
Baron Sordor's Theatre of the Doomed
Baron Sordor's Theatre of the Doomed takes you back to a golden age when live radio plays ruled the airwaves and Orson Wells’ Mercury Theatre convinced an entire nation they were under attack by Martians. Paying homage to 1960’s classics like the Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits, The Theatre of the Doomed features performances from a bevy of incredible Australian actors as well as Jeff Martin from The Tea Party as Baron Sordor himself!
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Baron Sordor's Theatre of the Doomed
The Infernal Circle of Eternal Return Part 2
Brady Hitchcock struggles to maintain his sanity as he is drawn deeper and deeper down into the never-ending whirlpool of eternal return. His mind reels as he relives the same horrific day again and again, and no matter how hard he tries to try and change it, he simply cannot escape his hellish reality. But as hope fades and all seems lost, he realises that to save himself, he must first save young Abby Robbins from the terrifying grip of The Monster.
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BARON SORDOR'S THEATRE OF THE DOOMED
EPISODE 4: THE INFERNAL CIRCLE OF ETERNAL RETURN PART 2
Written by
Aaron Harvie
Copyright (c) 2024
RALPHUS
There’s an old, decrepit theatre down
the end of a dark, deserted alley. On
the thirteenth night of every month
Baron Sordor throws open his theatre
doors to the lucky few invited to see
the show. The crowd are slowly
ushered inside to take their seats,
whispering in nervous expectation.
Then the music starts to rise and the
red velvet curtains are drawn aside.
A dark figure strides to the edge of
the stage and the audience gasps in
nervous anticipation, because when
the clock strikes midnight, it’s time
for Baron Sordor’s Theatre of the
Doomed.
BARON SORDOR
Thank you dear Ralphus and good
evening honoured guests, I am your
host Baron Vladimir Sordor, welcome
to another night at the Theatre of
the Doomed.
BARON SORDOR (cont'd)
Tonight we bring you the conclusion
of one of the most brain bending and
tantalizing tales of all time, The
Infernal Circle of Eternal Return.
But before we continue dear friends,
I have been asked to warn anybody in
tonight's audience with an ailment of
the heart or nervous condition to
please leave now and listen no
further, for the horrors that await
are simply too much for those weak of
body and mind to endure. For those of
you not cursed with a cowardly
constitution I brace your self for a
tale of terror that will shred your
soul... I give to you, the conclusion
of THE INFERNAL CIRCLE OF ETERNAL
RETURN.
SCENE 13
SFX
(the sound of a tape
rewinding)
SFX (cont'd)
(sound of alarm
ringing)
NARRATOR
7.10 am, Brady Hitchcock’s Apartment.
Brady Hitchcock woke as if still in a
dream. He opens his bloodshot eyes
and peers blearily at the blaring
alarm clock on his bedside table.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(croaky voice)
Jesus fucking Christ.(groans). What
time is it?
NARRATOR
He reaches over and slams his hand
down hard on the top of the alarm.
SFX
(alarm sound stops)
NARRATOR
Brady lies in his bed letting the
sickly waves of his hangover wash
over him. He considers closing his
eyes and going back to sleep then
remembers he has to go to work.
Slowly, he sits up and swings his
legs over the side of the bed,
ignoring the ruin of his head
screaming in protest. His bedroom is
a disaster. The bedside and the floor
are littered with empty beer cans,
dirty clothes and a quarter-filled
bottle of whiskey. The remnants of an
8-ball of cocaine are spilled across
the top of his dresser. He tries to
stand up and feels his stomach lurch.
His alcoholic hands already shaking
for a drink. Brady reaches down and
grabs the bottle of whiskey, twisting
off the lid and chugging. It's not
till he's almost finished the bottle
that he notices the woman in the bed
beside him.
(MORE)
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady recognises her. She's the
barmaid from the Gemini.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
(sleepily)
Mmmm... good morning.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(in fear)
What the fuck is going? What are you
doing here?
NARRATOR
Brady leaps up from the bed, his eyes
wide and panicked, his brain
desperately trying to process the
insanity it is witnessing before him.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(panicked)
No, no, no, no, no... This can't be
happening. It's the same... you're
the same.
NARRATOR
Sheila ignores his rude tone and
stretches seductively across the bed,
letting the sheets slip down across
her naked body.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
(seductively)
It's so early. Why don't you come
back to bed?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Why are you here... again?
NARRATOR
Shelia Crawford's face crumples and
she sits up, pulling the sheets over
her naked chest.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
(upset and vulnerable)
What do you mean here again? What’s
with you?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Are you fucking with me? Is some kind
of a joke or something? What the fuck
are you doing in my house?
SHELIA CRAWFORD
(angry)
You fucking prick...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(panicked)
Last night, at the Gemini, you told
me... you told I was banned from the
bar, you said you never wanted to see
me again.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
No I didn't. I only met you for the
first time last night.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Last night?
SHELIA CRAWFORD
I just started working at my brothers
bar yesterday.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Friday.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
Are you high? Today's Friday. My
first shift was last night, Thursday
night.
NARRATOR
Sheila looks at Brady like he's out
of his mind and gets out of bed,
grabbing her clothes from the floor
and dressing quickly.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
No, you’re wrong. Today’s Saturday,
yesterday was Friday, look I can
prove it.
NARRATOR
Brady runs out from his bedroom out
to the lounge room. It's totally
different. He passed out on the couch
last night. He smashed the TV. But
the lounge room looked like last
night had never happened. The TV was
untouched and the ashtray where it
always was, overflowing in a sea of
beer cans on his coffee table.
(MORE)
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady feels his chest get tight and
he runs to the door and opens it,
grabbing the morning paper from out
front of his neighbours door.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(desperately to
himself)
There's got be be an explanation...
NARRATOR
Brady opens the paper and stops. It's
yesterday's paper. Friday the 4th of
June 1976. It can't be. He remembers
everything that happened yesterday.
How could he forget?
SHELIA CRAWFORD
Alright hon, I'm gonna go.
NARRATOR
Bray looks back at her, waiting to
see his friends or the guys from the
precinct jump out and start laughing
like this was all some kind of joke.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Are fucking with me?
NARRATOR
Sheila smiles politely and kisses him
on the cheek, squeezing past him and
starting down the hall.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
If I was you I'd drink some coffee or
something doll before you go to work
today. I'll see you around, alright?
NARRATOR
He stands in his doorway watching
Sheila disappear down the stairs.
Then, as if on cue, his phone starts
ringing.
SFX
(phone ringing)
NARRATOR
Brady's breath catches in his throat
and his heart seems to skip a beat.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(scared and timid
voice)
Hello?
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
(phone voice)
Brady, is that you?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yeah.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
Jesus, you sound like shit.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I'm... I'm okay.
NARRATOR
Brady's hands become clammy and he
starts to feel faint. This is all too
familiar.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
(phone voice)
(dubious) Yeah alright Brady, if you
say so. We gotta call, this is
serious. Another girl went missing
last night...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
The... (gulps) Monster.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
(phone voice)
Yeah that's right. All Metro officers
have been called in to help.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
So... does this mean I'm on active duty again?
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
(phone voice)
Active duty? Are fucking drunk or
something? You better be ready in
fifteen minutes or there'll be hell
to pay...
NARRATOR
Brady hangs up the phone and walks to
the kitchen, grabbing what's left of
a bottle of vodka from the freezer.
