The Magnus Archives - MAG 138 - The Architecture of Fear
Episode Date: May 9, 2019Case # 8671302Statement of Robert Smirke, taken from a letter to Jonah Magnus dated 13th February 1867.Content warnings for this episode are at the end of the show notes. Thanks to this week's Pa...trons: Zach Jenkins, Dunstan Thorn, David Simons, Kayla B., Roman Sevchenko, Meche Morier, Andrew Wadsworth, E Jalenak, Brie Hutcheon, Sara Homan, Lucy McCully, Kelly Lux Callahan, Jeffery Sumler, Melissa Verble, Greg Lange, Kelsey P, Mobius, Pettycoated Swashbuckler, Christopher Pajo, ASmith, Eric Zagar.Edited this week by Elizabeth Moffatt, Brock Winstead & Alexander J Newall.Written by Jonathan Sims and directed by Alexander J Newall. Performances:"Elias Bouchard" - Ben Meredith"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.Join our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comContent warnings for:Body HorrorParanoia Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Rusty Quill Presents The Magnus Archives
Episode 138
The Architecture of Fear There. Much better.
You know I don't care if John hears this.
Come on, Martin. It's been so long since I've seen you.
Let's not start with lies.
Fine.
I am so very pleased to see you.
Mm-hmm.
No time for pleasantries? Very well, then.
To business.
What can I do for you?
Tired of running budgets for Peter?
I know I would be.
I need to...
Is he telling the truth?
About what?
Any of it.
Everything Peter has told you is true.
Oh.
For all his many faults, Peter is legitimately trying to stop the end of the world as we know it.
So why haven't you helped him?
My relationship to the apocalypse is more complicated.
Seriously?
Seriously.
Anyway, I have helped him.
I've given him control of the Institute.
I've provided him with...
Me?
Any manpower he might require.
Yeah, but if he's right about the extinction what it is
then why didn't you say anything before why am i only hearing about this now and why doesn't
john know in my case while peter's talked of it before it is only very recently that i've been
forced to admit the extinction is real and as for our dear archivist i'm afraid i no longer have any
real control over what he does or does not know.
Unlike yourself.
I notice you haven't told him either.
Yeah, well...
I'm still not sure I really believe it.
And I don't...
I'm...
Worried he might charge off into another coffin.
Quite.
As for why I've done so little about such a looming existential threat, to be blunt,
I have been rather busy.
Besides which, don't forget I am still living at Her Majesty's pleasure, due in no small
part to your actions.
So by this point, all I can do is confirm that everything Peter has told you is true.
I think he wants me to join the Lonely.
Then it sounds like you have a
decision to make.
What?
That's it?
No monologue? No mind
games? You love manipulating
people. That makes two
of us. But no,
this is too important for me to jeopardise with cheap
mind games. I simply have to trust that when the time comes, you'll make the right choice.
Great. Great, great. So what you're actually saying is that you're going to be
no help whatsoever? Just like old times. I don't know what I expected. Right, right, we're done here. Don't forget to keep in
touch, Martin. There are so many people in here, but without one's friends, it does get rather lonely.
Martin Blackwood, assistant to Peter Lucas, head of the Magnus Institute, recording statement number 8671302,
statement of Robert Smirk, taken from a letter to Jonah Magnus, dated 13th of February, 1867.
My dear Jonah, you will forgive me, I hope, for being so forward, but I feel I must break the
silence that has characterized our acquaintance for these past decades. You see, Jonah, I feel the hour of my death approaching,
and, though you have always been reluctant to pay due heed to my warnings or counsel,
I continue to see in you the reflection of my own past hubris. I could not go easy to my grave
without offering you one last plea for your restraint.
What we built at Millbank should be left well enough alone, resigned to the nightmares of
the reprobates and brigands contained within its walls. I have been blessed with a long life,
something few who cross paths with the Dread Powers can boast. But now, at the end of it,
my true fear is that I have wasted it, chasing an impossible dream. To speak plain, I have begun to
lose faith in the possibility of balance, of any sort of equilibrium among them. It is telling
that of those I have brought into my confidence, it is only you and I who have continued this far
without falling to one power or another, despite all my instruction and work. This is, of course,
assuming you have not taken the path of the I that I know has called you, called us both for so long,
even since before we began our work on Millbank. I suppose I had to believe that
the darker natures of our terror could be kept in check, weighed against each other so that the
great wheel would keep turning forever without reaching the velocity I feared would crush us.
Perhaps my sin was to see them as something that could be knowable and harnessed. I'm sure you recall what happened with the Reform
Club, but you may be unaware of some of my other experiments below the very streets of London,
places I have tried to cover with churches of all things, in the faint hope that perhaps the
sight of our Saviour will be enough to contain them. A rather feeble hope for my own salvation.
