The Magnus Archives - MAG 129 - Submerged
Episode Date: March 7, 2019Case #0130409Statement of Kulbir Shakya, regarding a flood that occurred around his flat in Hackney. Original statement given September 4th, 2013.Content Warnings for this episode are at the end of th...e show notes.Thanks to this week's Patrons: stickyshoelaces, RJ, Sarah randlett, Iryka Smeke, Mupod, Richard Dixon, Sarah Hickey, Jess Em, Joseph Fink and Jane dataghosts.If you'd like to support us, head to www.patreon.com/rustyquillEdited this week by James Austin, Brock Winstead & Alexander J Newall.Performances:"The Archivist" - Jonathan Sims"Martin Blackwood" - Alexander J NewallSound effects this week by 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:drowningnatural disaster (flood)isolationgriefemotional traumahuman remains Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Magnus Archives
Episode 129
Submerged Martin?
John, how did you...
I just... I know sometimes. It's a whole thing.
Oh.
Okay.
Well, sorry, but I...
You have to leave, suddenly.
John, come on, we've been over this.
No, it's fine. I know you've got...
Whatever this is, I'm not going to question you.
Thank you.
Even if it looks like you're doing something really stupid Sorry
It's okay
I get it
I just... I worry
You're working for someone really bad
Yes, I'm not an idiot, John
But it's no worse than working for something really bad, so...
At least the eye hasn't gone after our
own. Lucas has vanished
to people. Yeah, and if it wasn't for me,
it would have been a lot more.
This isn't helping anything.
I just...
I'm sorry. Basira's off doing God
knows what and I can't talk to Melanie.
Mm-hmm.
I suppose... I miss Melanie. Mm-hmm. I suppose...
I miss you.
I'm just... lonely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I, uh...
I heard about your mother.
Yeah.
I am
so sorry.
Thank you.
It's...
It's better this way.
If you do need to talk, I...
I can't.
No.
No, of course.
Listen, Martin, you should know...
John...
Daisy might be alive. Basira is... Stop. Stop,
please. I shouldn't know any of this. I really need to go. I'm right. Please stop finding
me. What happened, Martin? You died. I came back.
Yeah.
And I'm not going to let it happen again.
Wait.
Wait.
Statement of Gulbir Shakya regarding a flood
that occurred around his house in Hackney.
Original statement given September 4th, 2013.
Audio recording by Jonathan Sims, the archivist.
Statement begins.
In many ways I lost my home even before all this happened.
I lived in that house my entire life.
Hackney was my area, my community.
It wasn't some fashionable postcode or investment opportunity. I should have seen the signs, I
suppose. Little independent coffee shops sprouting up like weeds between the paving stones. Micro
breweries and tap rooms cropping up in old industrial estates, even though the Prince
of Wales had to close its doors because it couldn't afford the new business rights.
The faces I knew and recognised gradually being outnumbered by young, trendy, white people in
artfully shabby clothes who thought they were blending in, and precise-looking estate agents
in well-pressed suits taking pictures of dilapidated buildings.
I complained, of course, made all the right noises of disapproval,
but I still drank the overpriced coffee,
still shopped at all the shiny new franchise outlets.
I thought because I'd been living there so long I'd be all right.
Hell, the house had been my grandfather's before he died.
But we never had the money to actually buy it. And as property values skyrocketed, the landlord, who'd always seemed
so understanding, suddenly started itching to sell. And there was no way I could afford
the new rent on the meagre salary of my admin job. I looked into getting roommates, subletting, all sorts. But by that point I was
already too deep in debt, and there was just no way I was going to be able to stay.
So I started the long and painful process of moving in with my sister. It was humiliating.
The flat she lived in with her husband was much smaller than the house,
and I couldn't afford a storage unit.
So much of what I owned,
a lot of which had once belonged to my grandfather,
had to be thrown away.
We actually got into a blazing row over his old kukri.
He had been a Gorkhali,
serving in the 5th Gorkha Rifles during the Second World War.
I have complicated feelings on his military history, of course, but he had always been fiercely proud of it.
And that old knife had been one of his most treasured possessions.
I didn't keep it polished like he had, even at ninety years old.
But it reminded me of him. I could see
his calloused hand on its hilt as he meticulously, almost mechanically cleaned it, humming a
tune the name of which I never learned. He had been a man of discipline, in many ways
very harsh, but he had loved me and my sister very much, and the idea of throwing
away his blade felt like a kick in my chest. In the end, she agreed, though, and it wasn't
long before I was spending my last nights in an almost abandoned house, shelves bare
and wardrobes empty, trying my best to sleep on a mattress I knew I was leaving behind.
trying my best to sleep on a mattress I knew I was leaving behind.
The letter came the next day.
