Tales From Wolf Mountain
A bevy of continually strange and occasionally macabre stories from the creative minds behind Wolf Mountain Workshop - Monte D. Monteleagre and Alexander Wolfe. It is our home for short-run audio fiction.
Join us around the fire.
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Season 1 (12 Episodes): Voices From The Umbra
The collected recordings of four survivors of an apocalypse on Other-Earth where people are combined together into monstrosities, or thrust aloft to dangle from organs that once gave them life.
Season 2 (2 Episodes): Double Feature
Two short radio plays, the first following three people trying to escape their lives and the second following a man trapped in his.
Season 3 (5 Episodes): Genuine Radio
Either a collection of radio broadcasts from Wolf Mountain and the surrounding areas, or is a vain attempt to turn what might well have been an award winning breakdown into something resembling art.
Season 4 (9 Episodes): The City Unending
A guide for those Pilgrims who will soon come of age and be called West comprised of stories collected from The City Unending.
Season 5 (31 Short Episodes): The Book of Ezekiel Bradshaw
A collection of stories, sermons, and prayers from Ezekiel Bradshaw, a leader of thought and faith, who has taken pains to chronicle the world around him. Occasional prayers are lead by The Angel.
Tales From Wolf Mountain
5-11 Bill's Brother Who Had a Name
Offer a message for your place around the fire.
For mature audiences only. Content warnings for The Book of Ezekiel Bradshaw are at the bottom of this description.
Two Dollar Bill. Two Buck Chuck. A park. All that is left on Earth.
The Book of Ezekiel Bradshaw is written by Monte D. Monteleagre and produced by Wolf Mountain Workshop.
The voice of Ezekiel Bradshaw is Monte D. Monteleagre.
Special thanks to Edie Pierce, Alexander Wolfe, and Edward Hoffman.
For more from Wolf Mountain Workshop, visit our website https://www.wolfmountainworkshop.org/
Content Warnings: Self-harm, suicide, violence, murder, drug use, cult imagery and iconography, religious imagery and iconography, manipulation, domestic abuse, abuse of children, and more.
13 years after Two Dollar Bill sold him to a stranger at a park, he and Two Buck Chuck meet up at a burger place for a couple of beers.
Chuck doesn’t remember much. Bill says Mom’s dead. Chuck says he doesn’t remember much about Betsy, but Bill knows he remembers enough.
Bill doesn’t ask the question cause he thinks he knows the answer. Chuck says he got put in the back of the car, then it was the factory after that.
Bill doesn't work, hasn’t ever had a job as far as any tax collector is concerned. Chuck’s still a mechanic, even if his adult hands no longer fit in all the small nooks and crannies anymore. And now he’s at a place that’ll pay him half a decent wage and he doesn’t sleep on the factory floor anymore.
They leave together, sun going down, and they end up at the park where they parted ways all those year ago.
“I think you owe me a push on the swings, Bill.” Says Chuck.
“Sure,” says Bill.
One push. Two pushes. Bill takes the hammer out of his pocket. Three pushes.
“Come on, you can push harder than that.”
Chuck swings back, and Bill buries the claw of the hammer in the back of Chuck’s skull.
Chuck slumps in the swing. Bill takes his wallet and his hammer and doesn’t look back. The last time he saw his brother, he was sitting in the swing set. Just like he always was.
On the bus out of town, the living brother checks the wallet. A driver’s license and a two dollar bill.
All that is left on earth
Belongs to the Great Work.