The Magnus Archives - RQ Network Feed Drop – Selene: The Black Pond - Episode 1
Episode Date: October 25, 2024This month we are featuring a feed drop of one of many amazing podcasts on the RQ Network: Selene. Selene is a Narrated Supernatural Mystery and Horror audio fiction with Dark humor that develops into... a full cast production. Immersive audio brings the city of Selene to life, a city cloaked in darkness and teeming with horrors. Join the investigators of needle st as they navigate Selene's shadows, where mystery and intrigue await at every turn. This first episode follows constable Hughes as he begins to investigate, the broken ice of a black pond, a missing boy and the ransom for an exotic bird. Introduction and outro by Lowri Anne Davies, Listen to Selene on The Rusty Quill website, on Acast, or listen wherever you get your podcasts, or to learn more about The Silt Verses check out its official website. Credits: Selene is written, produced and performed by Aaron J. Reardon.Theme Song by Matt VanacoroA Clever > Than Production Content warnings: Child Death, Drowning, Mentions of: Parental Loss, SFX : (Gunshots) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi everyone, it's Laurie, voice of Celia in the Magnus Protocol.
Today, we're bringing you the first episode from one of the incredible podcasts on the RQ network,
CELINE, which is created by the brilliant Aaron Riordan.
CELINE is a narrated supernatural mystery and horror audio fiction with dark humor.
Immersive audio brings the city of CELINE to life, a city cloaked in darkness and teeming with horrors.
This first episode follows Constable Hughes
as he begins to investigate the broken ice of a black pond,
a missing boy, and the ransom of an exotic bird.
You can listen to more of this incredible series
with over 100 other episodes by searching
for Celine.
That's S-E-L-E-N-E wherever you listen to your podcasts or by clicking the link in the
show notes below.
And you can visit RustyQuill.com or CleverThan.com for more information.
Have fun and enjoy the episode.
Tonight's broadcast is brought to you by Minerva's Laudanum Elixir. Enjoy the episode. Deluxe's save your regrets for tomorrow.
In a strange city, lying alone, residedly beneath the sky,
the melancholy waters lie. What is a lie?
It may seem relatively straightforward on the surface,
dishonesty or mistruth or fabrication.
But it's a very personal and subjective thing, a lie.
We each have our own thresholds.
Many of us live with little white lies, bending the truth.
We look into the world and we see it's as if everything is floated on a river of deception.
And the mechanisms of society, is lying a feature or a bug?
In a strange city lying alone residedly beneath the sky, the melancholy waters lie.
With a glimpse of the glimmering city at dawn, a hushed respite at quiet park's Edge. Lies dark fingers of naked trees reaching upward,
dusted by newly fallen snow.
Died black water in the chill of winter.
As little Enoch Green stood on the thin, frozen ice of Parvum Pond,
Constable Hughes knew he was lying.
Even though his facial expression remained placid,
even though his little hands swung the soggy mittens attached to his cuff, his frozen lips didn't move.
As Enoch shook his head, even in that small of a gesture, dews knew the little bastard was lying. They were literally on thin ice together.
It was a chilly morning in the park. The previous evening had been particularly cold, and many of the neighborhood children had been hoping for sufficient freeze to thicken the ice for skating.
It hadn't been quite cold enough, and so Hughes arrived early to post signs around the pond
and fountain to prevent anyone from being tempted to wander out and fall through. Clearly
it had been ineffective.
Constable Hughes wasn't great at his job and was quite old to still be at the rank of constable.
He'd bungled previous assignments and was so bad at paperwork he was ultimately assigned to the park beat,
to walk a quiet path, nurse his lumbago, and deal with the irascible Roe Matrons.
He befriended a young newsboy nicknamed Shiner, who would hock morning and evening editions of the lantern paper at the entrance to the park.
Cartoonishly, Shiner often had a black eye in various stages of healing.
Rumor was from street scrapping or a rough household, likely both.
Hughes had struck up a partnership with Shiner when he realized the kid was pretty clever.
He'd hired him in secret to instigate various petty crimes around the wealthy neighborhood,
planning things just so Hughes would arrive in the nick of time to chase him off, giving Hughes not only an efficient report history, but
almost psychic ability to be in the right place at the right time to thwart pickpocketing,
burglary, and persistent peeping Tom.
Just enough to set the residents on edge and make Hughes a valuable addition to the community.
Otherwise, not only would he be bored stiff, but his entire life would be filled in complaints
from the well-to-do set about neighbors talking too loudly or the sun being too bright through
a specific set of curtains and couldn't he look in to see if there was something he could
do about that.
The occasional catch tip was nice, and he and Shiner and the local hotel doorman had
a valuable network of gossip.
