00:29:00 He doesn't know if he has anything to offer his son but disappointment and SpongeBob popsicles. And his son deserves better than that. David had a very strange experience a few weeks earlier, yes? the stranger's relative in a town like Nightvale. But he had been propelled by an inexplicable force to drive into the desert, and there a man had put a knife to his throat. He was going to die, was supposed to die. But instead, the man had let him go.
Starting point is 00:29:36 And he had run home, promised to become a better human being, a better father, even though he knew these were not promises he would be able to keep. He licks his popsicle. Mm, freezer burned. It really has been a while since his son has visited. A woman walks up to him. Hello, she says, as though they have an appointment and she is checking in. Uh, hello?
Starting point is 00:30:06 He says back. He doesn't know who she is. My name is Tabitha Littlefield, she says. I founded this town. Okay, he says, it's nice. What? She says, cocking her head. The town, it's nice.
Starting point is 00:30:32 He wishes he wasn't holding a freezer-burned popsicle shaped like SpongeBob Squarepants. He feels that this woman might be the change he has been waiting for, his way out of this sad stasis. And he is right. about that. She opens her mouth wide and then wider. And then beyond any human capacity, her mouth is a tunnel to a dark nowhere. The sky turns red, or it seems to, David is not holding the popsicle anymore. Welcome to Nightvale as a production of Nightvale Presents. It is written by Joseph Fink, Jeffrey Kraner, and Bree Williams.
Starting point is 00:31:34 Sound design and production by Dysperition. The voice of Night Vale is Cecil Baldwin. Original music by Dysperition. All of it can be found at dispirition.bancamp.com. This episode's weather was Radio Down by Caged Animals. Find out more at the link in our show notes. Comments, questions, email us at info at welcome to nightbale.com. or follow us on Blue Sky at Nightvale Radio,
Starting point is 00:32:04 or on Instagram, Tumblr, and TikTok at Nightvale Official. Or ask a dog. Is being good or is being bad? The answer is usually is being bad, but you still love them. But mainly check out welcome to night veil.com, where we have a twice monthly mailing list that is the best way to keep up to date directly from us to you. Today's proverb, to tell the difference between left and right, Just make an L with both hands.
Starting point is 00:32:32 And the hand that is on your left is your left hand. 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 Kraner and my friend from Welcome to Nightville, Cecil Baldwin, for our weekly podcast, Random Number Generator Horror Podcast Number 9, where we watch and discuss horror movies in a random order. Find, here's the short version, Random Horror. wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:33:27 Boo.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.