The Magnus Archives - MAG 63 - The End of the Tunnel
Episode Date: May 3, 2017Case #0143103 Statement of Erin Gallagher-Nelson, regarding an urban exploration trip beneath St Paul’s Church West Hackney. Original statement given March 31st 2014. Thank you to this week's patron...s: Deirdre, SJPatterson, Kay Hoddy, Daniele Boucher, Jen Moore, Paul Courtenay, Tyler Shields, Jen Roth, Cathy Sandifer, Jeffrey Lassanske If you'd also like to support us, head to www.patreon.com/rustyquill Sound effects for this episode provided by previously credited artists via freesound.org. You can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast software of choice, or by visiting www.rustyquill.com/subscribe. Please rate and review on iTunes, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear! If you want to get in touch with us, feel free to tweet us at @therustyquill, drop us an email at mail@rustyquill.com or comment on our dedicated Forums available at rustyquill.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Rusty Quill presents The Magnus Archives Episode 63
The End
The End To be continued... Video recording by Jonathan Sims, head archivist of the Magnus Institute, London.
Statement begins.
I'm sure you know what urban exploring is.
I'm sure you've had plenty of amateur yahoos in here who stumble across a ghost in some old factory,
so I'll spare you the breakdown of how it works.
And if you don't know what it is, well, the internet's a thing. Look it up.
I'm about as close to a professional as you can get out of what's basically trespass as a sport. I work as a photographer, and if I play my cards right,
I can get more money from an abandoned pump station than from shooting some spoiled human
Barbie for self-hate monthly or whatever. It's always been me and Luke Nelson. He was my wife's
brother, and did all the lighting for our shoots. At least, until he was eaten by the darkness last week.
That's why I'm here. Because I didn't dream that. It happened.
I don't care what Steph says. I don't need to talk to a shrink.
I need to talk to you.
We were underneath St Paul's Church in West Hackney.
Horrid boxy building. Really makes you wonder about God's housing standards. I mean, I'm just saying if it was my house, I'd be pretty pissed.
Still, I guess if he didn't want it, he should have protected its predecessor from Nazi bombs,
because St Paul's used to be St James before it got blitzed all the way to rubble.
Everyone always forgets how much London is under London. I mean, it's not as bad as somewhere like
Edinburgh, where they literally buried half the city and built a new one on top,
but some places it's not too far from it, and I've been doing a lot of research
into St Paul's that used to be St James because it looked like it might be
exactly one such place. Plans of the drainage and underground of the
neighbourhood seemed to indicate that there was a large subterranean area
directly beneath St Paul's that appeared to be avoided by all public works,
yet the plans for the modern church didn't indicate anything below ground level.
What this told me was that the old Church of St James
probably had quite a sizeable underground presence
which hadn't been completely destroyed by the bombs,
and which its inheritor didn't use.
Early to mid-19th century Victorian vaults, undisturbed for 70 years,
it was exactly the sort of thing that's in vogue at the moment with a certain section of arty magazines,
and I was sure I could sell a few to Getty and a handful of other stock photo sites.
And hey, it wasn't like I hadn't broken into a church before.
Luckily, St Paul's West Hackney was Church of England,
meaning they didn't lock up as tight as some places.
Catholic churches can be a real pain,
as they actually have some valuables inside that need to be protected,
but this, like most C of E, was plain and unadorned inside.
So while they took plenty of care with the offices,
they weren't so conscientious about locking up the main church building, as quite frankly there was nothing to steal. Unless you like hymn books. It took me and
Luke less than a minute to get inside. It was last Tuesday, the 25th. I suppose technically it was
Wednesday the 26th, as it was well past midnight when we made our move. Once we were in, we kept
our torches low, stowed our equipment, and went looking for anything that might get us deeper inside.
At first it looked like we might have been mistaken, and there was no way beneath.
But then Luke spotted what looked like a removable panel in the floor, just off to the right of what passed for a podium.
It was heavier than it looked, but after a bit of work with the crowbar it came off.
It didn't look like it had been removed in decades, maybe not since the new church was built, but what surprised me was the air that came out when it shifted.