He closes his eyes and drinks till
he's almost sick. He repeats this
can't be real over and over and over
again in his head, hoping he will
open his eyes and see his TV smashed
and everything back the way it should
be. But when he opens his eyes it's
just the same. Like yesterday never
happened. He dresses like he is in a
trance, pulling on the first thing he
can find on the floor then cuts
himself two long lines of coke and
heads out the door.
SCENE 14
NARRATOR
7.35 am, Detective Lee Lucas’s Sedan.
Brady Hitchcock seems unusually quiet
as he gets into Detective Lucas's
shitty brown Ford.
LEE LUCAS
Morning Sergeant.
NARRATOR
Brady timidly nods hello, retrieves
his silver hip flask from his jacket
pocket and takes a swig. Lee Lucas
glances over at him and frowns
dissaprovingly but remains light
lipped, his eyes on the road. They
sit in silence for some time before
Brady turns to him and snaps.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
You too, huh?
LEE LUCAS
Mee too what?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
This has gotta be some kind of joke
or something? Did the guys at the
station put you up to this?
LEE LUCAS
I don't understand Sergeant, put me up to what?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
This. This whole fucking thing is a
joke isn’t it? It's got to be.
LEE LUCAS
What thing?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
We just did this yesterday.
LEE LUCAS
Did what?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
This. The whole fucking day. You came
and picked me up, we went to the
crime scene then I did a whole
fucking report to the state police.
LEE LUCAS
I don’t know what...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(interrupting angrily)
They found the fucking girl in a bag
in the river last night. You were
there with me, you were fucking right
there...
LEE LUCAS
No I wasn’t sergeant. We were
following up leads on the Kingston
homicide yesterday.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
No, that was Thursday, I'm talking
about yesterday. Friday.
LEE LUCAS
Today's Friday sir. Yesterday we got
a call about a boating accident... a
girl from the lakes was killed when
Jimmy Kingston ran his boat into a
bridge. You tried to beat him up in
the holding cell...
NARRATOR
Brady looks at him like he's losing
his mind. But Lee Lucas isn't lying.
He's telling the truth, Brady can see
the genuine confusion and earnestness
in his eyes. Nausea begins to radiate
from Brady's stomach and he feels his
body lurch, his equilibrium shifting
as if he was on a boat in rough seas.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady takes a deep breath and tries
to rationalize what is happening. Was
this some kind of drug induced
psychosis he was experiencing or
stress or a fucking tumour in his
brain? But how could he be losing his
grip on reality if he was aware of
it? Someone who's lost their mind
doesn't think their insane. It's just
the opposite. They think they're
perfectly normal. So how could he try
and rationalize what was happening to
him?
LEE LUCAS
Are you okay sergeant?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I don't think I know anymore.
SCENE 15
NARRATOR
7.52 am, the EZ Mart. Brady follows
Lee Lucas past the police line and
into the carpark. Police buzz around
him but he barely notices. He feels
like he is in a dream, his mind
reeling from the scene playing out in
front of him. Nothing seems real.
There was no explanation for what is
happening, no rational one anyway,
and as every moment that passes Brady
feels his grip on reality slip
further and further from his grasp.
LEE LUCAS
Alright, what have we got.
NARRATOR
Lee Lucas calls over Officer Dailey
and starts talking to him while Brady
stands there mute, staring at them
both with bug eyes.
OFFICER DAILEY
I think, that is, we think it could
be the Monster again.
NARRATOR
Detective Lucas glances back at Brady
waiting for him to say something.
After an uncomfortably long silence
Officer Dailey clears his throat
nervously and continues.
OFFICER DAILEY
There’s a severed finger over there
if you want to see?
LEE LUCAS
Sergeant? Do you want to have a look?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Uh, yeah, okay.
NARRATOR
Brady follows Detective Lucas and
Officer Dailey across the lot,
listening to them have the same
conversation he had the day before.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
When they reach the crime scene
photographer Steve Gilmore and Dr
Amanda Pyke they both look up and say
hello, engaging in the exact same
small talk they did the day before.
Everything is the same as it was
before. The girls severed finger is
curled up on the bitumen in a dried
puddle of blood, the fingernail
painted with glitter polish, the lone
red sneaker sits on the other side of
the lot. Brady nods and smiles
desperately trying not to scream or
throw up.
LEE LUCAS
Looks just like the others.
DR AMANDA PYKE
Injuries look consistent with the
other victims. Judging by the
lividity I'd say she was attacked
about 8 to 10 hours ago, which fits
the timeline.
NARRATOR
Just then Abby Robbins parents arrive
at the crime scene. The girls mother
is hysterical, her face a mess of
pain and tears and mascara. Her
husband tries his best to keep her
from collapsing on the street. Brady
watches them with his mouth agape,
his eyes so wide it looks like they
might fall right out of his head.
DR AMANDA PYKE
Brady, come see me around noon. I
should have a report for you then.
NARRATOR
Brady doesn't reply.
LEE LUCAS
Sergeant? Are you okay?
OFFICER DAILEY
(from across the
carpark)
Sergeant Hitchcock, sir.
NARRATOR
Brady looks up to see Officer Dailey
walking over and waving his arms to
get his attention.
OFFICER DAILEY
Sergeant, we just got word from
Captain Dodd over the radio. He needs
back at the station ASAP.
NARRATOR
Whatever is left of Brady's tenuous
grip on reality slips.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I... I... can’t do this.
OFFICER DAILEY
Sergeant Hitchcock sir, Captain Dodd
told me to tell you that the state
police are coming in for a briefing
at nine and if we weren’t there that
you should go find yourself another
job.
NARRATOR
Brady shakes his head and backs away,
panic gripping his chest like a vice.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I have to go... I can't be here
anymore. I need... I need borrow
someone’s car.
NARRATOR
Lee Lucas throws him his keys.
LEE LUCAS
Take my car, I'll take care of this
and meet you at the station later.
SCENE 16
NARRATOR
9.25 am. Home of Heidi Hitchcock.
Brady screeches to a halt in front of
his estranged wife’s house. He is
hyperventilating and in the grips of
a panic attack. He keeps mumbling to
himself, assuring himself that he's
okay. Brady notices blood on his
hands and when he releases his white
knuckle grip on the steering wheel he
realizes he was holding it so tight,
he'd split the webbing of his
fingers. He tries to calm himself but
he feels like a frightened animal.
Deep breaths. Deep breaths. Brady
drinks the rest of his flask then
snorts two huge lines off the
dashboard before he stumbles out of
the car and up the drive to the
house. He knocks on the door, then
listens for the familiar and
comforting sounds of her footsteps
coming down the hall. Heidi opens the
door with a smile... till she sees
Brady.
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
What are you doing here Brady?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Look... I just need to ask you
something.
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
(sniffs the air) Are you drunk?
You're fucking drunk aren't you?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I’m not drunk... I...
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
(through gritted
teeth)
You fucking piece of shit. How dare
you come to my house drunk.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Look baby, it’s not like that. I've
got a serious...
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
(cutting him off)
Don’t you ever call me baby you
fucking shit...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Stop... please... Look, I don’t want
to fight. I just want to as you
something. Do you remember yesterday?
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
Are you serious?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Do you remember us meeting at the
diner yesterday?
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
If this is some kind of trick...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
No, that's not it. Look, can I talk
to you Heidi? I'm mean really talk,
me and you without the baggage?
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
It's not even ten in the morning and
you're falling down drunk Brady.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I... I... think I’m having a
breakdown. Tell me straight okay, did
we meet yesterday and talk about the
divorce?
