The Magnus Archives - MAG 55 Pest Control

Episode Date: March 9, 2017

Case #0160311 Statement of Jordan Kennedy, regarding several encounters while working in pest control. ... If you haven’t already, be sure to visit www.RustyQuill.com/subscribe in order to subscribe... to us using your podcast software of choice and be sure to leave reviews online. 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 www.rustyquill.com. 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. Rusty Quill presents The Magnus Archives Episode 55 Pest Control Say it again, please. Excuse me? What you just said. Can you say it again so please. Excuse me?
Starting point is 00:01:26 What you just said. Can you say it again so I have it on tape? Oh, okay. Jane Prentiss is dead. You're sure? Completely? Yeah. I watched the incineration. And there were no complications? Like what? Surviving worms that escaped.
Starting point is 00:01:43 Movement from the body during incineration. Noises from it, like screams or chanting. Weird feelings, like a thousand tiny crawling things are moving across your skin. Wow. No, nothing like that. Just the smell, but I mean, I'll get to that. It went well. Nothing left but the ashes I gave to your friend. Which I shouldn't have, by the way, so keep it to yourself. Of course. And thank you.
Starting point is 00:02:08 Sure. It's been months, though. Why are you just looking to make your statement now? Well, it's not really... It's not just burning her body. It was also the one that was first called in to deal with the nest in her old apartment. Oh. Yeah. But there were a few things I've been thinking about. Putting some pieces together, and I thought,
Starting point is 00:02:29 well, you guys should probably know. Right. Well, start from the beginning, wherever you feel comfortable. Statement of Jordan Kennedy, regarding... Several weird things I've found while working in pest control. Statement taken direct from subject
Starting point is 00:02:45 3rd November 2016. Statement begins. I've worked as an exterminator for the better part of 10 years now. I should say pest controller, really. The BPCA generally advise against using the e-word. They feel it sounds a bit too unpleasant. Harms our public image. I've never really minded. I mean, I guess I could say killing things is sort of exerting control over them, but I've always felt that trying to sanitise my job is somehow a bit dishonest. Like trying to help people forget that what they're actually doing is commissioning the deaths of creatures which we've deemed too disgusting or unhealthy to live. It needs doing, don't get me
Starting point is 00:03:25 wrong, and I'm happy enough to do it, but it isn't my job to hold people's hands and make them feel better about it. I've done places all over London, mainly big commercial buildings where I have to work at night while all the bankers and the like have gone home, setting traps, putting down poison boxes, the usual. Residential homes don't call me out quite as much for rats and mice, especially if it's a rental place. Most landlords don't bother paying out for that sort of thing, or try to deal with it themselves. You get a lot of calls about bed bugs, though.
Starting point is 00:03:55 Those little bastards are a devil to get rid of, and of course come summer we have to deal with plenty of wasps' nests. Sprinkle in a generous handful of cockroaches, ants and occasionally even birds or foxes and you have a pretty good idea of what my working life consists of. Pretty normal. Got my first weird call about five years ago. It was ants, or so I was told, down in Bromley. The house itself looked like a pretty standard suburban home. Maybe a bit more run-down than its neighbours, but nothing particularly unusual about that, especially if they were calling me in. There was no car in the driveway, and the blinds were all drawn
Starting point is 00:04:27 despite the summer sun. It didn't look like there was anyone home. I found out later that it had actually been one of the neighbours that called me in, a woman named Laura Starr, but at that point I was still expecting to be met by someone at the house. I knocked on the door, but obviously there was no answer. Now, I always wear gloves when I'm on the job, and when I noticed my hand, I noticed a very faint sheen where the thin leather had touched the wood. It seemed to be some sort of oily residue. I was feeling less comfortable with the job by the second. I couldn't hear anything from inside, so I knocked again. The woman who hired me had said to let myself in, but I didn't want to just waltz in unannounced.
