The Magnus Archives - MAG 85 - Upon the Stair
Episode Date: December 21, 2017#376-UStatement of an unknown figure, regarding an encounter they may or may not have had in their home. Date of original statement unclearThanks to this week's Patrons: C, Prince Julian, Phoebe Seide...rs, Aidan King, Francisco Pargana, Vicktoriano Vello, Dylan Morris, Thomas Carson, Zach Bowman, Sean Rossiter and Murium IqbalIf you'd like to support us, head to www.patreon.com/rustyquillEdited by James Austin, Brock Winstead & Alexander J Newall.Sound effects for this episode provided 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/subscribe.Please rate and review on your software of choice, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Rusty Quill Presents The Magnus Archives
Episode 85
Upon the Stair the stair. To be continued... statement unclear, though paper quality likely puts it at between 20 and 30 years ago. Recording
by Jonathan Sims in his personal investigative capacity. Statement begins.
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to put my words to you and apologies for any problems that
may arise from this conversation. I will try to restrain it.
Are you familiar with the work of the poet William Hughes Mearns?
I assume not, few people are.
Even now I'm not completely sure that's how you pronounce his name,
having only ever seen it written down.
There is one poem, however, I think you will be familiar with. It goes thus. As I was going up the stair, I met a man who wasn't there. He wasn't there again today. Oh, the man was waiting there for me. But when I looked around the hall, I couldn't see him there at all.
Go away!
Go away!
Don't you come back any more!
Go away!
Go away!
And please don't slam the door.
Last night I saw upon the stair a little man who wasn't there he wasn't there again today oh how i wish he'd go away the staircases of one of the grander homes. For the longest time I misread the title,
and was convinced the poem was called Antagonish. I thought it was a rather clever play on the word
antagonist, owing to the ambiguous nature of the subject. I was disappointed then to discover it
was simply a reference to a haunting. By tying it to a real place and a known story,
the strange, disconcerting nonsense at the heart of it was lost. Because nonsense is
what it is. It is playfully impossible. He cannot be not there, but he is, he was. And so am I. I didn't meet him on the staircase as well. The carpet didn't
bend under the weight of his soft, round body, and I distinctly recall the absence of a creak
as his foot pressed on the loose board of the empty fifth step. He laughed, but there
was no humour in it, because then it would have had to break the silence
In the poem I had always imagined a translucent figure, absent in life and body, but visible
But I couldn't see this man, obviously I couldn't
I couldn't see him or hear him or speak to him, because there was nobody there. The staircase was
empty, as he stretched his arm to gesture me closer.
My memory is not what it was. Some days it seems that damn poem is all I can remember.
I know I had a family. I know I had a house. Was it in Antigonish?
No, that's absurd
The man I didn't meet had nothing to do with the poem
Just a coincidence
But I'm not sure
What else I know now
I'm not sure where else I know now
I'm unsure where I've ever been
I had a home, a house. I know it had at least two
floors because there were stairs. The stairs were real. He wasn't there, but the stairs
were, at least to begin with. It was dark when I didn't see him, and I was about to walk up to bed. I remember being cold, damp.
Had it been raining?
No, the water was still.
I wanted to be dry, to be warm in my bed,
and I couldn't because in spite of his own absence this man blocked the stairs.
I think I would have asked others to tell me what or who they might or might not have
seen if that had been an option, and I didn't, so I must have lived alone. I don't know why the
lights were off, but the moon was bright and cast stark shadows upon the empty floor where this
figure stood. For obvious reasons, I can't describe him. I can barely describe his
absence. I could try to say that his hypothesis was tall and wide. Conceptually, he could have had
arms that stretched away from a soft-looking torso with stubby fingers that did not grip the banisters tight enough to splinter.
If he had had a face, it would have been unremarkable,
with a small, plump mouth that failed to quite turn into a smile.
He didn't speak, so I couldn't hear his offer to join him on the staircase,
but I accepted. I don't know if I was just desperate
to try and get up and into my bed, or if I was generally curious as to what this man
had to offer me when he didn't even have enough wherewithal to exist.