It hissed like a long-held breath, and the air that rose up from that hole was icy cold
and damp. Not unexpected, but what did surprise me was how clean it smelled, like an autumn
night after the rain. There was no ladder or stairs down, but we'd brought plenty of rope, so in we went.
The gloom seemed to swallow us,
and I would have sworn that at times I could feel it physically pressing against me.
As it turned out, it was only a couple of metres down to the floor of the underground tunnel,
and our flashlights showed exactly what I had hoped for.
Old Victorian brickwork.
The passage stretching away from us in both directions was absolutely perfect,
and I wasted no time in setting up a few shots while Luke placed the lighting rigs.
Down there, the flashes seemed almost blinding, but I was sure I was getting some excellent shots.
It was only when I had a quick glance through them on the screen of my SLR
that I began to get irritated. Clearly, Luke had been standing in front of the light when I had
started to shoot. In every single image, where the far wall was lit by the bright lights, you could
see the clear shape of a person's shadow. I got into quite an argument with Luke about it. He
insisted that he'd never make such a rookie move. I told him that he could argue with
me, but not with the camera. Eventually he stormed off to go exploring further on. I took another
picture before I followed him. The shadow was still there, and it seemed to be ever so slightly
closer. I don't know why I ignored it. The human mind is amazingly adept at ignoring things that don't make sense, that it
doesn't want to see. I convinced myself it was a quirk of the angles at that location. I didn't
even let myself entertain the thought that it could be a problem with my extremely expensive
camera, so I definitely didn't consider the possibility of a supernatural explanation.
I followed Luke further on, until after about twenty minutes,
we came to the ruins of a chamber of some sort. The roof had collapsed, probably from the bombing
that had destroyed St. James Church, and the rubble blocked off most of it. It looked like
it had once been a circular room, and either side of the entrance I could see doorways blocked with
fallen stone. There was no way we'd be able to
shift enough debris to access them, but it was strange. As the torch beams played across them,
even with most of them completely covered in collapsed masonry, they still didn't seem as
dark as the corridor we'd come from. I took some photos. The composition of the place was
excellent, and the blocked doorways had an odd sort of stark grandeur to them.
They were certainly well made if they managed to survive what looked to be a direct hit by a German bomb.
I checked the photos, and there were no shadows, which was something of a relief.
We headed back the other way.
When we reached our ropes hanging down from the hole above us, Luke started to have some concerns.
Well, I say concerns,
he wanted out of there. He wanted us to pack up and climb out and leave, telling me he was getting weird vibes from the place and was trying to convince me we'd seen enough. Looking up at that
bright square, lit invitingly with the moon shining through church windows, I was half-tempted
to agree with him. The trouble was that, due to the problems with the first shoot, I had one, maybe two pictures of equality I could do anything with, and that
wasn't nearly enough. I told him bluntly that I didn't have enough, and if I didn't get paid,
he didn't get paid. I saw the conflict on his face. He wanted to get out of there, sure, but
apparently not as much as he wanted to make rent. So on we went,
further into the tunnel. I don't know how far we went. I stopped every ten metres or so to set up
and try to get a good picture, but the shadows were back and worse than before. Now there'd be
two or three of them in some pictures. It wasn't quite as clearly a human silhouette, so I managed
to tell myself that it must be a quirk of how the tunnel reflected the light, even though looking three of them in some pictures. It wasn't quite as clearly a human silhouette, so I managed to
tell myself that it must be a quirk of how the tunnel reflected the light, even though looking
back that makes no sense whatsoever. Still, I kept going, hoping to find somewhere where I could get
some shots of the stark, gloomy tunnel with bricks so black they almost looked like coal.
We'd move, set up, shoot, check, and then I'd swear
at my camera. I don't know how many times we did this. Luke got jumpier and jumpier
the whole way. It didn't feel like much more than ten minutes we'd been doing it, but when
I checked my watch, we'd been down there for almost two hours. We had finally come to the
end of the path, and it was just that. An end. A blank wall of bricks, indicating the stopping of
the tunnel that seemed to go under a good deal of hackney. At this point, I at last decided to
write the whole thing off and head back. It was as I turned to Luke to tell him this that my torch
died. There was no fanfare, it just fizzled for a second, then turned off with a faint pop.