Starting point is 00:05:12 After a few seconds of silence, I tried the handle, and sure enough, the door opened. There were no lights on the inside, and the place seemed almost completely empty of furniture. I could see faint movement on the wooden floor as I looked around for the light switch. I found it quickly enough, and flicked it on to reveal exactly what I'd expected. Ants. I just hadn't expected that many. And there were so very many of them. To this day, I've never seen more ants inside a building at once. There must have been thousands carpeting the floor and swarming over the walls. I drew my hand back from the light switch as I noticed dozens of them crawling around it. Even the bulb seemed to be covered with them, causing the light in the room to be
Starting point is 00:05:56 covered with twitching shadow. The house itself didn't look much better. Wherever there was a gap in the ants I could see that same oily rot and I couldn't escape the idea that the building was somehow sick. Now, I've seen plenty of disgusting things in this job, but I reckon that moment was one of the most intense. I fled briefly back to my van to decide on my next move.
Starting point is 00:06:20 Normally I'd leave out some poisoned bait for them to take back to their colony, eliminating the problem at its source, but an infestation that bad, well, that doesn't come from nothing. I needed to get a sense of exactly what I was dealing with. Even from the road, I could see a steady stream flowing out the open door and over the step. I kitted up with pesticide spray and headed in for a closer look. I wouldn't normally bother using spray on ants, but this wasn't normal, and the formula I was using worked on ants just fine. That said, I didn't actually see any of
Starting point is 00:06:51 them die. I wouldn't have expected to immediately anyway, and what was important is that wherever I sprayed, they fled, clearing a path of discoloured floor for me to walk. It was slow going, but I got through most of the ground floor like that, and didn't see anything except more ants. No people, no furniture, nothing. At least, until I reached the kitchen and saw the fridge. There was nothing else in that kitchen. Even the sink had been removed, leaving just the water pipe sticking out of the wall like rusty, diseased bones.
Starting point is 00:07:26 But up against the far wall stood an old fridge. Its once white skin was now a jaundiced yellow, and I couldn't quite shape the feeling that it was pulsing ever so gently. A thick, black mass of ants swarmed from the crack in its door, and I had no doubt that whatever was at the heart of this incredibly unpleasant situation, it was going to be in that fridge. So, I decided it was probably a good idea to step outside for a cigarette before I opened it. The air outside seemed much fresher as I left the house. I walked a few yards away from the door so that I wasn't too close, and then I lit up. It was as I took the first drag that I saw a car pull up to the driveway. It was a small red compact,
Starting point is 00:08:11 and the license plate seemed to indicate that it had only been bought the year before, but even so, I could see the rust starting to bubble the paint near the edges of the paneling. I watched as the door opened and a man stepped out. He was tall, maybe six and a half feet, but it was hard to be sure of his shape inside the huge brown suit he was wearing. He took one look at me, then the sign on the side of my van that read Kennedy Pest Control, and his face began to crease with rage. I took another drag on my cigarette. I was uneasy about the whole situation and was waiting to see what the strange-looking man would do.
Starting point is 00:08:46 He walked up to me, great strides that brought him close enough that I could see the unhealthy gloss of sweat on his skin. Was everything here sick? He leaned in far closer than I was comfortable with and demanded to know what I was doing. I told him that the homeowner had hired me to take care of an ant infestation and I'd been doing a preliminary sweep. He started to shake his head violently, saying that he was the homeowner. That this was his house and I had no business being there. Well, those weren't his exact words. What he actually said was that I had no business plying my vile trade on his property.
Starting point is 00:09:23 I was about to get out my phone and call the woman who hired me when his hand shot out without warning and grabbed me by the throat. He lifted me off my feet with a strength that terrified me and I was very glad that, even with the hood down, my protective suit kept my neck covered. I could feel his hand through the thick plastic. It was hot, like he was running some incredibly high fever, and I started to panic.
Starting point is 00:09:45 He held me there, almost a foot off the ground, and my vision began to swim as he squeezed my throat. As I struggled for breath, I flailed for something to fight him off with, and realised that I was still holding my lighter. With a degree of composure that, looking back on it now, still surprises me, I flipped the lighter on and raised it to just below his arm. The result was a lot more dramatic than I expected. His loose brown suit sleeve caught almost immediately, and within a few moments his whole arm was alight. He helped and dropped me onto the ground as he began to flail about,
Starting point is 00:10:19 trying to stop the fire spreading further across his body. I staggered to my van. By then it didn't matter who the rightful owner of that house was, I was done with that job. It was as I was climbing into the van that I smelled it. It is the most disgusting thing I have ever encountered. Halfway between sunk at roadkill, stale sweat and rotten eggs with just a hint of burning rubber.
