The Magnus Archives - MAG 123 - Web Development

Episode Date: January 24, 2019

Case #0150108Statement of Angie Santos, regarding a website developed by one Gregory Cox. Original statement given 1st August 2015.Content Warnings for this episode are at the end of the show notes.Th...anks to this week's Patrons: Kody Hinkel, Emily Wilson, ILikeBiggBooks, Elizabeth Keir, Arthur Tucker, Dayna Plehn, Teri Bills, Nathan Hughes, Grainne Moroney, Katelyn Catameo. If you'd like to support us, head to www.patreon.com/rustyquillEdited this week by Alexander J Newall.Performances: "The Archivist" - Jonathan Sims "Melanie King" - Lydia Nicholas "Basira Hussain" - Frank VossSound effects this week by MWLANDI, bigmanjoe, kineticturtle, animationIsaac, rebeat, samueljustice00, zimbot, drewkelly, Ryding & previously credited artists via freesound.org.Check out our merchandise at https://www.redbubble.com/people/rustyquill/collections/708982-the-magnus-archives-s1You can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast software of choice, or by visiting www.rustyquill.com/subscribePlease rate and review on your software of choice, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear.Content Warning for: body horror spiders insect infestation direct violence extreme aggression emotional trauma grief Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the first radio ad you can smell. The new Cinnabon pull-apart only at Wendy's. It's ooey, gooey, and just five bucks for the small coffee all day long. Taxes extra at participating Wendy's until May 5th. Terms and conditions apply. Hi everyone, Alex here. I'd just like to take a moment to thank some of our patrons. Cody Hinkle, Emily Wilson, I Like Big Books, Elizabeth Keir, Arthur Tucker, Dana Plain, Thank you all. We really appreciate your support. If you'd like to join them, go to www.patreon.com forward slash Rusty Quill and take a look at our rewards. Rusty Quill Presents The Magnus Archives
Starting point is 00:01:07 Episode 123 Web Development Web development. Right. When did the... Coma. Great. Let's rearrange his office. Sleeping people don't need pens. Ah. Ah. Ah, what... Melanie!
Starting point is 00:02:13 It's very good to... Melanie, are you... Whoa! Get away from me! Melanie, it's me. No, no. No, I'm back. Oh, oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:24 Back to your happy little family. What? No, I didn't mean... How did you make it out then? What? Tim is dead. Daisy is dead. And you? What? You're just fine.
Starting point is 00:02:34 No, I've been in hospital for six months. Something has been in hospital. Something that's got your face. I warned Basira. I said not to let you back in here, but she just doesn't. Melanie. Melanie. It's me. Oh, okay. So what? Hi, John. How are you? Get anyone killed lately? Why that look off your face?
Starting point is 00:02:58 Like you're not the reason all of this is happening. Like you're any better than him. Basira said Elias was gone. Oh, gone, right, yes, yes, he is. He's gone. Like that makes any difference. I don't understand. No, you don't, do you? He's still alive. You are still alive. So this place is still... Melanie, Melanie, this isn't you. Back off!
Starting point is 00:03:28 You don't know me. And I don't know you. So stay the hell away from me, or I swear... Okay. Okay. Okay. I'm sorry. Okay. I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:03:52 She nearly attacked me, Basira. I mean, I know me and Melanie haven't always seen eye to eye before, but, Christ! Yeah, I did warn you. She's not, er... She's not been having a good time. Mm, yes, I did get that impression. Elias is gone. I thought...
Starting point is 00:04:09 I mean, wasn't that supposed to be... it? But she is still... It's not that simple. She needs help, Basira. God, I didn't even get that bad with... Even Tim never threatened me. Not like that.
Starting point is 00:04:25 Just back off. You haven't been here. Okay. You're right. I haven't. So explain it to me. Alright. Best I can understand it.
Starting point is 00:04:40 The holding, or the eye, or whatever you want to call it. We're one of the only powers that hasn't actually taken a shot at a ritual. Yet. And everything out there knows it. No, I mean, we can't be the only ones, surely? I don't know. Probably not.
Starting point is 00:04:58 But we made a big noise with the unknowing and other stuff, and now they've taken notice. We're safe in here, usually. But we don't go out much anymore. Usually? Yeah. You were attacked.
Starting point is 00:05:15 When? About two months ago. It was, uh... It was the flesh. Oh, God. Yeah, it was bad. We took them all out. Melanie did most of them. She was...
Starting point is 00:05:29 She got a knife from somewhere and... Sarah, I... I don't know if that's a good sign. She saved my life, John. She saved all of us. I won't forget that. Fine. Fine.