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
No, we didn't.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(desperately)
I think I’m losing my mind Heidi. I
don’t know who to talk to about this
but you. This all happened, this
entire day has already happened...
and I’m living it again.
NARRATOR
Tears well in Brady's eyes as he
looks at his wife, imploring her to
open her heart and understand what he
is trying to say.
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
(furious)
You piece of shit. I knew you were
fucking high. You think you can fuck
with me cause your police? My lawyer
said I can get a restraining order
against you... he said you’ll never
see Ellie again!
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(pleading)
Please, Heidi, please. You gotta help
me. I don't know what else to do. You
loved me once, didn’t you? Please...
I need...
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
(interrupting)
I don’t give a fuck what you need
Brady. I never loved you... you hear
me? Not ever.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(in tears)
Heidi please...
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
I don't want to see you again Brady,
I don't want you around Ellie
anymore, you hear me?
NARRATOR
Before Brady can answer Heidi screams
in frustration and slams the door in
Brady's face.
SFX
(door slamming)
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
(muffled)
You'll be hearing from my lawyer.
SCENE 17
NARRATOR
10.05 am Port Perte Metro Police
Station. Brady Hitchcock stumbles
into the station. He is drunk and
high, having finished a fifth of
whiskey out in the parking lot and
snorting what was left of his
cocaine. Everything is a blur, he can
barely keep his red raw eyes focused
in front of him. As he walks into the
bullpen the door to Captain Dodd's
office swings open and Police Chief
Greaves and Mayor Finn storm out. As
soon as he sees Brady, Mayor Finn and
comes over to chastise him.
MAYOR FINN
(angry)
There you are Sergeant. So nice of
you to join us.
NARRATOR
Brady steadies himself against the
desk beside him and nods
incoherently.
MAYOR FINN
(angry)
You were supposed to be here an hour
ago briefing us on the Monster case.
What the hell have you got to say for
yourself?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I'm sorry sir... I... was.
NARRATOR
Mayor Finn shakes his head in fury.
MAYOR FINN
This is your lead detective Captain
Dodd? A drunk. Look at him, he can
barely stand up. No wonder this case
is a fucking disaster. I should have
your badge Captain for allowing this
embarrassment to serve on our force.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
Look, this has been a hard morning
for all of us. I can assure you that
Sergeant Brady is an officer of
integrity.
NARRATOR
Whatever is left of Brady's rational
mind snaps. He lunges at Mayor Finn,
grabbing him by his lapel and
smashing his fist into his face,
breaking his nose in a spurt of snot
and blood. They tumble to the floor
and Brady pins him, smashing his fist
into his face in a crazed fury, then
grabs his head and slams it into the
floor again and again until it slaps
with a with thump. It takes four
officers to drag Brady off Mayor
Finn. Brady screams and fights like
an animal, screaming about how he is
losing his mind, how he is living the
same day over again.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
1.51 pm Port Perte Remand Centre.
Brady sits in the cell, his eyes
locked on the floor. He mumbles to
himself every now and then, telling
himself that this isn't real, that
none of this is real. Just before a
quarter past two a guard ducks his
head in and tells Brady that Mayor
Finn has died in surgery.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
4.22pm Port Perte Municipal Court.
Brady is led into court to be
arraigned. His lawyer tells him not
to say anything, that he'll come see
him Monday morning to discuss his
defence. Before the judge says
anything Brady starts screaming
hysterically, insisting he knows where
the Abby Robbins is going to be
dumped. It takes three officers to
restrain him and the judge orders
Brady to held without bail.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
8.48pm Port Perte County Jail. Brady
Hitchcock is led into the protected
wing of the lock up and takes a seat
on the furthest bench away from
informants and low lives. He ignores
the drone of the TV and says no to
dinner, curling up on the bench and
crying until sleep finally takes him.
SCENE 18
SFX
(the sound of a tape rewinding)
SFX (cont'd)
(sound of alarm ringing)
NARRATOR
7.10 am, Brady Hitchcock’s Apartment.
Brady Hitchcock woke as if still in a
dream. He opens his bloodshot eyes
and peers blearily at the blaring
alarm clock on his bedside table.
His booze soaked, drug addled mind
kicks into gear and he sits up,
expecting to be in jail. But he's
not. He's laying in his bedroom,
hungover, the barmaid sleeping beside
him. Brady starts screaming
hysterically and the woman beside him
wakes and jumps back against the
headboard, as if trying to escape
from some unseen attacker.
SFX
(hysterical screaming)
SHELIA CRAWFORD
(scared)
What's happening? Are you okay?
NARRATOR
Sheila scrambles from the bed,
pulling the bedclothes across her
chest. Brady curls up into a ball and
starts rocking on the bed in a foetal
position.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
Jesus, are you overdosing? Have you
taken something?
NARRATOR
Brady's eyes roll back in his head
and he starts moaning as if in agony.
Sheila looks at the naked man, then
casts her eyes across the room. The
empty bottles. The coke on the
dresser. She dresses quickly and
grabs the phone.
EMERGENCY OPERATOR
(phone voice)
Please state the nature of your
emergency.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
Shit... uh, yeah, I need an ambulance.
EMERGENCY OPERATOR
(phone voice)
Slow down miss. It's alright. Take a
deep breath.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
Fuck you... he's fucking
overdosing... please...
EMERGENCY OPERATOR
(phone voice)
What is your location?
SHELIA CRAWFORD
Sheila looks around frantically. She
grabs his pants from the floor then
jacket, tearing at his pockets till
she finds his wallet.
SHELIA CRAWFORD (cont'd)
Yeah okay... it's apartment 213, 924
North 25th Street.
NARRATOR
She sees his police shield and backs
away, dropping the phone before
running out of the apartment.
EMERGENCY OPERATOR
(phone voice)
Hello? Are you there? Miss? Are you
there?
NARRATOR
8.32 am 924 North 25th Street.
Emergency vehicles fill the street in
front of the apartment block.
Detective Lee Lucas helps guide a
stretcher towards the ambulance
parked out front. Brady Hitchcock is
strapped to the gurney catatonic and
drooling. Captain Dodd stands
solemnly nearby, his face a mask of
stoic sadness. They watch as Brady is
loaded into the ambulance.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
When the doors close Lucas turns to
his Captain and says he’s amazed that
Sergeant Hitchcock lasted as long as
he did with all the drugs he was
taking. The Captain nods sadly and
says that the state mental
institution will give Brady the help
he needs.
SCENE 19
SFX
(Montage of rewinding
tape, back and forward)
NARRATOR
Brady Hitchcock's life is like a
dream. He wakes the next day and
doesn’t even get out of bed. He does
the same thing the next day and the
day after that. Every day his
depression grows and grows and every
day he is discovered catatonic in bed
and shipped to the state mental
institution. Days become weeks...
Brady's rejects reality and hides
from the world around him. Time knows
no bounds like his own melancholy.
But one day, the pile of his own self
pity finally teeters and falls and
Brady pulls himself out of bed. He
gazes into the abyss of his soul and
what gazes back is twisted and angry
and full of hate. He has never felt
so alone, so betrayed and forgotten,
and a homicidal desire to extract
some semblance of vengeance from the
indifference of the universe flares
brightly in his heart.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
At that moment something snaps inside
of Brady's head. He calmly crosses
the room and retrieves his gun from
its holster then shoots the barmaid
asleep in his bed till she is dead.