Did I ever tell you about the dreams? I'm sure I must have. I would dream about them, you see,
as a young man, long before I devised my taxonomy. I would find myself in nightmares of strange,
far-off places. A field of graves, a grasping tunnel, an abattoir knee-deep
in pig's blood. I believed then, as I still believe now, that these places I saw were the
powers themselves, expressed in their truest form, far more entirely than any secret book can claim.
Far more entirely than any secret book can claim.
And if, as I came to believe, the Dread Powers were themselves places of a sort,
then surely with the right space, the right architecture, they could be contained, channeled, harnessed.
So yes, hubris.
Not simply in that, I suppose, but in believing that those I brought into my confidence shared my lofty goals.
So many have abandoned us, casting about for rituals that I helped design.
In my excited discussions with Mr. Rayner, I perhaps extrapolated too much from his talk of a grand ritual of darkness.
The dark, I thought, was simply one of the powers, so it stands to reason that each of them should have its own ritual. Perhaps they already did, even before I put pen
to paper. They certainly do now, and I shudder to think how Lucas, Scott, and the others may use
this conception. Fourteen powers, with their opposites and their allies, each with a name no more nor less than manifestation.
Apocalypse. Apotheosis.
I wonder, did my work bring about these dreadful things, or did I simply develop the means by which they can be known?
can be known. I should have realised, of course, when we first discussed the flesh, for how can there be true balance, each one to its opposite, when new fears can emerge and change as civilisation
itself grows and alters, when a new power can birth itself, screaming from the torn remnants
of others? I know you say the flesh was perhaps always there, shriveled and nascent until its recent growth, but to grant the existence of such lesser powers would throw everything into confusion.
Would you have me separate the corruption between insects, dirt, and disease? To divide thus we must conclude that the only explanation is a new power, created from what was once others, yet all so distinct.
And if such change is possible, how then can any true balance be achieved through immutable, unchanging stone?
I have been dreaming again, Jonah. The same every night for months now.
I imagine myself a boy again at Aspley. I awake, cold and alone in the dormitory.
The sky outside is dark and I see no stars. I light a candle to better see my way and step
down the silent corridor.
The master's rooms are empty.
The fire in the kitchen is dead.
Eventually my steps lead out into the courtyard.
It is so quiet that the sound of my feet upon the grass is painful to my ears.
I stop and look up at the sky, that empty black nothing, and I see the edges of the horizon becoming a dull white.
I cannot understand what I am looking at.
And then the sky blinks.
And I awake.
I am not a fool.
I know well enough what this dream is likely to mean,
and I warn you again that if you have any remaining ambitions to use our work to try and wear the Watcher's crown, you must abandon them.
Not simply for the sake of your own soul, but for that of the world.
I have always had the utmost respect for you as a man of dignity and learning.
Do not allow yourself to fall to this madness.
I have been thinking, of late, about the first origin of the Dread Powers,
if such beings can really be said to have true origins.
Are they eternal, or were they created from our own fear by some grand accident, or worse, some grand design?
I believe the latter to be the case, as you well know, for I have in vain struggled to reconcile their creation with the existence of a loving God.
They are not demons, of this I am sure, though we have drawn parallels with their acolytes and certain
monstrous figures from ancient myth. No, I feel certain they were brought into existence by some
ancient civilization, some foolish tribe from pre-history. Do you know of Alexander Cunningham?
He's been working with the Viceroy of India on the Indus Valley digs, and has discovered some quite remarkable things. Burial pits full of burned bones and ash, skulls with markings as though
the eyes were removed, and others that seem buried alive. Perhaps a dying civilization
sought to harness its own terror, as we once thought to harness its results.
as we once thought to harness its results.
Of course, such things are pure conjecture.
I have not brought Cunningham into my confidence on this,
nor do I believe there will be any cause to,
even if there was still time remaining to me.
Perhaps you wonder why I am so convinced of my imminent demise,
and why I should see it as a cause to reach out to you, after so much silence and distrust has passed between us. Certainly, you must either wonder, or you already know all too well.
It was subtle at first, easy to ignore and dismiss.
What possible harm could there be in the idle glance of a footman, staring at you as you leave your home?
And no doubt the shopkeeper is permitted to watch whomsoever he pleases within the confines of his own establishment.
So I have been reassuring myself, as I attempted to ignore my own growing disquiet. But what is not to be dismissed is when your driver,
on the long road from London, takes his eyes from the horses and begins to turn his head,
slowly at first, but with a clear determination, inch by inch without ceasing, neck cracking and
skin stretching, until his whole head seems as though it were placed atop his shoulders in reverse by some careless sculptor.
