The Magnus Archives - MAG 96 - Return To Sender

Episode Date: March 8, 2018

#9961505Statement of Alfred Breekon, regarding a new pair of workers at his delivery company. Original statement given May 15th 1996.Content Warnings for this episode are at the end of the show notes....Thanks to this week's Patrons: Joshua Diiorio, Eva, Alexa, David Tynan, Helen Clifford, Avon Gale, Joanna Kowalik, Sara Baldwin, Tim Helmstedt, Nikhil RodeIf you'd like to support us, head to www.patreon.com/rustyquillEdited by Elizabeth Moffatt, Brock Winstead & Alexander J Newall.The Archivist is played by Jonathan Sims, Sarah Baldwin is played by Alice Adzowa, Alice "Daisy" Tonner is played by Fay Roberts.Sound effects for this episode provided by dheming, Klankbeld, HarryPeeks, acidsnowflake, LeMudCrab, Adam_N, Caitlin_100, mikewest, EFlexTheSoundDesigner & 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:Gun violenceImposterBody Horror 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. Joshua Dioro, Eva, Alexa, David Tynan, Helen Clifford, Thank you all. We really appreciate your support. If you'd like to join them, go to www.patreon.com forward slash rustyquill and take a look at our rewards. Will Presents The Magnus Archives Episode 96 Return to Sender The End To be continued... by Jonathan Sims, head archivist of the Magnus Institute, London. Statement begins. Three years. It was three years ago when they arrived. It wasn't much, the little delivery company I'd built up, poured my heart and soul into. I don't know why they wanted it,
Starting point is 00:02:19 but they did. Breakin' and Sons, I'd always wanted to call it, but I was always unlucky when it came to love, so in the end I called it Breakin' and Hope. Just my own little joke. Backfired on me plenty. Everyone always asking if I'd run things by my partner, and often I was too awkward to correct them. I sometimes used to disappear into the back room, pretend I was making a call to Hope. It was harmless enough, though, and the company was growing well. We had opened a few new depots and had a few dozen drivers making deliveries anywhere from Aberdeen to Penzance. Life was pretty good, to be honest. When they turned up at my office, I remember it was their shadows that I saw first. It was early evening, and the sun wasn't shining in through the window, but still their shadows fell across my desk, thick and dark as they loomed over me in the half-light.
Starting point is 00:03:10 They wore featureless grey overalls, and even now I'm not sure I could easily describe what they looked like, other than to say they seemed solid, somehow heavier than the world around them. somehow heavier than the world around them. They stared down at me, dark eyes sizing me up as I coughed gently and asked if I could help them. They traded a few words between them in another language I think it was Russian, before turning back to look at me. At this point I was pretty sure these guys must be mafia probably trying to shake me down so I waited until it was clear what they wanted from me.
Starting point is 00:03:46 But the silence just stretched on and on and on, and eventually I cracked, held out my hand. Arthur Breakin, at your service. Who might you be? There was another pause, shorter this time, before the slightly taller of the two, at least I think one was taller, turned to his companion and opened his mouth. Breaking at your service, who might you be? Instead of the Russian accent I had expected, he spoke in a broad cartoonish cockney that I assumed must have been a mocking impression of my own voice. I began to stand up to tell these jokers to get out of my office, but as I did,
Starting point is 00:04:25 the shorter one turned to his companion and in a similar voice replied, The name's Hope. What can I do for you? I don't know why this shook me so much, but it stopped me right in my tracks. I just watched as they repeated these two phrases back and forth between themselves, introductions made over and over again. Finally, they stopped and turned back to me. I had no idea what was going to happen or what I was meant to do, but there was something profoundly unnatural about these two figures,
Starting point is 00:04:55 and I had no intention of pushing too far and finding out what it was. It was a sunny day in June, and the window was open to a bright field behind the building. I didn't notice the butterfly until it had landed on the one who kept calling himself Hope. With a slow, languid motion, he picked it up. He looked at it for a couple of seconds, then looked at me. Then he ate the butterfly, not slowly or particularly fast. He just placed it carefully in his mouth and began to chew. As his partner did this, the one who seemed to have taken my name held out his hand
Starting point is 00:05:31 to me. Keys, he said, this time the words still lightly accented with Russian. I gave them to him. I took the keys to the oldest of the vans and just handed them over. Anything to get them out of my office. I'm not a small man, you understand, and I'm not used to feeling intimidated. I got into plenty of scrapes when I was young, and there was a small part of me screaming to teach these disrespectful punks a lesson. But when this other breacon took the key from me, what I felt beneath the skin of his hand convinced me I had made the right choice. Then they turned and left. I wish I could say that was the last I saw of them,
Starting point is 00:06:13 that they stole one of my vans and drove away, never to return. But they did return. And even worse, they started to make deliveries. They were innocuous at first, the right things delivered to the right people on time. Then it became the right things delivered to the wrong people. Then the wrong things being delivered. Then the very wrong things. Strange folk began coming around asking for Brinkin and Hope, and when I told them who I was, they just shook their heads, and hope, and when I told them who I was they just shook their heads and I knew who they were after. They often brought crates or boxes with them and, once, a sack full of hair. I never opened any of these or looked too closely when they came around. There was something in me that wanted to believe if I was smart and kept my head down, maybe I could somehow
Starting point is 00:07:01 get through it. I couldn't accept that something like this could just turn up and casually destroy me without cause. If there is a reason that they've picked me, I have never found it out. I have asked them, but unsurprisingly got no answers. There must be other delivery companies, surely, and it's the deliveries they seem to focus on. must be other delivery companies, surely, and it's the deliveries they seem to focus on. They're out most of the day and night, usually, allowing me some rest away from their horrid, blank faces. But they always come back. When not on delivery, they stand in the break room facing the wall. Sometimes they laugh, suddenly and abruptly, as though they've both simultaneously thought of a hilarious joke. It sounds like the laugh track in an old sitcom and cuts off almost immediately.
