[CLICK]
[SOUND OF TELEPHONE BEING HANDLED – THREE KEYPRESSES, THEN IT RINGS]
OPERATOR
999, what’s your emergency?
ELIAS
Police, please.
OFFICER
Hello.
ELIAS
Yes, I’m calling to report a crime in progress.
OFFICER
Sir, are you in any immediate personal danger?
ELIAS
Ah, y-yes, not immediately, but I will be shortly.
OFFICER
Sir, where are you calling from? I need –
ELIAS
Could I speak to your Chief Inspector, please? Tell her Elias Bouchard is calling. Of the Magnus Institute.
OFFICER
Oh, er… Sure.
ELIAS
Thank you.
[SOUND OF PEN ON PAPER WHILST WAITING]
CHIEF
Chief Inspector Kaugery.
ELIAS
Ah, yes, er, good afternoon. Er, sorry to bother you. I believe you’re looking for Detective Alice Tonner?
CHIEF
Do you know where she is?
ELIAS
I do, yes. Er, she should be here in about fifteen minutes.
CHIEF
I’ll send some officers over immediately
ELIAS
That would be wonderful. Much appreciated.
[PUTS PHONE DOWN]
[FINISHES WRITING, COVERS PEN AND PLACES IT DOWN]
[STEADYING BREATH]
Statement of Barnabas Bennett, as given in a short letter to Jonah Magnus. April 9th, 1824.
ELIAS (STATEMENT)
My dear Jonah,
You must help me. If anyone is still here, it is you. I know your work brings you into contact with all sorts of fantastical terrors, so perhaps you might have it within your power to save me from this place. And it was you who warned me not to cross Mordechai Lukas. Advice that I have, I’m afraid, disregarded.
It was a small enough thing, as I believed. A trifling debt I fell behind on. And when he met me in that garden, quiet as it always is with him, he demanded repayment. Well, I took it poorly, and laughed at his insistence. “Bring it before the courts,” I told him. After all, what judge would find in his favour over mine? He simply regarded me silently for many minutes, staring with such a cast to his face that I could feel my resolution beginning to falter. “You shall pay me,” he said at last, “in kind.” Then he walked away.
Let me tell you, Jonah, I believed myself profoundly lucky that day as my hansom deposited me on the steps of my townhouse, a mood only slightly shaken by the impression that, as the cab pulled away, it seemed to have no driver that I could discern.
I am lucky, Jonah, but only insofar as that I never married. Never fathered children. Never let anyone get closer than my brother. The pangs of loneliness I feel are no more acute than my general longing for the company of my fellow man. I have no-one whose absence truly pains me.
And yet here, in this empty world, I cannot but spend these nights, these dreadful, silent nights, huddled and frozen in some terrible fear I find myself unable to name. I almost think I hear the mocking joy of my friends, but there is nobody here, and never shall be again. I try to read, to lose myself in something that is not the absence of humanity. How is it that the books speak to me of my isolation more acutely than the silence? For every treatise I read on this world and its workings, the more I know I am to spend my time left in it without comfort or reprieve. With every tale of love or society I feel more keenly the absence of both.
I went to Egypt once with the Royal Society, to the temple of Ramses the Second in Abu Simbel. The place was remarkable, of course, but what sticks so keenly in my mind is the journey. Two days earlier, on the road from Aswan, I found myself separated from my fellow travellers. I do not know how it happened, but I spent two hours alone there, under the blazing sun, staring across the vast empty expanses of that ancient country. I revelled in the silence, then, embraced the loneliness like an old friend. But now that friend has devoured me, and I shall not emerge from its jaws. Not without your help.
And you must help me, Jonah. If anyone knows of what might break me from this dreadful place, it is you. I know that what is done by those I cannot see might be felt here – I have found glasses broken and pages torn that were not so the night before. It is my hope that if I leave a letter here, in your institute, you might find it, you might be able to save me. I have no other hope.
Please, Jonah, if you have any compassion within your heart, you will not leave me in this place.
Your loyal servant,
Barnabas.
ELIAS
Jonah Magnus did leave him in that place, John. He got the letter, oh yes, and was on good terms with Mordechai Lukas. He could have interceded, perhaps even saved him, but he did not. And it was not out of malice, or because he lacked affection for Barnabas Bennett: he retrieved those bones sadly enough when the time came. Bones that you can still find in my office, if you know where to look. No, it was because he was curious. Because he had to know, to watch and see it all.