He feels nothing. Brady dresses
quickly, ignoring the phone and
heading downstairs to wait for his
partner. As soon as Lee Lucas arrives
he calmly walks over to the car,
shoots Detective Lucas in the face
before dumping his body on the side
of the road and driving off in his
car. He arrives at his old house, the
house where his ex-wife and daughter
live. Fifteen minutes later the three
of them are dead.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Each day that follows is filled with
atrocities, each worse than the next.
(MORE)
NARRATOR (cont'd)
The horror in Brady's mind knows no
limits but all the murders and mass
shootings and executions do not break
the infernal circle of eternal return
he his mind is trapped inside. Soon
he turns his anger inward, taking his
own life over and over and till one
day, without realizing why, he finds
himself here...
SCENE 20
SFX
(the sound of a tape rewinding)
NARRATOR
2.09 pm Offices of Dr Dawn Clearer
PhD. Brady walks into the
psychiatrists’ office and sits down.
He looks pale and drawn and he
fidgets nervously.
DR DAWN CLEARER
Well, I'm surprised to see you here
today. I didn't think you'd be
returning after our last session.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yeah, sorry about that.
DR DAWN CLEARER
It's your time Sergeant. What you get
out of these sessions is entirely up
to you.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Alright. And we can talk about
anything, right?
DR DAWN CLEARER
Of course.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Well, I don't know how to explain
this. I've been living the same day
over and over again.
DR DAWN CLEARER
Go on.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
It's like I'm trapped in a déjà vu,
but it's not one moment, it's an
entire day, the same day that keeps
repeating again and again. It's been
going on for so long... I feel so
alone, so trapped. Everything has
become meaningless. At first I
thought it was all the drugs, that I
was having some kind of psychosis or
some kind of breakdown but now...
I... I don't what's real anymore.
DR DAWN CLEARER
Exactly what drugs are you taking?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I drink. A lot.
DR DAWN CLEARER
How often?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Everyday.
DR DAWN CLEARER
Go on.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Whatever gets me through the day.
DR DAWN CLEARER
And why do you think you do this?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
To cope. You can't see what we see on
the job and then come home and play
happy families, at least I couldn't
anyway.
DR DAWN CLEARER
And are you coping now?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
No. I'm so lost right now. Can you
help me? I think I might be losing my
mind. Is there something you can do?
DR DAWN CLEARER
You said before you felt as if you
were living the same day over and
over again. Were you speaking
literally?
NARRATOR
Brady could see red flags waving in
Dr Clearer's eyes as she leant
forward and waited for his answer. He
chose his next words carefully, ever
mindful of being carted off to the
State Hospital again.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(cautiously)
No... but what's the difference?
I take coke, quaaludes, smack...
DR DAWN CLEARER
Well, if I thought you were speaking
literally it would have cause for
concern. That type of delusion is
very serious and could be a symptom
of a much larger problem like DPRD,
depersonalization-derealization
disorder. But that is very rare. What
you seem to be describing to me is
some type of existential crisis.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
What does that mean?
DR DAWN CLEARER
The human mind has many ways of
dealing with stress. An existential
crisis is the feeling of unease
experienced by an individual when
contemplating the very meaning of
their life or the choices and
freedoms within it. What is the
meaning of life? Am I insignificant
in the face of an infinite universe?
To put it simply, this anxiety can
cause people to feel that their life
is inherently pointless. With the
breakdown of your marriage and the
possibility of not only losing your
job but also facing criminal charges
and incarceration it is not all that
surprising you feel as if your life
is falling apart, that you have no
control anymore. Dr Irving Yalom
identifies what he calls the four
ultimate concerns of life which are-
death, freedom, isolation, and
meaninglessness. It is not uncommon
for somebody confronted with one or
more of these concerns to experience
problems with addiction and
depression as well as anti-social and
compulsive behaviour. When things
change dramatically in your work life
or in relationships, especially when
dealing with feelings of loss, people
may relive or even mourn significant
moments in their life, regretting
decisions they've made and ultimately
where that has led them.
DR DAWN CLEARER (cont'd)
You know Friedrich Nietzsche spoke of
Eternal Recurrence, he said that said
we are all destined to live the same
life over and over again without
change or control of its outcome.
NARRATOR
Brady looks up at Dr Clearer in
complete shock, as if she had just
looked right inside of his mind and
witnessed what had been happening for
these past days, weeks and months.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Right there, that's what's happening
to me. What you said just then...
Eternal Recurrence. What does that
mean?
DR DAWN CLEARER
Eternal Recurrence or eternal return
as it is sometimes known, frames
existence in terms of endlessly
repeating cycles. Put simply, time is
a circle, it repeats itself in an
infinite loop, and the same events
will continue to occur in exactly the
same way, over and over again, for
eternity. How literally you want to
interpret that is up to you, but I
must warn you, this is a
philosophical principle, a thought
experiment at best, rather than an
actual psychological condition
Sergeant.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Can someone actually experience this
and be conscience of it?
DR DAWN CLEARER
Well, we are all at the mercy of
ever-shifting perspectives Sergeant.
The truth is that as a cosmological
principle, it is not clear to what
extent, if at all, that even
Nietzsche believed in the truth of
it. But there was a famous Russian
esotericist by the name of P. D.
Ouspensky who did.
DR DAWN CLEARER (cont'd)
As a child, he was prone to vivid
sensations of déjà vu and when he
grew older and encountered the theory
of eternal return in the writings of
Nietzsche, it occurred to him that
this was a possible explanation for
his experiences.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Go on.
DR DAWN CLEARER
He wrote a book about man who
convinces a magician to send him back
to his childhood and give him the
chance to live his life over again.
The magician agrees, but warns him
that he will be unable to correct any
of his mistakes. This turns out to be
true; and although he knows in
advance what the outcome of his
actions will be, he is unable to keep
himself from repeating them. In
despair he asks the magician whether
there is any way to change this. The
magician says there is, but that he
must first change himself or be
doomed to repeat the same mistakes
forever.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
How do you mean, change myself?
DR DAWN CLEARER
We must all look at ourselves and
understand how our actions both
effect and create the world the we
live in.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I think I understand.
DR DAWN CLEARER
I would like to remind you again
Sergeant that eternal return is a
philosophical theory not a clinical
condition. If you are actually
feeling like you are living the same
day over and over again then there is
some cause for concern. Symptoms of
DPRD coupled with what could be a
form of drug induced psychosis
require an immediate mental status
examination.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Thanks doc, I'm alright. You've
really given me a lot to think about.
NARRATOR
Brady smiles politely at Dr. Clearer
and gets up to leave. She looks at
him with great concern.
DR DAWN CLEARER
Sergeant Hitchcock, I cannot stress
this more clearly, if you are
suffering from feelings of alienation
and emotional disconnection as if
you're living in a movie or a dream
as well as experiencing distortions
in the perception of time and not
being able to differentiate the past
from the present I urge you to give
my office a call. In the meantime
I'll prepare a report for the
department.
NARRATOR
That afternoon Brady returns to his
apartment a changed man. What Dr
Clearer explained is a revelation. He
thinks about what his wife said to
him that day at that cafe... that
he'd never done a thing for anyone
but himself. She's right. He has to
change. But while the truth is
finally sinking in, Brady begins to
understand that no matter what he
does, he cannot change the shitty
things he’s already done in his life.
Not in one day. He he cannot change
what he's how he's treated his wife
or his daughter or the hundreds of
people he's fucked over in his life,
including the poor bastard in laying
in the ICU right now. No matter what
he does he's still probably going to
be dismissed from the force or
imprisoned for what he's done. All he
can do is reap what he has sewn. The
only thing he can change is what
happens today. He cannot save
himself, but he can try and save that
little girl.
