The Magnus Archives - MAG 36 Taken ill
Episode Date: September 14, 2016Case #0121911Statement of Nicole Baxter, regarding visits culminating in the fire that consumed Ivy Meadows Care Home in Woodley, Greater Manchester.…As Season 1 draws inexorably closer towards its ...close remember, any questions you have for writer/narrator Jonathan Sims or the rest of the team at Rusty Quill should be posted to our forums at www.RustyQuill.com. We will be hosting an interview at the end of season one and all the best questions will be read on the recording.Be sure to subscribe using your podcast software of choice to get every episode automatically downloaded to your device. Visit www.RustyQuill.com/subscribe for quick and easy links. It’s more convenient for you and really helps us out.Like what you’re hearing? Let us know.SFX today from dmitrydiez, sangtao and previously credited artists via freesound.orgFor more information visit www.RustyQuill.Find ad-free episodes and bonus content on our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/rustyquillCheck out our merchandise available in our official stores:RedbubbleTeepublicCrowdmadeYou can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast software of choice.Please 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: @therustyquillTHREADS: @rustyquillukINSTAGRAM: @rustyquillukEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comThe Magnus Archives is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International Licence Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Terms and conditions apply. Rusty Quill Presents
The Magnus Archives Episode 36
Taken Ill The End
Statement of Nicole Baxter
Regarding visits culminating in the fire that consumed Ivy Meadows Care Home in Woodley, Greater Manchester.
Original statement given November 19th, 2012. Audio recording by Jonathan Sims, head archivist of the Magnus Institute, London.
Statement begins.
Fear is a strange thing, isn't it?
What you're afraid of.
For most people, a corpse is at the least unnerving, and for some, outright terrifying.
Or maybe it's disgust.
They are two very different feelings, aren't they?
Though they often bleed into each other, if you'll pardon the pun.
I work as a funeral director, so as you can imagine how I feel about death and the body is a bit more complicated and more immediately relevant than it is for most people.
Dealing with cadavers day in, day out forces you to confront all manner of things about yourself.
Simply put, I have found that I do not believe in any sort of afterlife.
I have seen people cold and lifeless upon the mortician's table who I knew, who I remembered as vibrant
and lively. There was no soul that had departed, no special spark that passed on to something else,
simply a body that no longer moved or spoke or thought. It feels odd to consider the fact that you will no longer exist someday.
But you didn't exist for billions of years before your birth,
so it doesn't seem unreasonable to conclude that you will not exist afterwards in much the same way.
I try to see life as a pleasant holiday from non-existence.
It provides some comfort when the truth of
my own mortality stares me in the face every day. There is one thing about dead bodies
that does bother me, though. One thing that eats at me, as it were, and does give me that
sick tightness of fear deep in my gut. It is rot. I don't know why it gets to me so. Perhaps it's
precisely because I don't think there is anything beyond the body, and even dead and unaware,
seeing a person's form begin to putrefy and fester, becoming just a home for the crawling,
feasting things, is too much for me. Perhaps it's just an unaccountable phobia.
Regardless of the reason, the fact is that
to see the corpses decaying, to see their flesh corrupted,
it is the one part of this job that I find uncomfortable.
So much so that I would describe reconstruction and preservation
as my favourite part of the process.
Making sure the cadaver looks as peaceful and lifelike as possible.
Make them the person they were, or as close as they can be while cold and senseless.
Fighting off the rot.
The insects.
The disease.
I don't know why I wrote disease just then.
They're dead, so they can't be diseased in the normal sense, can they?
I suppose it's just thinking about what happened at the Ivy Meadows care home links them in my head.
But it's not just that, is it?
That fear, the feeling, that tingling, squirming fear at the back of my mind.
It feels the same when thinking of the germs that corrupt and twist
our bodies, lurking invisibly on any table or surface, or when I saw those swarming flies.
