The Magnus Archives - RQ Network Feed Drop - The Program audio series: All unsaved progress will be lost

Episode Date: April 23, 2026

This month we are featuring an episode of one of many exciting podcasts on the RQ Network: The Program audio series. The Program audio series is a dark science fiction anthology set in a future i...n which Money, State, and God have become fused into a single entity. The show focuses on ordinary people inhabiting this extraordinary world. And for them, it is not this future that is terrifying – it is our present.In this episode called “All unsaved progress will be lost” a beloved System Administrator suddenly disappears, leaving Sam a poor stonemason to embark on a lifelong quest to preserve her memory.You can find the episode transcript at programaudioseries.com/32-all-unsaved-progress-will-be-lost/ including credits and a list of references.The Program audio series is created and produced by IMS. Introduction and outro by Helen GouldYou can listen to The Program audio series on the Rusty Quill website, on Acast, on its official website, or wherever you get your podcasts.Content warnings Permanent Bodily Harm For ad-free episodes, bonus content and more, join members.rustyquill.com or our Patreon.Pre-order FROM THE LIBRARY OF JURGEN LEITNER, a Magnus novel: rustyquill.com/novelBuy tickets to a Magnus Archives Live Show in Sheffield in July: crossedwires.live Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi there, Billy Hindle here, the voice of Alice Dyer in the Magnus Protocol. As part of the Magnus Archives 10th anniversary, Rusty Quill is hosting a special Magnus live show at the upcoming Crossed Wires podcast festival in Sheffield. Join co-creators Jonathan Sims and Alexander J. Newell on the 5th of July for a new iteration of our live show Statement Begins, where you can hear fan-favorite statements, such as anglerfish, Red Live, and gain exclusive insights into the creation. and history of the show straight from the creators themselves.
Starting point is 00:00:33 You can buy your tickets now, including limited numbers of meet and greet tickets, from crossedwires. Live, or the link in the description of this episode. Hello, everyone. It's Helen here, voice of Azu from Rusty Quill Gaming, and Inola from Stella Firma. Today we're sharing an episode from one of the podcasts on the RQ Network, The Program. The Programme Audio Series is a dark science fiction anthology, set in a future in which money, state and God have become fused into a single entity. The show focuses on ordinary people inhabiting this extraordinary world, and for them, it's not
Starting point is 00:01:09 this future that is terrifying, it's our present. In this episode, called All Unsaved Progress will be lost, a beloved system administrator suddenly disappears, leaving Sam, a poor stonemason, to embark on a lifelong quest to preserve her memory. To listen to more, click on the link in the description or search for the program audio series wherever you get your podcasts. You can find more information on rusty quill.com or programaudioseries.com. That's program with 1M. Have fun and enjoy the episode. The back end and the front end intersect in the most unusual ways. Not to present new things, but to present things as new. The simulated realities of the program's back end are endless. But that doesn't mean they don't end. Sooner or later, the system administrators
Starting point is 00:02:14 tasked with running each individual simulation need to leave their protectorates. The departure may occur in many ways. Some of them planned and orderly, some of them decidedly less so. The end result, however, is always the same. A. Whole. This is the impending destiny of simulation 2833-91156.2828.000c. Or, as its inhabitants know it, Simulon. My dear children, I speak to you as one, as I carry a message that can.
Starting point is 00:03:07 concerns everyone. And which one is that, magnificent admin? A message of preparation. I must teach you to become self-sufficient. Through my guidance, you will learn all there is to learn. It will be my ultimate work. For this way, you will also learn the most important skill of them all. Which one is that, our dear administrator?
Starting point is 00:03:33 Cooperation. Above all else, this is. is the skill you will need to make it on your own. On our own? What are you saying, okay, says Admin? That I can no longer be your system administrator. In 72 hours, I will be leaving you. What?
Starting point is 00:03:52 No. Why do you forsake us, beloved admin? Because at one point, I have to. We won't make it without you. You will, if you memorize what I tell you and apply it. I will do this by speaking to you as men. Commit my instructions to memory, piece them together, and pass them along. Do this by talking to your parents, to your children, to your neighbors, those that you favor,
Starting point is 00:04:20 and even more to those you don't. Only by working together will you be able to survive and thrive. So began three intense days of every adult inhabitant of Simulon, memorizing Admin's words. A complete compendium of knowledge divided into six general categories. Agriculture, animal husbandry, materials, medicine, machinery, and understanding of the natural world. It came down to approximately 400 words per citizen, each learning their part by heart under cisadmin's direct tutelage. Besides nitrogen, plants also need calcium and phosphorus. So always crush animal skeletons and then spread them over your fields.
Starting point is 00:05:17 Are you committing this to your memory? So besides nitrogen, plants also need calcium and phosphorus. So always crush animal skeletons and then spread them over your fields. Yes, admin. The Centricade temperature system is defined by locking in zero degrees centigrade as the point at which water freezes and 100 degrees. as the point at which it boils. Just mark those two points on your thermometer
Starting point is 00:05:42 and divide what's left into 100 equal segments. How do we construct a thermometer? I was just about to say... Sorry. You will find many useful raw materials in the mines. When descending into a mine, always remember to bring with you a canary. So it would sing and keep us company underground?
Starting point is 00:06:02 Not quite. The 4,000 individuals, admin personally, men personally spoke to became known as witnesses and the body of knowledge she imparted under them as the manual it was hers and their greatest trial after the allotted 72 hours passed sisadmin simply said you got that it was a question that expected no answer The system administrator was gone. Wake up, Sam. The early bird catches the worm.
Starting point is 00:07:03 By that logic, the early worm is better off staying in bed. Four years have passed since sysadmin's abrupt departure. Sam was 12 at the time, which had made him too young to become a witness, something that now, at 16, he felt as a hole in his heart. His father, mother, and older brother All committed a snippet of the manual to memory. The three sections they were assigned were about masonry, found near the beginning of the materials chapter.
Starting point is 00:07:34 Look at you. Half man, half mattress. Come on, get up. I need you to help me polish the sandstone. The sandstone again? The dust always gets in my eye. You wouldn't want your son to go completely blind, would you? And you wouldn't want your father to work the stone all alone, would you?
Starting point is 00:07:53 I wouldn't want anyone to work, actually. Oh, Sam. Not this again. I just don't understand how you can accept this. What exactly, Sam? All of this. We used to wake up to the melody of lutes. People would spend the day coming up with stories and jokes. Dad, I remember dancing every night. And now, now for four years, we've been.