So I placed my foot on the first step, and I began to walk. If he'd been there, it might have been hard to get past his bulk,
but as it was, I continued up without any problems.
The staircase in my house was not long,
and it wasn't steep,
and it went straight up to the landing with only a single right-angle turn.
It was not a spiral staircase,
so after walking down that corkscrew for almost a half hour I knew it couldn't be mine.
The man hadn't come with me, of course, so I wasn't able to ask how it was he could always stay three steps in front of me without once moving his legs.
I walked and I walked, and then I didn't walk and that got me moving much faster.
The walls didn't look like my house because there weren't any, so it was hard to tell what they did look like.
Eventually I must have reached the end because I woke up the next morning in my bed,
and my bed was at the end of the staircase that was there, so I assume it was also at the end of the one that wasn't.
The next few days are hard for me to remember because they happened,
and genuine recollections slip through my mind like rippling glass.
But the man didn't come back. He didn't come back every night.
He didn't come back until I made a horrid mistake.
until I made a horrid mistake. I called to him. I stood on the landing and shouted at him to go away. I asked him if he was there. I demanded he show himself, all utterly impossible,
of course. I was shouting at nobody but myself, and so it was into my own mind that my curses and
pleas burrowed and nested.
As he wasn't there, I have no way of telling how many teeth were on show when he smiled
at me.
After that it became hard to tell where he failed to begin and easier to tell where I
ended.
People would forget me, but
that was all right, because only real people care about who remembers them, and I was no
longer among their number. I would have whole days where I failed to exist, a feeling so
entirely alien that I am glad I had no stomach from which to throw up. And as I existed less and less, the man ceased to exist less and less, until I remembered
the first time he was really in my house, and I wished for nothing more than that I
had hands with which to strangle him.
My parents were the worst. They came for dinner once shortly after I had called to him. They looked
so confused when I served them their meal, and the conversations would die after only
a few words. My mother's eyes were bloodshot, and I could see them unfocused when they tried
to look at me. She dabbed a napkin at her mouth and asked me where her son was. I asked her what his name had been. She didn't know.
She dabbed her mouth again and the napkin came away bloody.
My father said nothing as I had taken him up the stairs an hour before and he now lay dead in his
chair, his heart unsuited for the expedition. He had sworn at me as he tried to climb them to the top, telling
me I was no son of his, and I was trying to agree with him, but if I could have done so,
then he would have been wrong. Eventually, after almost an hour descending the spiral,
he keeled over in his seat and lay lifeless. My mother got abruptly to her feet and told my father that they were leaving.
My father got to his feet and silently followed her out. I never saw either of them again.
Eventually, the man who had never set foot upon my staircase became real enough to have
done this to me. He existed so thoroughly that he was finally able to laugh at the joy of
being. He looked around for me, but of course I wasn't there, and in my absence I watched the
realization on his face that in reality, whoever he was, he had died decades before, and he was
now in reality. He tried to scream, but his throat decomposed around the noise,
cutting it short with a slough of rotten flesh and collapsing brittle bone.
And as I stared from the empty spiral staircase,
I wanted to laugh right back at him,
but I couldn't, because I just wasn't there.
I haven't been here for a long time now.
Time is difficult.
I try to take people up the staircase.
Sometimes they make it, sometimes they do not.
None of them have called out to me, though.
Not like I once called out to an empty house.
Most staircases are easy for me to
not be on, but this one here took effort. I tried to be just real enough to talk to
you. I wanted to share. I don't want to take you up the spiral staircase, so you should try to leave.
I don't want to, but it's my nature now.
And you can't fight what you are.
Or even what you aren't.
As I was going up the stair, I was a man who wasn't there.
I wasn't there again today. Oh, how I wish I'd go away.
Statement ends. There are many aspects of this statement that I desperately want more
information on, but I have no real way to do so. There are some short pieces of correspondence in the file addressed to Gertrude from someone
called Eric Delano, confirming that while he typed out this statement he has no memory
of doing so, and requesting some sick leave to address persistent migraines he has developed.
There's no supplementary research, because what do you research? A nonsense poem from 1922.
