The Magnus Archives - MAG 99 - Dust to Dust

Episode Date: March 28, 2018

#9522002Case 9522002 - Robert E. Geiger. Incident occurred in Boise City, Oklahoma, April 1935. Victim’s name given as Stefan Brotchen. Statement given 20th February, 1952. Committed to tape 2nd Sep...tember, 2007. Gertrude Robinson Recording.Content Warnings for this episode are at the end of the show notes.Thanks to this week's Patrons: Jeff Goodhind, Liraven, Ryan Byrne, Rachel Brownhill, Chad Wiley, Paul Richardson, Doug Bostic, Cooper Dukes, Jay Honsey, Mark H, DisasterNickIf you'd like to support us, head to www.patreon.com/rustyquillEdited by Elizabeth Moffatt, Brock Winstead & Alexander J Newall.Gertrude Robinson is played by Sue Sims, The Archivist is played by Jonathan Sims, Michael is played by Luke Booys, Georgie Barker is played by Sasha Sienna, Breekon is played by Martin Corcoran, Hope is played by Steve Violich.Sound effects for this episode provided by MrAuralization, CGEffex, Diramus (https://www.youtube.com/user/diramus), RICHERlandTV, LOVEBURD & 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.Content Warning for:SuffocationUndeadNatural DisasterAbductionClaustrophobiaViolence Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the first radio ad you can smell. The new Cinnabon pull-apart only at Wendy's. It's ooey gooey and just five bucks for the small coffee all day long. Taxes extra at participating Wendy's until May 5th. Terms and conditions apply. Hi everyone, Ben here. I'd just like to take a moment to thank some of our patrons. Jeff Goodhind, LeRaven, Ryan Byrne, Rachel Brownhill, Chad Wiley, Paul Richardson, Doug Bostic, Cooper Dukes, Jay Honzi, Mark H, Disaster Nick. Thank you all. We really appreciate your support.
Starting point is 00:00:35 If you'd like to join them, go to www.patreon.com forward slash rustyquill and take a look at our rewards. Rusty Quill Presents The Magnus Archives Episode 99 Dust to Dust ¶¶ ¶¶ Case 9522-002 Robert E. Geiger Incident occurred in Boyce City, Oklahoma, April 1935. Victim's name given as Stefan Brochen.
Starting point is 00:02:03 Statement given 20th February 1952. Committed to tape 2nd September 2007. Gertrude Robinson recording. I read somewhere once I was the first man to use the term dust bowl. Now that's not so. Maybe the first the boys in the New York office had heard. But down in Oklahoma it wasn't too unusual a turn of phrase. Wide, flat, open spaces. You could see a storm coming for miles, coming straight at you all across the horizon, looking near as anything like the end of the world.
Starting point is 00:02:48 world. Those were bad days, worse than anyone knows. Did my best to spread the word, filed my copy with the AP, but there was plenty I never did find the words for. There were things in the dust that I never told to a soul. That's why I decided to step in on you folks. I still wish there was a place like this back home, but the way things are going, they'd be up in front of Congress, likely as not, so maybe it's for the best. You know much about dust pneumonia? Don't know why you would do, really. There isn't much of it about these days. Wasn't back then, either, at least before the storms came.
Starting point is 00:03:23 Then there was plenty. The name makes it sound more complicated than it is. You see, dust pneumonia is just a medical way of saying your lungs are full of mud. Too much goes in, you see, and it clogs up all the bits of your chest that should clear them out. There's fever, difficulty breathing, infection. The dust mixes with the moisture of your insides, and soon enough you're drowning, your lungs packed solid with mud and mucus. Awful thing to happen to anybody, but that's what the dust storms were, great chunks of earth torn up and hurled across the open plains, desperate to find some poor unsheltered throat and climb inside. They buried you alive, without even giving you the courtesy of getting you below the ground.
Starting point is 00:04:13 I saw so many choking farmers, their dirt street faces seemed to blend together, watching as their livelihoods evaporated with the rain, as their farms, their homes, their lives collapsed into dirt. It was all a long, sepia blur, weather-beaten faces caked in that same patina of misery and grit. All except for Stefan. Stefan Brodchen was, to all appearances, much the same as any other oaky farmer, strongly built, with a mess of short, curly, blonde hair and a round, smiling face. But his eyes were different.