SCENE 21
SFX
(sound of alarm ringing)
NARRATOR
7.10 am Brady Hitchcock’s Apartment.
Brady Hitchcock woke as if still in a
dream. He opens his bloodshot eyes
and peers blearily at the blaring
alarm clock on his bedside table.
The doctors words ring out through
the fog of his alcohol soaked brain.
Brady turns off the alarm and sits up
as the sickly waves of his hangover
wash over him. He politely asks the
barmaid to leave all the while trying
his best to avert his eyes from the
bottle of whiskey at his feet. He
breaks out in a cold sweat and starts
shaking, the alcohol withdrawals
almost too much for him to handle.
Then the phone rings. He listens to
the Captain's briefing then nausea
overcomes him and he runs to the
toilet and is violently ill. His mind
may want to change but his body
cannot, well not right away anyway.
The only way he can get through he
day is to keep on drinking. He too
far gone to quit cold turkey. Brady
drinks until his equilibrium returns
then dresses then meets Lucas out the
front of his apartment and heads to
the crime scene.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
11.02 am Port Perte Metro Police
Station. Brady goes through the
motions at the EZ Mart then heads
back to the station where he gives
his report and waits for the Captain
to call him in his office and give
him his ultimatum. When the Captain
is through Brady sends Lucas out to
follow up the door knock interviews
and decides to immerses himself in
the case files. For the next hour he
scours the reports, looking for
anything that might help break the
case.
(MORE)
NARRATOR (cont'd)
He knows the two witness statements
they have are useless, neither Howard
Granger at 48 Broad Street or Sharon
Brown at 22 Boulder Lane saw anything
worth following up. He knew this
because he'd interviewed them both
dozens of times. Even Sharon's
husband Daryl was a dead end. Then
Brady sees Officer Kember and Officer
Horton walk into the bullpen.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Hey, did you two do the door knock
interviews for Abbie Robbins case
this morning ?
OFFICER HORTON
Uh-huh.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Got a minute?
OFFICER KEMBER
Sure Sarge, what can we do for you?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
How'd they go?
OFFICER KEMBER
It was late, nobody saw a thing.
OFFICER HORTON
Didn't Detective Lucas give you our
report?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
He did, I looked through before. You
only got two statements. That's
pretty light.
NARRATOR
The officers look at each other
confused.
OFFICER KEMBER
Three Sarge.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
There's only two in the report.
OFFICER HORTON
No sir, we interviewed three people.
NARRATOR
The officers both get out their
notebooks and skim through till they
find the right page.
OFFICER HORTON
Howard Granger at 48 Broad Street.
Ummm, Sharon Brown, 22 Boulder Lane.
and Doreen Hanson 108 Meadow Ave.
NARRATOR
Brady opens the case file on his desk
and shows them their signed report.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Look. Doreen Hanson. She's not in
here. No record of the interview at
all.
NARRATOR
The officers look at the report, both
confused as to why the interview is
missing.
OFFICER HORTON
I don't know how that happened.
OFFICER KEMBER
Yeah Sarge, we definitely filed that
report.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Well, someone fucked up, didn't they?
Tell me who she is, what did she see.
OFFICER HORTON
Not too much. She lives alone, in her
late eighties, and seemed quite
confused. Dementia maybe. She was
convinced someone was running through
her yard last night.
NARRATOR
Brady grabs his coat from the back of
his chair and heads for the door.
OFFICER HORTON
Where you going Sarge?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Where do you think? To follow up
Doreen Hanson.
SCENE 22
NARRATOR
12.45 pm 108 Meadow Ave. The house on
Meadow avenue is two blocks down from
where Abby Robbins lives. It looks as
if it was recently abandoned, the
once well-maintained yard was now
neglected with overgrown garden beds
and the fall leaves left to rot on
the ground. Weeds poke up through the
ornamental white pebble drive and the
low hanging tress at the front of the
property cast long shadows across the
house. Brady gets out of his car and
walks up the drive, the soft crunch
of pebbles beneath his feet breaking
the eerie silence around the house. A
dog starts howling from out the back.
It sounds as if it was hungry or in
pain. There's an air about this
place, a feeling of neglect and
decay. A cold wind rises and the
leaves rustle and whisper as they
blow across the yard. Brady knocks
loudly at the front door and listens
for footsteps but the house is quiet.
He knocks again then walks over to
one of the front windows and peeks
inside. Shadows fall across the room
and it hard to make anything out. It
looks like the shape of a person on
the floor and he taps the window and
calls out loudly to see if they move,
but nothing. There's no one home.
Brady peeks in one more time before
heading back to his car. For some
reason goose flesh crawls up his
spine as he walks away from the
house.
SCENE 23
NARRATOR
8.08 pm Port Perte Metro Police
Station. After Brady left the home at
108 Meadow Ave he walked the route
from Abbie Robbins house to the crime
scene, trying to imagine the girl
walking down the dark suburban
street. When he reached the EZ Mart
he scoured the car park and
interviewed the manager again, before
door knocking every house within a
two block radius. But it was just
like the two officers said. No one
saw a thing.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
When he was finished with the door
knocks Brady headed over to the
library where he checked out several
books by Nietzsche and Ouspensky that
Dr Clearer had discussed with him
then returned to the station and
started reviewing the files in the
Monster case. Two murders. One
abduction. One mysterious phone call.
The two murder victims were Ellie
Rose 14 and Raynor Langton 12. They
lived in different neighbourhoods and
went to different schools. Neither
had anything in common with each
other or Abbie Robbins other than all
three have had been picked up by the
police for petty crimes. Perturbed by
his lack of progress Brady realizes
that evidence simply isn't there to
solve these cases or save Abbie
Robbins. In order to make a break in
the case he needs to figure out if
there was a third victim out there,
if the mysterious phone call they got
months ago was from the killer or
some shitbag teenager with too much
time on his hands. Brady waits for
the events of the evening to play
out, first helping Captain Dodd with
the State Police hand over then
getting told he's facing criminal
charges for the assault of John
Bailey. Brady waits till after the
Monster calls the station at 8.06 pm,
then asks to speak to the Captain
privately.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
Make it quick Brady. I don't really
have time for your bullshit right
now.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Look, I think I know where the killer
is going to dump the body.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
How the fuck could you possibly know that?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Call it a hunch. We need to have
surveillance set up at Orleigh Park,
tonight.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
You're full of shit.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I'd stake my badge on it.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
(laughs)
You're badge isn't worth anything
Brady. Besides, the State Police are
calling the shots now, it's outta my
hands.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Well... let me go then. Just let me
take a car on my own. Please Captain,
you said it yourself, I'm probably
facing criminal charges over the John
Bailey thing, they'll probably
suspend me next week. Let me help,
even if it's just for a little while
longer.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
(reluctantly)
Yeah alright. I'll tell Captain
Gibson I've got someone covering
Orleigh Park.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Thanks Captain. I appreciate it.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
But Brady... no more fuck ups. I
can't cover for you anymore.
SCENE 24
NARRATOR
8.32 pm Port Perte, Orleigh Park.
Brady sits alone in his car parked in
the lot across from Orleigh Park
where the body is going to be found.