The envelope was slightly damp, like it had been carried through the rain and it had my name printed on the front in a business-like sans-serif font.
It looked at first like any other piece of financial junk mail you might glance at once and throw away, but I read it anyway.
The letter claimed to be from a financial firm named Eberhardt & Strauss.
At least, those were the names on the letterhead.
The first words did nothing to dissuade me from my assumption it was junk mail.
from my assumption it was junk mail. Drowning in debt? We can help! In big, friendly text that seemed at odds with the pseudo-respectable image the rest of it seemed to be striving for.
But as I read through it, I realised that not only was it addressed to me specifically,
not a difficult job for modern batch printing, but it made references to some very specific aspects of my situation.
Precise amounts of debt, names of creditors, and the sort of details that made it very clear that
this was definitely written to me. It didn't give any indication of the exact assistant that
Eberhardt and Strauss were supposedly offering, but it did give an address and told me to call
on them at my convenience.
At the bottom, in that same friendly typeface, it assured me,
we can help with the pressure.
I don't know what I expected. I really don't.
What, they were just going to hand me ten grand and another four hundred a month to cover the rent increase?
I mean, I knew about loan sharks and debt consolidation companies and the dozens of other scams that prey on those in desperate situations like mine.
This was just going to be another one of them. But the letter had been to me specifically,
and maybe somewhere in the back of my mind, I was genuinely hoping for a way out.
The address they gave me was for a tall, thin building in Hammersmith
that housed about a half-dozen law firms and a couple of tech start-ups.
It didn't look like the sort of place that high-prestige businesses would have their premises,
and more than one of the names listed on the plaque next to the revolving door
had been roughly scratched out,
I assume indicating they were no longer in business.
I asked at the front desk about Eberhardt and Strauss
and was directed to an extremely cramped lift
that rattled me up to the fourth floor.
There was a buzzer next to their door,
but it seemed to be broken and made no sound at all when I pressed it.
My finger came away wet, and looking up I
could see some sort of leak in the ceiling, dripping water down onto the button. I tried
the handle, and the door opened quietly. The rooms beyond were empty. Bare wooden floors, no curtains or wallpaper,
a few abandoned chairs or cheap-looking desks.
The light switch did nothing,
though the dull grey light of a cloudy day
filtered through the window bright enough to see by.
Every surface was damp,
slick with old water and warped with mildew.
It dripped slowly down the walls and seeped into the rotten wood of what furniture was left. I could see a line of liquid in
the bare light bulbs. I was confused, obviously I was, and stepped back out to double-check
the door, and sure enough these were the offices of Eberhardt and Strauss.
I felt disgust rise in my throat, the awful, humid air of the waterlogged place sitting heavy in my lungs.
I checked the drawers in one of the desks, but even if the mushy pulp inside had once been paper,
it wasn't anymore.
Confused and angry, I turned around and left.
It started raining on the walk home.
When would you start to worry about the rain?
I don't mean about it ruining your day or wrecking an event you're planning,
but at what point does it stop being normal and start to alarm you? I've lived my whole life in London, so I've seen plenty of rain in my time.
I've lived through weeks where you catch what minutes you can when the sky closes for a moment
and you can run to the bus stop. I've seen poorly maintained roads turn into tiny lakes,
and I've seen hackney towns turned into a muddy swamp.
So the first day didn't worry me.
The rain pounded down steadily outside, and I sat in my bare, dismal home, waiting for my sister to pick me up.
It drummed on the roof, rhythmic and insistent, cascading off in tiny waterfalls, and just for a moment, I found myself almost completely at peace. Then I felt a drop, heavy and wet, land on the back of my neck, and it
shattered all at once. I looked up, and I saw the spreading patch of damp in the centre of my
ceiling. Evicted or not, part of me recoiled to see my home starting to finally crumble,
as though my leaving would take the last part of its hope.
The water was warm, and after the heat of the summer's day,
I breathed in, expecting the smell of petrichor.
But the scent of the rain was something else.
Something earthy and cloying I couldn't
quite place. It was a storm. There seemed to be no doubt of that, and I didn't blame
Boana for not wanting to drive in this weather. I was a bit annoyed that she hadn't called,
but looking at my phone, it was clear it wasn't getting any signal. Now that wasn't necessarily a surprise given the storm,
but it did present me with a problem. Namely, that my television and computer had already
been sent over to my sister's place, and without any signal, I was left with pretty much two
options. Sit doing nothing and listen to the rain, or head out into it. I opened the door
for about three seconds
before I decided that sitting and waiting was the better choice.
I walked upstairs, pulled the seat to the window overlooking the road,
and I sat there, watching.
The drains were already starting to flood,
puddles growing around the parked cars reaching up and over,
eager to meet in the middle to turn from a pool of water into something much more.