How many more moved and buzzed just out of sight? I've never had any mental health issues before,
but perhaps after my experience I should consult someone. I read once
that OCD can come on later in life if a severe experience sets it off. I'm rambling. Disregard
this first page, I'll start again. I work as a mortician at Baxter and Gordon Funeral Directors
in Woodley. By rights, it should now just be Baxter Funeral Directors,
as William Gordon passed away himself about five years ago, leaving my Uncle George running the
place on his own. He kept the name, though, as he always said it was one of the most respected in
all of Manchester. God knows there was no sentimental reason to keep it. From the way he
talked, he and William Gordon hated each other by the end, to the point where the will expressly stated that the body of William Gordon
was to be handled and prepared by Fenchurch and Sons, one of my uncle's great rivals.
Maybe that's why Uncle George is so keen to keep it in the family.
He hired me and my cousin Josh to help, and now Baxter and Gordon Funeral Directors is entirely run by Baxters.
and Gordon Funeral Directors is entirely run by Baxters. I've been there for almost four years now and have taken over most of the client-side arrangements of the business. My uncle has gotten
somewhat brusque in his old age and is now more suited to organising things with churches and
crematoria rather than handling the recently bereaved. As such, I've gotten to know the various
nursing and care homes around Woodley rather well.
We generally get a few removals from any given one each year,
maybe as many as a half-dozen if the winter is bad.
It's certainly our most reliable source of business.
Of them all, Ivy Meadows was my favourite.
For a funeral director to say she has a favourite nursing home
probably sounds a bit like the Grim Reaper talking about his favourite hospital, but it's true.
Ivy Meadows Care Home was on the outskirts of Woodley, where the suburbs gave way to pockets of green countryside.
It wasn't remote, exactly, but it was removed enough from the main road that it stood alone, surrounded by rather lovely gardens on three sides, and a long, open field behind it. It had been a country house once, I believe, but not much
of the original structure remains, having been modified and expanded to provide accessible
accommodation for about thirty residents. It was an odd building, with modern glass
and concrete sections sprouting from old turreted brickwork,
like blocky stone tumours. The look of the place wasn't why I liked it, though.
No, that was the residence. Ivy Meadows was almost entirely populated by those elderly who were
entirely supported by the state. Most pensioners have some savings or property or family to support
them, which means
if they're unable to live alone they can at least afford to pay for their own care, or some of it.
It's rare for a person to reach that age and have literally nothing to pay for their care,
but it does happen. In these cases the state pays for them, but they have little choice in
where they end up. Ivy Meadows was almost entirely populated by these. Old people
without money or family sent to be looked after by strangers. You'd have expected the atmosphere to
be unpleasant, some morbid combination of prison and hospice, but it was quite the opposite.
Something about the mutual loneliness seemed to lead them to create a real sense of community.
It was the only place
I ever went where the residents still gave me a smile. Hannah Ramirez, who ran the place,
would always tell me a bit about the deceased and their time there, and I was inevitably shocked by
tales of drugs, sexual escapades, and other gossip that sounded more like a high school than a
nursing home. I think Hannah enjoyed trying to get a reaction out of me when I was trying to be solemn. It was just a happy place, even if I was only there to do a sad duty.
It all started to change about three months ago, after Hannah left. I don't know exactly when she
left her post or why. We hadn't had a call from Ivy Meadows for a couple of months,
so it must have happened during that period.
I don't know where she moved to, either.
It certainly wasn't any of the other care homes around Woodley,
and it wasn't like I knew her personally.
I'd gotten a call from one of the nurses, Olenka Kozol,
who said that one of their residents had taken ill and passed away,
a man by the name of Bertrand Miller.
I asked her for a few more details.
She started to say something else, but the call was cut off almost abruptly.
I didn't really think too much about it.
Most of the details could be worked out when we arrived, so I called Josh and loaded up the car for a removal.
It was a hot mid-August day, and the air was thick and humid, making everything feel sticky, like the whole world was running a fever.
The sky was overcast, though, an orangey-grey that cast muted shadows and seemed to muffle the world.
It was about a ten-minute drive to Ivy Meadows,
and neither of us said a word.
I don't know why.
At that point we had no idea that there was anything wrong,
but looking back it seems like we both felt there was something off about it.
Or maybe we were just too hot for conversation,
and hindsight is colouring my memories.
When we arrived, the place was silent.
There were no cars in the parking area, which was not unusual,
but I couldn't see a soul anywhere on the grounds.
Maybe they were simply staying out of the heat.
Josh and I got out of the car and approached the door.