That’s what this place is, John, never forget it. You may believe yourself to have friends, to have confidantes, but in the end, all they are is something for you to watch, to know, and ultimately to discard. This, at least, Gertrude understood.
[SIGHS CONTENTEDLY]
Let us begin.
[FOOTSTEPS ECHO AND THE DOOR OPENS]
MARTIN
Uh, sorry to interrupt, er, J-John’s here! And he’s – well he’s – He seems – He seems angry.
Um, [splutters] I actually think he’s brought a coup-
DAISY
Bouchard.
BASIRA
Easy.
ARCHIVIST
Hello, Elias.
ELIAS
Goodness, John. Whatever happened to your hand? And your neck?
DAISY
[Satisfied smirk] That one was me.
ELIAS
You look a mess.
ARCHIVIST
[Chuckles] I’ve had a hell of a week.
ELIAS
Martin, would you be so good as to fetch Melanie and Tim. I think it would be worth their time to be here.
MARTIN
Er. R-Right. Okay. I’ll just… what, go then?
[FOOTSTEPS, THEN DOOR CLOSES]
DAISY
Okay. Let’s do this.
BASIRA
Er, John? Do you… You want to get this on tape?
ELIAS
No need, Basira. I’ve already got one running.
Now, you have something to ask me?
BASIRA
Go for it.
DAISY
Before I strangle the grinning bastard.
ARCHIVIST
Elias. Did you kill Gertrude Robinson? And Leitner?
ELIAS
[PLEASURED EXHALATION]
That’s… That’s quite nice, actually. Tingly… but sort of freeing. [Chuckle] You know, even Gertrude never properly tried to compel me. I always wondered –
BASIRA
Just answer the question.
DAISY
Or don’t.
ELIAS
Oh, no need to worry about that. I just feel it’s only fair to wait for your colleagues, John. They’ll want to hear this too. Uh, it’s also very important to me, in a personal capacity, that you understand I’m answering you of my own free will.
ARCHIVIST
[Angry] I don’t care!
ELIAS
I know, but I do. There’s so much of this place, of ourselves, twisted by forces far beyond us. I just wanted you to know –
[DOOR OPENS]
MARTIN
Uh, okay, okay, so I’ve got everyone, but I’m honestly kind of lost as to what’s happening.
TIM
[Speaking over Martin] Yeah, I…
Oh, Christ, what is it now?
MELANIE
Er, yeah, same question, please.
ARCHIVIST
[Snarling] Elias here is about to confess his crimes.
TIM
What?
MELANIE
Oh.
Good?
MARTIN
Is, is that like, er…
ELIAS
Yes, I was just saying to John. It’s very important to me you understand that no action I have taken has been controlled. I have done everything because I wished to.
DAISY
Get to the point.
ELIAS
[Sighs] Of course, Detective. So. For the avoidance of any doubt. I killed Gertrude Robinson because she intended to destroy the Archives. And I killed Jurgen Leitner because he was… an unnecessary complication. Likely to tell John too much, too early.
MELANIE
Bloody hell!
TIM
Oh, no.
MARTIN
So-So-S-Sorry, that guy was Jurgen Leitner?
ELIAS
It was.
BASIRA
Daisy, where do I know that name from?
DAISY
Oh, the Yousuf case. An Introduction to Higher Anatomy.
BASIRA
Ah… Oh, god! And you killed him? You sure we shouldn’t be giving him a medal?
ARCHIVIST
Very sure.
MARTIN
And Sasha? Did you kill her too?
ARCHIVIST
Sasha died almost a year ago, Martin.
MARTIN
Wh-What?
TIM
Oh, god.
ARCHIVIST
When Prentiss attacked, something else, it… it… it replaced her. I still don’t know how, but –
TIM
Goddamn it! This is… [dejected, exasperated sigh]
MARTIN
[Splutters incomprehensibly] It wasn’t… Sasha?
ELIAS
He’s right, Martin. The thing you remember as Sasha was nothing like her. It toyed with your memory. If I showed you a picture of the real Sasha now, you’d have no idea who it was.
MARTIN
So that thing we saw…?
