The Magnus Archives - The Magnus Protocol 29 - Keyed In
Episode Date: September 5, 2024CAT2RB4254-30012020-13052024 Drowning (subterranean) -/- key (metaphor)Incident Elements:CaptivityDrowningClaustraphobiaGriefTranscripts available at https://rustyquill.com/transcripts/the-magnus-prot...ocol/This episode is dedicated from Skylar Ceros to Aeron, thank you for your generous support! You can find a complete list of our Kickstarter backers https://rustyquill.com/the-magnus-protocol-supporter-wall/Created by Jonathan Sims and Alexander J Newall Directed by Alexander J NewallWritten by Alexander J NewallScript Edited with additional material by Jonathan SimsExecutive Producers April Sumner, Alexander J Newall, Jonathan Sims, Dani McDonough, Linn Ci, and Samantha F.G. Hamilton Associate Producers Jordan L. Hawk, Taylor Michaels, Nicole Perlman, Cetius d’Raven, and Megan Nice Produced by April Sumner Featuring (in order of appearance) Lowri Ann Davies as Celia RipleyShahan Hamza as Samama KhalidSarah Lambie as Lena KelleyAnusia Battersby as Gwendolyn BouchardJonathan Sims as ChesterBillie Hindle as Alice DyerKazeem Tosin Amore as Teddy VaughnKai Partenie as Ticket OfficerDialogue Editor – Nico VetteseSound Designer – Meg McKellarMastering Editor - Catherine RinellaMusic by Sam Jones (orchestral mix by Jake Jackson) Art by April Sumner Support us on Patreon at https://patreon.com/rustyquillCheck out our merchandise available at https://www.redbubble.com/people/RustyQuill/shop and https://www.teepublic.com/stores/rusty-quillSupport Rusty Quill by purchasing from our Affiliates;Phantom Peak – UK immersive experience – 15% discount with this linkDriveThruRPG – DriveThruRPG.comJoin our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillX: @therustyquillEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.com The Magnus Protocol is a derivative product of the Magnus Archives, created by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share alike 4.0 International Licence. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi, Billy here, the voice of Alice in the Magnus Protocol.
I wanted to let you know that Rusty Quill will be at the London Podcast Festival on Saturday the 8th of September.
Join the Office of Incident Assessment and Response crew for an onstage discussion
where they'll be sharing insights into the Magnus Protocol experiences and character journeys through Season 1,
plus answering your questions live.
The panel will be followed by a signing session with the cast. This episode is dedicated from Skylar Keros to Aaron. You are so incredibly important
to us and worthy of genuine and gentle love and affection. We hope at some point you'll
be able to see this too. We'll always be there for you, no matter what. Sincerely, Skyler.
Rusty Quill presents...
The Magnus Protocol I'm sorry. Sam, are you still out here?
Oh shit! Sam! Sam, are you okay?
Sam? Can you hear me?
Christ, Sam, no, no, no, no, no.
Sam, oh thank god.
Let's get you inside.
You're sure you don't want me to get the others?
No. The I went outside to see the car.
It was empty.
I watched it leave and then it was just there.
You're sure it was the same thing?
I'm sure.
Everyone else that attacked ended up, well...
Dead?
Yeah.
I don't know.
It didn't feel like it wanted to kill me or eat me or whatever.
It felt...
It felt more like it was searching for something in my head.
Random memories just kept popping up and then suddenly I was talking and couldn't
stop. It was like that but it was just an accident.
Do you know what it wanted? What it was looking for?
It kept going after anything it could on the Magnus Institute. Then my mind went to the
Hildorf Centre and...
And?
I think we need to go there.
Now, oh, something terrible is going to happen.
Sam, I just found you lying unconscious in the rain.
You can't stop shaking.
You're going to be lucky not to catch pneumonia.
I don't think we're going to be running off.
I'm telling you, something important is going to go down and I need to get there.
No.
No, you can't stop me.
Wanna bet?
Celia, please.
Fine, but we're going together.
Call Alice and let her know what's happening, just in case.