Now, I am more interested, as before, with who is sending me these statements, and why this one especially is the message, if indeed there is one seems to contradict the last one.
If the moral, shall we say, of Miss Ashbert's statement was that ignoring the horror stalking you just makes them more dangerous,
then surely the message of this one is that confronting them directly is even more so.
I suppose that leaves skulking around the periphery, which is what I was already doing.
There is, of course, a different reading, which is that this is a targeted warning about trusting Michael.
Giving the obvious parallels, swap out stairways for corridors and spirals for fractals, and there you go.
The nowhere man thing is new, though.
What was it Leitner said about the spiral?
It deals with fooling your senses, drawing your mind to difficult paths, making you doubt the reality you live in.
Well, if this is a warning about Michael, then it is, as before, somewhat superfluous.
If I never see him, if I never see it again, it's too soon.
Maybe that's it.
It.
Maybe whoever sent this wants me to consider how many of these creatures used to be people.
How many seem to have taken the mantle from the ones that came before them,
and how none of them seem to be able to overcome their new natures.
How most of them don't even seem to think like people anymore.
Given that there is every possibility I've taken on one of these mantles myself,
this is not an interpretation I'm keen on.
Or it could be someone in the archives randomly sending me statements with no curation, rhyme or reason, assuming they come from the archives.
They're marked as Institute statements, but I have no idea who's sending them.
I feel like I've been seeing a lot of police cars about.
Maybe... that's absurd.
Maybe Leitner stole a lot of statements
and had a sort of dead man switch to...
Occam's Razor.
For now, it makes sense to assume they're coming from the Institute, and they're only coming one at a time, so I will work on the belief that they are some
way curated. So the current questions are who and why.
I feel bad staying put, like I might be placing Georgie in danger,
but I don't have anywhere else to go at the moment.
And if the increased police presence isn't just in my head,
then I don't know...
Right, I'm out tonight, okay?
There should be some stuff in the freezer if you...
Oh.
I was just, uh...
You didn't say we got another one.
I didn't want to worry you.
I knew it was something.
You've been weird all day. I'm sorry, I... I don't want to worry you. I knew it was something. You've been weird all day.
I'm sorry.
I don't know.
We can talk about it later.
I need to head out.
Yeah.
You look great.
What's the occasion?
I have a date.
Oh.
Do you need me to get out of the house?
No.
Trust me. Nothing's happening tonight.
How are you so sure?
Check out his profile.
Good Lord.
Yeah.
I mean, he does know what a book is, right?
Unclear. He climbs mountains, though.
Yeah, I got that.
Face to face with your own mortality on the frozen peaks,
staring death in the face and saying,
not today, dude.
The man's a poet.
And why are you going out with him again?
He, uh...
He likes Hungarian food.
And there's a place just opened.
You're serious?
You're going on a date with the dullard of Skull Mountain
just so you have an excuse to eat a Shopska salad?
I need my sheep's cheese, John.
No one else will go with me.
You hate Hungarian food.
Jeff says it tastes too Soviet, apparently, whatever that means.
Melanie says it's too salty.
Everyone I know has bad taste in food.
I don't hate Hungary.
Hold on. Melanie's back.
You didn't hear?
Hear what?
Yeah, she had a bad time in India. She got shot.
She... what?
Yeah, I know.
Is she... I mean, she survived.
I hope so. I'm going for a drink with her on Thursday. Be a bit awkward if not.
Right.
I'd take you along, but, you know,
she thinks you're a dick. Another startling insight from the piercing investigative mind
of Georgie Barker. Is she all right? Well, she's had a hell of a time. Figured the least I could
do was get her drunk and listen to her bitch about the new job. Oh, she found something then?
Yeah, didn't say what. I think she was a bit embarrassed. Says her co-workers are super weird. Really? Really? Well, speaking of weirdos, I think you have
a Hungarian mountain man to be courting. Yes, I do. I'll see you later. Don't forget the
freezer. I won't. Have fun. Yeah, we'll see. Hmm.
Oh.
The Magnus Archives is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International License.
Today's episode was written by Jonathan Sims and directed by Alexander J. Newell.
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