I pressed the buzzer, as I had done so many times before,
expecting the cheery voice of one of the receptionists.
Instead, there was just dead air, followed by the clunk of the door being remotely unlocked.
I looked at Josh, who shrugged, and we went inside.
Ivy Meadows Care Home was usually much as you would find any other.
Air-conditioned and smelling faintly of cleaning products and cheap potpourri.
This time it was different.
The smell now was just as faint, but seemed rancid,
while the air itself was close and damp.
The beige walls seemed dirtier than before,
with dark marks at roughly hand height.
There was a faint buzzing like a fly, but I couldn't see any source for it.
None of it was so bad as to make us turn back, however, and we headed towards the reception desk.
There was nobody behind it, and I rang the bell.
I always wore gloves when on a removal, and was glad of that fact now as I noticed a greasy residue on top of the small brass bell.
The door to the reception opened and a tall man stepped out.
He was rail-thin and wore a faded brown suit that seemed to have been cut for a much fatter man.
His eyes were a watery blue, and his dark hair stood on the top of his head in an unruly mess.
He must have been around forty, but had a nervous sort of energy to him.
He was quite a surprise, to say the least.
Josh recovered faster than I did and asked the man, a bit rudely, who he was, where we could find Hannah.
The man shook his head at this and said that Ms. Ramirez had left the position and he was now director of Ivy Meadows.
He introduced himself as John Amherst and held a hand out for Josh to shake.
My cousin stood there for some time, staring at the thick, sweaty hand of this strange man, clearly not wanting to shake it.
Mr. Amherst just stood there, arm outstretched,
apparently unconcerned. A fly landed on his face, and if he noticed, he didn't give any sign of it,
not even when it walked across his eye. Eventually, the now clearly shaken Josh
stuttered out some semi-polite excuse and backed away. At this John Amherst lowered his hand and turned to me.
He asked why we were here. This took me rather by surprise, as there's generally only one reason
undertakers show up in such a place. We told him we had received a call and been told Mr. Miller
had passed away. Amherst asked who had called us, but with such a sharpness in his voice that I lied and
said the caller hadn't given their name. He paused, clearly considering what to say next very carefully.
Finally, he nodded and said that yes, Bertrand Miller was dead, and we could have him.
Then he gestured for us to follow, and began to walk back into the main building.
then he gestured for us to follow and began to walk back into the main building as we walked he began listing the details for mr miller's funeral such as they were no family or friends no savings or insurance simple cremation as soon as possible no service to be held at the crematorium ashes to be returned to ivy meadows in whatever the cheapest option was for an urn made of brass. At this I asked what he wanted the ashes for, and he simply waved his hand in a vague dismissal and said they'd be
wanting to have a private remembrance service. By now we'd been walking for a few minutes, and
I hadn't seen another soul in the corridors. I thought I spotted one of the nurses at one point,
but they had turned and walked away as soon as they saw us.
We arrived at a room bearing a small plaque. It read,
Bertrand Miller. John Amherst opened it without hesitation and went inside.
The smell was what hit me first. I've smelled plenty of corpses in my time. I'd almost say I'm used to the smell.
This was different. There was some deeper taint there than simply putrefying flesh,
and it made me gag. By the look on his face, Josh smelled it as well. Then I got a good look at the
body on the bed and almost turned and ran. Based on the colour of those sections of skin still
whole and unblemished, Mr. Miller couldn't have been dead for more than a few hours,
half a day at most. He wouldn't have known, though. Large sections of his body were covered
in a wet, creamy yellow rash which... I'm not a doctor, so describing exactly what it did to the flesh it touched
would serve no purpose except to start me having the nightmares again. Let us just say
that it gave a plentiful home for the flies that swarmed around his body.
We looked at John Amherst, utterly appalled. He said not to worry, that the disease that
had claimed poor Mr Miller wasn't contagious.
"'He even produced the recently signed death certificate,
"'though it was stained with some dark grey fluid,
"'so I did not examine it too closely.
"'He then apologised that the air conditioning had broken.
"'I'm sure you know all about what heat does to cadavers,' he said.
"'I just wanted to get out of there,
"'and have never been more grateful to whoever designed care-home beds
"'so that we could remove the body with as little contact as possible.