I'll ask Georgie if she can look after Jack this morning.
Thank you.
Don't thank me.
This is a really, really bad idea.
I'm heading off for the night, Gwen.
Make sure you lock up when you're done.
Are you sure I can handle such an important responsibility? There's no need the night, Gwen. Make sure you lock up when you're done. Are you sure I can handle such an important responsibility?
There's no need for that, Gwen.
I actually thought you did rather well with the minister, all things considered.
Let's not end things on a sour note.
Well, I'm afraid I do have to run.
I presume I can trust you to close up.
If you like.
Excellent.
Please don't call me unless it's an emergency.
Cheshire Police Constabulary.
The hell?
Case Homicide. Date 3001 2020 0035. Collection Cheshire East CID repository. Item 1
times 2019 2020 travel diary pink with flowers significant blood damage UPC 2956 723676 case 3692 slash 20 serial number 9528 3674 collector David Collins So co
dash nine eight five four nine routing to northwest long-term evidence storage
scanned information reads travel diary of m Viola Locke. If found, please
return to 151 Lacey Green, Wilmslow, England, SK9 4BY or call 0787352, text obscured by
bloodstain and get a lovely smile as a reward. Tuesday 19th November 2019, 1430 ish. Stanley has really outdone
himself this time. Woke up 7.45 a.m. expecting a short walk around the green
before aerobics and instead he throws a new travel diary in my lap, that's you,
and tells me to pack a bag for somewhere cold this afternoon. Spent first half of
the morning packing, then second half
running around like a headless chicken looking for my passport. Thank goodness I renewed it.
Nearly missed the taxi after Stan had to rush back inside for the fourth time to check the oven was
off. And even then he still managed to forget his stick. I'll let him off this time though.
Feels a little ungrateful to get on his case when he's gone to all this trouble.
Besides, I'm fairly certain I left the immersion heater on.
Must remember to turn it off when we get back before he sees it or he'll pitch a fit.
Apologies for the handwriting, diary. In back of the taxi, on way to airport.
1515. Prague! The sly devil! I knew he was doing something up in the loft.
Probably digging through the old travel box. The soft old thing.
Pardon the crumbs, I'm just having a spot of tea and cake before the plane.
Note, call Sandra when we land. Get her to turn off the immersion.
7.30pm.
He's only gone and booked the Archibald. He's in the same room.
And you'll never guess, that dashing Tomas, who was serving the drinks with his funny
little jokes, he's the manager now.
I feel oddly proud of that.
I'll have to leave it there.
Absolutely shattered.
And we've got a big day tomorrow.
Note, must call Sandra first thing.
Wednesday, 20th November November 2019. 8pm. This is
the first chance I've had to write all day. Breakfast by the river, then up onto Charles
Bridge. Gorgeous as ever, but cold. Across to Old Town, past that wonderfully gothic
tower and fancy clock. Stopped for food. Stan ordered an early beer, but I let him off as he's been on grand form.
Stumbled on this hilarious sex museum on the way back. Stan was all blushing and averted eyes,
but I insisted we went in. Then it was back to the hotel to freshen up for a lovely seafood
dinner in Canberra. He's definitely keeping us away from Lover's Bridge. Probably wants to
reenact his proposal. I doubt he even could with his hip, but I suppose I'm happy to play along. He may be
a grumpy old fart, but he does love me. I hope our lock is still there. Could you
imagine? 50 years locked together. Goodness knows it stands a better chance
than most. That must have been the biggest padlock they sold at barely fit around the rails. Right, off to Nod. I always get morkish when I'm tired.
Note, must must must call Sandra in the morning. Thursday 21st November 2019.
Dempkinot, Svíat sváat se. Thursday, 24th December, 2020. I miss him. I'm all alone on Christmas, and it's my fault. Friday, 1st January, 2021. Happy New Year, Stan. Friday, 29th January, 2021. I never told you what happened, did I, Diary?
I just agreed with whatever they said had happened.
But I suppose I should write it down before I use the key.
