The Magnus Archives - Rusty Fears 5 - Derailing
Episode Date: November 4, 2021This week's Rusty Fears 5 winner is "Derailing" written by Josefin Berntsson, performed & directed by Jonathan Sims.Note: this is a piece of stand-alone fiction and not a part of the Magnus canon....Content warnings:Being huntedParanoiaAnxiety & compulsive behaviourBody horrorDiscussions of: auditory hallucinationsSFX: low continuous drones, high pitched tonesTranscripts:PDF - https://bit.ly/3bm3QOVDOC - https://bit.ly/3pFzAXIThank you to all our Patrons for your continued support.If you'd like to join them, visit www.patreon.com/rustyquill.Edited by Marisa Ewing, Nico Vettese & Jeffrey Nils GardnerProduced by Lowri Ann DaviesCheck out our merchandise available at https://www.redbubble.com/people/RustyQuill/shop & https://www.teepublic.com/stores/rusty-quill.You 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/RustyQuillYOUTUBE: youtube.com/rustyquillEMAIL: 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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Hi everyone, it's Kareem, the voice of Simon Fairchard from the Magnus Archives.
Or if you prefer, the eternal tavern keeper from Chapter and Multiverse.
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Derailing by Josephine Burnson Read by Jonathan Sims
There was an old railway near my house. Not that I actually knew how old it was, but I
had thought of it as old ever since I moved in. Back then I thought the expression had
a kind of charm to it. The first summer I didn't really pay it any mind. I had plenty
of work to do to get the house in order as it was a bit of a renovation project, and
the garden even more so. But I still heard it, ever so often, placed beyond the trees at the
edge of my garden. The railway would always be well out of sight, but the metallic rushing sound
of a train passing by was hard to miss. It wasn't until late autumn that I fully realised that I'd
never actually seen any of the trains that passed. Now, with the trees stripped
of their leaves, I had a direct line of sight to the railway from my bedroom window, but not once
did I manage to be looking in the right direction when the train came. I did try, mind you, once I
noticed. Several times I'd be on the other side of the house when I heard the tell-tale sound,
and rush over to see if I could catch a glimpse of the train itself, but it was always gone before I could see it. Eventually I stopped bothering,
and once winter fully hit, the trains stopped coming at all. I started hearing the sound of
it again come spring, but by then the trees were lush and green again, and once more obscured my
view. I could have gone across to the other side of them, but I wasn't
so invested in this train spotting that I could be bothered to, especially not with how irregular
the trains tended to be. Sure, they would mostly run in the evenings, but I had better things to
do than to just sit for hours and wait for a train that might not even show up. They became just
background noise for me after that, and remained so until summer rolled around.
A railway is always louder in the summer, somehow,
to the point where it forces you to pause any conversation you might have until the train has passed by.
The day my friend Sarah was visiting me was no exception,
though she did say something that no one had said before.
I didn't know any trains ran by here.
Well, they do, I replied with a shrug.
Almost every day.
But where do they go?
She asked.
There's no station in town.
I had no answer to this.
In fact, I was a bit thrown by the fact
that I had never even considered it myself.
I managed to mostly put it out of my
mind for the duration of Sarah's visit, but I couldn't let it go. The train only passed once
more while she was there, and I didn't miss the way Sarah frowned at the sound. It was a train,
wasn't it? The way the sound built and built until it became almost deafening,
only to then fade away into the distance again.
Couldn't be anything else. Could it? When Sarah left, I almost immediately went to look for my
house on a map. I found it easily. There was my property, with the buildings marked just as well
as the small road winding its way up from the main thoroughfare. But no railway. I could see
the stretch of land where it should have been drawn but there was
nothing. I had to look miles away to find where the nearest railway was marked but
that didn't make any sense. And yet as I stood there with the map right in front of my eyes
I heard the sound of the train again. Frustrated and itching for some answers, I then did something I had never
actually done before. I went outside, and I crossed my yard. When I reached the trees at
the edge of it, I didn't stop, but instead brushed my way through their thick leaves.
There were more of them than I had initially thought, but eventually I made it through to
the other side, and onto the railway.
Quite literally, my foot stepped onto the rails as soon as I emerged from the trees.
The first thought I had was that it was dangerous,
that I didn't know when the next train might arrive and that I wouldn't want to be on the rails when it did.
But as soon as I could think past that,
I began to realise that there was no way a train had actually passed through there recently.
The rails were well overgrown, you see, with grass and vines reaching up and around them.
In some places, even roots had begun to overtake them, which would have led to a certain derailment of any train that attempted to pass. Overhead, the tree branches were thick and gnarled and
reached almost all the way across the rails, effectively blocking the path of any vehicle save maybe a bike.
As I looked up, I could see that there were no wires either.
Even if a train had been able to pass by here, it couldn't have been an electric one.
And yet what I had heard had definitely not been the steady chugging of a steam engine.
All my concerns of danger had passed by then, and I was just confused and
annoyed. None of this made any sense, but I desperately wanted it to. So I did the one thing
I could think of, and began to follow the rails. It wasn't an easy walk, given nature's attempts at
reclaiming the old structure, and it felt like I walked for hours. At no point did the railway turn
into something that might even resemble something functional,
and eventually it just stopped.
The trees gave way to a field full of crops almost ready for harvest,
and the rails stopped with the tree line.
