
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 3
A breakthrough in the case brings Brady Hitchcock one step closer to rescuing Abby Robbins and uncovering the identity of the elusive serial killer known as the Monster. But as he races to save the girl, time begins to run short, and his tenuous grip on reality finally slips away. Brady’s relentless pursuit leads him to the very heart of evil in a horrifying final confrontation, as the epic conclusion to one of the most terrifying podcasts of all time comes to an end.
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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 be warned there are those who
listen to this tale and never return.
Brace yourself dear audience as the
terrifying tendrils of terror twist
and twirl around your heart. This is
the conclusion of our spine-chilling
story guaranteed to shred your very
soul... I give to you, THE INFERNAL
CIRCLE OF ETERNAL RETURN.
SFX
(the sound of a tape
rewinding)
NARRATOR
9.35 am Port Perte Metro Police
Station. Brady tells Detective Lucas
that he's going to be busy this
morning and to follow up the
interviews by himself. Then he makes
his way into Captain Dodd's office
for their meeting. When it's finished
Brady heads back to the records room.
It's what he's been waiting for all
morning. Ever since he dragged that
poor kids body onto the boat last
night he can't stop thinking the same
thing. There's more victims of the
Monster out there. More kids, lost or
long forgotten, crying out to be
found from a watery grave. He picks
up the phone and starts calling other
jurisdictions, asking if they have
any cases involving victims with
similar mutilations or anonymous
calls to the station matching the
Monster's MO. He is met with a wall
of silence. Most of the detectives he
speaks to are too busy or indifferent
to take the time to share any of
their cases. The ones that did want
to help have nothing fitting the
Monster's profile. After three hours
Brady is ready to give up... until he
calls Shawcross PD. A sergeant there
tells him a teenage runaway named
Rachel Dunston was found two years
ago, dismembered and stowed in a
black garbage bag in a water tower
with her index finger missing.
Gooseflesh creeps up Brady's spine as
the Sergeant describes the murder. It
has to be the Monster. Brady asks to
speak to the investigating officers
on the case. He is told that only one
works at Shawcross PD now, Detective
Gus Croft but he has taken a personal
day to attend his sister's funeral
and won't be at the station till 9pm
this evening. Brady checks his watch.
It’s half past twelve. Shawcross is 9
hours drive from Port Perte.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
This is the break Brady's looking
for. He leaves a message for Gus
telling him he is driving up to meet
with him tonight, then he leaves the
precinct informing the duty sergeant
that if anyone needs him he is on the
road for the day.
NARRATOR
9.17 pm Shawcross Police Station.
Brady arrives at the station and is
escorted to Detective Croft's desk.
Gus Croft is in his early sixties. He
has slicked back thinning hair and a
droopy moustache that is flecked with
the remnants of his dinner. His nose
and cheeks are ruddy and swollen and
bumpy. He offers a broad smile and a
handshake as Brady sits down at his
desk.
GUS CROFT
How's the drive?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Long. Thanks for seeing me.
GUS CROFT
You must be beat. My partner's
getting herself some coffee, you
wanna cup?
NARRATOR
Brady could smell the waft of whiskey
coming from Gus Croft's cup and
readily agreed.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yeah sure, that'd be great.
NARRATOR
Gus Croft waves in the direction of
the kitchenette on the far side of
the bullpen and gets the attention of
a detective making coffee.
GUS CROFT
(speaking across the
room)
Kate? You mind grabbing our guest
here from Port Perte a cup while
you're up?
NARRATOR
Detective Kate Hazelwood smiles and
nods yes. She is exceptionally tall,
well over six feet, with white blonde
hair and blue eyes.
GUS CROFT
Well here's the Rachel Dunston file.
You know you didn't have to drive all
this way, I could have a copy mailed
to you and saved you the time.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I appreciate that Gus. But I need it
today. You mind giving me the broad
strokes?
NARRATOR
Brady opened the file and started
paging through. The photos of the
victim were eerily similar.
