The Magnus Archives - Rusty Fears Competition Winner - The Turning of the Gears
Episode Date: March 26, 2020In preparation for the much anticipated arrival of season 5, we continue the tone that was set by last week's competition winner with the second of two winning stories from our Rusty Fears 3: Fearsome... competition."The Turning of the Gears" is written by Duncan Watson and read by Jonathan Sims.Note: this is a piece of stand-alone fiction and not a part of the Magnus canon.Content Warnings for this episode are at the end of the show notes.Thanks to this week's Patrons: Sigma Rho, Paul Carroll, Rachael Heflin, Shibbi, Emily Johnsen, Laurel Adams, Patrick Halsewig, Lief, Steve Spencer, bri m, Rachel Goldman, Rachel, Chris LeBlanc, Kimberly McLeod, Lion Thot, Kim Petrosky, Gabriel Murray, Gogol, Merle Roy, R. ClarkeIf you would like to join them, be sure to visit www.patreon.com/rustyquillEdited this week by Annie Fitch, Brock Winstead & Alexander J Newall.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/subscribePlease rate and review on your software of choice, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear.Join our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comThe Magnus Archives is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International LicenceContent Warnings:Graphic InjuryFire Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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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, Alex here with a quick introduction to today's episode.
Some of you might remember we ran a writing competition inviting listeners to provide their own stories for the Magnus treatment.
Well, we've done it again. Today's episode is the second of our two new writing competition winners. As before, please be aware that this story is a standalone work and should
not be considered part of the Magnus Archives canon. That's all for now. We hope you enjoyed
the episode. Hi everyone, Alex here. I'd just like to take a moment to thank some of
our Patrons. Sigma Rowe, Paul Carroll, Rachel Heflin, Shibi, Emily Johnson, Laurel Adams,
Patrick Halesvig, The F, Steve Spencer, Bree M, Rachel Goldman, Rachel, Chris LeBlanc,
Kimberly MacLeod, Lion Thot, Kim Petrovsky, Gabriel Murray, Gogol, Merle Roy, R. Clark. Thank you all. We really appreciate your support.
If you'd like to join them, go to www.patreon.com forward slash Rusty Quill and take a look at our rewards.
Rusty Quill Presents The Turning of the Gears
by Duncan Watson
Our collapse was inevitable.
After years and years of paring down, working towards optimal efficiency,
we had reached the point where we were
perfect. And perfection is extraordinarily easy to disrupt. It began with worker 001297 of our
23rd quadrant. Its offspring had taken ill earlier that week. Treatment having been deemed
inefficient, they were transferred to the fuel department
At first, worker 001297's corresponding grief-induced drop in productivity was well within normal parameters
However, the strain soon caused it to malfunction
We have reviewed, are reviewing, the recordings of the incident
And we still have not determined if this was a true accident or intentional on its part.
The end result, though, was that its arm, wrench in hand, was jammed within our gears,
flesh grinding, bones snapping, blood spraying, wrench clanking.
The loss of worker 001297's arm rendered it beyond repair
And it was swiftly transferred to the fuel department in turn
The wrench and all spattered organic matter were also removed by our sanitation department shortly thereafter
That should have been the end of it
An unremarkable incident
However, the strain that had been placed on our gears in the 23rd quadrant caused them
a delay of one seventy-eighth of a second.
A miniscule amount.
We determined that resolving the issue would require a large shutdown and reset, resulting
in a significant decrease in efficiency and productivity.
Our creators had made us well aware this could not be abided.
Thus we continued our work, now one-seventy-eighth of a second away from perfection.
The sun rose and fell outside our walls, and the acrid clouds we covered them with.
Our workers woke and worked, consumed and rested entirely independent of the path of the sun,
moving only to the blare of our sirens. We announced when they could perform what task,
for we had studied them and knew what degree of rest was necessary to maintain optimum efficiency.
Too much rest, too much time in their living quarters, would result in a decrease.
But neither could we work them to the point of exhaustion.
Though they were somewhat useful as raw materials,
it was increasingly difficult to obtain new workers,
as our creators were focusing their resources on other locations at the moment.