ELIAS
Precisely. It finally tried to kill John. Then Leitner killed it. Then I killed Leitner. And I believe that brings us up to date. More or less.
ARCHIVIST
What about Michael?
ELIAS
What about him? An irritant. Interfering because he’s bored, and he resents us. He has no purpose –
DAISY
Right. That’s enough for me. Even got it on tape.
Everyone get back.
[SOUNDS OF CONSTERNATION AS DAISY DRAWS A GUN]
MARTIN
What?
BASIRA
Daisy, wait.
DAISY
Out the way.
MELANIE
Now hang, hang on, I thought you were about to arrest him.
DAISY
Get out the way!
MARTIN
John, do something!
[INTERCOM BUZZES AND ELIAS CHUCKLES]
DAISY
Don’t.
ELIAS
…
Excuse me.
[RINGING THAT CEASES UPON KEYPRESS]
Yes?
ROSIE (INTERCOM)
Elias, there are some police officers here to see you?
ELIAS
Ah, yes, thank you Rosie. Er, could you ask them to wait a minute or two?
ROSIE (INTERCOM)
Yep, will do.
ELIAS
There. That should make it even easier for you. Right, Detective? I know you were planning to kill me, but surely an arrest is a consolation prize?
[DAISY’S QUIVERING FRUSTRATION IS AUDIBLE]
BASIRA
Daisy?
ELIAS
Oh, didn’t she tell you why she hadn’t gone back to the station?
Allow me. She rightly suspected that I held evidence of various murders she had committed, and that I sent this to her superiors.
DAISY
…
ELIAS
She’s quite the killer, your partner. All in the public good, of course. And she was correct, I spent some time acquiring that evidence. Or creating it. And while your superiors don’t much care about the killings, the fact there is proof… They’re not happy. And they want you brought in.
DAISY
Heh. So I kill you, and go to jail. I’ll take that deal.
ELIAS
For someone who used to be a detective, you’re remarkably reluctant to think things through. You think you’re the only police officer eager to do violence and call it justice? No, there are plenty of other rabid dogs out there, mad with the hunt. And some of them have signed a Section 31. There are plenty of others your superiors can call on to clean up this mess.
BASIRA
Er… they wouldn’t.
DAISY
Yeah. They would.
ELIAS
And anyone close enough to be implicated. They will kill Basira.
MARTIN
Okay, wai-wai-wai-wait, that’s the police that you’re talking about! Okay, they… they wouldn’t…
Would they?
DAISY
I’m sorry, Basira.
BASIRA
Yeah.
ELIAS
If the officers down there take you away…
Oh, but perhaps I was wrong when I called them. Maybe it was a false alarm.
DAISY
What do you want?
ELIAS
Collateral.
[PAPER IS PUSHED ACROSS THE DESK]
DAISY
That… What?
ELIAS
A contract of employment. For Basira.
BASIRA
Uh?
MARTIN
What?
ARCHIVIST
Oh, no…
ELIAS
Sign it, and I’ll send your ex-colleagues on their way.
DAISY
Basira, I…
TIM
Don’t do it.
BASIRA
There.
ARCHIVIST
Oh damn it.
ELIAS
Hmm.
[PUSHES BUTTON]
False alarm, Rosie. Could you apologise to the officers for me, and thank them for their time.
ROSIE (INTERCOM)
Oh. Um. Alright…
DAISY
So… what, you’re her boss now? Is that supposed to stop me?
ELIAS
Yes.
MELANIE
Um, I mean, she’s still got a gun?
ELIAS
Ah, of course. Er, sometimes I forget how new you all are to this.
Basira is now tied to the Institute. All of you are. Like fingers on a hand. And I am the beating heart of it. Should I, or the Institute, be destroyed, you will all, unfortunately, follow suit.
MELANIE
Wait, what?
TIM
Yup, that sounds about right.
ELIAS
And it would not be a pleasant death.
DAISY
Bullshit!
ELIAS
Then shoot me. Just squeeze the trigger, and watch the only person you care about die screaming. Your last connection to humanity.
Do it.
BASIRA
Daisy…
[DAISY EXHALES, AND EVERYONE ELSE SIGHS AS SHE LOWERS THE GUN]
DAISY
What do you want?
ELIAS
The police are not the only ones who can find a use for your violence. I’m sure there’ll be plenty here for you to do. Feel free to go where you like in the meantime. I’ll be in touch.