Starting point is 00:07:49 When I get fitful sleep in the small fold-out cot I keep in my office, I can sense them standing there, looking at me. I don't go home anymore. I'm afraid of what might happen if they followed me outside of a professional environment. My other drivers have been disappearing. For all that, they do seem to have friends, or at the very least people who come to see them regularly. Most I don't remember, the feature's difficult to put together from memory, but I know that more than once I've seen the pair of them talking to a figure at the other
Starting point is 00:08:24 end of the depot. They always make sure these meetings are in shadow, and I can never get close enough to see exactly who they're talking to, but I think they're dressed like a circus ringmaster. And so it's been going for the last couple of years. I think I might even be paying them, though it's hard to tell. The account book, as well as the shipping logs and manifests, keep filling up with entries I don't remember, although it is definitely my handwriting.
Starting point is 00:08:54 I am not sure how long this might continue for. Maybe years. Maybe forever. Whatever fight was in me at the beginning is gone. maybe forever whatever fight was in me at the beginning is gone occasionally when they first began to take over I would start to march up to them my mind whirring filled with demands and threats and ultimatums then they'd look at me with those blank impassive eyes
Starting point is 00:09:18 and I'd feel all my resolve simply melt away now it's just a memory a daydream I've forgotten the taste of determination. It won't last forever, though, because I think they've decided they're done with me. I came into work yesterday to find a box sat on my desk. The address and label had been completely scribbled over in black marker pen, and it was impossible to tell from what was left where it had originally been sent to. It didn't matter, though, because on top of it, written in my handwriting with a vicious precision I've always lacked, were the words, Return to Sender.
Starting point is 00:09:59 They'd put it there for me. They'd never delivered to me before. The package was still, but every part of me recoiled from it. I slowly walked forward and touched it, but I did not pull away the tape. The day was warm, but the box was ice cold, and the cardboard was spongy and strangely yielding. It didn't move when I pressed it with my hand, but there was a sound like shifting sand. I don't know what was inside. I don't know what is inside. It won't be right. It's not my package. I didn't send it. I tried to look it up in the logs. I found it easily enough.
Starting point is 00:10:41 Everything seemed to be in order except the item description. That line simply read, Goodbye. God knows how long I spent staring at it. Nothing about that box was right. The card fitted together at slightly off angles and the corners were damp like it had been left out in the rain. The table seemed to bend slightly under its weight. Yet when I tried to move it,
Starting point is 00:11:05 it seemed so light I doubted for a second it could have anything inside. Even then, I never dared to fully lift it up or pull it towards me. There's a gravity there, though, and I don't know how much longer I can resist its pull. My brother came to you people about ten years ago. He had been having visions of demons and witches and came to discuss them with you. He never recovered, but he always told me that there was little quite as freeing as making a statement for you. So I snuck away. But I need to be back soon. It has been freeing talking to you, but not enough to free me from my fate.
Starting point is 00:11:46 I am not the sender, but I am going to open that package. I know I leave Breakin' and Hope deliveries in safe hands. Safe hands where the skin feels wrong. Statement ends. I found Mr. Breakin, the real one. It's strange, for all he talks of worrying that what's in the box will get him, all the bite marks appear to be coming from the inside going out. What does it mean when death no longer phases you, even the most grotesque?