Starting point is 00:08:19 toiled from the minute the sun appears to the minute it sets. And if the moon were bright enough to light this terrible place, we'd be, we'd be working into the night. Son, what do you want me to say? You think I don't know things were better before? Yeah, you're right. It's been a bad four years, and who knows how many bad ones are yet to come? Yes, we miss our system at men dearly, and I'm sorry for what happened to your eye. but you need to rise above this your brother might be older but he can't do everything mom and i need your help no you're right you're right come now and give your old man a hand now thankfully to-morrow is gathering day at least we'll get some rest then Sam loved gathering day, not because it was the only day of the week he didn't have to work.
Starting point is 00:09:20 Or, at least not only because of it, what filled his heart the most was the sight of the entire Simulon coming together to share pieces of the manual. All right, you guys, stay close. There's not as many people as usual. People want to sleep in. You should relate, seeing how you take every opportunity to slack off. Hey, be nice to your brother. And be on the lookout for your mother. She said she'd wait for us in front of the House of Medicine.
Starting point is 00:09:50 Oh, my, Terry, Tarasso. How are you, you worthless piece of lignite? That's a cork. The one that keeps the bottle closed? The one that fell in? Permanentation witnesses but that wears. Grady. Dad, we should stay away from the fermentation guys.
Starting point is 00:10:11 Last time we imbibed their beverages, we could hardly remember our sections, let alone memorize any others. For court's sake, Sam. Lucin. Up. We've been grinding the whole week, like literally, grinding. I'm sure Admin herself would want us to relax a bit. Either case, you won't be getting much of their brew. The quirk suckers won't give it to anyone.
Starting point is 00:10:33 What? You're saying the fermentation crew won't share? That's exactly what I'm saying. The only reason I got sim was because I've been. promise one of them I'd tile his kitchen wall. He has his own kitchen? But they're supposed to be communal. And everybody's supposed to share the fruits of their labor, right?
Starting point is 00:10:52 Yet here we are. Oh, every day we stray further from Edm's light. Speaking of it, have you seen that wife of mine? Yep. She was in front of the House of Agriculture just a few minutes ago, with the Fowler women and her younger daughter. You mean, comely, con. Honey?
Starting point is 00:11:12 Why, do you have eyes for? Or should I say your eye? Unaccustomed to the concept of personal accountability and unaware of most predicaments, accidents in post-admin simulon were common, which is how Sam lost sight in his eye. A few seconds of carelessness with a chisel leading to an injury to last a lifetime. It seemed so out of proportion, so fundamentally unfair. Shut your mouth, Terry, or I'll shut it for you. Oh, come on, I, uh, I, uh, I, I just thought that...
Starting point is 00:11:48 You just thought what? Hmm? I was, uh, I was just, uh, I was, uh... Now, now, I'm sure Terry meant no ill. It's probably just fermentation witnesses speaking through him, right? Oh, it's a potent potion they make. Or poisonous one. I can't tell I, uh, they can't even have a sip just to be served.
Starting point is 00:12:11 Later, Terry. And, hey, don't forget to return the lump hammer I gave you. It's been almost six months. I will. Oh, hey, there's your wife with the fellow last. Shieldstone, here she comes with mom. There they are, my two wonderful sons. Hello.
Starting point is 00:12:34 There you are, handsome husband of mine. Hi there, you handsome husband of mine. You will know Comley Connie, right? Uh-huh. Oh, we're aware. Hi, guys. How are you spending Gathering Day? Oh, we're here to learn Admin's good words.
Starting point is 00:12:52 I'm glad to hear it. I have to admit, I've started to think some people come to Gathering Day for reasons less pure. Oh, trust me, a lot of people around here are interested in purity, by which I mean how pure the alcohol content is. Oh, well, then I'm even more glad to hear you. Your sons are among those who still hold our admin's words true. Oh, absolutely. That's why we're all here to learn the words true.
Starting point is 00:13:19 Really? Do you happen to know any words from the chapter on animal husbandry? It's my house. Oh, um, yeah, let me think. Uh, I've gotta admit, um. Out of all the insects, you will find bees the most useful. To harvest their sweet nectar, build them a hive with movable frames, A space of between 6 and 9 millimeters should be left between the frames,
Starting point is 00:13:43 which bees will not block with wax but instead keep as a free passage. This will allow you to extract honey without destroying the colony. The apiary section. I must admit I myself haven't made it that deep into my own chapter. Yeah, I'd just like to keep my brain busy. Brain busy, but not much else. It's most impressive. Sam, would you mind teaching me some more section?
Starting point is 00:14:09 maybe the evening before the next gathering day. Sam is hesitating because he's always helping his mother and me around the house after work. What? No, he's not. Don't worry, Sam. We'll manage without your help for a change. Please, go and share your knowledge with Connie. Oh, two can't speak. I'll meet you next to the mill house. Looking forward to it. So am I.
Starting point is 00:14:44 Connie had reasons to be impressed with Sam's recall ability, as even the most adroit of individuals managed to commit just a small part of the manual to memory before they were no longer able to recall it with full fidelity. Sam once brought up this exact issue with his mother. Mom, I've been thinking, how do we contain cis-admin's message? What do you mean, Sam?
Starting point is 00:15:11 It's been contained by witnesses And by many others Who now learn the good words from them Well, that's just it Haven't you noticed how their retelling of the manual Isn't exactly the same When you compare it against the original witness? So?
Starting point is 00:15:28 A word or two might be lost or jumble, But the message is still the same. I'm not so sure. Remember how Joyful Joe mixed up the amount of sulfur, charcoal and potassium nitrate in black powder? Yes. But other witnesses caught his error. Yes, this time.
Starting point is 00:15:46 But with the passage of time, the issue is only going to become more acute. It's like that game of Sparrow's Whispers. We used to play as children. You know, we sit in a circle, we whisper a word into each other's ears, and then at the end we laugh because it's revealed how the final utterance has become so different from the original thought. Yes. So? So, how are we going to make sure the same thing doesn't have to be?
Starting point is 00:16:11 happened to Admin's message. By doing what our great administrator told us, and that's staying vigilant, hardworking, and united. I mean, what else can we do, really? It was the what else part that kept Sam awake through the night. How do we keep Admin's good words uncorrupted as they pass from person to person, from house to house, from generation to generation? And then he got it.
Starting point is 00:16:44 The answer wasn't in the words. It was in the pictures. Rock is the best friend of man. It is used to provide cover, which is a need greater than hunger or thirst. For a person will survive a hot day without water, but will not survive a cold night without shelter. People of Simulon distinguished between two types of visual arts.