He feels anxious, nervous even, and
his stomach twists in knots. The park
ahead is dark, bathed only in the
soft glow of the street lights that
run along the pathway on the waters
edge. It is cold and there is the
scent of saltwater in the air. Across
the bay he can see the bright lights
of the shipyards reflected on the
dark water. The park is all but
deserted. Brady waits and watches in
silence.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
9.58 pm Port Perte, Orleigh Park.
He leans forward in his seat as a
couple holding hands appears from the
shadows and makes their way along the
waters edge. Could this be it? Brady
grabs the binoculars from the
dashboard and peers closely at the
pair. They stop by the waters edge
and point into the bay. Brady's heart
sinks. He recognizes the couple. He's
seen them before. They're the ones
who discover the bag in the water. He
swears loudly and hits the steering
wheel in frustration. There’s more
than a hundred waterways feeding into
Port Perte. The killer could have
dumped the bag anywhere and at
anytime for the currents to carry it
right here. It's going to take a
miracle to figure out where the
killer dumped the body. Brady turns
over the ignition and revs the engine
before peeling out of the car park.
In the distance he can hear the
couple screaming.
SCENE 25
SFX
(the sound of a tape rewinding)
NARRATOR
7.33 am Detective Lee Lucas’s Sedan.
Brady gets into the car with an angry
grunt. He is still fuming about the
night before. He had returned home
after the debacle at Port Pert and
started drinking, then decided to
read the books he'd checked out of
the library. But the more he read,
the angrier and more frustrated he
became. Übermensch. The death of God.
The Will to Power. None of it made
any sense to him. Finally he threw
them out of his apartment window in a
fit of rage and smashed up the
apartment till the police arrived and
hauled him off to jail.
LEE LUCAS
Good morning Sergeant.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
We need to make a pit stop.
LEE LUCAS
Really, I mean do you think that's a
good idea? The Captain...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(interrupting)
We need to go to 108 Meadow Ave
before we head to the crime scene,
alright?
NARRATOR
Lee Lucas stares at Brady strangely.
LEE LUCAS
Why do you want to go there?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Cause it was missing from the goddamn
report.
LEE LUCAS
What report?
NARRATOR
Brady remembers that the report
hasn't been filed yet and backtracks,
noticing that Lee Lucas is still
staring at him intently and not
watching the road.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Eyes on the road. I gotta tip, alright?
LEE LUCAS
A tip, how the hell can you get a
tip? We haven't even been to the
crime scene yet.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Just trust me okay, we won't take long.
LEE LUCAS
I'm sorry, I can't do that sir,
Captain Dodd was very clear...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
We'll only be a few minutes, why do
you fucking care?
LEE LUCAS
I've got a job to do Sergeant.
Another girl’s gone missing...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(laughs & interrupts)
You honestly think that anything we do matters? I mean really matters? You think that us running around scraping murdered fucking children off the side walk is going to change anything?
LEE LUCAS
I do.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
All this shit, none of it means
anything. This world is a fucking
meat grinder. The same horrible shit
is gonna’ keep on happening whether
we’re there to clean it up or not.
LEE LUCAS
That's not true Sergeant.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Oh, you don’t believe me? Trust me
Lee, there’s always gonna be another
sick fuck out there. We can't save
everyone. Truth is, we can't save
anyone, no matter how hard we try.
NARRATOR
Jesus Christ can save you soul Sergeant...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Oh wow. Do you know how stupid you
sound right now? This life, it’s just
the same fucking thing over and over
again, all of us doomed to repeat the
same mistakes till the day we die.
Look at me for example, I have a
panoramic view of the circle shit I’m
trapped in, but still, no matter how
hard I try there's not one thing that
I can do to unfuck this shitty world
around me.
LEE LUCAS
So, you believe that you have no
choice, do you? That all of this is
meant to happen?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Again and again and again.
LEE LUCAS
I’m sorry sergeant but I’m a
Christian... I believe we have free
will, the choice to do right or
wrong. Jesus died for our sins...
remember that.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
That’s fucking hilarious. No one
chooses this. We're dragged into this
existence kicking and screaming over
and over again, the same messed up
bag of meat for eternity. Can’t you
see it? What, do you think I chose to
be who I am? Do you think I want to
be a middle-aged cop whose fucking
wife and kid won’t even speak to him
anymore? You think this is something
that I wanted to be?
LEE LUCAS
I choose who I am, because I believe
that I create my own destiny.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Then you’re a fucking idiot. It’s all
the same, every fucking day. None of
it matters, because we can’t change a
thing about it. No matter what we do,
no matter how hard we try were are
trapped in the same cycle of abuse,
over and over again.
LEE LUCAS
That’s a pretty pessimistic way to
look at the world.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Oh fuck you... at least I can see the
truth. You've still got your head up
your ass.
LEE LUCAS
You know sergeant, I feel sorry for
you. How can your soul be blessed if
it's doomed to return to misery? You
know, where I'm from...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(interrupting)
Oh yeah? And what bum fuck town is
that?
LEE LUCAS
I grew up in Hindley...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(interrupting)
Let me tell you something, there is
nothing, not in your heaven or in
this entire fucking universe that's
going to deliver me or you or even
that poor little girl from this
fucking hell here on earth. We're
trapped, like rats in a maze for
eternity. And there's nothing that
can save us. Now take me to 108
Meadow Ave... NOW!
SCENE 26
NARRATOR
7.47 am 108 Meadow Ave. Brady makes
his way up the drive to the front
door of the house with Lee Lucas
trailing somewhat reluctantly a few
steps behind. He looks to Brady as if
he's nervous about something. Fucking
kiss-ass, Brady thinks to himself.
He's probably worried about a uniform
seeing him here and telling the
Captain. Brady knocks on the door
loudly and the dog starts howling
again. He can hear movement in the
house. The door is suddenly answered
by an elderly lady in a stained
nightdress. She looks like a shut in,
behind her Brady can see a labyrinth
of furniture and junk and magazines
piled high almost to the roof. The
smell of mould and rot hits him
almost immediately and he has to stop
himself from gagging.
DOREEN HANSEN
What do you want?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Good morning. Are you Doreen Hansen?
NARRATOR
Her hair is white and thin and sticks
up at odd angles as if it has not
felt a brush for sometime. She seems
confused, angry even, and she stares
at Brady with a dull and vacant gaze.
DOREEN HANSEN
Who's asking?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Well ma'am, I'm Sergeant Hitchcock
from the Port Perte Police
Department.
DOREEN HANSEN
Is this about the dog? I told that
bitch next door that it's none of her
business.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
This isn't about the dog, I can assure you.
BRADY HITCHCOCK (cont'd)
I'm here to talk to you about what
you saw last night, the people you
reported running through your yard?
DOREEN HANSEN
How do you know about that?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
You reported it to some of our officers.
DOREEN HANSEN
I did? I don't remember that. Who's he?
NARRATOR
Doreen Hansen points at Lee Lucas who
is skulking on the porch behind
Brady.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
That's Detective Lucas ma'am. Can you
tell me what happened last night?
NARRATOR
She looks at Brady like someone who
needs glasses and is straining to see
the world.
DOREEN HANSEN
It's those kids. They come round here
you know, they come round here and
they and mess with my dog. They were
down there mucking around in my
basement.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Is there someone in your basement ma'am?
DOREEN HANSEN
There was.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Okay, well, did you see anyone last
night? Was someone in your yard or in
the basement?
NARRATOR
Doreen seems confused by the question
and looks over at Lee Lucas again.
DOREEN HANSEN
(suspicious)
Who's he?
NARRATOR
Brady smiles and tries his best to be patient.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
That's Detective Lucas. Ma'am if I could ask...