Starting point is 00:04:52 There was something there. I was never quite sure what, but they had a depth, a quiet intensity to them that struck me the first time I saw him. I'd been gathering comment for an AP article on the latest dust storms to hit the area. There had been a lot of interest nationally after one dust storm made it all the way to Washington, and my editor was keen to get some comment from the people worst hit. So, naturally, I ended up in Boy's City. There was always something odd about that town, something about it at odds with the land it sat on, challenged the wide stretches of nothing. I guess that's not a surprise, looking
Starting point is 00:05:34 back. I did some research on the place afterwards, you see. Did you know that Boy's City was founded by fraud? I mean, literal, send-you-to-prison fraud. Back in 1908, three men decided to start selling the deeds to land they didn't own. They printed up hundreds of brochures, come to scenic boys' city, tree-line boulevards,
Starting point is 00:05:57 all the amenities, even a railroad station, all ready and waiting for brave souls to head out there and settle. And people bought it, almost three thousand of them. Of course, when they finally arrived to this fabled town, there was absolutely nothing there, just empty, waiting earth. They didn't even own the plots of land they'd been sold. But they stayed, and they built a town. Not a great town by any stretch,
Starting point is 00:06:26 not even a good town, truth be told, but there it was, in defiance of all good sense. One of the men who settled in the newly formed boys' city was Stefan Brodchen's father. He was long dead by the time we met his son. My photographer, a small man named Harry Eisenhard, had been told about the Brotchen farm when asking about places around the area hit bad by the storms. Steffens Fields had nothing left but dry earth, they told us. Farmhouse stripped almost bare by the harsh winds, his livestock dead and already half buried, his family gone. Never found out more than that. Just gone. When we pulled up that Sunday, the place was everything we'd been told and more. We'd see the top of wheels and farm equipment poking up through the ground, until we realised
Starting point is 00:07:19 it wasn't the ground, just a good three feet of newly forden dirt half burying the plows and wagon. I saw what must once have been a cow, covered from the neck up in coarse and clinging dust. Harry and I had wrapped our handkerchiefs over our faces as the men back in town had told us, but the air was already thick, and I could hear Harry coughing beside me. I'd seen a few victims of the dust pneumonia by this point, and the sound of his breathing made me press the cloth close to my face and offer up a silent prayer. Stefan did not wear a cloth across his face when he came out to meet us,
Starting point is 00:07:57 and I could see the fine particles collecting in his hair and the corners of his eyes. He smiled warmly and waved us over. in his hair and the corners of his eyes. He smiled warmly and waved us over. I've tried in the years since to remember if there was anything behind that smile, anything dark or secret that I might have overlooked. There was nothing. The soft, friendly voice was, as far as I can tell, genuine, and as Stefan Brodchen sat there in his small, dusty kitchen, telling us his misfortunes, there was no clue in his face as to what must have been going on inside him. His story was not unusual, and I'm sure that if you hunted down a copy of the Lubbock Evening Journal from that week, there'd be most of it in there. Crops dying, soil parched, and a farm on the brink of ruin all ruled over by that desperate empty hope of rain
Starting point is 00:08:48 he never mentioned his family and i never thought to ask though the house was clearly far too big for stefan to live there alone and he offered us a drink at one point just water but i couldn't bring myself to accept i just had this image playing through my mind over and over again. He stands up, walks over, pulls out a bottle of thick flowing mud, opens it and pours it down his throat with a smile on his face. Just my imagination, I told told myself just letting the dust get to me it only took an hour or two before I decided I had enough material for the story and I stood up and thanked him for his time Harry did the same and I shook Stefan by the hand as I touched his skin I almost pulled my hand away it was so hot it was a dry feverish, and I looked at his face and saw for the
Starting point is 00:09:46 first time the fierce, flushed redness, the forehead slick with sweat. His chest started to convulse, and he doubled over, spluttering out a clod of pulpy brown sludge onto the wooden floor. I started to ask if he was okay, but Harry tugged on my arm, gesturing outside with an almost wild urgency. It all seemed to be happening so fast I could barely register what was going on, or at least until I got outside and looked west. The vast rolling black cloud stretched before us as far as we could see. It was coming for us with such a speed that there was a part of me that immediately knew, despite all logic, that it was trying to kill me, and me alone. It was the worst dust storm I had ever seen, and it promised to blot out everything.
Starting point is 00:10:40 I ran back inside to warn Stefan and ask if he had anywhere we could wait out the storm but I found him lying on the ground he was face down a thin trickle of dirt oozing slowly from his mouth and nose I called to Harry, told him Stefan needed help but he could barely hear me over the wind which was now so fierce that it seemed to drown everything else out when I finally made him understand he seemed none too keen to drive through the storm me over the wind, which was now so fierce that it seemed to drown everything else out.