Starting point is 00:10:43 And underneath it all is that undefinable scent of sickness. You know, that smell you get when you enter a room where someone's been ill for several days. No matter what else it smells like, beneath it all there's that vague but undeniable whiff of disease. That's what this man smelled like as he desperately tried to extinguish his burning flesh. I drove away, trying not to gag, and I didn't look back. I didn't call the police either, as I felt they might not look too kindly on me, setting a man alight, even if he did attack me. I assume he didn't file a report either, as no one ever turned up to question me about it.
Starting point is 00:11:22 So that was the first time I encountered that smell. I see. And the other time was when you burned Jane Prentiss. Not just. I mean, I didn't actually see her. The incineration was the first time I ever saw her in person. But a couple of years ago, I was called in to deal with the wasp's nest. That's what the landlord had called it on the phone, at least. Apparently it had injured one of his tenants earlier that day,
Starting point is 00:11:48 and I was the first pest control service he had called. It was free immediately. He didn't tell me the name of the tenant, though obviously I now know who it was. He didn't give me any real details on the phone, but he seemed happy to pay the emergency call-out charge, so I bundled up my wasp gear and headed out to Prospero Road. It was a bit strange to get a call about wasps at that time of year.
Starting point is 00:12:09 It was late February or early March, I think, and still quite cold. Still, if it was a warm enough building, they could easily be getting active. Regardless, I made sure to check over the thick suit I used for that sort of job to make sure there was no weakness or damage. If they were aggressive enough to injure someone, I wasn't going to take any chances. The landlord's name was Arthur Nolan. He was a short man with a constant scalp, thinning white hair and a well-chewed cigar. It looked like his denim shirt had once contained quite an athletic build, but it had long since settled. He looked me up and down as I left my van and I saw his mouth twist briefly in irritation.
Starting point is 00:12:46 Clearly he wasn't impressed. I gave him the usual talk through what was going to happen and he nodded absently before pressing the keys to flat 4 into my hands and pointing me towards it. If I needed anything he said he'd be in flat 1 where I lived. I advised him and the other tenants to stay out of the building while I was dealing with the wasps but he just grunted and told me again that he'd be in flat one. The other tenants had apparently already left. I loaded up on the firecam de-insecticide and headed in. It was a lot quieter than I expected. By the time I was outside flat four, I would normally have expected to be hearing the buzzing sound of wasps, but the evening was quiet. I opened the door slowly, no sudden movements that might alarm anything on the other side, but again the flat seemed to be empty. It looked like there'd been some chaos though, with books and clothes strewn across the floor and a shattered TV screen in the
Starting point is 00:13:36 corner. I found the ladder up into the loft space in the centre of the bedroom. It was quite small and climbing in my bulky suit was tricky, but I got up there. Still no wasps, but it was very dark so I rooted around again until I found the switch to a single bare bulb. The light was very faint, but enough to make out a thick, pulpy lump up against the far wall. It certainly didn't look like any wasps' nest I'd seen before. I mean, the shape was familiar enough, but the texture of the surface was way off. It seemed a lot less papery than would have been normal, and the walls were less regular, going off at odd angles and making it kind of hard to look away.
Starting point is 00:14:17 The whole thing was spongy, popped with tiny holes, and generally looking very unhealthy indeed. And most disconcerting of all, there were still no wasps. None of this changed the job I had to do, so I figured I'd start off like any other wasp's nest and see if it worked. I reached forward, staying as far from this thing as the nozzle would let me, and I pushed it into one of the larger holes. It sank in with almost no resistance at all. I took a deep breath and pulled the trigger, spraying the insecticide dust deep into the mass. The effect was immediate.