NARRATOR
She smiles broadly at Lee Lucas.
DOREEN HANSEN
No. You're Mark. You're my son.
NARRATOR
Lee Lucas smiles politely, confused.
LEE LUCAS
I'm sorry Mrs Hansen, ummm, you must
have me confused with someone else.
DOREEN HANSEN
Who's your friend Mark? Come on in
and I'll fix you both something to
eat.
NARRATOR
Brady glances back at Detective Lucas
who shrugs and looks utterly
perplexed.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Ma'am... if you could just focus for
a minute. We're here to talk to you
about the complaint you made to the
police.
NARRATOR
Doreen looks at both of them for a
moment as if it's the first time
she's seen them.
DOREEN HANSEN
Are you the police?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yes ma'am. You told one of our
officers about someone running
through your property last night
around 10 or 11 o'clock. Do you
remember that?
DOREEN HANSEN
They hate my dog you know.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Who? Who hates your dog?
DOREEN HANSEN
That bitch next door... she hates
him. She's always telling me she's
going to send the police. They were
in my yard last night. That bitch
called the police in my yard...
NARRATOR
Doreen trails off, then looks at Lee
Lucas again.
DOREEN HANSEN
Who's he?
NARRATOR
Brady smiles as best he can to
placate the old lady. It's obvious
this is another dead end.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Alright. Thanks so much for your
time, we have to go now.
NARRATOR
Brady turns to leave, then stops.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Ma'am can I ask you one more
question?
DOREEN HANSEN
About what?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Do you have any plans today? Is there
any reason you wont be home later?
DOREEN HANSEN
I haven't left this house since Mark
and I moved in. What's this all about
anyway? Who are you?
NARRATOR
The two detectives say goodbye
politely and leave while the old
woman stands at the door, watching
them suspiciously.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
All the while the dog howls miserably
from the back yard. They reach the
car and Lee Lucas jumps inside,
revving the engine.
LEE LUCAS
Well that was a complete waste of
time. Come on, we've gotta go.
NARRATOR
Brady looks back at the house. He
didn't know why but there was
something about this place that put
him on edge.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
You go. I've got somewhere else to be.
SCENE 27
NARRATOR
8.12 am Port Perte Metro Police
Station. Brady returns to the station
and makes his way to the records
room. Luckily the state police, Mayor
Finn and Chief Greaves haven't
arrived for their meeting yet, but
even so he makes sure to avoid the
attention of the detectives in the
bullpen. If he has any chance of
finding the Monster he needs a
breakthrough, something more than he
has. And the only way to find that is
to find the third victim.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
The records room is deathly quiet,
cold and smells of industrial
cleaner. The length and breadth of
the space is filled with floor to
ceiling shelves of folders and files
and lit from above by harsh
florescent lights. Brady starts
pulling files on missing children and
runaways from a week before the call
until now. He spends the next three
hours combing through papers till he
finds a runaway named Joseph King.
The boy was reported missing twelve
hours after the third suspected call
from the Monster. But for some reason
he was never even flagged as a
possible victim. That seems strange
to Brady and he takes a closer look
at the case. There isn't much there
and it's obvious that Joseph King's
disappearance wasn’t properly
investigated. But why? Two uniforms
conducted an preliminary interview
with the father but there was no
recorded follow up by a detective.
Nothing. Stranger still was that when
the case went cold it wasn't passed
onto major crimes and Joseph King was
never even officially listed as a
missing person. In fact, for some
strange reason, he'd been filed as a
runaway. None of it made sense. The
investigation didn't follow proper
procedure. It seemed as if someone
had tampered with the file
deliberately.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
There was only on way to figure out
what was going on, and that was to
speak to Joseph King's father.
SCENE 28
NARRATOR
2.25 pm Kings Salvage, Home of
missing boy Joseph King. The junk
yard is located in Red Cliffs Creek,
about 40 minutes from town, right on
the edge Port Perte jurisdiction.
It's pretty out here, lots of green
trees, blue skies and pristine
waterways. Brady parks his car out
front of the junk yard and makes his
way inside. It's a wire fenced lot
filled with stacks of old cars, scrap
metal, discarded furniture and junk.
Crickets sing loudly at the midday
sun. There's a shack near the front
entrance with a sign on the door that
reads "Trespassers will be shot,
Survivors will be shot again." Brady
knocks on the door and waits. The
boys father Neil greats him, a big
smile plastered across his face. He's
short and round with a blonde
receding hair, adult acne and the
long healed scar of a cleft lip.
NEIL KING
You looking for something?
NARRATOR
Brady introduces himself as police
and Neil King's demeanour sours
almost instantly.
NEIL KING
Look, I've had this same conversation
with every new cop that starts on
this beat. I don't deal in stolen
goods. Every one of my transactions
is logged and verified...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(interrupting)
I'm not that kind of police. I work
homicide. I want to talk about your
son, Joseph.
NARRATOR
Neil King's face crumbles and Brady
can see the endless torment he lives
within his eyes.
NEIL KING
(voice breaking as if
he's about to cry)
Homicide? It's been a while since we
heard from you guys. You got some
news on my boy?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Nothing new. I was hoping you could help me.
NEIL KING
Yeah of course, whatever you need.
The police came through here after
Joe first disappeared. I've been
trying to get someone to help to me
for weeks. Tell you the truth I'd
almost given up hope. The last thing
they told me was Joe was listed a
runaway.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yeah, well I'm sorry about that Mr King.
NEIL KING
You wanna come in, have a cup of
coffee or something?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Thanks, but we've already wasted
enough of your time. I want to talk
about the day Joe went missing.
NEIL KING
Yeah alright. It was a Saturday. Joe
was supposed to work with me here at
the yard but he wanted to go meet his
friends at the boathouse instead, a
whole group of them was gonna take
their boats out for the day, you
know, kids messing about on the
creek, that sort of thing. That's
nothing out of the ordinary mind you,
they did it all the time. Anyway he
left about half past nine, a quarter
to maybe. Old Rodd Bloodman from up
the road saw him walking past his
place just before ten. He never
arrived at the boathouse. I didn't
even know till after seven that
night. Even then I weren't worried. I
just thought he was out late.
NEIL KING (cont'd)
Wasn't till he hadn't come home past
ten I started calling around and
checking on him.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Why that late?
NEIL KING
Joe's always been a good kid. But he
was wild. A few months before he
disappeared he got into some trouble
with the law. Nothing major, just
kids stuff. He got caught with a
bunch of his friend’s spray painting
their names on a fence near the
school. The police arrested him, but
instead of juvie they put him into an
'at risk program'. That really
changed him, scared him straight. He
was different after that.
Responsible. He said he never wanted
to get in trouble with the police
again.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I'm sure you've been asked this but
did you see anything unusual before
Joe disappeared? Any strange
customers at the yard or phone calls?
Anything that struck you as out of
the ordinary?
NEIL KING
Nothing at all.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
All right. Thanks for your time Neil.
Here's my card, I'll be in touch.
NARRATOR
Brady shakes hands his card to Neil
King and turns to leave.
NEIL KING
Well I'll be, it's about time.
NARRATOR
Brady stops and turns back to Neil
King.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Everything okay Mr King?
NEIL KING
You're the detective who came out
here before aren't you? You spoke to
my wife a few weeks ago.
NARRATOR
Brady shakes his head confused.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
No, I think you're mistaken. I
haven't been out here before. Did a
detective come and interview your
wife Mr King?