Starting point is 00:11:09 When I finally made him understand, he seemed none too keen to drive through the storm, and warned me the engine would clog before we got halfway back to Boy's City. I said we had no choice but to try. If we didn't, then Stefan was already dead. We covered his face with a cloth and carried him out and into our small car, laying him into the back as gently as we could. The wind was so sharp it felt like it was trying to strip the flesh from my skull. I had to hold my hand in front of my eyes to keep out the dirt that was whipping around at 40 miles an hour. Even with my handkerchief covering my mouth, I could feel the dust creeping in, forming a damp, cloying paste between my teeth, and the storm hadn't even hit yet. I climbed into the driver's seat while Harry scuttled round to the passenger side, and with Stefan laid across the back, we turned and began
Starting point is 00:11:58 the drive back towards town, trying to convince ourselves we had any hope of outrunning the storm. town, trying to convince ourselves we had any hope of outrunning the storm. We did not. It bore down on us like the judgment from heaven, and in less than a moment the sun was gone and the sky was black. I tried to keep driving, but I could hear the engine choking, spluttering, and finally coming to an end. It's hard to describe just how dark it is in the middle of a dust storm. It's not just the lack of sun, is in the middle of a dust storm. It's not just the lack of sun, but that no light can penetrate more than a few feet before the swirling, opaque cloud kills it dead. It's loud, with the wind and the sound of those dry specks of earth blasting against the car, but it's the sort of loud that after a while starts to feel a lot like silence.
Starting point is 00:12:48 We did our best to plug up any gaps in the windows or the frame and keep as much of the dust outside as we could, and then we sat there, feeling for all the world like we were the last people left alive, entombed within our metal coffin. I'd tried to say something to Harry to reassure him, but opening my mouth just invited more dust, and I was already coughing more than enough to panic. So we just sat there in what felt like silence for over an hour, trying not to think about the storm or the poor Oklahoma farmer dying on our back seat. We just waited.
Starting point is 00:13:31 And at some point, Stefan must have finally died. I know this because when he started talking to us again, there was no way he could have made those noises unless his lungs and throat were fully packed with sediment. The words were soft, insistent, and spasmed out of his dirt-clogged body like an earthquake. I don't remember what he said, not really. It only comes back to me in those quicksand dreams where I feel the earth swallowing me forever. He was making promises, I think, promising us that when the sky fell and became an eternity of mud,
Starting point is 00:14:07 he would carve out a place for us in the heart of the forever buried. He would show us the love of choke. I still couldn't see anything, but I felt his hand on my face, hot and dry and rough, and I tried to scream, but it just let in more dust. Harry did scream, though, and I could hear a struggle going on beside me, grunts, and the sounds of flesh striking soil, then the sound of a car door opening, and the sudden rush of wind and grit, and then it closed abruptly and I was once again sad in the unmoving quiet of the car.
Starting point is 00:14:50 Except this time I was alone. I never saw Harry Eisenhard again, and when the storm finally passed I spent hours searching for him, but he was gone. I did find the body of Stefan, though, about twenty yards away, so encrusted with dirt he barely looked human anymore. Black Sunday, they called that storm, and Harry was a long way from its only casualty. He got lost in the shuffle, officially mourned by the staff of the Associated Press, and then never discussed again. I wish I could say more about him,
Starting point is 00:15:28 but honestly, I hadn't worked with the man very much. All I know is that he was taken by Stefan Brodchen, and that it happened after Brodchen was dead, when all that made him human was suffocated, and the only thing left to move and speak inside him was that terrible killing dust. Final comments. Based on the history of Boyce City and its deceptive roots, I would perhaps have expected some aspect of Spiral to be at work here, but its unique position at the centre of the dust
Starting point is 00:16:06 bowl does seem heavily to indicate another power overtly at work. I have had my suspicions about where to be focusing my efforts, and the nature of the pseudo-prophecies given by the dust inside Stefan Brodchen seems to confirm them. To that end, I've been examining fault lines and seismic data for... Hello? Miss Robinson, I found Mr Vargas' statement that you asked for. Well, I found the translation. I already had the original, but, you know, I didn't think you'd want it in Spanish.
Starting point is 00:16:46 Unless you speak Spanish. I do not. Thank you, Michael. Sure. Well, was there anything else that you needed? No, no, not at the moment. Thank you. Right.