Hughes had a hard time keeping the name straight, but Shinder got kickbacks from the copy desk at the society column. It was from the onlookers shouting
that the constable looked up and saw Enoch standing out on the ice by himself as he placed
the last of the signs. Some of the morning walkers had noticed and were trying to get
his attention. Hughes carefully made his way out onto the ice, it cracked in between his
feet, and made the walk to the deep center treacherous as he tested his weight and carefully made his way in inch by inch.
It's there when he saw the crack in the ice and the churning water. There had been several
kids about that morning near the edge. There had been a few people milling about and some
footsteps nearby. So the constable pointed at the crack, shouted if anyone was down there,
but Enoch wouldn't reply, and the situation became more dire.
Harvam pond is 80 strides across and two men deep at the center.
Its waters are pitch black from dye, but we'll get into that later.
Enoch was standing out near the middle, next to a large crack looking into the dark water.
Constable Hughes waved a scarf he picked up off the ice in the boy's face as he shouted,
Did someone fall in? Is someone down there?
He pointed at the stirring waters around the crack edge.
He tried to shake loose any response from the boy,
but only saw the absolute faintest of smirks
in the corner of his mouth.
This was without question Shiner's scarf.
Hughes knew it, the one he used to disguise himself
on some of his little jobs,
and what he used to keep himself warm.
Hughes hadn't seen Shiner in the fog of the morning.
He wasn't at his stand with his papers, and now Shiner was nowhere to be found.
Enoch, technically, was not a bastard.
He was, however, an orphan, and just recently.
Adopted by Edmund William Green II, a textile maven who had taken the boy in after an accident
on his mills, an accident that had removed the boy in after an accident in his mills.
An accident that had removed the lower portion of Edmund's own leg, as well as killed both
of Enoch's parents.
Edmund had taken on it as a charge, out of responsibility and a solid public relations
move, but Edmund had no skill or nurturing for children and kept his distance.
He'd invited a young lady he'd been courting for a morning ride through the park as an
opportunity to get to know her better and to get some distance from the child that made
his skin crawl.
So with Edmund riding around with his new companion Charity's suitor, Enoch was sent
to play with friends while Charity and Edmund did a tour of the pond a few times in the
warmth of a carriage.
Enoch had wanted to go on the coach with him, but Charity pinned his little gloves on and
pushed him out to go play and get some air.
She scrunched the hat down on his little head almost over his eyes.
He tilted his head up so he could look down his nose at Charity with a cold stare.
Step back and the carriage lurched away from him.
Edmund was Charity's age plus her same age again.
He had a determined demeanor but very kind eyes.
It was pretty apparent he was lonely, though he tried to hide it.
Nights in his office, dinners at the club, brandy and cards with the other men.
It wasn't an unhappy life per se.
He never pleasured his appetites in brothels or with showgirls.
Charity liked that.
She also liked that Edmund didn't really use his servants and insisted on dressing himself.
Charity admitted to herself that in the blue cushions of this luxurious velvet carriage,
she could imagine a day with a dashing young man and a steal from Rimbaud in a nest of mad kisses
in each soft corner, keeping her safe from the starling monsters and black wolves through the
glass. But that was a fleeting craving from a younger her, nothing serious, much like one for
blueberries and cava this early in the morning.
When Edmund asked her what she was thinking about, she stared wistfully out the window.
Charity said, nothing.
Quickly she came up with something.
She missed the changing of the fall colors, she said.
Too preoccupied and regretted not spending more time in the park to watch the leaves.
Although this fact was true, the colors changing were one of her favorite things.
She chose to lie, but wondered if that's maybe more true than blueberries and cava.
As a little exercise, starting when you wake up tomorrow,
document whenever you encounter a lie, when you know someone is deceiving you.
See just how many there are in a single day.
Even harder, on the next day, task yourself
with going through the day and never once telling a lie.
See how tough that is.
And for extra credit, because we're ever so good at it,
count each time you lie to yourself.
Quite difficult to catch, and
eye-opening how we fall into habits.
Charity could have had any indulgence produced, and Edmund would have felt very satisfied
in producing them. But she hadn't made any requests. The novelty had worn off and she
wasn't a little girl anymore. She'd gotten better at momentary cravings versus the real thing that she'd wanted for
herself.
She didn't think of herself as a materialistic person, but wondered if she needed to try
a bit harder to fit in with this new class of people, even for survival's sake.
She didn't want any kind of trade-off to be the nanny of this odd child.
It was clear Edmund was relieved to have a barrier between him and the boys' chilly
bays. Enoch just seemed to have a barrier between him and the boys' chilly bays.
Enoch just seemed to appear in rooms, usually in the corner, one hand on the furniture, one in his pocket, breathing slowly and not blinking.