I expected cars, maybe people running desperately to their homes,
but the street outside was quiet, save for the pounding of the downpour.
Ten minutes.
Twenty.
Half an hour passed, and I didn't see a single soul.
Not a car or a bike Not even a bus
That started to worry me a bit
The 394 should pass by every 15 minutes or so but I definitely hadn't seen it
Did they know something I didn't?
Was there some sort of weather warning out that I'd missed for Hackney?
That was when I heard the first peal of thunder.
There was no lightning.
I want to be very clear on that.
Nothing broke the uniform iron grey of the sky,
dark and solid as far as I could see.
But the thunder hit like a hammer.
It rolled, deeper than I could see, but the thunder hit like a hammer. It rolled deeper than I had heard
even in the most violent of storms, and it just kept going. I could feel it shaking through
my whole body, and for a moment I thought I was wrong and that it must have been a proper
earthquake. Then it faded, and the world was silent again, save for the impact
of the rain. When my watch told me it was nine o'clock, I dragged myself over to the
mattress and told myself I might as well sleep through the rest of the storm, even though
the sky seemed no darker than before. I tried to relax, to let the rhythmic tapping of the rain lull me off to sleep,
like it always had when I was a boy. But I could find no comfort in it. It sounded too
much like it wanted to get in. The thunder woke me. Another long, deep roar that seemed
to come as much from the ground as it did from the clouds.
The rain still hammered down outside and I checked my watch, staring at it in confusion.
It didn't make any sense.
It said it was 3am, the middle of the night,
but looking out through the window the world was still light.
The sky was cloudy and grey as it had been the previous day,
and the rain made it impossible to see further than the end of the street.
For all the same, it definitely wasn't night.
There were no streetlights turned on,
and now that I looked for it, I couldn't see any windows lit in any of the other houses on the street.
It seemed like it was just me.
Me and the steady, driving rain.
The road was beginning to properly flood now,
with an inch or two of water creeping up over the edges
and starting to cover the pavement and climbing up the tyres of the parked cars.
I started to consider trying to leave.
Perhaps I had missed some sort of official
evacuation, some huge storm warning, and I was in terrible danger. But no, that was ridiculous. This
wasn't some rural town panicking at the prospect of a flash flood. This was East London. If there
was some sort of disaster coming, I would have seen something, an emergency vehicle, or at least someone in a high-vis vest.
I was overreacting.
It was just the rain keeping everybody home.
They all just wanted to stay dry.
I lied to myself like that until the water was too high for me to even consider going outside in it.
And I was trapped.
too high for me to even consider going outside in it. And I was trapped.
By the time it started to pour into the downstairs of the house, I had just about accepted that, whatever was going on, there was no longer a day or a night. Just the storm and the rain
and the thunder. It's odd how you gradually come to accept things as real. By the time
you drop the last of your rationalizations, there's no surprise left in you. Just an
awareness that, no matter how wrong it might feel, it's the reality you're now in.
I walked down the stairs, as low as I could without stepping into the water, and I watched it.
It was dark and murky, obscuring anything below its surface as soon as it was covered.
I reached my hand out and pushed it gently into the flood.
It was warm, as warm as my hand, and moments after the water covered it, my mind could no longer easily tell where my skin ended and the water began.
It should only have been half a foot deep at most, but reaching in I couldn't feel the floor.
I pulled my hand out and returned upstairs.
By the time the rain stopped, it was halfway up the staircase and had almost completely submerged the cars parked outside
The thrumming of the rain gave way to sudden silence and for a moment
I allowed myself the smallest sliver of hope
The streets outside were still
The top of the floodwaters flat and undisturbed. The sky remained those same
dingy clouds, but it seemed to be holding its breath. Then, one by one, the headlights
on the cars lit up. They shone out into the water that covered them, faintly illuminating
the murky liquid for a few feet below the surface.
And that's when I finally saw things moving.
Silhouettes, gliding through the water with smooth, undulating motions.
They might have been the shape of people.
It was hard to tell for sure.
They moved too fast, darting in and out of the lights,
before my eyes could fully register what they were seeing.
I left the window and returned to the mattress.
I was tired, I was hungry, and without the motion of the rain, the air had become intolerably humid.
Every breath I took filled my lungs with that thick,
wet scent, and it felt like I could barely get enough oxygen to think.
The walls of my house were slick with moisture now, and there was nowhere I could go to be dry,
no way out of this oppressive, cloying damp.
No way out of this oppressive, cloying damp.
Then the thunder came for the last time.
It shook and rattled with more force than it ever had before, and the empty oak wardrobe fell over with a crash.
I ran to the window and saw that the floodwaters were rising again, but faster this time.