Starting point is 00:17:01 Well, if you need me, they're installing that climate control storage, that thing, over the weekend. So, you know, I'm just getting all that together. Yes, yes. I remember. Right. Well, call me if you need anything. Thank you, Michael. I will. Right. These additional researches have further cemented my belief that North America is going to be the focal point for the buried. Now it's just a matter of narrowing down the specifics of geography, and that may just come down to monitoring the right movement of supplies and
Starting point is 00:17:38 people. I'm still not completely sold on the US for the hunt, but that's unlikely to be quite as urgent. For the buried, however, I do have what I believe might be quite an effective plan forming, assuming, of course, that my suspicions about Yankil Bride are correct, and that's something that should be easy enough to determine once he's back on Earth. Considering what's probably happened to him up there already, I feel almost bad. But there's ten years yet before I can afford a conscience. I, um... I... Right. Right.
Starting point is 00:18:22 My head is... That was Michael. It was... It was Michael. How? How was it Michael? He... It... It never... Gertrude knew Michael. He was one of her assistants, but that doesn't make any sense.
Starting point is 00:18:39 The thing that calls itself Michael, it doesn't seem like it was ever human. So what happened to the real Michael? I mean, that's not really a question, is it? He's dead, and it's probably because of Gertrude. I still can't figure out whose side she was actually on, or even if she was playing the same game. It doesn't matter. Everyone who came close to her seems like it went badly. Her assistance to Gerard, Leitner, Elias, though I don't think Gertrude has anything to do with his going rotten. But Michael... Did it take that form just to mock me, knowing that at some point I'd look deeper into Gertrude. What the hell are you?
Starting point is 00:19:32 No, never when you call. Just one door. So many of these stories, these people touched by. Once you're on the path to becoming a monster, an avatar, it looks like it gets more and more unhealthy to be around you. I think... I think I need to...
Starting point is 00:20:00 John, did you call me? I was in the studio, but I thought I heard a shout... No, it's a false alarm. Okay, I'm sure. You alright? Yeah, I... in the studio but I thought I heard a shout No, it's a false alarm Okay, I'm sure You alright? Yeah, look, I've been thinking Are you sure? No, I'm fine No, really, you're really
Starting point is 00:20:13 Georgie, I need to move out Yeah, I thought you were looking for a place You know, now you've got a salary again No, I mean now What? Now, now? It's like five in the afternoon. Tomorrow, then. I just... I don't like staying here.
Starting point is 00:20:30 Well, thanks. You know that's not what I mean. I feel like I'm putting you in danger. Well, yeah. You are. A horrible mannequin thing turned up. I had to change all my light bulbs. This is my point.
Starting point is 00:20:45 I said I'm fine with it, at least until you're properly back on your feet. You're not doing well. You keep apologising and saying you're changing, but it's all just the same. If you leave, I think it's just going to get worse and I don't want that. I do appreciate... I mean, I don't... Georgie, you literally can't feel fear. Are you sure that that's not...
Starting point is 00:21:06 Don't, okay? I'm well aware of my situation. It does not make me an idiot. And it doesn't mean I've got a death wish either. Is it... Why are you so insistent on keeping me around? Because you're trying to cut yourself off and that's... That's really bad.
Starting point is 00:21:22 When's the last time you spoke to someone who wasn't me? That's... I talked to Martin a few few weeks ago did you talk to him or did he talk to you while you tried to find a way to escape i look you're worried i get it but if you really think you're turning into something inhuman you need people around you you You need anchors. All my anchors are just as deep in this as me. You still need them. Maybe you're right. I'll talk to the others, check in properly, see if I can help with the... with Elias' new management style.
Starting point is 00:21:59 But I won't stay here. If something happened to you or, God forbid, the Admiral, because I was here... All right, fine. I mean, you're a grown-ass man and you want to leave, find a hotel. I can't stop you. Just keep in touch, alright? You know, don't be a stranger. Georgie. Oh, come on, that was classic Barker. I'm just not in the mood. Excuse us. Are you Jonathan Sims? Yeah, what... Oh shi... Miss Orsinov wants to see you. She says she changed her mind. Oh god.
Starting point is 00:23:26 Oh god. To be continued... To subscribe, view associated material, or join our Patreon, visit RustyQuill.com. Rate and review us online, tweet us at TheRustyQuill, visit us on Facebook, or email us at mail at RustyQuill.com. Join our communities on the forum via the website or on Reddit at r slash The Magnus Archives. Thanks for listening. To be continued... the leader in audiobooks, so you'll always find the best and freshest selection of mysteries and thrillers to choose from. Sometimes you just want to get lost in a classic whodunit, and sometimes you want to get wrapped up in a twisted new mystery where the tension is high and you just can't stop listening until you find out what happens next. Audible can take you places only you can imagine and whenever you want, on a run, doing errands, commuting, or just relaxing at home. And it's not just audiobooks
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