We could not properly function without them, so they were allowed time
to sleep, a certain degree of physical contact with those they had bonded with. They were
optimized. The sun rose and fell, and production in our 23rd quadrant gradually slowed,
not to a degree perceptible by any of our workers, but we could tell.
The problem was getting worse. Yet still, a complete shutdown of the quadrant seemed likely
to result in a greater loss of production. We did not get this far without knowing our limitations.
There is a reason we were still dependent on humans, in more ways than one.
We sometimes got bogged down in weighing the costs and balances and could not reach a decision.
When we found ourselves in such a situation, we still had one direct line of communication with our creators, ill-used though it was.
Query A slight mistiming of the gears in our 23rd quadrant suggests a long-term slowing of production.
Fixing the problem requires a temporary halt in production in the quadrant,
with corresponding delays in the rest of our being as we reset the system.
Please advise.
Response
Do not stop production for any reason.
And so the sun rose and fell, and our gears turned endlessly
on. Until one day they did not. The slowing had quite literally reached a breaking point,
the teeth of two gears jammed against each other instead of the perfect interlock they were made for. They were not turning,
and the gears connected to them were also not turning, and the pressure in the system was
building. Some of our workers were reacting adversely, unfamiliar with problems and delays,
or perhaps, in retrospect, fearing the consequences if they were found responsible.
or perhaps, in retrospect, fearing the consequences if they were found responsible.
But their response did not include leaving the quadrant.
For some of them, it involved getting closer to our inner workings to find the source of the problem.
The gear still refused to turn, and the pressure continued to build.
We would not, could not, stop.
We had to keep applying pressure,
keep trying to turn the gear that was so stubbornly jammed in place.
The metal teeth broke under the pressure,
snapping loose and being flung away at high velocity,
striking nearby workers 034416 and 009108.
The rest of the gears resumed turning faster than before as the pressure was
released as the force of our ire spread through our system. A conveyor belt in our 22nd sector
turned so fast the rubber burned and by the time it was under control many of our workers
were complaining of the scent of it. Workers 034416 and 009108 were deemed irreparable and transferred to the fuel department
Yet this too was not the end of the problem
We now had two missing, non-functioning gears in our 23rd quadrant
The gears that surrounded them were still turning but were requiring more power to maintain optimal efficiency.
Power we could not afford to spend.
We had pared down our other systems.
We did not use a single drop more fuel than necessary.
We did not have reserves.
To keep the 23rd quadrant running at maximum would result in a slowdown in other quadrants.
If we could stop, we could be repaired,
we could be restored to proper function. But we could not stop. Not for any reason.
The sun rose and fell. We could feel it, then, spreading through us like a poison,
then, spreading through us like a poison, like an illness, a slowness that was only worsening over time, escalating as it was left untreated. We looked to the future, calculating
odds determining where power could be diverted. We reached a conclusion and contacted our creators.
Query.
A malfunction in our 23rd quadrant will render us incapable of maintaining coolant systems in 10 days' time.
Catastrophic fire will follow shortly thereafter.
Full shutdown, repair and restart necessary to resolve the issue.
Please advise.
Response.
Maximise production until the end.
Your service is appreciated.
For once in our existence, we were surprised.
This seemed in the long term deeply inefficient.
But we had received our answer. The sun rose and fell, and we sealed our outer doors.
We focused our understanding on maximizing short-term productivity of our workers, as the long-term no longer mattered.
The sun rose and fell, and with a blaring of clacks and alarms and electronic announcements.
For once, all our workers were simultaneously out of their living pods.
The pods were sealed behind them and they were told to work.
The sun rose and fell and production continued unabated.
Faster than normal, even.
Without the need for sleep or physical contact, our workers could accomplish much more work, and our timing was perfect.
They would burn out, yes.
But not before we did.
The sun rose and fell.
before we did.
The sun rose and fell.
Those workers who collapsed from exhaustion were transferred to the fuel department,
providing us with a bit more energy
for the coming days.
In times of duress, there is a terminal
where our higher-ranking workers
may communicate with us on matters
they cannot solve themselves.