Starting point is 00:05:44 Fine. Fine. Haven't seen Martin about yet? Yeah, he comes and goes. He's busy. Well, he seems it. Working for Peter Lucas? Don't be too hard on him, John. You're a... situation. It hit him. Hard. Yes. Well, I'm sure there are better ways to deal with it than getting cosy with Elias's successor. Who I've yet to meet, by the way.
Starting point is 00:06:17 Yeah, join the club. Sorry, you haven't... Nope. Never seen him. Far as I can tell, Martin's the only one who has. Right. And you're sure he's... real? We get emails from him. Memos. He's been restructuring.
Starting point is 00:06:37 Separating out the departments a bit. Not a surprise, I guess, with his pedigree. But if you've never seen him, I mean... Rumour is a couple of researchers up on the third floor decided to ignore some of his new directives and... Sorry, what's... Gone. Oh. The more things change.
Starting point is 00:07:10 So, we're under siege. Melanie is aggressively unstable. Martin is working very closely with the Lonely, who is, predictably enough, isolating him. And, oh, yes, Tim and Daisy are still dead. Which is at least easy to keep track of. That isn't funny, John. I know it's not. Sorry. It's just...
Starting point is 00:07:34 It's a lot. And we've got an audience. Perfect. I thought you said you decided to throw them all out. Yep. And I did. And here's another one. Maybe it's hungry. Seriously.
Starting point is 00:07:53 I mean, I did have a statement I was planning to record. Great. Perfects. You can get on with that, and I'll just leave, then. Right. What do I do if Melanie comes back? I don't know. Play dead. Right. Thank you. Statement of Angie Santos, regarding a website developed by one Gregory Cox. Original statement given 1st August 2015. Audio recording by Jonathan Sims, The Archivist.
Starting point is 00:08:39 Statement begins. Okay, for this to make any real kind of sense, you sort of need to know Greg, or at least understand how he works. Don't misunderstand me, please, I'm very fond of the man, but I have never in my life encountered anyone quite so passive. So willing to go along with whatever situation he finds himself in. No matter how awkward or uncomfortable he might be, he just seems to accept his position. Actually, now I think about it, it's more that his being uncomfortable actually makes him more likely to dig in, to double down on whatever's happening, as if increasing his investment in a thing will somehow make it easier to endure. To give you an example, I first met him about seven years ago, when he was 26.
Starting point is 00:09:25 At that point he'd just got out of his first real relationship, and it was one that had lasted nearly a decade. But to hear him talk about it, it sounded like he'd never actually been happy. I mean, it didn't even sound like happiness was a consideration for him when thinking about it. For the last four years of the relationship, she had just treated him worse and worse, taken more and more liberties, and he'd just tried to shrug it off. He still does. He wasn't even the one to end things. She'd found herself a rich older guy fresh from a divorce and just disappeared. Something Greg once described as fair enough, I suppose. Oh, as another example, when I was first getting to know Greg, I went for a drink with him that I mistakenly thought was romantic. I mean, he's not a bad-looking guy,
Starting point is 00:10:13 but he'd intended the evening as purely platonic. Do you know how long we dated before I realised what had happened and actually pressed him on the whole misunderstanding? Two months. happened and actually pressed him on the whole misunderstanding. Two months. Sometimes I think if I'd just been a little bit more oblivious, we'd be married by now. Anyway, all this is to try and explain why, when it started to get really weird, Greg didn't just quit the job. I mean, it's a freelance web project, and from what he said, it doesn't even pay very well. He wouldn't be breaking any contract, and the client hardly ever even gets in touch. There is no reason that he couldn't just walk away, but I honestly don't think he ever will, and I really don't know how it's going to end for him. I knew it was going to be bad as soon as he started telling me about it. I mean, Greg doesn't really talk about work unless something's gone badly,
Starting point is 00:11:07 and he wants to not listen to me tell him to drop whatever project he's locked himself into. And this job was red flags all the way down. An email out of the blue from what looked like a personal address rather than a business one. Vague, occasionally contradictory descriptions of what they actually wanted the site to do. I mean, even the email was a bit strange. Not the broken or algorithmic English I'd have expected. The short message was quite well composed. But for some reason, something in it caused the font to appear incredibly large,
Starting point is 00:11:39 and Greg had had to scroll through almost word by word. None of it was exactly what you'd call a good sign. But, Greg being Greg, he was taking a train down to Guildford before you know it to meet the client in person, a small coffee shop just off the high street. As he told it, she was young, rail-thin underneath an oversized brown hoodie,
Starting point is 00:12:02 which she kept pulled up, trying to cover up a network of pale stitches that stretched over one side of her head. She didn't say much, other than to briefly outline the job. She wanted a forum made, though she couldn't seem to explain exactly what audience or topic she wanted it to be targeted towards, or why she couldn't use any of the countless online services that specifically made and admin'd forums. She just mumbled something about custom requirements and told Greg to drink his latte. Which he did, so he tells me, though he can't stand milk in his coffee. All through it, she just kept staring at him, hands pressed into the pockets of her hoodie,
Starting point is 00:12:44 occasionally pushing long, spindly fingers out against the fabric, smiling to herself. I haven't given the name of this mystery client, because, to be honest, Greg's never told me. I've asked him plenty of times, but whenever I do, he gives me this surprised look, insists he's told me before, and then immediately forgets and changes the subject. I know that's not exactly helpful, but honestly I'm a bit lost here myself. I mean, none of this feels normal, some of it doesn't even feel natural. Greg's an odd one, sure, but until recently he's always been very sharp. This was all about six months ago. He's been working on the website ever since.