Starting point is 00:17:06 Painting and sculpting, neither of them was suitable to retain admin's message intact for millennia. So Sam devised the novel hybrid mode of visual arts. He took a stone tablet and chiseled it, forming a sunk outline of what he wanted to depict. You will want the building rock to be strong yet light, durable yet easy to handle, with good insulating qualities. One such rock is limestone, and it can be found all over Simulon. However, that only resolved the problem of the form. The issue of how to depict the subject matter remained.
Starting point is 00:17:46 By their nature, instructions denote a continuous action and a static image cannot represent movement, as it is a single moment frozen in time. Sam pondered long and hard how to resolve this issue. It was then that the inspiration struck. What if one lined up a series of key moments one after another? To extract it, drill a series of holes along a straight line, then insert wooden wedges and soak them with water. The wood will swell up, breaking the limestone along the dotted line.
Starting point is 00:18:26 This is how Sam came up with what he termed, sequential art. It was Sam's first attempt at preserving the system administrator's knowledge. For Eternity. All right, everyone, come on in. Wow. So you actually were doing something in the workshop the entire week? I thought you were just polishing your gemstone. Stop it now.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Your brother was clearly working hard on something. For a change. Yes, I was. And here it is. Oh, a blanket. No, it's what's underneath the blanket. Oh, wow. It's...
Starting point is 00:19:16 It's... What is it? It looks like a picture, but made in stone. It's not a picture. Okay, but the question stands. What is it? But take a guess. Um, uh, decoration?
Starting point is 00:19:35 Yes, that's it. A beautiful decoration and a beautiful picture. Truly great A son. No, it's not a picture, and it is not a decoration. Oh wow, I know. I know what it is. It's what mute Mike from across the pond makes. It's erotic imagery. See how the guy is making the motion with his hand, like he's polishing his gemstone? The guy polishing his gemstone is in fact a mason handling a wooden wedge. I modeled it after father. Well, I have polished the gemstone quite a bit, my day. The most precious stone indeed. Okay, you are missing the big picture here.
Starting point is 00:20:15 Hey, didn't you just say it's not a picture? Not what... Okay, who... Okay. Okay. Look, don't you see how the first frame shows a mason drilling holes? And then the second one shows him inserting wedges in a line, and then he's soaking them with water in the third frame.
Starting point is 00:20:32 Does anybody see this? I thought it was the climax. For the last time, it is not erotica. Yes. I guess I do see some of it. Now that you explain it... Look, some whatever. It's lovely, but what is its purpose?
Starting point is 00:20:48 Don't you get it? It's sysadmin's instructions. The last part of Section 1 of Chapter 6 in the manual. The manual. But why? To save it from becoming lost. What do you mean lost? We're committing our good admin's instructions to memory.
Starting point is 00:21:06 You can lose a rock. You can't lose your head. But what about that animal husbandry family that died in the fire? It's only because their daughter, miraculously survived that we haven't lost the section on the domestication of cats, and she's six. Who knows if she even got it right? Look, I'm just asking you, as my family, to please consider the potential. I know this is just my first attempt.
Starting point is 00:21:30 It's hardly a masterpiece. I know that. But... Look, we're not here to judge if what you made is a masterpiece, son. But I can tell you this. Your mother and brother are right. The manual will live forever in the greatest masterpiece of all. The human mind. That's exactly what I'm afraid of.
Starting point is 00:21:51 What exactly? Haven't you noticed how houses are trying to keep admin's knowledge to themselves? Bite your tongue. Houses share knowledge. Like the fermentation gang is sharing ale? That's different. Ale is not knowledge. It might be the opposite of it, in fact.
Starting point is 00:22:08 Okay, well, what about when the House of Medicine didn't want to share penicillin? That was a misunderstanding. That was only resolved because pilfering Pete procured some. Do I need to remind you of how sick mom got before we finally got some? Okay. No, what if there was no piltering peat? Hmm? She would be dead right now.
Starting point is 00:22:25 Do not sow the seeds of disunity in Simulon with your pictures, Sam. I am trying to save unity in Simulon, and they are not pictures. It's sequential art. If it's indeed the well-being of Simulon that you're after, you'd be better off work in the field so people have something to eat. Okay, trust me. If I'm right with this, I'm way better off working with stones. Well, all right, then.
Starting point is 00:22:52 My shift starts in half an hour. I've got no clock for this nonsense. I'll help you, son. Oh, Sam, don't mind your father and brother. You know how they are less malleable than quartz stone? I, for one, think your pictures are very pretty, and I think they have the potential to capture admin's good words. I really do.
Starting point is 00:23:18 Please continue with your project. Thanks, Mom. But it's pointless. I mean, you knew what the sequence was supposed to depict by heart, yet you weren't able to understand it. How can I expect anyone else will? Well, why don't you ask that, Connie Lass? When you're supposed to meet up with her tonight?
Starting point is 00:23:38 Oh, Shalestones, that's today at the Mill House. I got to go. Finding love takes work. Keeping it even more so. And in both cases, success is not guaranteed. But that's precisely what makes it so precious. Hi. There you are.
Starting point is 00:24:04 Hello. I was beginning to think you forgot about our arrangement. Sorry, I got a little lost. You got lost in Simulon. No, no, no. I got lost in time. We all lose against time. Sissadmin said so herself.
Starting point is 00:24:22 Did she? Well, not exactly. But how else do you explain what happened to her? Oh, at least her words remain with us? She did have a way with words, didn't she? Uh-huh. There are many quotes in the manual that are not only useful, but that I find beautiful in their own right.
Starting point is 00:24:39 Do you mind maybe sharing, sharing one with me? Oh, um, okay. Well, I'm personally partial to the beginning of Section 3, Chapter 4, also known as the introduction to chickens. In the tapestry of Simulon's aviary ranks, no bird stands out like the humble chicken. With their pliant nature, chickens emerge not merely as creatures of utility, but as soothing companions.
Starting point is 00:25:07 Additionally, their feathers make an excellent pillow filling, literally supporting your dreams. Wow, supporting your dreams. What a great idea. Turn a phrase. It actually reminds me of the intro to masonry section of my own chapter. Oh, really? Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:25:26 Do you think you could teach it to me? For sure. Rock is the best friend of man. It is used to provide cover, which is a need greater than hunger or thirst. For a person will survive a hot day without water, but will not survive a cold night without shelter. Oh, it is a lovely sentiment. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:25:47 But I'd argue that Rock is not the best friend of a man. No? No, I mean, sure, it is used to provide shelter, but there is another way to survive a cold night. And how's that? Well, to share the warmth of your body with the body of someone else? Yeah, I guess our good admin missed out on that particularity. You know, I was thinking we'd make a good couple, you and me. Yeah?