"'Even then, on the way out,
"'I felt a sudden tickling pain on the back of my left hand
"'and looked down to see the thick leather glove
"'in contact with one of the patches of yellow.
"'I nearly screamed and dropped the body, but did neither.
Ivy Meadows did not feel, then, like a safe place to do either of those things.
In fact, I kept my composure through the whole of the drive home.
As soon as we arrived, I ran into the bathroom.
Throwing my gloves into the medical waste bin,
I scrubbed the patch of skin that still felt like it was crawling.
I could see nothing wrong with it, but I kept scrubbing until it was bloody,
then poured disinfectant over it until it went numb.
When I finally left the bathroom, I found Josh arguing loudly with his father.
Apparently Uncle George was not satisfied
with the explanation given for the state of Mr. Miller's body.
He turned to me and asked what had happened.
I told him the same thing Josh had,
the same thing I've told you.
We went over it slowly, point by point,
until finally he stood there silently looking,
worried but determined.
He had us tell it to him one more
time before he nodded, told us to stay away from the corpse of Bertrand Miller, and left,
telling us he had to make a few calls. I have never seen a cremation done with such a quick
turnaround, and he was burned before the end of the day. I asked Uncle George about returning the
ashes in a brass urn, but he shook his head and said he'd already had them disposed of.
I knew my uncle wasn't one to share his thoughts when he didn't want to, and if that seemed to be
the end of it, save for those times throughout the day, I would feel that tickling in my hand
and run to scrub it away. I went on a couple of other jobs, and it seemed like we were expected to forget it.
Josh didn't talk about what happened,
and I got the impression he was trying to ignore what he had seen.
He always was a practical soul.
I couldn't let it go, though.
It just kept playing in my mind.
So when the phone rang two weeks later and I heard Alenka's voice on the other end,
my heart skipped several beats.
What she said did nothing to allay my fears.
The line was bad, very bad.
But I could have sworn she said,
Come quickly.
We've taken ill. We've taken ill.
We've passed away.
The words repeated as though on a recorded loop,
though they were no easier to make out than the first time.
Finally, I put the phone down.
I was technically off-duty at that point, having just finished my shift,
so I could have ignored it. I could have walked away. Instead, I put on my normal clothes,
grabbed three pairs of gloves, and got in my car. The drive there was dreadful. Still
hot, I kept looking at turnings and junctions and imagining where
I would go if I turned away from Ivy Meadows and just drove off. But I didn't. I kept taking
those old familiar turnings, moving inevitably towards that sick, old building. When I arrived,
it was quiet. The whole building looked filthy now, even
from the outside, and the plants that bordered it had started to take on an unhealthy, whitish
colour. There was one other car in the parking area, a faded white transit van I didn't
recognise. I got out and started to walk towards the front door. The smell was noticeable even from out here,
and by the time I got close enough to reach the buzzer,
it had become so strong as to be unbearable.
I tried to bring myself to press the button,
but instead I turned and half-sprinted back to my car,
desperate to breathe clean air again.
I stood there, torn between wanting to flee and needing
to know. Then in the silence I heard it. Tap, tap, tap. Someone banging rhythmically on
a window. I scanned all the ones I could see, but they were dark. Tap, tap, tap. It showed no sign
of stopping, and I began to make a wide circuit of the building. It was on the other side
that I saw it. A large ground-floor window showed what I think would once have been the
lounge. The walls were dark, stained, and smeared to almost
black, but the windows were clear. Stood the other side of the glass, weakly banging her
fist against it was Alenka Kozol. Her skin was mottled, covered with that leaking yellow rash.
She saw me and as her eyes locked with mine she opened her mouth
and the buzzing of the flies that spewed out
was almost as loud as her scream.
I turned and began to sprint back towards my car I had to get away to get out.
Then without warning I felt something heavy hit me in the side and I lost my footing, falling to the ground.
I looked up to see an old man pinning me to the ground, his long white beard matted and filthy.
I screamed and tried to escape, but his age seemed to have done nothing to diminish his strength and he kept his grip easily.
but his age seemed to have done nothing to diminish his strength and he kept his grip easily.
Then he spoke in a thick Mancunian accent and told me to keep my voice down.