GUS CROFT
Rachel Dunston was reported missing
by her mother two years ago. She was
a troubled girl, sixteen years old,
came from a bad home. Both the mother
and step-father were alcoholics and
in and out of jail. She had a pretty
long record herself, two stints in
juvie, one for drugs, one for grand
theft auto. The initial investigation
listed her as a missing person but
the feeling round the station was
she'd picked up an run off. It wasn't
until the manager of the building she
used to live in got complaints about
a strange taste in the water that her
body was found.
NARRATOR
Detective Hazelwood comes back with
the coffee's and introduces herself.
Gus fishes a bottle of cheap whiskey
from the bottom draw in his desk and
offers to make their coffee's Irish.
Brady readily accepts while Detective
Hazlewood politely declines.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Go on, you were saying.
GUS CROFT
Well, the apartment building Rachel
Dunston lived in had an old water
tower on the roof. A few of the
residents had started complaining to
the super that their water tasted
funny and had a bad smell.
GUS CROFT (cont'd)
As you can see by the pictures she
was found stowed away at the bottom
of the tank.
NARRATOR
Brady pages through the pictures.
They were horrifying. The atrocities
committed on her poor little body
were beyond imagination.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I see her right index finger is
missing. Did you recover the digit or
receive any anonymous calls about the
abduction.
GUS CROFT
Nah. If the finger was left somewhere
we didn't find it. Then again, no one
was looking for it either. She was
missing for about three months before
she was found. Could be a pet or
vermin ran off with it, I dunno.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
And the calls?
KATE HAZELWOOD
There are no records of any calls to
the station or the family. Gus's
former partner was the lead on this
and he was pretty meticulous.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
So all of this was before your time?
KATE HAZELWOOD
Yeah. I transferred in eighteen
months ago from over in Hindley.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
You don't say. My partner's from
Hindley too. Maybe you know him,
Detective Lee Lucas?
KATE HAZELWOOD
Can't say that I do.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
You sure? Tall guy, mid-thirties,
tremendous pain in the ass? He
transferred to Port Perte about the
same time you came to Shawcross.
KATE HAZELWOOD
I worked in Hindley for ten years. I
never met anyone by that name.
NARRATOR
A strange feeling came over Brady. It
felt like he was watching a movie of
himself. He could feel the threads of
his sanity slipping through his
grasp.
GUS CROFT
My partner took this case pretty
personally. Rachel Dunston was one of
the kids at the 'at risk Program' he
ran for troubled teens...
NARRATOR
Brady felt numb. A high pitched noise
sounded in his ears. Joseph King was
a part of an 'at risk program' for
troubled teens. The Monsters first
two victims had records with the
police... someone he knew back in
Port Perte ran the same program for
at risk teens...
GUS CROFT
Anyway, we ended up arresting the
step-father for it. He always denied
it, but he had no alibi and a history
of domestic violence so it wasn't
hard to get a conviction. He got life
but only served two years. Hung
himself in his cell. Hope that helps
you.
NARRATOR
Brady could feel himself shaking. It
felt like he was in a vacuum.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(carefully)
What was your old partners name
again?
GUS CROFT
Mark Mason.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Have you got a photo of Mark at all?
GUS CROFT
Sure, I've got one around here
somewhere.
NARRATOR
Brady watched Gus fumble around in
his desk till he retrieved a small
wooden framed black and white
photo...
SFX
(dramatic music)
NARRATOR
It was of Gus Croft and Lee Lucas.
SFX
(dramatic music)
NARRATOR
The floor suddenly fell out from
beneath Brady’s feet. Lee Lucas is
Mark Mason. Lee Lucas is the Monster.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Excuse me a sec. I gotta go to the
bathroom.
NARRATOR
Brady races across the bullpen and
into the bathroom, kicking open the
first stall door and vomiting into
the toilet bowl. He throws up again,
his body in spasms as sick pours out
of his nose and his mouth as if he
was purging all of the horrors of the
case from his body. After what seems
like an eternity the nausea subsides
and he starts to cough and dry heave.
Spent, Brady falls to the floor
crying so hard his whole body
convulsed. How could he be so stupid?