It was raining when we went to Nakumpia.
It was cold, wet, and honestly, if Stan wasn't so set on going I would have
skipped it, can-a-versary or not. It turned out they'd cut all the locks off the bridge
years ago, so there was no sign we'd ever been there. I could tell Stan was disappointed,
but he still dropped to one knee. Silly kid. And, just as I expected, he got stuck. His hip always played up in the damp.
Thankfully, a local lad stepped in, but I could tell Stan was really upset.
This was supposed to be his grand gesture, and instead, he was filthy, I was shivering,
and the cafe wasn't even open yet. But you know Stan, when he gets a B in his bonnet,
there's no stopping him.
So he marches over to see when the cafe opens and starts faffing around checking the doors
even though he can see the closed sign.
A moment later he's calling me over.
He points down some narrow stone stairs that lead to the canal and at the bottom there's
a little sign with a picture of a lock, surrounded by the words, Zančené muzeum. My Czech isn't
what it was, but according to Stan it meant, the lock museum. Stan got all excited at this,
said he was going to buy another lock for the bridge, come hell or high water. I tried
to talk him out of it, but he was on a mission. It was only when we reached the bottom of the stairs that we noticed the squat man outside. He was soaking, worse even than us, and he didn't even seem
to care. Instead he sat on the museum step playing some game with a manky looking deck
of cards and somehow smoking a pipe despite the downpour. The scruffy doesn't begin
to describe it, his clothes were patched all over and the shapeless
floppy hat he wore barely covered his lank hair.
Stan was hesitant, we were out of sight of the road after all, but he put a brave face
on and pointed with his stick before speaking loudly and clearly.
Open?
The man blinked slowly, then gave a lazy nod. I wanted to get back to the road, but off Stan went, ducking under the heavy wooden
lintel, and I followed him.
It was dark and damp smelling inside, unsurprising really, given it was so close to the canal,
and the weak bulbs shed just enough light to see the tunnel led to a spiral staircase
leading downwards. I told Stan he
was going to break his neck, but he just limped on down them without a backwards glance. At
the base of the staircase was a colossal wooden door. There was a thick white key in place
of a knocker that had four spiky arrows pointing inwards at the handle end. I was rather proud
of myself for recognising the symbol of the Knights of Malta who supposedly
built the canal. Stan tried the door and it seemed locked tight. He turned to me then,
so crestfallen by this latest defeat that I couldn't help but take pity on him.
He clearly hadn't seen the key so I reached out and grabbed it myself.
It was clearly made from some sort of ivory, smooth and cold to the touch, colder even
than the stone of the tunnel itself.
I half worried it might be frozen in place, but it came away from the knocker easily and,
I swear, when I slid that key into the keyhole, I heard the lock grind open before I'd even
turned it.
Stan hurried inside with a satisfied grin and I followed. The room beyond
was large with damp stone walls interlaced with thick oak beams and a large millstone
in the centre. Lined around the walls were incongruously pristine dark and glossy wooden
plinths, each with a little pillow displaying a different lock. There were some simple,
modern looking padlocks near the entrance,
but walking around the millstone they grew older and stranger. Some were elaborate and
delicate with golden filigree, others were oversized gothic affairs of worked iron with
screaming faces and keyhole mouths. As I kept circling the room though they grew simpler,
until finally at the far end was a simple wooden bolt with what looked like a spiked wooden paddle beside it, stained
with something old and dark.
I turned to point this out to Stan only to find him still by the entrance, staring at
one of the more modern locks. I couldn't see how this had caught his eye given all
the other beautiful and grotesque exhibits, but as I drew nearer, I understood.
It was our lock. I don't know how it got there,
but I was certain. A closed padlock of thick steel with an engraving for the love of a lock.
That was Stanley's little joke. I'd always teased him about his surname even after it was mine as well.
I gently picked it up. It was ours after all, and it felt like the most natural thing in the world.
That was when everything changed. First the main door slammed shut with an echoing boom.