I noticed that his skin was unblemished pink,
and behind him stood a young woman, tall and lean,
with close-cropped hair and a deep scar over her right eye.
She carried a large canvas bag and was shaking her head, telling the old man to leave me alone. After a few suspicious glances, he got up. I could swear I recognised
him from somewhere, but when I asked the two of them who they were, they just shook their
heads and told me to leave. I asked them what was going on, and the old man looked at his companion as if asking permission,
said something about knowledge being a good defence here.
She shook her head and said that leaving quickly was a better one.
I didn't need to be told a third time.
I got in my car, and I left them to their work. I didn't turn
around even when I saw the smoke start to rise behind me, and that was the last time
I went there. Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to go wash my hands.
I need to go wash my hands.
Statement ends.
The Ivy Meadows care home in Woodley was officially decommissioned in July 2011,
a month before the first of these alleged calls came in.
It burned down on the 4th of September that same year,
after a leaking gas main caught fire.
If the gas was already leaking, this might have resulted in hallucinations or other problems during their initial visit. There is no record
of the body of Bertrand Miller being processed or cremated by Baxter and Gordon funeral directors,
but based on this statement, that's not necessarily a point of incredulity.
Bertrand Miller was a resident at Ivy Meadows, but according
to his death certificate, he passed away on 19th July, a week before the home was decommissioned.
There's no record of any funeral arrangements or disposal of the body. In fact, it seems the record
from the closure of Ivy Meadows are... well, according to Sasha, calling them patchy would be very generous.
There are only transfer records for seven residents,
whereas at last official count the home held 29.
The others seem to have been lost in the system somewhere.
The majority of the workforce also appears to be undocumented,
and I can find no record of any Alenka Kozol on
the system. Martin's research would seem to indicate the place employed a reasonable number
of international staff they preferred to keep off the books, but it doesn't explain why none
of the officially listed staff can be located for follow-up. Except for Hannah Ramirez, whose brief
interview simply established she moved to Brighton
shortly before the closure of Ivy Meadows
and hadn't heard anything about it since
John Amherst, as best we can tell
doesn't exist
we're unable to locate anyone fitting that description
anywhere within the care or medical sector
and he certainly never ran any nursing homes.
Another tale full of dead ends.
We did contact the Baxters.
Joshua Baxter repeated the first part of the above statement.
George Baxter told us not to listen to tall tales.
Nicole Baxter said she stands by her account,
but aside from losing her left hand in what she calls
a workplace
accident, there have been no further developments. Still, there's a lot here that puts me in
mind of other statements. Something in the way Ms. Baxter talks about fear. I can't help but be reminded of Statement 0142302, how Jane Prentiss talks about her own fears.
And the old man and his companion. Who does that remind me of?
If he wasn't dead, I'd think it might have been Trevor...
Oh, uh, yes?
Are you free?
Yes. Yes, I'm just about finished here. What is it? Oh, nothing urgent.
It's just Elias was asking a couple of questions about the delivery.
Delivery? What delivery?
Well, that's actually what he was asking.
Apparently Martin took a delivery of a couple of items last week addressed to you.
Did he not mention it?
No, he...
Oh, yes. Actually, I
completely forgot. He said he put it in my desk drawer. Hold on. What is it? A lighter.
An old Zippo. You smoke? No. And I don't allow ignition sources in my archive. Okay. Is there anything unusual about it?
Not really.
Just a sort of spiderweb design on the front.
Doesn't mean anything to me.
You?
No. No.
Well, show it to the others, see what they think.
You said there was something else as well?
Oh, yes. Yeah, it was sent straight to the artefact storage.
A table of some sort.
Looks old.
Quite pretty, though.
Fascinating design on it.
Tim?
Tim, it doesn't have
a hole in it, does it?
About six inches square?
Uh, I don't know. Maybe?
Um, I'll be honest,
I didn't really notice. It was quite...
Hypnotic, yes. Do you know
who made the delivery? Did they sign in?
Um, uh, no.
Sorry, no, I don't know. I need to talk to Martin.
Uh, end recording. To be continued... Jonathan Sims. It was produced by Alexander J. Newell and Mike Lebeau, and directed by Alexander
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