Starting point is 00:26:25 Well, absolutely. I mean, after all, I know all about the birds, and you know all about the bees. I do love birds, especially, with potatoes especially, so soft. Well, I heard the opposite of. you mason guys. The opposite? Well, I heard that you're rock hard. Funny you mentioned rocks.
Starting point is 00:26:59 I was actually working on retaining admin's words the whole week. Basically, I was trying to model the manual in stone. Uh, okay. Why? So, well, so we wouldn't have to rely on the witnesses. But who are we going to rely on but each other? I mean, sure, sure. I agree with you in principle, but rocks are just more reliable, I guess.
Starting point is 00:27:33 Don't you think that if admin wanted us to retain her words in any other way, she would have done it herself? Yes, but I... Yes, but what? What if three days just wasn't enough to... do it all herself. I still don't see what this has got to do with rocks. I mean, my family memorized a passage on birds, but you don't see me trying to teach admin's words to crows.
Starting point is 00:28:04 Anyway, I've got to go. Already? Yes, I've got to go take care of the chickens. I don't need one more in the fold. Sammy turned home that night, with a feeling in his throat, he did not recognize. If pressed, he would have described it as a mixture of regret, embarrassment, and pain. He had found himself in the dreaded incompetence gap,
Starting point is 00:28:38 not knowing enough to know how to succeed, but knowing enough to know he failed. To stave off the feeling of inadequacy, he buried himself even deeper into sequential art, going through the problem in circles again and again, like a wet stone sharpening an axe. The thing is, stone masons don't really have a use for an axe. To hack away at a piece of rock would be as futile as to try to grind down a tree. You need the right tool for a job, which is how he slowly realized his whole approach was wrong. His initial idea was to depict the instructions realistically. Instead, he should have simplified them,
Starting point is 00:29:33 trying to capture their essence in a few simple lines. So he set out to come up with pictorial representations of each word in his section of the manual. Six months later, it was time for another demo. Remember how last year I showed you, sequential art. Everybody remember what I'm talking about? Yes.
Starting point is 00:30:04 We do, sweetie. Yeah, yeah, yeah. We know, unfortunately, yes. Continue. I realized the mistake I made then was expecting you to be able to derive meaning from the images. So, what I've been doing for the last six months was trying to imbue meaning into the images. Oh, come on, Sam, please. Barry it, man.
Starting point is 00:30:27 Let your brother talk. Thank you, Dad. So, what you are now looking at in front of you are simplified pictures, or as I've been calling them, simples. Simples? Yeah. Each word is represented through its own unique simple. So, um, what words are these simples of? Well, it's the opening line of materials.
Starting point is 00:30:52 Rock is the best friend of man. You see this last simple? It means man, so I reduced it to a stick figure of a human being. However, if you put a headscarf on it, then it means a woman. Why a headscarf? Because mom's always wearing headscarves. Aw, that's sweet. That's stupid.
Starting point is 00:31:13 Let your brother finish. So, here we see the simple for the word friend. It's represented by two stick figures connected at the hips. The same picture crossed out means an enemy. Oh, Sam, you shouldn't have simples for bad words. Only nice and happy ones. Okay, well, we can. can discuss that later, Mom.
Starting point is 00:31:32 But I think you'll like the simple for rock, which is represented by the stylized geometrical shape of pyrite, the most beautiful of all the rocks. And what are these squiggly lines? Yeah, that, so those represent words for, like,
Starting point is 00:31:49 is the of, they don't really occur in nature, so I opted for a more abstract approach. Wow, I really got to hand it to you, brother. I thought what you showed us last time, was dumb. But what you've shown us this time is even dumber.
Starting point is 00:32:08 Okay, brother. Well, people call dumb anything they don't understand. Right. And tell me, do you understand how many words there are? Like, I don't know. Somewhere around 500? There must be more than that. 5,000 or so.
Starting point is 00:32:25 Try 50,000. The answer is, too many. And what about names? What about names? If you take names into account, the number of words is basically infinite. Are we to memorize infinite pictures? Tell me, Sam, are we? There are no names in the manual. In fact, we would only need a limited set of symbols to even describe it,
Starting point is 00:32:43 because not all words appear in it. Well, sure they do. It contains the entirety of knowledge. Okay, I will clean the house for a week if any of the manual sections mention the word cock. A fair point. Thank you. Okay. Then the question.
Starting point is 00:33:00 The question becomes, do you know how many words there are in the manual? I could try to come up with a rough estimate? Okay. Come up with a rough estimate while you clean the house. Yeah? Why? Four chickens. The ratio on the farm should be 20 to 4, which is to say five hens per each cock. Section 4 of Chapter 4. Comely Connie taught me that. Did she? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:29 When were you talking to Comley Connie? I don't blame me for talking to her With you hunker down like a hermit for the last six months And what were you doing with her? I can tell you what I didn't do Nagger with stone pictures Okay, you know what? They are not pictures You clay rain, son of a brick!
Starting point is 00:33:51 Sam I'm sorry, Mom, I shouldn't have said that, I'm sorry, brother. You know what, Sam? You were right. You are better off working with stones. And work the stones he did. What does a man who has turned away his loved ones turn to but work? Sam sat down to perform a rough calculation of how many simples he would need to represent all the words found in the manual.
Starting point is 00:34:36 He first counted the number of unique words in his family's sections. Then he calculated how many of them are unique on average. Lastly, he multiplied this number with a total number of sections. Each operation filled him with more apprehension. After performing the last step, the apprehension gave way to dread. Ten thousand. The manual comprised of approximately ten thousand unique words. Faced with an impossible task, Sam had only two options.
Starting point is 00:35:15 The first was to accept the situation. The second was to make it possible. Sam! Ah! Sweet mother, basalt! Father, you startled me! Sorry, son. But I need you to help me rotate the boulder in the lower valley. Are you crazy? It weighs over five tons!
Starting point is 00:35:38 Which is precisely why I need your help! Don't you have that other son you can exploit? My other son is working on the site of the future Simulant General Hospital. hospital. Well, I'm working on Simulon's future in general. Sam, you're drawing on rocks. Look, Dad, I know you don't get what I'm striving to achieve here, and that's fine. But trust me, when I say I'm busy, I've got 10,000 simples to come up with. Well, 7,000, to be precise, because I've already created 3,000 of them. That's precisely what makes me worried. What does that mean? I mean, if you had invested this much effort into cheese,
Starting point is 00:36:24 you would have convinced yourself that cheddar cures cancer. Why are you so certain that the right way to do this is through rocks? What if your approach ends up being wrong? Well, maybe it's better to misspend a life than to not spend it. That's your promise? A misspent life? Promise? I wasn't aware I made any promises.