Starting point is 00:13:27 The actual basic setup took him all of two days, maybe a bit more since the client insisted on him coding from scratch. It was bare bones since he'd been given no copy or indication of how it was to be organised except for the name of the site. Caliceri. Which he made sure stood prominently at the top in a tasteful sans serif. The client had requested only a single area where threads could be posted, labelled Come In.
Starting point is 00:13:54 Of course, there was never anything in there. The site was called Caliceri, but the URL, the web address, was nothing like the name. Just a long string of letters and numbers with no pattern or reason to them, almost impossible to memorise. Once the site was live, Greg would get an email every few weeks with a new domain name, another long string of gibberish, and he would have to change it all over. There were other things, though, that the client would email through. other things, though, that the client would email through. Things she insisted were included not on the website itself, but in the code.
Starting point is 00:14:32 I'm not really a computer person, but according to Greg, they had nothing to do with any coding language he'd ever seen. Meaningless strings of words, or weird little fragments of poetry, or a name, different every time, repeated over and over again hundreds of times. He tried to explain to her more than once that just pasting these things into the code wouldn't cause them to appear on the page or have any effect at all. But she insisted, so he did it. And he's been doing it ever since. He's on some sort of retainer to administrate the site, and this amounts to changing the domain name every few weeks, checking the statistics that, yes, still no one has visited,
Starting point is 00:15:11 and pasting whatever the latest nonsense the client wants in the code. I'd have said it was good money for doing basically nothing, except that over the last two months it's all started to go really, really weird. It started with an email he got from a hotmail address he didn't recognise. The subject line was simply, are you the Calisari? At first Greg thought his client must have passed his details on, but opening the message there were just four more words. Please make it stop. Now, Greg being Greg, he just deleted the message and pretended it didn't bother him. But after he told me about it, I pressed him further, and he admitted that it wasn't the first unsettling email
Starting point is 00:15:58 he'd gotten from strangers about the site. He wouldn't tell me the others and kept insisting I drop it that it was fine that I shouldn't worry but of course I did worry I knew that secretly he was as well I started to do a bit of searching online just to see if there was anything we were missing and there was a lot as it turns out
Starting point is 00:16:23 it didn't take more than an hour or so to discover that Greg had apparently found himself the web administrator for an urban legend. The Caliceri popped up on the occasional paranormal site or edgy message board each time accompanied by a now-defunct link. According to those who follow such things, all you had to do was start a new thread as a guest, something that Greg had been instructed to make sure was possible, and the title of that thread should be the name of someone you want dead. As the stories went, you would receive a reply almost immediately, and it would simply ask you for a story. You would have to write out and post in full a horrible event that had happened to you
Starting point is 00:17:07 or someone that you loved. All the instructions were very clear that the target would only die if the account satisfied the story spinner. None of them made any mention of what happened if it did not. Pretty standard fair spooky stuff., at least I would have thought so, if it hadn't been for the messages that Greg kept getting. Someone more technically adept than him had clearly found his email associated with the site and had posted about it, so he had become the de facto mailbox for this... forum. Greg swore blind the site had never received any visitors at all, never had a single thing posted in it. But still the emails came. Bring them back. What is
Starting point is 00:17:55 happening? I'm sorry I lied. It's been getting to him, I know it has he's lost weight he rarely goes out anymore and judging by the cobwebs he definitely doesn't clean his house like he used to I've tried talking to him, but it's like talking to a brick wall that refuses to admit it's crumbling that's why it's me
Starting point is 00:18:19 here rather than him, I mean I had to talk to someone we were walking home from the cricketers, a pub just off Horsall Birch. We were heading back to his house since I'd missed my last train, and when that happened I tended to sleep on his sofa. We were turning down into his road when there was a small voice from a doorway next to us asking for help. Now, the last few years there have been a lot more homeless folk around Woking, I know, welcome to Tory Britain,
Starting point is 00:18:55 but my point is Greg usually made a habit of giving whatever change he had left over from the pub to whoever we stumbled across on the way back. So when we heard this, he turned towards the voice and held out his hand towards the dark, crumpled shape, offering some change. What grabbed his wrist was not a hand. Not exactly, not anymore. It was coarse and bony and covered in fine, sharp hairs. Greg screamed, falling backwards, pulling the figure under the street lamp, where, for a second, I saw it more completely than he did. It was definitely human once, at least based on how it was screaming.