I looked over to Luke, about to ask him to pass me the spare batteries, when I saw his face.
I don't think I've ever seen anyone as scared as he was at that moment.
Then his torch went out as well, and there was nothing but darkness. I could hear him fumbling
for something that I assumed were the camera lights, and a second later I heard the click, click, click of him trying
to turn them on. Nothing happened. He kept clicking the switches on and on, and I could
feel his desperation, but we were still trapped in the pitch black. Eventually he stopped,
and we just stood there. I wanted to say something reassuring, to reach out and let him know I was still there,
but I was terrified of breaking the silence.
There was just his breathing, laboured and scared.
I became aware of my own breath, quick and betraying the panic I was trying to pretend I wasn't feeling.
And then I heard it.
The third set of breathing.
It was quiet at first.
Long and slow and very deliberate.
The more I listened, the louder it seemed to become
as though whoever was down here with us was making sure we could hear it.
And then another set of breaths joined it,
deep and throaty. And a fifth, a sixth, then more. We were surrounded on all sides by the
sound of breathing, getting louder, getting closer. Luke let out a small whimper, and
altogether they stopped. In their place there came a scraping sound, something metal it sounded like, being dragged
across the bricks.
Far away behind us but getting closer and fast, it was joined by a heavy thumping tread,
footsteps coming towards us rhythmic and unhurried.
I almost thought it could be my heartbeat pounding in my ears, but the echo assured
me it was coming from down the tunnel. Then the scraping
came again, now from the other direction, and I sank to the floor, clutching my camera
to my chest like some sort of protective talisman. It was silent once again. The noise that broke
the stones this time is the one that is still ringing in my ears. It was far more dreadful
than the others because of how familiar it was,
though I had never heard it in such a manner before.
It was Luke's voice, and it was screaming in agony.
A shrill, gut-wrenching screech of pain and fear that wiped away all thought in a second
and replaced it with blind panic.
I wanted to run, but my legs had locked up.
Somewhere in my mind, I remembered the flash on my camera, and my fingers instinctively
flicked the switch. As I pressed the button, the screaming stopped with a wet snap, and
for the worst moment of my life, an explosion of light shot through the darkness. I saw Luke hanging in the air.
There was nobody around him, but on the wall, in stark black outlines,
I saw two long, thin shadows standing beside him.
On each, I saw one spindly arm gripping his shadow by the shoulders,
while the other held up the shadow of his torn-off head.
In front of me, the real one just hung there, dangling as if by some invisible thread,
blood dripping onto the body below it.
His eyes were staring at me, as though pleading for my feeble, flashing camera to save him.
I screamed.
The next thing I remember was the painfully bright light of a
dozen torches on my face. It was the rector of St. Paul's, and a small group of what I assumed
to be parishioners. He didn't say a word as he gently led me back towards the entrance.
I looked around to see if Luke's body was there, but I knew deep down that the darkness had eaten him, and he was gone.
The rector was very understanding, though I wasn't making much sense. He spoke soft words
of reassurance, brought me out into the sick, pale blue of dawn, and called an ambulance to
look me over. I didn't get his name, and it was only after I'd reached the hospital I realized he had taken my camera.
Since then, I've been under observation in the hospital.
Nobody listens to my story, and Luke has been officially listed as missing.
Steph has been very supportive, but I can see the pain in her eyes.
She knows I was the last one to see her brother, and it eats at her.
I don't really know what to do now, except to keep
the lights on. Statement ends. It should come as no surprise to me by now that the foundation stone
of the original Church of St. James in West Hackney was laid on the 17th November 1821
by Sir Robert Smirk. Even so, I was very much hoping to find at least one architectural oddity lurking beneath the streets of London that did not bear the mark of him or his students.
This particular encounter doesn't seem to have much in common with manifestations from similar buildings. We've had something of a spectrum from him and his ilk, cobwebs entombing, difficulty in navigation, and now a violent, murderous dark.