The others in my carriage seemed not to mark this awful sight, but I could scarce look away,
and the eyes of this twisted figure were locked on my own, tears streaming from their corners.
It was such a dreadful spectacle that it took every ounce of my composure not to hurl myself bodily from the coach.
The journey was not a short one, and for all those hours the driver did not for a second look away.
The horses seemed to take it all in stride.
Since then I have attempted to avoid such situations and have travelled primarily by the railway,
but even then it seems I cannot avoid the ceaseless gaze of those silent figures
who gather along the sides of the track to stare at me as I pass.
I count the billowing smoke as a blessing,
for though it sends me into coughing fits, it at least serves to hide me from their relentless eyes.
I am choosing to assume that
these manifestations are unintentional, Jonah, and you have not simply decided to implore a dark
patron to end the life of an old man. I further find myself supposing that they may emanate from
your own intrigues and preparations to culminate those plans which we agreed to abandon so many decades ago.
I beg you, do not pursue this goal.
If only a single lesson may be gleaned from my life of long study and longer hardship,
it is that the fear of death is natural, and to flee from it will only bring greater misery.
Repent of your sins, Jonah. Seek forgiveness.
I am certain the Dread Powers cannot take a soul that keeps faith in the resurrection.
As for myself, I must cling to hope, for I cannot ultimately deny the wavering of my own faith.
I have pleaded with the Lord to give me strength, to help shield me from the things I have sought these many decades,
to protect me as my end draws near.
I do not believe my prayers have been heard.
Last night I was awoken by a noise from the drawing room.
I was in my own bed, and the moon shone through the window,
casting the place into a pale and sickly hue,
though it was illumination enough to assure myself I was
alone. The noise came again, however, and I called out to Laura, asking if she had woken in the night.
There was no reply. I struck a match and lit my meagre candle, clinging desperately to its small
pinprick of warmth and light, and I crept towards the drawing room the door opened
slowly and the room within was in pitch darkness the heavy curtains having been
drawn across the window in the sputtering glow of the candle I could
see a figure stood in the corner opposite the door it wore a long
nightdress and seemed at a glance to be my dear sweet Laura.
I let out a breath and began to settle myself, asking her what she was doing out of bed.
She did not respond, however.
She remained silent instead, facing into the corner of the room.
I approached slowly, that restored confidence fleeing me as swiftly as it had arrived, and asked her again.
This time she began to turn, with such a slowness I was reminded instantly of the driver.
I started to speak again, but at that moment my candle went out, plunging me into abject darkness.
I fumbled desperately for a match, and finding one in my nightgown, I struck it in a panic, casting sudden light on my surroundings.
Laura's face was inches from my own, her eyes staring into mine, so wide that they seemed to take up half her face or more, bulging grotesquely from their sockets.
I screamed, just once.
She gave no response of her own. I wanted to run, to lock myself in my room, but under the sight of those horrible eyes, my entire body seemed
to freeze, and I stood there, match held aloft, eyes locked with this awful parody of my daughter.
aloft, eyes locked with this awful parody of my daughter. After an eternity, the flame reached my fingers and I dropped the match, letting the relief of darkness wash over me. I stood there
until morning, only to find Laura gone. It was then I began composing this letter.
Laura, of course, claims no knowledge of the night's events, having no
memory of even leaving her chamber. The eye has marked me for something. Of this I have no doubt.
My humble hope is that it may be a swift death, an accidental effect of your own researches which
I once again implore you to abandon. It is likely too late for me, but I will not...
The letter ends there.
Apparently Robert Smirk was found collapsed in his study that evening,
dead of apoplexy.
I don't know how the letter reached the archives.
I mean, I can guess, but...
So what? What does it mean?
Am I supposed to be reassured that new entities can be born?
That there's some kind of precedent for the extinction?
Peter?
Peter?
Huh. Maybe he has gone to a party. Anyway,
Smoke was clearly wrong about the powers balancing each other, at least. I mean,
it's obviously impossible. There's too much variation in how much something is feared by people at any one time. And if that's the case,
I suppose it's not impossible that Peter might be telling the truth. I don't know what he's talking about when he mentions Milbank. The old prison, I guess? Tim said the tunnels under the
institute were all that was left of it, but John said he'd checked them pretty thoroughly.
I'm not the one who knows all about this stuff. I wish...
No. No, it's fine. I'm fine. I... I can do this.
I don't know what Peter's planning, but my guess is that it might involve something below the Institute.
Hopefully by the time you get these tapes I'll have something more concrete for you.
Good luck, John.
I...
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