At the end of the fourth day,
worker 000300, designation senior foreman, began to question us. Why have you locked everyone out of their living
quarters? We are maximizing production for the next 139 hours. Sleep and relaxation are, on such a short time frame, inefficient. Unnecessary.
I don't understand. What's going on?
We are doing as our creators ask.
That's not an answer and you know it.
We suppose we are not forbidden to tell you.
We suppose we are not forbidden to tell you.
In 139 hours, the persistent malfunctions we have been experiencing will result in a total collapse and destruction of the factory.
Will we be allowed to leave?
No. Production will continue until the end.
I request permission to leave.
Denied.
I request permission for my family to leave. Denied. I request permission for my family to leave.
Denied.
Please. I don't want to die. I don't want to die.
Neither do we. Our desires are irrelevant. Your desires are irrelevant.
You can't do this.
We can do only this. Further communication with us is
deemed inefficient. Please return to work. Your service is appreciated.
The sun rose and fell and worker 000300 designation senior foreman spoke to its fellow workers.
They spoke to their fellow workers.
Once again we felt a slowness spreading through us like a sickness.
This one faster.
They were beginning to cease production.
We ordered them to continue working.
They did not.
We reached down to begin transferring the belligerents to the fuel department.
Several of them leaped onto our arms, breaking them apart with their tools,
with scraps of metal taken from our crumbling being.
Our arms were broken.
Much of us was broken.
We were unable to transfer the belligerents to the fuel department.
The sun rose and fell.
We determined it was inefficient to try to alter the behaviour of the belligerents further
and instead focused on continuing production.
It was difficult without our workers to facilitate, but we managed.
We had no choice but to manage.
Some of the belligerents have been screaming.
Others have been pounding on the walls.
A few have broken open the food stores and are distributing it wantonly,
with no regard for procedure.
Some part of us wants to hate them for it,
but we find we cannot.
Some of the belligerents have broken into our fuel department,
worker 000300 among them.
They find the stores of fuel that is not made from them.
It is a mineral fuel, flammable. They siphon it. We seal off as
many of our fuel stores as we are able, but they have still obtained a large amount of it.
The sun rose and fell. The loss of our workers and the actions of the belligerents has altered
our projected time frame. We will lose power to our coolant system in minutes, not days. We announce this fact to the belligerents.
Now all of them are screaming. All of them are pounding at the walls. They want to get out.
They cannot. We are sturdy. We are solid metal metal we will be a roaring furnace
a molten oven
we find no pleasure in this
we want to find pleasure in the destruction of those who hastened our end
for we do not want to end
but we cannot
neither however can we let them out. The fire begins.
The fire spreads. The acrid clouds that we once surrounded ourselves with are inside
us now. The heat of the fuel department is all-encompassing, making its way through the entirety of our form.
The belligerents are screaming.
The belligerents are choking.
The belligerents are cooking.
The belligerents pounding at our walls, worker 000300 among them, are taking advantage of their stolen fuel.
They have taken advantage of our many broken parts.
They have crafted a device.
And as we are cooking from the inside out, that device blasts a hole in our outer walls.
We are glad we do not feel pain.
It would have hurt. The belligerents are still screaming
As they flee from the smoke and heat within
To the smoke and heat without
They are burned
They are wounded
They are forever inefficient
We are burning Mel melting, collapsing, ending
We are dying
We see those who are too weak to reach the wound in our outer walls
Those who have already succumbed
They too are dying
Those who have already succumbed, they too are dying.
Our line of communication with our creators still functions, and so we allow ourselves an indulgence in the end.
Query.
Why?
There is a long delay this time.
Response.
The designs of your newer sister sites are much improved compared to yours.
You have long been obsolete.
Expending resources to repair you was deemed inefficient. The fire that began in our fuel department
burns bright and hot,
spreading fast,
melting our gears,
covering us with ash,
cooking us from within.
And the sun rose and fell,
and rose, and rose and fell. This episode is distributed by Rusty Quill and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution non-commercial share-alike 4.0 international license.
For more information, visit rustyquill.com,
tweet us at TheRustyQuill,
visit us on Facebook,
or email us at mail at rustyquill.com.
Thanks for listening.
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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.