Starting point is 00:19:39 But it was thin, with bits of it twisted and discoloured, covered in small, scurrying shapes. Its face was the most human part of it remaining, except for the two black and hollow spaces where its eyes once were, from which now poured an endless stream of scuttling legs and fangs. The mouth was full of them too. But I could see, as they grasped desperately at Greg, it was trying to say, I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:20:19 I'm sorry. Tell her I'm sorry. But words were not what tumbled from those lips. We ran, of course. The thing was frantic but clumsy, and it wasn't difficult to get away. I wanted to go to the police to tell them everything, but Greg refused, of course. He said there must have been some mistake, that it was just a tramp with an unfortunate condition, that he wasn't going to bother the police just because we'd had a bit of a shock.
Starting point is 00:20:55 I didn't have the energy to argue with him. I still don't, really. I don't know what to think. Greg's my best friend, but I might have to stop seeing him. He's still working on that site, still updating the domain name, still pasting gibberish into the code. I think he might be part of something really awful. And I don't know how to make him see that. Awful.
Starting point is 00:21:23 And I don't know how to make him see that. If I had a little bit more courage, I might just hang around a few message boards I know, waiting for a link to the glyceri, waiting to post a name that might end it. I've got a story for it, all right. But I won't. I'm just too much of for it, all right. But I won't. I'm just too much of a coward, I suppose.
Starting point is 00:21:53 So I guess I'm telling it to you instead. For all the good that'll do. Statement ends. The web does seem to have a preference for those who prefer not to assert themselves. The investigation is tricky, I don't want to impose on Basira, and obviously Melanie and Martin aren't available, but I did do some light-searching myself on Gregory Cox. Vanished, unsurprisingly.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Sometime in late July 2016, which is two years ago. That doesn't seem right. It doesn't feel like... There's just this great gap of time where I wasn't. No notes or follow-up here that I can see, just... It looks like the statement came in just after Gertrude disappeared. Another gap. And whoever took it didn't do any follow-up, just... filed it away. I may be the first person to actually read it, so... Sorry, Angie.
Starting point is 00:23:05 I suppose. There's a small supplemental document with it, though, that is a bit alarming. It's apparently a list of people whose names appear in the various pieces of text Mr Cox was pasting into the code. It's unclear if they were meant to be users or victims.
Starting point is 00:23:23 But I cannot help but note that there seem to be the names of several statement givers who found their way to the Institute, including noted arachnophobe Carlos Vitteri. Perhaps a coincidence, just people shopping their traumatic event around, but I have to wonder how much their actions were their own I have no theories on this no sudden insights
Starting point is 00:23:53 I wish I could talk it through with Martin or Tim or Sasha but we never really did that did we everything's changed Sasha. But we never really did that, did we? Everything's changed. Two days out of a coma and I'm already tired.
Starting point is 00:24:18 End recording. To be continued... Today's episode was written by Jonathan Sims and directed by Alexander J. Newell. To subscribe, view associated material, or join our Patreon, visit RustyQuill.com. Rate and review us online, tweet us at TheRustyQuill, visit us on Facebook, or email us at mail at RustyQuill.com. Join our communities on the forum via the website or on Reddit at r slash The Magnus Archives. Thanks for listening. To be continued... and freshest selection of mysteries and thrillers to choose from. Sometimes you just want to get lost in a classic whodunit, and sometimes you want to get wrapped up in a twisted new mystery where the tension is high and you just can't stop listening until you find out what happens next.
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