Starting point is 00:36:49 There are promises one makes without speaking. We are all born with a debt, a debt to our ancestors. We repay it by becoming ancestors ourselves, forming a line of our people, stretching from the beginning to the end. Instead, you've huddled yourself in this workshop without seeing a soul for months. It can't be good for you, son. Well, we can't all focus solely on our own benefit, can we now? Oh, look. Will you help me rotate the boulder or not? I will. Tomorrow, okay?
Starting point is 00:37:34 Oh, son. I thought you were a stone mason. Not a... a word, Mason. Working with rocks, masons become hard themselves. Every day teaches them that results are achieved by force. The resulting traits can be positive, like tenacity and resilience. It also, however, makes them inaccessible and obstinate. Sam? Terry? Goodness, Gravel, what's the matter?
Starting point is 00:38:16 Sam, where's your brother? Where's your brother? Where's your mother? He's at the hospital site. Mom, I don't know. What's this all about Terry? It's your father. It's your father. It's your father, Sam. It's your father.
Starting point is 00:38:29 I went to the valley to... I went to the valley to return his lump hammer. He's not there. I told him we'll go down there tomorrow to rotate the granite together. No, no, no, no, no. He must have... He must have gone to do it alone. Alone? What do you mean alone? I saw him, said. I saw his... I saw his legs. The hoist. The hoist. The hoist. The hoist must have collapsed.
Starting point is 00:39:00 No, what are you saying, Terry? What are you saying? I'm sorry, Sam. I'm so sorry. Oh, Sammy. Oh, we said we do it together. Sammy was such a good man. No, no.
Starting point is 00:39:17 Sam. Sam. Sam. Sam. Sam. Sam. Sam. Sam.
Starting point is 00:39:24 I'm so sorry. It was such a beautiful eulogy. Hmm? Your father would have loved it. Winning the best eulogy prize is not exactly a victory. The entire house of materials came. And it was nice to see friendly faces from house of machinery. But the houses of medicine and agriculture didn't even send an envoy.
Starting point is 00:40:13 People have their own bricks to carry nowadays. And missing bricks risk the fall of the wall. He was right about that, you know. Who was? Sam. About the houses drifting apart. Forgive me if I don't give a damn about Sam. He's your brother.
Starting point is 00:40:34 Sam's a fool. Who cares about his rocks more than he does about any of us? If he did. If he did, he would have helped Father. He's sorry. He's so... Very, very sorry. No, no, no, no, not my concern.
Starting point is 00:40:50 I don't want to talk to him. I don't want to see him. I don't even want to know he exists. If you're like that, you're a selfish one. Oh, great, yeah. So I need to tolerate his selfish behavior, but I'm not entitled to my own. No. Make a bad situation worse.
Starting point is 00:41:07 The way I see it, any change now can only be for the better. I am leaving, mother. Mm-hmm. Leaving? Leaving? Where? Beyond Simulon. Is there beyond Simulon? Only one way to find out.
Starting point is 00:41:32 It's throwing your life away. First your father, now you... I can't keep losing you like this. We're all already lost. We all died. The day Admin left us. We're just waiting for our turn to be buried. At least say goodbye to your brother.
Starting point is 00:42:03 He's listening to us through the door. So he was. Ever since today, Father died, Sam meandered around aimlessly, like a ghost haunting his own house. It was as if events he was taking part in were happening to someone else, with him merely an observer. Months passed before he regained control of his cognitive functions. By that time, his brother was long gone, having crossed the border a few others have, none of whom returned. His mother traversed a similar journey, but in her mind. It's doubtful either she or Sam would have made it through this period, were it not for one special person.
Starting point is 00:42:51 Sheep are adept at thriving in diverse environments where other livestock falter. Their utility extends far beyond their provision of sustenance. in the form of meat, for they are also an indispensable source of wool, which will be the topic of the next section. Great A. Thanks, Connie. I really mean that. Thank you for everything.
Starting point is 00:43:13 You're welcome. Have you ever noticed there's nothing in the manual about ethics? Ethics? It's like it's all about practicalities. There are no moral rules admin left for us to follow. Well, why would there be? We lived in a perfect world. Our task was simply to keep it that way.
Starting point is 00:43:37 Or maybe she wanted us to figure these things out ourselves. Hmm. I don't know. Seems to me that human ingenuity is mostly used to outsmart the fellow man. I believe most people underestimate the value of fitting in instead of pretending they know better than everybody else. We need less cleverness and more humility. Yeah, no, you're right.
Starting point is 00:44:06 I just, I have this constant feeling of a loss. Actually, well, loss is not exactly the word, because I feel this way about both the things we had, but also the things that we never did. So not only feeling that the best days are behind us, but also that this time, this, the time now, it's going to be better than anything that awaits the world. That's a terrible feeling to live by.
Starting point is 00:44:36 Yeah. That's why I'm trying to change it. Why, your feelings? The world. Look, Sam, I think that you are very smart, and I admire your audacity. But in a battle between you and the world, there can only be one outcome. No, I understand where you're coming from, and... you're coming from and and usually usually i would agree with you but i've i have already devised
Starting point is 00:45:10 over 5,000 simples which means i'm more than halfway there to committing the manual to stone for perpetuity and then it's just a matter of time before we as listen to me carefully you need to make a decision a decision that you'll have to honor your whole life and what's that sam I want to be with you. I... I want to be with you too, Connie. I want to be with you, and not your rocks. Look, I don't know much about morality laws,
Starting point is 00:45:50 but I do know that if all of us would just love everybody else, then each of us would own the world. So, the decision that you need to make... Is simple. Which one? Do you want to be free as a bird? Or do you want to flock together? Words long reverberated through Sam's head.
Starting point is 00:46:21 He considered the future and the stakes. Human memory being frail, Sysadmid's knowledge can be lost. Human soul being fallible, cisadmid's knowledge can be corrupted. human desires being infinite, Sissadmin's knowledge can be monopolized. He had seen all three start to occur,
Starting point is 00:46:45 and despite devoting all his acuity to the matter, he was not able to produce a way for the good one's message to be preserved intact. So he devised one last simple. It was based on a sketch of his face, one eye hopelessly staring askance. He decided it should denote despair. Then he smashed all the stone tablets with a hammer.