I cried out in surprise and Stan gave an angry yell. He rushed over and started tugging pointlessly
the iron ring handle, but it was locked again again and there was no keyhole on this side.
Instead there was writing carved deep into the back of the door.
I wrote it down at the time and have since looked it up. It means unlock your heart.
The door didn't shift despite Stan carrying on.
It was only when he finally stopped for breath
that I noticed a sound in the previously silent room.
Rushing water.
That was when I really got frightened.
Sounds silly, I know, but up to then,
I was still assuming it would all work out.
It would turn out the wind caught the door and we'd be let out, that somehow it was
all a mistake.
But the water, that scared me.
Filthy water was already pouring in under the door, and even as I watched it creeped
up the edges on each side, spurts of the same fetid liquid rapidly gushing in with terrible
force.
It was even seeping between
the wooden boards of the door itself, which began to groan under the strain.
We hurriedly backed away, our feet splashing through the already rising water, searching
for a way out. Looking around, I saw more pouring in from between the stones on all
sides, trickles thickening into gouts, and it wasn't long before it was lapping at
our knees.
Stan was yelling again, screaming for help, but there was no one to hear her besides me and whatever had locked us inside. As I was splashing around, my foot caught on something
heavy protruding from the floor. A bolt. Heavy iron against the floor covering what looked like
some sort of trap door. In a blind panic, I scrambled with my arms for the bolt,
straining my neck to keep my chin above the surface. My searching fingers finally found it,
and without thinking, slid it open. Suddenly the walls and floor were rushing up and away from me
as I fell, utterly terrified, certain I was going to drown down there, alone in the dark.
certain I was going to drown down there, alone in the dark. Instead, I landed hard, only a few feet down, with the stinking water rushing past me in a torrent, down and away through
a tunnel. I forced myself up till my shoulders just cleared the trapdoor. The water level
had lowered as it drained away down my tunnel, but it couldn't be long before it climbed
again, as ever more water streamed in, even from the darkness above now. I looked over at Stan. He had seen what happened, and for
a moment, he smiled, moving towards me. I try to remember that smile, the look on his
face when he thought everything was going to be okay. Then his foot slipped, his hip gave way and he fell. Hard. I heard his skull crack on
the wet millstone even over the roar of the water.
I still like to tell myself that was when he died, but I couldn't possibly have heard
him begging me for help. But the water was so strong, too strong. Every second I hesitated more was rushing through
the trapdoor, threatening to wash me away with it. Soon I wouldn't even be able to
close it. So I braced the trapdoor against my back and then heaved it upwards, thrusting
with my legs. I have no idea how my back held up under the strain, but I managed to force it closed, except the
bolt on the underside was weaker than the one on top. I knew it wouldn't hold on its
own, not unless… unless I locked it. So I did, using our lock.
Water was still pouring through all four sides of the trapdoor, but it was holding.
I didn't know how long for though, so then I ran,
forcing myself along the tunnel through the icy water with numb legs before it rose too high.
I know I couldn't have heard him calling for me, even if he was still alive, which he wasn't.
I couldn't have heard it over all the rushing water and through the sturdy wood of the trapdoor.
He wasn't calling for me.
But I heard him as I escaped down the tunnel.
I still hear him.
I don't remember much of the rescue. I was unconscious for most of it, but apparently
I was still screaming as they bundled me off to the Nah Frantishku hospital. It turns out
that the lad who helped Stan up earlier heard my screams coming up through a drain and called
for help. I'm still in contact with him. He's called Andre and has a beautiful little girl. Stan washed up two
days later on the bank of the Vultava. They wanted me to identify the body, but I didn't
recognize him. We made the news, you know. Two stupid British tourists mistake flood
relief tunnels for a tourist attraction. But I know it was real. I've still got the key. I
Wanted to throw it away so many times, but I just couldn't bring myself to
Horrible or not. I traded Stanley's life for it and it is so very beautiful
Even better it works. I
Haven't found a lock yet that it doesn't open. Doors, safe slot boxes.