As I stood there, gazing out at the golden wheat,
I thought that maybe I just imagined the train all this time. I don't
know why I would imagine such a thing, but what other explanation could there be? And then I heard
it again. Faint and far away in the distance was the familiar sound of a train approaching.
Determined, I remained where I was.
I had no intention of leaving these rails
until I could actually see the train approaching.
Except, it never came.
The sound rose, only to fade
before it could really reach its peak.
Was there a second railroad, perhaps?
Further away?
No.
It had to be my imagination. it had to be. Besides,
dusk was setting in and I hadn't thought to bring a torch with me. Resigned, I began to walk back
towards my house. I decided I would follow the railway in the other direction the following day,
and maybe once I had found out that there was another dead end, my mind would stop playing
these tricks on me.
The terrain didn't offer much in the way of landmarks, but I was well over halfway back home when the train sounded again. It was definitely closer now, sounding much more
like I knew it to, though still not quite right. Not loud enough. My heart was beating hard and
fast by this point, partially from the long walk and partially from nerves
Still, I pressed on
I just wanted to get home and get this over with
It was dark by the time I returned
And I had only the moonlight to go by
I couldn't see my house from this side of the trees
But there was a small clearing on the opposite side of the tracks that I recognised from earlier.
I was about to push through the trees when I heard it again.
Metal against metal.
That long, drawn-out, discordant note that started faintly but then began to grow and grow and grow.
The train was here.
Out of instinct and self-preservation, I threw myself into the branches and off of the tracks,
holding my breath as I waited for the train to pass.
Of course, there was no train.
But the noise didn't come from inside my mind, either.
As the sound crept towards its crescendo, I could see something step out into the clearing.
It was large, easily taller than me, even as it walked on all fours.
Its limbs were taut and stretched, and large, thick spikes protruded along its spine.
stretched and large, thick spikes protruded along its spine. It didn't have a face, only a mouth which opened wider and wider as it screamed out the anguished cry of a train rushing over rails.
Slowly, on hands or paws I couldn't tell, it crossed the clearing. In the glint of the moonlight, I could see that the spikes on its back looked like rails, but jagged and bent.
The creature didn't pause, didn't seem to listen or look or sniff the air, if it could even do either of those things.
It just kept on walking, as its roar gradually faded into the distant singing of rails before going silent
altogether. Only well after it had disappeared on the other side of the clearing did I dare to move
and ran through the trees and across my yard and into my house as fast as I could.
I didn't manage to sleep that night. No matter how badly I told myself that it wasn't real, that what I had seen was just some
bizarre trick of the light. Three nights later, I spotted the creature walking through my garden,
making its way over my lawn with heavy, lumbering steps. The morning after, there was a single
railroad spike lying in the grass. I was too scared to touch it at first
but after a few hours of it doing absolutely nothing i finally caved in and grabbed it and
threw it into the trees only a few days after that i saw the first bit of railway begin to reach its
way into my garden it was partially hidden by the vegetation at the edges,
and I probably would have missed it
if I hadn't been paying such close attention to the tree line.
But there it was,
rusty but solid bits of rail stretching towards me.
I tried to get rid of them,
tried to dig and chop and hack through them,
but the iron was firm and sturdy.
I finally gave up when my shovel cracked, and instead I began to cover the rails with a thick layer of soil.
I doubted that it would solve anything, but I just couldn't stand to look at them.
After a few more days, I found another pair of railroad spikes, this time sticking up from the earth like
sprouting plants. I knew I couldn't stay, and I certainly didn't want to. I put my house up for
sale and hoped, with all that I had, that the creature wouldn't find me before I could leave.
I was lucky and managed to be indoors every time it showed up. In fact, I barely went outside at all, and certainly not
after dusk. I saw it, though, through the windows. It would stalk through my garden, searching,
waiting. Sometimes it dug up the rails I had painstakingly buried, and sometimes more were
left there in the morning. I did my best to cover the rails when I showed the house,
and I must have succeeded well enough,
but by the time I managed to sell it, they were almost reaching the front door.
It didn't feel good to leave the house to new owners who had no idea
what was slowly crawling its way towards their home.
But I told myself I didn't have any choice.
As soon as I got the house sold,
I moved as far away as I could, to a place where I knew for sure there would be no railroads.
I couldn't avoid them entirely, of course. Not if I wanted to be able to ever visit any larger cities.
But for the next couple of years, I at least only ever heard trains that I could see,
or that I knew were supposed to run.
That fact calmed me somewhat, if not entirely.
Still, a part of me always knew that I wouldn't be able to avoid it forever.
A few weeks ago, I found the tracks in a park a few blocks away from my current home.
I found the tracks in a park a few blocks away from my current home.
They were already overgrown, but I'm certain the rails weren't there when I first moved here.
And then yesterday I finally heard it again.
A train passing in the distance, no matter how impossible.
I've thought of moving again, but how far can I run?
I don't even know what it wants, just that it can't possibly be anything pleasant.
I suppose at least this way, I'll finally get some sort of answer to the mystery.
All there is left for me to do now is to stay and wait for its arrival. For more information, visit RustyQuill.com, tweet us at TheRustyQuill, visit us on Facebook or email us at mail at RustyQuill.com.
Thanks for listening.
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