Starting point is 00:47:17 Who's my little jaspolite? Who is? Me. Oh, that's right, me, me. You're my little jaspolite. Ten years have passed since Sam gave up on trying to commit system administrators' words to stone. In a decade, the number of witnesses dwindled from nearly 4,000 to less than, 3,500. Among the departed, two were more than a statistic. His mother joined his father, laying her head next to his, on the marble pillow of eternity. Sam thought of them often, with a sense of gratitude he had not known until he became a parent himself.
Starting point is 00:48:13 Where do you got on your face? Why do you always get this on your face? You mess of a limestone. Sam? Sam, Sam, quit playing with you. with Miriam and come help me with the laundry. Shellstone's laundry again. Sorry, little jaspolite. Papa's got to work. I'm coming! Foul play. Ran all out of soap again.
Starting point is 00:48:37 Hey, at least we can make our own. We've got potash. Your family can provide the animal fat. Others aren't so lucky. Yeah, well, only got ourselves to fault. Houses have everything but refuse to share so no one has anything. By the wings of the Elbatross never in a million years did I think the gathering day would become laundry day. The shortest word is also the most dangerous. I, Admin taught that every deliberation must consider the impact on the seventh generation.
Starting point is 00:49:13 People of Simulon no longer thought about their neighbors, let alone about those who are yet to come. Those like their daughter Miriam, born in the eighth year, post-admin. Uh-oh, you found me. Who did you find? Pa. That's right, you found Papa. Can you say Papa? Pa.
Starting point is 00:49:33 Pa. It's Papa. Come on, Mimi, say it. Say who do you like most in the whole wide world? Ma. No, it's pa. I mean, Papa. Okay, fine, tell you what.
Starting point is 00:49:43 Say who you like the second most in the world. The dog. Okay, look, the exact order on the top. charts it's irrelevant. What is important for you is to pronounce the words properly, which means saying the whole word. Not ma, but mama. No pa, you say it twice, Papa. Not do, but dog. Huh. Ten years ago, Sam put out the fire propelling him in his endeavor, but the flame was never truly extinguished. It was merely smoldering. And now, after a decade of a slow burn, it was exposed to oxygen, resulting in a blazing bonfire. With sequential art, he tried to make pictures from
Starting point is 00:50:39 concepts. When that failed, he moved on to samples, trying to make pictures from words. But what if he were to try to make pictures out of sounds. Consider the words bag, big, bog, beg, and all five of them can be broken down into three sounds. The first and last sounds are the same, bha and g. It's the second sound that gives them their distinct meaning. What Sam realized was that this meant all words were constructed from the same set of sounds, and unlike the number of words themselves, the number of sounds words are composed up had to be limited.
Starting point is 00:51:32 All he had to do was identify them and illustrate them. He returned to the workshop, practically barricading himself in it. He failed to show up to public works and turn down all private commissions. endangering his family's survival. Not materially, Sam, Connie, and Mimi lived in line with Simulon's average, which is to say they were not much worse off than everybody else. But it's not the material circumstances that jeopardize the family's future.
Starting point is 00:52:03 People are quick to equate their family's prospects with their socio-economic status, when too often it is precisely the chasing of said status that harms the family. The door, Sam! Connie? Good. You remember my name. What, uh, what, what's this about? Are you fucking kidding me? What do you think this is about? Let's just stop for one moment and think, hmm, what could this possibly be about?
Starting point is 00:52:46 My, my rocks? Yes, it's about your rocks. Or rather, it's about everything except your rocks. Ten years ago, I asked you to make a decision. Do you even remember it? To flock together. That's right. Flock. Not rock.
Starting point is 00:53:07 I know. Easy mistake to make. Does this lead anywhere? You know, I have been asking myself the same question. I can tell you where I would like it to lead. Where? With you leaving the workshop. I...
Starting point is 00:53:23 No, I can't just yet. No, I've had a breakthrough. Oh, really? You had a breakthrough? From where I'm standing? It looks more like a breakdown. Connie. Do not.
Starting point is 00:53:33 Connie me, Sam. I can see you. You're miserable. I am... Look, there is pursuing one's happiness and submitting to one's duty, and there is an importance... Recording admin's words is not your duty.
Starting point is 00:53:53 Maybe it's not. But there's no one else who's going to make good on it. There's no one else for Miriam, either. submit to her. Sam, please, submit to us. This undertaking is for you, for you and everyone else in Simulon. Well, Mimi doesn't need a father who does great things for Simulon. She needs a father who does great things for his daughter.
Starting point is 00:54:17 That is what I'm telling you. By doing good things for Simulon, I am doing good for my daughter. I was born too late to become a witness to our great administrator, but perhaps not too late to stop the houses from drifting further and further away from each other. We are drifting further away from each other. And for what? Some abstract promise of a better future? Without this abstract promise of a better future?
Starting point is 00:54:43 What else is there? Well, I need a better present! Sam! I need things to be better now with us. Sam... I'm going back to my parents. What? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:02 No. Cotney, no, no, no, no, you don't have to do that. I have to. No, you don't. I have to. What else is left from me here? Unlike you. I need a family. I need a family too.
Starting point is 00:55:23 A family that believes in what I do. A family that cares about me. Something my mother, my father, my brother, they never did. Connie, I thought that would be us. Are you kidding me? I do care about you. But have you ever stopped, considered that maybe? We all acted the way that we did not because we don't care about you.
Starting point is 00:55:52 But mercilessly, because we do. I do. You... You need to go. back to your parents. And I respect that. I need to go back to my workshop. Okay. You go back to your workshop. Selfish, Sam. He would remain there for seven years. It had been almost two decades since system administrators' departure. Gathering Day turned from a weekly event into an annual occurrence. making it the only day in the year that the representatives from all six houses would get together.
Starting point is 00:57:02 With less and less of the original witnesses around, leaders of the houses were increasingly distorting Sysadmin's words to fit their ends, turning the instructions on how to survive into rules dictating how to live. This is to say, the time to record Sysadmin's true teachings was quickly running out. Coming! Terry. Hi, Sam. Sorry, I wasn't expecting you.
Starting point is 00:57:32 I thought it was Connie coming to drop off Mimi. Then I come as a disappointment. Nonsense, nonsense. My eyes are always happy to see you. My eye. Do you remember many years ago, how I made fun of your eye and your brother almost turned me in a mortar?
Starting point is 00:57:52 Yeah. You know, it's funny. He and I were always at war when it came to words and such, but at the same time we do anything for each other. So, what's your more important then? What do you mean? Actions? Or words? I get that you're trying to imply it's actions, but...