My first thought was the People's Church of the Divine Host, as they seem to have some affinity to the darkness,
but I can find no connection of any sort between them and West Hackney Church.
Not that any of the staff there were very helpful.
Every one of them claims to have no memory of encountering Ms. Gallagher-Nelson,
despite hospital admission records clearly stating
she was picked up from there on the morning of the 26th March 2014.
Tim is convinced that at least some of them are lying,
that there's little we can do to gain any information they don't wish to volunteer.
We've been unable to follow up with Ms. Gallagher-Nelson.
All attempts to contact her have been prevented by her Ms. Gallagher-Nelson. All attempts to contact her have been prevented by her wife, Stephanie Gallagher-Nelson,
who has made it abundantly clear that we are not welcome and are to attempt no further contact.
Luke Nelson remains missing.
End recording.
Supplemental. I have been attempting to access Gertrude's laptop, but have thus far had no luck.
None of the obvious passwords I've tried have been successful, and I am unsure who can provide both assistance and discretion.
There may be further clues on the other tapes, but so far I've had no word from Basira.
I'm so close to finding something. Maybe I should just go down...
Excuse me. Do you have a moment?
Miss King, how did you get in here?
The new girl let me in. Are you all right?
Hmm? Sorry?
You look like hell.
It's been a hard few months.
Look, can I help you?
Because if you're just after another shouting match...
No!
I, um...
I actually do need your help.
Hmm. Interesting.
All right, can you not be an arsehole about it?
I just need access to your library.
So talk to Diana. She runs the place.
Yes, I don't exactly have the academic credentials you guys demand,
so I apparently need someone to vouch for me.
And you're basically the closest thing I have to a friend here.
We've spoken once, and we ended up screaming at each other.
Yes, and that's more than I have with anyone else here.
Also, Georgie
actually has some nice things to say about you.
That came as a surprise.
You didn't even tell me you knew her.
I... It was a long time
ago, before she started doing
What the Ghost. It's a surprise to me
as well, to be honest. We didn't exactly part on the
best of terms. What exactly
do you need from us anyway? Can't your
showbiz friends help you?
No, I'm...
Most of them won't talk to me anymore.
What happened?
Did word get out that you'd given a statement to us?
What was it? Credulous idiots?
Not exactly.
Look, in my business, your reputation is all that you have.
The industry's mainly full of sceptics
pretending to be believers, pretending to be sceptics.
I think the word you're looking for is charlatans.
Can you not?
Please.
I'm trying to...
Look, Ghost Hunt UK split up.
I mean, not formally,
but, well, you know,
Pete was always a flake to begin with
and the others just drifted away.
I'm sorry to hear that. I noticed you weren't updating anymore.
I tried to get a new crew together, but it was tough.
I took to going on expedition solo, but I don't really have the skills to get usable footage.
I saw a few weird things.
Then I got arrested.
Go on.
Yes, I am.
I broke into the train graveyard up near Rotherham, got picked up by security, and I wasn't doing well.
When I was being thrown out, some late-night dog walker got a video of me screaming at them about ghosts.
When it went online...
Your all-important professional reputation went with it.
Yes.
went online... Your all-important professional reputation went with it.
Yes. Look, I have
leads that I really need to follow up, but
as far as my colleagues are concerned,
these days, I'm the ghost.
Well, for what it's worth, I'm sorry.
I do know what it's like
to lack the respect of your peers.
I'll have a word with Diana, see if
I can get you into the library. Thank you.
Seriously.
Now, how do I get out of this place?
Oh, Sasha can show you out. Sasha? Yes, she should be around here somewhere. Oh, right.
Well, let me know about the library, okay? Will do. What a strange woman. End supplemental.
The Magnus Archives is a podcast distributed by RustyQuill.com and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International License.
Today's episode was written and performed by Jonathan Sims,
produced by Alexander J. Newell and Mike Lebeau,
and directed by Alexander J. Newell and Mike Lebeau, and directed by Alexander J. Newell.
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