I even tried it on a crack in the wall once, just to see what happened. It can open anything.
I've been thinking about using it on myself. I could push it into my chest,
give it the smallest turn,
and open up my heart.
Just reach in,
and pull out all the grief.
Perhaps I will.
After all,
what have I got to lose?
Either way,
I won't be missing you soon, Stanley.
So, how's sunlight treating you? You know, can't complain.
News to me.
Ha.
You know, can't complain. News to me.
Ha.
If I'm honest, I actually am struggling to get back on days.
I keep catching myself online at 2am.
Yeah, I noticed.
What can I say?
Insomnia's a bitch and it's not like anyone else is up then.
Nonsense! The night is full of creeps and weirdos.
You'd think I would fit right in.
Your words, not mine.
So, how's things your end? Sam still getting on okay? He's doing fine. Wow. I. Ah. Listen, Alice, while you're here, I've been meaning to talk to
you about something, er, serious. Yeah, I know what you're going to ask and no, salmon
pink really isn't working for you. You need something in rich pews. Alice, we've got to talk.
It's important.
Okay.
So, erm...
The thing is, the new job is...
It's not exactly...
Damn, I'm really sorry but I think I need to check this.
Hold on for two minutes.
Oh, yeah, sure.
To listen to your messages, press 1. You have one new message.
Alice it's Sam. I thought you should know. Celia and I are on our way to Paddington right
now. We're catching a train to Oxford. I think we need to stop the archivist thing from doing
whatever it's going to do at the Hilltop Center. I know you won't want
us to go. You'll just be like, it's stupid, it's reckless, you're an idiot.
Alice? Listen Teddy, I'm really sorry but I have a train to catch. A train? Right. No,
honestly Ted, I'm so sorry. It's really important. I mean I wouldn't rush off
like this. Sure, sure. I get it. Drop me a line later, yeah?
We can pick up where we left off.
Of course.
Great, cheers Teddy, look after yourself.
For God's sake Sam, pick up. Pick up, pick up, pick up. You useless sack of-
Hey.
What the hell do you think you're doing?
Okay, Alice, listen.
No, you listen. You're going to get off that train right now, otherwise I will come in
there and drag you off do you hear me
no I don't need a ticket I'm just grabbing my mate I can't let you pass
without a ticket you can buy one over at a ticket desk for God's sake
those are closing Alice I'll call you once we're in our seats or something no
Sam wait Sam damn it miss I'm going to have to ask you to step aside.
Listen mate, I just...
Miss...
Wait...
Do you see that? Who?
Seriously.
What? No, look! Look! On the train, there's...
Right, that's it. Sarah, can you show this woman out please?
No, no, wait, listen, I...
Fine, fine, forget it.
Pick up Sam, pick up.
It's on the train.
It's on the train! The Magnus Protocol is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill and licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike 4.0 International License.
The series is created by Jonathan Sims and Alexander Jane Ewell and directed by Alexander
Jane Ewell.
This episode was written by Alexander Jane. Newell and edited with additional materials
by Jonathan Sims, with vocal edits by Nico Vitesse, soundscaping by Meg McKellar and
mastering by Catherine Rinella, with music by Sam Jones.
It featured Billy Hindle as Alice Dyer, Shahan Hamza as Samar Makhalid, Anuja Battersby as
Gwen Bouchard, Laurie Ann Davis as Celia Ripley, Sarah Lambie as Lena Kelly, Kazim Tosin Amore
as Teddy Vaughan, with additional voices from Jonathan Simms.
The Magnus Protocol is produced by April Sumner, with executive producers Alexander J. Newell,
Danny McDonough, Lynn C and Samantha F. G. Hamilton, and associate producers Jordan L.
Hawke, Taylor Michaels, Nicole Perlman, C.T.S. DeRaven and Megan Nice.
To subscribe, view associated materials or join our Patreon, visit RustyQuill.com. Rate and review us online, tweet us at The Rusty Quill,
visit us on Facebook or email us at mail at RustyQuill.com.
Thanks for listening.