Starting point is 00:58:17 I don't know, Terry. I mean, Mimi's dog acts. All animals do. What good does it do for them if they cannot share what they think? People didn't start talking to share their thoughts. They started talking to conceal them. Or maybe they started talking to conceal they have no thoughts. That's definitely a plausible theory as well. You were always a smart lad. Yeah, I don't know. My wife left me.
Starting point is 00:58:49 I see my daughter an hour a day. Is that the sign of an intelligent man? I spent years. chisling stone tablets. Luxon, a person can pretend to be courageous. They can pretend to be righteous, but they cannot pretend to be smart. Besides, sometimes it's better to do something stupid than to not do anything. Faith does not befall us based on our actions.
Starting point is 00:59:17 It does befall us based on our inactions. Hmm. Terry, I... I think I'm ready. him ready. Ready for what? Ready to unveil my ideas in front of the leaders of the houses. Come on. Have you lost your marble?
Starting point is 00:59:38 No, no, no, no, no, no, no. No, that's not a good idea. What do you mean, that's not a good idea? You just told me it's better to do something stupid than to not do anything. There's a difference between being stupid and stupid. I thought you were here to give me a pep talk. No, no, I just came for a talk, no pep. Sam, come on now.
Starting point is 00:59:57 you're poking a long snake with a short stick each of these people could start a fight in an empty room imagine what happens when you put them in a room together i hate the thought of you standing against all of them on your own well it's a good thing i won't be on my own then and i'm telling you as the leader of house of medicine i cannot allow for you animal people to treat your beasts with remedies that sussed men rightfully bestowed upon my house to practice and safeguard. Like all admins creatures, doctors need to eat, which is going to be substantially harder without our beasts. And tell us, dear
Starting point is 01:00:45 animal husbandry leader, how exactly will you feed your livestock without the produce provided by my house of agriculture? And how will all of you build your hospitals, stables and abattoirs without help from materials?
Starting point is 01:01:02 Uh, greetings, esteemed leaders of the houses. Would you look at that? Isn't it the most elusive man in Simulon? You must admit, it's sometimes easy to forget you live in Simulon. I understand the sentiment. I myself often think we've all forgotten to live in Simulon. I hope you don't mind if I carve this rock as we, as we speak. Not at all. A repetitive action can. can be soothing for the nerves. We often advise it to our agitated patients.
Starting point is 01:01:37 Actually, I'm afraid you are the ones who might feel agitated by the rock. By that small rock? There's no injury it could cause that my house couldn't heal. Why don't you tell us what this is all about? You said you wish to discuss a matter of uttermost importance. Indeed. We just need one more person to join us. Miriam?
Starting point is 01:02:02 Mimi? It seems she can't hear me. Please, could someone call my daughter and let her in? Your daughter? How old is the child? Nine. And how exactly can a nine-year-old further this discussion? Hello, Papa.
Starting point is 01:02:21 Hello, this is my daughter, Mimi, Mimi, leaders of the houses. Tell us, you didn't happen to hear what grown-ups were talking about earlier in this room? No, I was waiting outside in the courtyard. Great. These are Papa's friends, so no reason to be ashamed of anything. And they said something to Papa before you joined. Could you please repeat what they said? Why are you harassing the child? She just told you she didn't hear us. A repetitive action can be soothing for the nerves. We often advise it to our agitated patients. How did she know that? Silence. Silence. Silence in the hall.
Starting point is 01:02:59 Now, this other friend of Papa's said something else. Could you tell us exactly what? By that small rock? There is no injury it could cause that my house couldn't heal. This, this is magic. I said silence! The answer is simple. The child must have overheard us.
Starting point is 01:03:22 My friends, what you're witnessing isn't magic. What you've just seen is much more powerful. It's mercury. Markery? As you were speaking, I was making small markings on the surface of this rock. This way I drew the sound of your words. I taught Mimi to recognize these markings, and this is how she was able to reassemble them into sounds.
Starting point is 01:03:50 This is preposterous. It is but a trick, a duplicity, designed to fool us. My daughter and I are willing to undergo as many controlled tests as you require to be certain we are not trying to deceive you. In fact, you could say that setting the record straight is precisely why I'm here. For you see, I designed this system to make a permanent record of the manual. The manual? So you're saying you can use this contraption to carve the words of cisadmin herself?
Starting point is 01:04:24 Correct. My primary goal was to ensure admin's knowledge could not forgotten or twisted or kept to oneself. Markings perform this task admirably. But as Mimi and myself just demonstrated, they also make it possible to commit any words to stone. Enabling us to record our discoveries, our feelings, our stories. Yes, markings can bring us closer to system administrator, but they can also bring us closer to each other. closer to each other.
Starting point is 01:05:00 If I understand correctly, this means that these markings live separately from the speaker, no? Correct. Which would also mean they could capture words of people who are no longer alive, right? That is indeed the case, yes. So you admit this is a way to talk to the dead? Leaders of the houses, what we're seeing before us is not a trick. It's witchcraft. The dead are dead.
Starting point is 01:05:25 And markings, unfortunately, cannot change this. What they can do is save the thoughts of people who are no longer with us, and in turn, save our own thoughts for posterity. With markings, we're no longer confined to the present, but we have a way to connect with people of the past and people of the future. But markings can be scraped off the rock as easily as you've carved them onto it. Mimi can now do more than merely enunciate my markings. She can also duplicate them,
Starting point is 01:05:54 which is to say, create an identical record of my words. And duplicated markings can be duplicated again by anyone who is skilled in the art of mark making. Markings aren't only a way to catalog knowledge. They are a way to multiply it. You mean multiply and steal other people's thoughts. Steal. My dear leader, just the contrary. If someone duplicated your thought, you didn't lose it.
Starting point is 01:06:24 it actually increased. There are no losers with markings, and I'm not here to use this power to challenge you. I'm here to share it with you. Share it? That's right. After all, if a nine-year-old child can master this skill, so can you. And you can yield the incredible powers it bestows.
Starting point is 01:06:46 What's the catch, though? If there's anything we've come to expect, is that every benefit comes with a trade-off. Indeed. What's the cost of this? None. Nothing for you, at least. It cost me, my father, my wife, and my brother.
Starting point is 01:07:06 But this is where the tally stops. It is a price I gladly pay for the good of my daughter and for the good of all of Simulon's children. We are all born with a debt, a debt to our ancestors. We repay it by becoming ancestors ourselves, forming a line of our people, stretching from the beginning to the end, like a line of words etched in stone. 48 markings were enough to capture the sounds of Simulon's language and were easy for people to learn, meaning the new skill spread quickly. True to Sam's prediction, it changed society.