The house contained decorative statues more animated than he was, and more than once the help had tried to feather dust him while not paying attention.
As they rounded the circle, Charity noticed there was some commotion at the water's edge,
and people were gathering and pointing.
She stopped the coach and rolled the window down to see what was happening, and spotted
the constable and Enoch in a tussle out on the ice.
She stopped the carriage and ran for the crowd, Edmund limped after her with his cane.
As all of this was going on, Madame Viola, matron of the walker fortune, finished her
hot-heg phosphate
and pushed herself out of her Morris chair,
stepped to her park view window,
and slid open the curtains with a gasp.
She told her manservant Pumble
to take her prized peacock plum for its morning saunter.
Pumble had been gone for some time.
Seeing the commotion out on the water had Viola in a panic.
Plum had quick little legs and a bad habit in past winters of slipping its decorative
leash and darting out across the ice.
From her second story of view, she saw out across the park's pond the gathering crowd
and the stirring of the water.
Panic set in as she furiously rang the servant's bell and called for Pumble with increasing
intensity.
But Pumble was nowhere to be found.
The stirring crowd was growing more concerned, some of them convinced they'd seen someone
fall under the ice.
Additional constables arrived on the scene to help, and with some of the more stalwart
men began forming a human chain from the edge to the center.
Looking into the churning water, Hughes wasn't foolhardy enough to jump in to see if anybody
was down there on a mere guess.
It'd be easy to get lost under the sheet
and freeze of lungs full of black water.
He handed Enoch over the human chain
that had made its way out to them and took a pull.
Another constable handed him and pawed the water for a body.
A call went out across the wire, and a few moments later,
the force brought in a cart with rigging, ropes,
and a hoist to drag the pond.
Another man from the dock, a diver in cold weather
gear, was suiting up to go bashing through the ice. Time was getting away from them. If someone had
fallen in, it was getting to the point they'd be lost. They quickly set up the legs and ropes of
the rigging, stretched ropes to the edge, and placed the hoist in the water in an attempt to
hook anything up size. Dark ice and slush was making it very difficult. Constables canvassed
the area and went door to door to do a family head count to see if anyone was missing.
Hughes let the younger men take over the search as he made his way back onto the street. He
slumped onto a park bench, breathing heavily, trying to catch his breath. Someone handed
him a warm cider with a nip of rum, and a constable set a small crate next to him. In
it was various items they'd gathered scattered across the ice.
A scarf, three cigarette butts, a couple large buttons, and a rotten turnip.
Any footprints were long gone from the snow and commotion.
Shiner wasn't at his corner, Pumble wasn't anywhere in the crowd, let alone a fancy bird,
and Enoch was wrapped in blankets getting warmed up by a group of ladies as they fawned over him. Enoch stared emotionless into the distance. Charity stood quietly nearby.
And a very rare sight, Madame Viola in her housecoat, looking desperately around for
some assistance in her cherished pavo crustatus plum. Lying evolves as we go through life.
Did you know that even babies lie?
Sneaky babies calculate unnecessary cries.
Sinister pre-verbal machinations.
Perhaps we lie even in utero.
From infancy and into old age, lying is a matter of survival.
Our primal desires want things, the rules of our societies say
no, so we create lies to avoid uncomfortable realities. Lies are the way we cope with our
imperfection. As frustrated as Hughes was with Enoch, he himself would commit a few
lies that day, and would spend the evening in his own state of omission. If omission is the threshold, I've lied to you already.
See, because what I know is that by nightfall at the medical examiner's office,
the report would read accidental death as it sat near a zipped-up cadaver bag,
a toe tag with no name, and not attached to a toe.
In the next room under the radiant heat of the open boiler doors, in hard flickering
light shadow, a tiny shape shivering, coated in animal fat, atop a pile of blankets, and
adorned with only a top hat. Perhaps the mystery is what fell in the water that morning, or
perhaps it's what was under the ice to begin with. Shall we get to a discernible truth or will it remain nowhere to be found?
A momentary glimpse into one little bouquet of lives in one modest corner in a strange city
lying alone resignedly beneath the sky where the melancholy waters lie. Join us for this season of Celine. So So So So So Would you like a ticket to enjoy the revelry of Moonlight Affair?
Our Patreon is a place where you can see all the sordid savagery and indecent decadence
of the mysteries of our fair city.
Want some answers for once?
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Come be a part of Moonlight Affair, silent treatment and Celine with the other spirits
again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again
and again and again. To listen to more of Celine and check out their other content, search Celine
wherever you get your podcasts or click the link in the description of this episode. And as always,
you can visit rustyquill.com for more information. Thanks for listening.