Starting point is 00:14:55 The whole thing started to pulse and spasm, the spongy flesh of it throbbing and bubbling like some sort of vile putty. It began to grow in size, blossoming out and covering the rest of the nozzle, reaching out for me. And then it began to scream. Not the sound of air escaping or a buzzing that sounded like screaming, the weird nest thing was letting out a long warbling cry of anger and pain. I dropped the pump and was down the ladder so fast I almost fell into the flat below. I could still hear it as I reached the door to the corridor. I threw it open, only to be confronted by the face of Arthur Nolan, the landlord, staring at me with a look of disappointment. He nodded and began to walk down the hall. I followed him, desperate
Starting point is 00:15:39 for answers, but he just ignored my questions about what the hell was going on, what that thing was, and kept walking down the stairs to his own flat. At one point he shook his head and mumbled something about hoping it wouldn't get this far but he didn't seem to be saying it to me. As soon as the door opened I became aware of how uncomfortably warm Flat One was. The air was thick and dry and made my throat feel a bit scratchy. The landlord continued to ignore my presence and walked over to an old armchair in the centre of the room. As he did so, he started to unbutton his denim shirt. More so than anything else that had happened, that was the thing that finally stopped me in confusion. I couldn't understand
Starting point is 00:16:22 what he was doing. As he sat down, his shirt flapped open and I saw what looked to be an intricate scar on his chest. If I had to guess what it was, I'd have said it looked like a stylised flame, but it also made me think of a face contorted in pain. Time seemed to move slowly as he reached for the asht tray on the arm of the chair and picked up a pack of matches. He struck one, and without even looking at me, he gently pressed the small flame to the centre of the scar. His flesh caught fire immediately, the flame spreading across his body like rippling water. The armchair caught, then the floor, and then I was running out of the building before the rolling inferno covered me as well.
Starting point is 00:17:09 This time, I didn't drive away. I stood there, and I watched it burn until the fire brigade arrived. It was when the fire hit that attic space at the top floor, where I knew that awful nest still sat. That was when I smelled it. The same grotesque stench that had come from that oily, fevered man three years before. At the time I didn't really connect the two. I was too busy trying to comprehend what had just happened. And when trucks from the ECDC showed up to put me in quarantine, it slipped my mind entirely.
Starting point is 00:17:44 They were surprisingly forthcoming about Jane Prentice and what had happened, and after an extensive debriefing, they actually offered me a job. Apparently disease control and pest control often go hand in hand, and I've been working for them since. Most of the jobs have been mundane, a couple slightly weird, but nothing like those two. So why make your statement now when I helped incinerate her body I smelled it again like before took me a while to piece the two together but I thought you should know are you saying there might be more out there like her god I hope not I don't
Starting point is 00:18:22 know the man from the ant house he wasn't like her, not at all. But that smell when they burned, I think they're connected somehow. And that scares me. Yes. Yes, it rather scares me too. Mr. Kennedy's statement has left me somewhat rattled. While I am always glad of any further closure to the case of Jane Prentiss, this seems to come with the rather serious caveat that she might not have been working alone. No, that doesn't sound right. Jane Prentiss, or whatever this flesh hive was that took her, does not seem like the sort of being that would work well with others.
Starting point is 00:19:10 The house in Bromley was torn down last year, but Martin managed to locate the ownership records. It was listed as belonging to John Amherst. The dates aren't entirely clear as to whether this was just before or just after he apparently took charge of Ivy Meadows Nursing Home, but there can be no doubt that it was the same person. All the ownership records from the Ant House lead to dead ends or deactivated bank accounts. It doesn't sound like he's another flesh hive. And yet... No connection except disease and insects, and a foul smell when they burn. Jane Prentiss is dead. But this is a long way from over.
Starting point is 00:19:52 End recording. Supplemental. I... I don't have much to report, actually. It's been Halloween week, which means the research department is always inundated with statements. Most of them are patently false, but the volume means that they've called in the archive to assist with the overflow. It's been nice, actually.
Starting point is 00:20:18 Disproving piles of nonsense felt good. Like real work, not just driving myself to distraction with conspiracy theories and paranoia. I even got a good night's sleep. I miss those days. And 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,
Starting point is 00:20:58 and directed by Alexander J. Newell. To subscribe, view associated material, and make donations, visit RustyQuill.com. Thanks for listening. Hello, it's Kareem, the voice of Simon Fairchart from the Magnus Archives, letting you know about our sponsor, Audible. For fans of heart-racing, bone-chilling and mind-bending stories, Audible has everything you need. Audible is 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. Audible also gives you binge-worthy podcasts and exclusive originals with thousands of included titles you can listen to all you want.
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