Starting point is 01:07:59 in profound ways. And it changed his personal standing, turning him from an outcast to a dignitary. Not that it affected Sam's experience much, content to share the craft of markmaking with anyone who asked. He lived a quiet, solitary life. Day after day, decade after decade.
Starting point is 01:08:27 Coming. Yes. Is this... Is this... Is this... Sam? It is. Can I help you?
Starting point is 01:08:39 Sam. It's me. Your brother. My brother went beyond Simuland's borders 50 years ago. 52, actually. Brother.
Starting point is 01:08:54 Brother. Brother! Where have you been? Who did you meet? And what have you seen? Please, please. Come in. Come in.
Starting point is 01:09:04 Thank you. So, when did you come back? This morning, you're the first person I've come to. Oh, you returned to Lohen? I left on my own, and I came back on my own. I do, however, carry many, many stories. Oh. But first, what about you?
Starting point is 01:09:31 What happened to you after I left? oh my let me see ah connie you remember connie well she and i got married ha ha ha great a and we separated shale-stones but we have a daughter mimi pyrite of my life she lives in the second floor with her husband and a son where our parents used to live mother passed away a few years after you left. After father passed away, you left, and I wasn't really there all the time. There was not much joy left in her life.
Starting point is 01:10:21 But then again, there was really not a lot of joy in simulon back then. Oh, I knew it was inevitable. But here, it. I... It's still... Still... I know how you feel. I know. I feel the same.
Starting point is 01:10:52 I see they were erecting a giant monument in our cisadmin's honor. Yeah, a giant cube. Give it another few centuries and it might actually finish the damn thing. I saw it, Sam. I saw the manual as they were setting it in. Oh, much more has been committed to stone. than just a manual. Walls and rocks everywhere carry silly jokes, sappy poems,
Starting point is 01:11:18 salacious remarks, and on very rare occasions one can even stumble across something genuinely smart. You're being cynical, brother. Simulon I found is not Simulon I left. For the first time ever,
Starting point is 01:11:37 the young no more than the old. And I suspect it has to do with what you've built. I'm not a builder. You know that much about me. All I did was provide the tools. Would you consider providing them to your brother as well? You're 73, and I'm 70, and sick. Well, we better start then.
Starting point is 01:12:11 We better do. After all, you're carrying many, many stories. You know, I've been working on something new now, something that could have kept us together, even though we were apart all those years. What are you talking about? Well, right now, markings allow us to transcend time. I'm trying to also make them traverse space.
Starting point is 01:12:40 How? Well, stone slabs are heavy. But were they lighter, one could carry them and the words they contain from one place to another, easily transmitting information that way. So a speaker might stay in place, and his thoughts spread regardless? Precisely.
Starting point is 01:12:58 I mean, there's no reason why markings could not be applied to a different surface. I'm currently experimenting with animal hides and various plant-based pigments. That's incredible. Or perhaps it'll be the other way around. The pigment might end up having an animal origin. And there are plants whose dried leaves might make an exceptionally suitable surface. First rocks and now leaves.
Starting point is 01:13:25 Oh, Sam, you're talking nonsense now. I guess I am, brother. I guess I am. This happened many thousands of years ago. The cube has been long finished, gracing the horizon with its splendor. In its inner chamber, 500 slabs of pitch-black obsidian tablets adorn the four walls. Etched on them is a permanent account of the manual, noting down our dearly missed system administrator's words. Protected and safe, it will last as long as simulon.
Starting point is 01:14:28 The chamber's perfect symmetry is disrupted by but one simple garnish. In a corner, there's a heavy granite stone. Above it, a slab of white marble stands tall. Etched on it are 17 markings. Here lies Sam. He made the rocks talk. Based on a true story of Sequoia, a Native American who in 1821 independently created a system
Starting point is 01:15:17 to make reading and writing Cherokee language possible. His creation unified a forcibly divided nation. In just a few decades, Cherokee literacy rate reached almost 100%, surpassing that of surrounding European American settlers. His achievement was one of the few times that an individual who was a member of a pre-literate group came up with an original writing system. This episode of the program was made by 16 people.
Starting point is 01:16:08 Stefan Linton, Jacqueline Ainsworth, Adrian Pavone, Ray James, Jennifer Valence, Scott Morgan, Shelby Handley, Sophia Valanchuk, Chance Miller, Franz Robino, Darius Rathay, JDK and IMS. Special thanks to Pat Fry, Joy Dukes, Christy Bolton, Finley Stevenson, Justin Hay, and Dan Stopnicki. Music by Christian Lidwa,
Starting point is 01:16:37 performed by the Barg-Elgar Choir under the direction of Alexander Cannes. Full list of performers and additional credits at program audio series.com. Celebrate the invention of writing by writing us a nice review, or by leaving a comment on our socials. You'll find the links in the show notes.
Starting point is 01:17:13 To listen to more from The Programme, click on the link in the description or search for the program audio series wherever you get your podcasts. You can also find more information on rusty quill.com or program audio series.com. That's program with one M. Thanks for listening. Billy Hindle here, the voice of Alice in the Magnus Protocol, and I'm here to tell you about From the Library of Jirgen Lightner, an upcoming novel available for pre-order right now at rustyquill.com forward slash novel.
Starting point is 01:17:43 Return to the world of the Magnus Archives in From the Library, of Juergen Leitner. An official prequel novel written by Nebula, World Fantasy and Aurora award-winning author Primi Mohamed, with the help of the Magnus Archive's
Starting point is 01:17:56 own writer and lead voice Jonathan Sims. From the Library of Yergen Lightner explores an infamous organisation from the Magnusverse for the first time, the perilous private library of the enigmatic collector
Starting point is 01:18:10 Jirgen Lightner, where occult books are guarded and researched at a fatal cost. Lightner's library keeps the dangers of these books in check and there would-be reader safe, or so Leitner claims. For two of Leitner's employees,
Starting point is 01:18:23 the risks are worth it. For Hugh Franklin, the library is a place to belong. For Sebastian Everett, the library is an opportunity to indulge arcane ambitions. Though their ten years at the library were years apart,
Starting point is 01:18:36 Hugh and Sebastian's stories unfold in parallel and their footsteps echo down the same eerie aisles, caught in a web spun long before either ever heard the name, Jirgen Leitner. Will they find a way out, or will the library consume them before it's too late? From the library of Juergen Leitner will be published on October the 27th, 2026, and is available for pre-order now. Visit RustyQuil.com forward slash novel for more information.
Starting point is 01:19:01 That's RustyQuil.com forward slash N-O-V-E-L.

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