NEIL KING
I was away at the time, a detective
named Brady Hitchcock came out and
spoke to my wife. He didn't leave a
card or nothing but he said he'd be
in contact. I called a few times but
I was told Brady Hitchcock wasn't
working the case. It was you wasn't
it?
NARRATOR
Time seemed to stand still for a
moment. How could this be? He'd never
been here before, well, not that he
could remember.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
No sir. It wasn't me.
NEIL KING
Well isn't that strange. Never heard
of a coincidence like that before.
Two detectives by the same name.
NARRATOR
Brady remains silent, his mind
reeling. There was no other Brady
Hitchcock.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Could I speak to your wife at all Mr King?
NEIL KING
She's driving up to her sister's
place. She should be there sometime
tomorrow if you wanna’ give her a
call. This has been awful hard on her.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
That's alright, Mr King. I'll be in touch.
SCENE 29
NARRATOR
3.37 pm Rodd Bloodman's house.
Brady walks back to his car almost as
if he's in a daze. What the fuck was
happening to him? Was he living this
day over and over again while living
other days at the same time without
even knowing? Was there multiple
versions of himself running around?
The thought of this makes him feel
sick. It's like lying in bed and
trying to comprehend your own
mortality or the endlessness of
universe. Nothing makes sense and he
feels small and insignificant. Brady
gets into his car and tries to calm
his nerves. He's breathing hard and
sweating. His hands are shaking.
"None of this is real" he whispers to
himself as he cuts a huge line of
cocaine on the dashboard an snorts
it. Two more and a deep drink from
his flask and Brady starts to feel
alright again. He turns over the
engine and drives up the road to Rodd
Bloodman's house, the last person to
see Joseph King alive.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Rodd Bloodman's property backs onto
Red Cliff Creek. The house looks like
it's seen better days, the exterior
is weather-beaten peeling paint
criss-crossed with curling fingers of
ivy. Rodd sits out the front on a
lawn chair drinking a beer, a mottled
mongrel of a dog at his feet. The old
man looks like his house, battered
and grey and about to fall down. As
Brady approaches the dog growls and
raises its hackles.
RODD BLOODMAN
Rex... down.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Rodd? I'm Sergeant Hitchcock. Mind if
I ask you a few questions?
RODD BLOODMAN
This about the King boy?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yeah it is. Why would you ask that?
RODD BLOODMAN
It's the only thing that's happened
round here the past 20 years.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Joe's dad Neil says you were the last
person to see him. He told me you saw
Joe walking past here the morning he
disappeared.
RODD BLOODMAN
I wasn't the last person to see him.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
How's that?
RODD BLOODMAN
Whoever killed that boy saw him after
me.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
How can you be so sure he's dead?
RODD BLOODMAN
14-year-old boys don't just up and
vanish into thin air now do they.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Kids runaway all the time.
RODD BLOODMAN
Not without packing a bag first. That
boy walked up the road and never came
back. He didn't have anything but the
shirt on his back. You see many
runaways like that?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
No sir I don't. Do you remember the
day Joe King went missing?
RODD BLOODMAN
I was sitting right here when he come
by. It was five to ten in the
morning.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
How do you know that? I mean that's a
pretty specific thing to remember.
RODD BLOODMAN
It was my birthday. My son came and
picked me up for lunch not five
minutes after.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Did your son see him too?
RODD BLOODMAN
No sir. As I said he arrived five
minutes after.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I don't suppose you saw anything else
unusual that day?
RODD BLOODMAN
No. I was out till about seven. But,
when I got home Rex here was making a
hell of a fuss about something round
the back of the house. I remember
cause I thought someone had broken
in. But when we checked we couldn't
find anything.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Alright. Mind if I take a look around?
RODD BLOODMAN
Be my guest.
NARRATOR
Brady walks around the house and
checks the tool shed, unsure of what
he's looking for or what he thinks
he'll find. There's nothing there but
cobwebs and the smell of old motor
oil. He can't stop thinking about
what Neil King told him, about the
other Brady Hitchcock, and the more
he thinks about it the more confused
he feels. The rear of the property
backs onto Red Cliffs Creek. Gnarled
and twisted trees grew along the
banks and in the murky water, their
branches heavy with thick curtains of
Spanish moss. Insects buzz around
Brady's face as he walks down to the
jetty, which is nothing more than
algae encrusted rotting wood with a
aluminium boat tied to the end.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
He walks out to the end of the
ramshackle pier and looks out to the
water, his mind a mess of cluttered
confusion. He is numb, everything is
distorted. He could feel himself
losing touch with what is real and
what isn't, he felt almost as if he
was watching himself, watching his
own thoughts. The water beyond is
blanketed in shadows. It looks more
like a marsh, the stream clogged with
the moss covered trunks of fallen
trees and thick vegetation. Without
even thinking he unties the boat and
steps aboard, pushing himself away
from the jetty and out into the
darkness.
SCENE 30
NARRATOR
4.16 pm Red Cliff Creek, behind the
property of Rodd Bloodman. The light
has changed and twilight is fast
approaching. Golden rays of sunlight
push their way through the thick
canopy of trees above. It is calm.
Frogs and toads croak from hidden
corners and the water murmurs softly
around the boat. Brady can hear his
own heartbeat in his ears. Nothing
seems real. He could not tell the
past from the present anymore.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
The boat drifts through the brackish
water. It's littered with garbage. A
half submerged body of an old rusted
car peeks up from the depths.
Discarded tyres and old plastic bags
clutter the exposed roots of the
trees. 'What am I doing out here?' he
asks himself out loud as looks across
the scum clogged water. There's
nothing out here, he thinks to
himself. This is another dead end,
another... before he can even finish
his thought something catches his
attention, something caught in a
slime covered log up ahead. There's a
mass of tangled refuse, a black
garbage bag with what looks like a
white branch poking out the top.
He guides the boat closer. It's not a
white branch. It is the femur bone of
a human. It is protruding from a
tattered black garbage bag. Brady's
heart starts beating like a drum and
he paddles over to the log, grabbing
hold of it's slimy exterior and
carefully pulling the bag up into the
boat. The sickly sweet smell of
decomposition rises up from the water
as he hauls the black garbage bag
into the boat and it splits open as
it hits the deck. A slime coated,
putrefied skeleton spills out, still
partially clothed in a black Led
Zeppelin t-shirt and blue jeans, the
same outfit Joe King was supposed to
be wearing the day he disappeared.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
The smell is overwhelming and Brady
buries his nose and mouth in the
crook of his elbow as he leans in to
examine the corpse. He notices saw
marks on the bones beneath the boys
head, as well as his arms and legs.
His right index finger is missing,
the bone jagged and broken as if it
was bitten off. Brady checks the boys
pockets for some form of ID. He finds
a wallet in his back jeans pocket. A
library card inside reads Joseph
King. There nothing else in his
pockets but a set of keys and a
handful of white pebbles. Brady
collects the paddle and slowly starts
back for shore. The's no doubt now
that Joseph King was the third victim
of the Monster.
EPILOGUE
BARON SORDOR (cont'd)(evil laughter)Oh my, my, my... Will Brady Hitchcocksave young Abby Robbins from herwatery grave or curse her to aneternal hell in the gruesome clutchesof the Monster? Only time will tell.While I'm sure you are eager tocontinue we must, for the moment atleast, say goodbye. So please join usnext time for the conclusion of TheInfernal Circle of Eternal Return atBaron Sordor's Theatre of the Doomed.