DAISY
You piece of –
BASIRA
Daisy, it’s… it’s okay. We’ll figure something out.
MELANIE
This is insane!
TIM
You get used to it.
ELIAS
Now that’s taken care of, if you’ll all give me and John a moment alone. I’m sure we have some things to discuss.
DAISY
Yeah.
MARTIN
Come on.
[FOOTSTEPS AND DOOR CLOSES]
ARCHIVIST
So.
ELIAS
Come on, John, there’s really no need for the scowl.
ARCHIVIST
What do you want?
ELIAS
Honestly? To offer some congratulations. You’re doing a lot better than I expected.
ARCHIVIST
Feels like all I’ve managed to do is… not die.
ELIAS
And believe me, that is a remarkably rare skill.
ARCHIVIST
I’m not getting any answers out of this, am I?
ELIAS
The easily-digestible sort that wipe away any doubt and fear, and neatly organise your new world into happy little columns? No. Not from me.
These are things you must discover on your own.
ARCHIVIST
Why?
ELIAS
[Sighs] What are you?
ARCHIVIST
I… The Archivist.
ELIAS
Precisely. It is your job to chronicle these things, to experience them, whether first-hand or through the eyes of others. To simply be told, well…
ARCHIVIST
It doesn’t please your master?
ELIAS
Our master, John.
ARCHIVIST
[Emphatically] I never chose this.
ELIAS
You never wanted this, no. But I’m afraid you absolutely did choose it. In a hundred ways, at a hundred thresholds, you pressed on. You sought knowledge relentlessly, and you always chose to see. Our world is made of choices, John, and very rarely do we truly know what any of them mean, but we make them nonetheless.
ARCHIVIST
[Signs heavily] So what now?
ELIAS
You were doing fine before you forced this little scene. I suggest you continue.
ARCHIVIST
So it was you sending me statements.
ELIAS
A little bit of direction never hurt anybody. So to speak.
ARCHIVIST
[Chuckles] Directed towards what?
ELIAS
The Unknowing. I need you to stop it.
ARCHIVIST
Again with – What is “the Unknowing?” Exactly.
ELIAS
A ritual. The Stranger and its kin attempting to gather power enough to bring it closer.
ARCHIVIST
They’re trying to, what, summon it?
ELIAS
Not exactly. These things that touch us, they… don’t have a form of the sort that could exist in physical reality. So the Stranger wishes to remake that physical reality into something closer to itself. It wants to make this world its own.
ARCHIVIST
And how do I stop it?
ELIAS
That is what you need to find out.
ARCHIVIST
No. You are not doing that. I know you have Gertrude’s notes, her, her files. She was working on a way to stop this. Not to mention that apparently you can… effortlessly see anything at any time!
ELIAS
Hardly effortlessly, but I take your point.
ARCHIVIST
So you obviously know how to stop it. You could just tell me!
ELIAS
I could. But I believe that if I did so, you would fail. The Stranger is antithetical to us.
[THE ARCHIVIST SIGHS HEAVILY]
We thrive on ceaseless watching, on knowing too much. What we face is the hidden, the uncanny, and the unknown. If you are to stop them, you need to get better at seeing. And my explaining things is simply not enough.
ARCHIVIST
And you can’t just give me all of the statements?
ELIAS
John, even when you had them all at your disposal, you barely got through one statement a week. Why do you think that is? It takes its toll on you. And I know you’ve had problems with moderation.
ARCHIVIST
So it’s… it’s back to breadcrumbs, and statements, and risking my life talking to things that barely remember how to be human anymore?
ELIAS
For now. I’ll be in touch.
…
[RESUMES WRITING]
Anything else?
ARCHIVIST
Am I… Elias, am I still human?
ELIAS
John, what does human even mean? I mean, really? You still bleed, you can still die. And your will is still your own, mostly. That’s more than can be said for a lot of the ‘real’ humans out there.
…
You’re worried about ending up like that thing, lurking in the dirt under the streets of Alexandria? Don’t be. Just do what you need to, and you’ll be fine. Understood?
ARCHIVIST
I suppose so.
ELIAS
Good. Well, I have work to be getting on with. I’ll send you a Return to Work form, but don’t worry about the doctor’s note. Now, if there’s nothing else?
ARCHIVIST
Right.