And not because of any rain, the house, the street, the world was sinking into that unending line of water which I was now certain stretched out to the horizon.
Inch by inch, foot by foot, everything was descending into the water's embrace.
thing was descending into the water's embrace. It would wrap itself around me, reach down my throat and fill me with its choking darkness. There was nothing I could do. As the water
reached the top of the stairs and started to flow outwards towards my open bedroom door,
I looked around desperately for any escape that
I might have overlooked. And I saw something lying just behind the fallen wardrobe.
It must have fallen there months ago. It was the worn leather sheath to my grandfather's kukri.
I walked over and picked it up. I stared at it. I could feel that warm, grasping water cover my feet, my ankles, slowly working its way up my calf,
but in that moment, all I could think about was my grandfather,
and how he had looked when they gave him his diagnosis.
Calm and solid.
He had thanked his doctor without hesitation.
And although I knew he had been afraid,
he had spent those last months methodically preparing for the end.
He had always endured his problems,
never tried to squirm out of things he felt he had to face.
I gripped the sheath in both my hands and waded to the window.
Corpses floated by, slowly waving
at me gently, their lifeless hands grey and bloated. I ignored them and stepped out into
the water.
I don't know if you've ever drowned, but it's the most painful thing I've ever experienced.
I tried to remain calm, to think on my grandfather and his firm, stony face, but even he had
begged for painkillers at the end. Even he had been afraid. My lungs spasmed painfully,
desperately trying to wring air out of the warm, rancid water that filled them.
And as I felt the water embrace me fully, pressing in on all sides,
I gripped the last connection I had to the world I knew.
The last thing I was conscious of was the water getting colder.
I don't remember them fishing me out of Regent's Canal, or most of my treatment, to be honest.
At a certain point it all blurs together.
I'm alive, and that's what matters.
But I've been living with my sister and her husband for a month or two.
She doesn't believe me, of course, and is keen to put the whole thing behind us.
So I catch her staring at me sometimes.
I suspect she thinks I might have done it on purpose, but she doesn't know.
She doesn't know what it's like to really hear the rain.
Statement ends.
One thing that always strikes me when I read statements like this is...
the bias of survivorship.
With one or two notable exceptions, the only statement the Institute receives are those where the witness has...
successfully escaped to whatever terrible place or being has marked them for a victim.
I wonder how many don't make it out.
How many of those shapes in the water
were once just like Mr. Shakya.
Hmm.
Or perhaps
I shouldn't wonder.
Even as I say it, I can feel the knowledge
pushing at my mind,
eager to find a way in.
But I don't want it. I don't want to know But I don't want it.
I don't want to know.
I don't want to see.
No more than I wanted to see how Gertrude stopped the buried and their ritual,
but that came to me as well.
They called it the sunken sky,
and she calculated, correctly,
that casting a void-touched body down the pit at the right
time would be enough to disrupt it. Something she found in Jan Kilbride.
But Gertrude also realised that the body need not be alive, or in one piece. She thought it was a mercy. It wasn't.
I don't like this. I don't like not being sure what's going to be in my mind,
what thoughts are mine and what are from elsewhere.
Why I just know some statements
are what I should be reading.
I assume this one is related to the
coffin, to Daisy.
I haven't heard from Basira
since she left on whatever secret errand
and I feel like I'm no closer to
understanding any of this.
I suppose if this one managed to free
himself from the buried,
to find a way out of whatever part of Choke embraces drowning...
I need an anchor.
I could go in myself, I could find her,
and then I just need to get out.
I need something out here.
Something I can know the way back to.
I don't know what.
But I'm here to start.
End recording. To be continued... Today's episode was written by Jonathan Sims and directed by Alexander J. Newell.
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Dette er det første radio-adlet du kan smelte.
Den nye Cinnabon Pull Apart
bare på Wendy's.
Det er ui, gui og bare 5 kroner
for en liten kaffe hele dagen.
Det er ekstra penger på å partisipere
på Wendy's til 5. mai.
Terms og kondisjoner oppfatter.
Her kommer et podcasttips fra Eikast.
Hei, Dana!
Hei, Erika!
Og sammen har vi podden Skitshowet.
Hva er det?
Neste blir noe for to av de enke influensere som har fikset podden.
Fortsatt bostaden som noen aliens i Trondheim.
Det er jo ikke noe hemmelighet at det er ganske mye glem på Insta,
så jeg føler at vi trenger podden for å ta det litt ned.
Vi tar for oss hva vi har gjort den siste uka!
Samtidig som vi tester nye ting,
som for eksempel menneskehopp og kosmikk,
er egentlig det.
Så det man skal gjøre nå er å ned på huk igjen,
for jeg får fått litt panikk.
Hør om du gidder.
Bye!