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The Midnight Broadcast Shaina Tranquilino October 13, 2024

The Midnight BroadcastShaina TranquilinoOctober 13, 2024

It began without warning. One night, in towns across the country, late-night listeners searching for something different on the radio stumbled upon a strange, unlisted frequency. The numbers on the dial didn’t quite match anything they had ever heard before. The signal came from nowhere, and yet it was too clear, too precise, to be accidental.

People found it somewhere between 93.7 and 94.1 on their analog dials. No music, no static, just a low, droning hum and, underneath it, the faintest whisper of voices. Curious insomniacs, night shift workers, and loners tuned in. The whispers grew louder, more distinct, until they were impossible to ignore.

There was no station identification, no DJ announcing the time or weather. Only that strange hum and a constant stream of voices, whispering just low enough that listeners had to strain to hear. But as they did, they realized something disturbing.

The voices were familiar. Too familiar.

At first, it seemed like a coincidence. But soon, across online forums and late-night chat rooms, the reports started piling up. Every person who tuned into the station heard their own voice—whispering their darkest, most personal fears and memories. Nightmares they thought they had forgotten. Things they had locked away. As if the radio signal was pulling the worst of them out of the depths of their minds and broadcasting it back to them.

A woman named Rachel, in a small coastal town, was one of the first to speak out. She was a habitual night owl, always flipping through channels while painting in her tiny studio. She stumbled upon the signal one night and froze when she heard herself whispering about drowning. About the icy water filling her lungs, the darkness closing in as she struggled to scream.

Rachel had almost drowned when she was twelve, something she hadn’t thought about in years.

The whispers grew more vivid, more terrifying, with each passing night. They no longer just recalled nightmares—they created them. Listeners reported strange shadows moving in their rooms after they tuned in, or hearing voices even when they turned the radio off. Sleep became impossible. Eyes appeared in mirrors where there should have been only reflections. Phantom touches brushed against their skin as the voices murmured darker things, impossibilities and horrors that couldn’t be unseen.

More people began to tune in despite the growing dread surrounding the broadcast. Curiosity, fascination, and fear mixed into a hypnotic pull that made the station impossible to ignore. Listeners couldn’t help but come back for more, even as it cost them their peace, their sanity.

One by one, they began to disappear.

A man named Greg was the first to go missing in his town. He’d been posting obsessively about the broadcast in an online community, describing in detail the whispers that plagued him. He had started hearing them outside of his radio, in the dead silence of his apartment, in the whine of his fridge, and even in his own breathing. His last post was fragmented, barely coherent: "It’s not in my head anymore. They’re here. They’re inside me."

After that, nothing. No one could reach him.

The disappearances spread across states. The Midnight Broadcast, as it became known, was no longer a rumor. Local news stations reported cases of people going missing, some vanishing from their locked homes without a trace. There were no signs of struggle, no clues—only a faint, lingering static coming from their radios, still tuned to the phantom frequency.

By then, those who hadn’t yet heard the broadcast began to actively avoid it. They warned others, telling stories of people who tuned in just once and never turned off the radio again. Some claimed the broadcast wasn’t just tapping into their minds but stealing their very souls, piece by piece, through the whispers.

The broadcast seemed to know its time was running short. It became more erratic, the hum shifting into something deeper, more guttural. The voices, once fragmented whispers, turned into a low, maddening chant that infected anyone who listened for more than a few minutes.

One night, a late-shift trucker named Bill, alone on an empty highway, tried to switch his radio over from the broadcast after realizing what he was hearing. He hadn’t believed the stories but found himself frozen in his seat as his own voice, distorted and thick with static, whispered his greatest shame. The one secret he had never told a soul. His fingers hovered above the dial, shaking, but he couldn’t turn it off. His eyes blurred as tears streamed down his face, and suddenly the chanting voices broke into a cacophony of shrieks.

Bill's truck was found later that night, abandoned on the highway. The engine was still running, his driver’s side door wide open. But there was no sign of him. Only the soft crackle of static from the radio.

In the weeks that followed, more trucks were found along the same stretch of road. Empty.

No one dares listen anymore. But late at night, when the wind dies down and the world goes still, if you turn the dial just right, you might hear it. That same haunting hum. Those same whispered voices, waiting for someone new to listen. Someone new to take.

The Midnight Broadcast still airs.

Waiting for you to tune in.


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