Starting point is 00:12:23 Perhaps it's a sign I'm adapting to my new situation. Useful, I suppose, but... I was right about the Newcastle Depot. It's still here, and it seems like it's been deserted for a long time. There's a pile of mail at the door almost two feet high, and today it was topped with a crisp brown envelope addressed to me containing this statement. A gift from Elias, no doubt. He could have sent this to me any time, filled me in on
Starting point is 00:12:53 Breakin' and Hope, but no. I had to find it myself, just in time for him to show me he knew all about it. Cocky prick. Still, there's not actually as much information here as I'd hoped, either here or in the statement, it shows that Breakin' and Hope didn't own the company I guess that those aren't their real names it does seem to confirm that they have some connection to the circus, judging by
Starting point is 00:13:17 clandestine meetings with someone apparently dressed as a ringmaster as if it's not obvious if you're dressed as a ringmaster and their apparent Russian origins. I say origins, perhaps it's just the last link in a very long chain. If the circus is connected as closely to the stranger and the unknowing as I believe, I should probably keep an eye out for delivery vans. The other useful thing I found here was one of the old logbooks. It lists deliveries quite a ways past the point where the company technically ceased to exist,
Starting point is 00:13:50 right up to 2013. I need to go through it in more detail, but probably not here. This place... This place is done with its story. It's just... empty. I don't like it. Who the hell are you people? Let me go! Like I said, you're under arrest. What fool? Shut up, I...
Starting point is 00:14:22 You're recording again? What? It's hardly your first crime on tape. And... You're recording again? What? It's hardly your first crime on tape. And if we're going to question her... Is that what we're doing? You're making a mistake is what you're doing. You thought we were going to, you know, kill her. Elias didn't say.
Starting point is 00:14:36 No, he doesn't. He's not big on micromanagement. It's Elias now, then. What? Get on with it. I'm not a fan of taxidermy. Don't like wasting time. Last chance.
Starting point is 00:14:47 I really don't want to be interrogating her where those animals can see us. They're dead. They can't see us. Yeah, it would just be a bad idea. What's your name? Sarah Baldwin. Are you the same Sarah Baldwin that disappeared in Edinburgh in August 2006? Some of her. Skin, a few memories.
Starting point is 00:15:16 Not on the inside. And just that knife and I can check. Smells rank enough already. No, not yet. Did you go as part of a filming expedition to the Cambridge Military Hospital? A mistake. Thought I'd have fun with some over-curious idiots. But it turned out I had trespassed.
Starting point is 00:15:36 I paid for it. So, what? Now you sell dead animals. What is this place? The Trophy Room. A taxidermist shop in Barnet. It says above the door, Surprised to meet an archivist who can't read.
Starting point is 00:15:51 No, I... Nice. Why are you here? You and Daniel Rawlings, and I assume the others taken by that mimic thing, the anglerfish. It's where we were told to be. What is it? The thing that stole you?
Starting point is 00:16:06 It doesn't have a name. What did it do to you? Exactly what you think. They always suffer. How do we kill it? You don't. There are dozens of deliveries recorded here by Breekner Hub. What were they delivering? What is the significance of this place? There are dozens of deliveries recorded here by Breakin' and Hope. What were they delivering? What is the significance of this place?
Starting point is 00:16:31 Nothing, except what people give it. But they give it a lot. Make it a place of power for us. Enough to keep certain items here. The couriers brought them, and took them, and moved them where they needed to be. What items? What was stored here? Books, relics, but nothing since the skins. The skin, the uh, the, the, the, the ancient taxidermy, the one that, um, Escapelhorn, the one he saw. I, I don't know who that is. He was a tax inspector. He came here and Daniel Rawlings, or his replacement, showed him something he claimed to be the oldest piece of taxidermy in the world.
Starting point is 00:17:09 Gorilla skin from Carthage. Was this when you sent your Sasha to interrogate us? Don't you dare talk about... Sims. Sims. Shut up and focus. Right. Right. Is the skin important? Yes. For the un skin important? Yes. For the unknowing?
Starting point is 00:17:27 Yes. And where is it now? You have it. What? You don't know. What do you mean, I have it? The old woman, the one before you, she stole it. She killed Daniel and took it.
Starting point is 00:17:44 But why would... what? You really don't know where it is. I see. I hit her. I'm sure I hit her I'm sure I hit her I know you did, look Sawdust and cloves Damn Come on
Starting point is 00:18:16 Before the Met get here Whatever you say And wipe that grin off your face. 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. 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 MailAtRustyQuill.com. Thanks for listening. To be continued... Thank you. Audible can take you places only you can imagine and whenever you want. On a run, doing errands, commuting, or just relaxing at home.
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Starting point is 00:20:33 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.

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