The fucking Monster was right there
in front of his face the whole time
and he was too blind to see him.
NARRATOR
1.32 am Brady Hitchcock's car. Brady
grips the wheel tightly as his car
speeds south down the highway towards
Port Perte. It is raining hard, and
Brady struggles to keep the car in
its lane. He is so tired. Not just
sleepy, but exhausted. Exhausted by
this case, his fucking job, the
charges he is facing and the soul
crushing realization that his wife
and daughter will probably never
speak to him again. But most of all
he's exhausted by life. He didn’t
want it anymore. His life is a curse
and nothing more. Brady blinks away
the tears from his eyes. The highway
before him is a mess of bright
strobing lights, their elongated
trails streaking across his field of
vision.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Back at Shawcross P.D. bathroom it
had taken him almost twenty minutes
to pull himself together. When he had
finally stopped crying and gotten
control of himself, he washed his
face and popped two quaaludes to calm
his nerves. They had fucked him up
more than he was expecting. Brady
spent the next couple of hours trying
to find out as much as he could about
Detective Mark Mason. After a couple
more drinks Gus Croft had let him
into the records room and Brady was
able to access Mark's personnel file.
He was a decorated officer, a
favourite of the brass, who ran an at
risk youth program and had an almost
perfect arrest record. Apparently,
Mark Mason had retired early to care
for his elderly mother. That had come
as a surprise to the department who
had earmarked him for promotion.
There were no records of where he
moved to after he left the force.
When Brady dug a little deeper, he
found some sealed records from Mark's
childhood.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
He was orphaned at a young age, his
parents killed in an horrific murder
suicide, his mother shooting his
father then herself over an alleged
affair. Mark had witnessed the
killings and was found sitting with
the bodies, completely catatonic.
After a year in hospital he was made
a ward of the state and housed at the
infamous Christian orphanage,
Governors House. The school was
eventually closed down years later
after multiple allegations of
physical and sexual abuse by the
priests. He was adopted when he was
ten years old, although the name of
the family wasn't mentioned in the
records. In his file there was an old
and fade black and white picture of
Mark as a boy standing with his class
in front of the Governors House
entrance. Carved above the school
house doors were Three Monkeys. One
covering its eyes. One covering its
ears and one covering its mouth. See
no evil. Hear no evil. Speak no evil.
SFX
(foreboding music)
NARRATOR
Just like the Monster said on the
phone.
NARRATOR
In every case the Monster’s victims
had their eyes, ears and tongue
removed and then their eyelids, ear
canals and mouths sewn shut. It was
almost midnight by the time he left.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady speeds down the highway. Hours
pass. Everything is a blur, and the
road stretches off in front of him,
the sound of his own screaming
drowning out the hum of the highway.
Nothing seems real anymore. It's as
if he is sitting behind himself,
watching like a passenger as he
drives the car.
SFX
(foreboding music)
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Ever obsessed about a moment in time
and wished you could do it over again
and make it different?
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady gripped the steering wheel
tightly and shook his head as if to
clear it.
SFX
(sound of alarm
ringing)
NARRATOR
Brady Hitchcock woke as if still in a
dream. He opens his bloodshot eyes
and sits bolt upright in bed.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
The events of last night come
flooding back and he turns off his
alarm, gets out of bed and wakes the
sleeping woman in the bed beside him.
SFX
(alarm sound stops)
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Shelia? Shelia, you have to wake up.
NARRATOR
She rolls over and looks at him,
smiling at him with warm, dusty eyes.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
(sleepily)
Mmmm... good morning.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Hi. I'm sorry to do this but I have
to go. Something's come up, I have to
go into work.
NARRATOR
Sheila 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
I wish I could, I really do. But
we've just had a major break in the
murder case I'm investigating and I
have to go.
NARRATOR
Shelia Crawford smiles and gets out
of bed, grabbing her clothes and
dressing.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
(disappointed)
It's okay, I understand. I'm working
at the bar tonight but I don't start
till nine, I thought we could get
some dinner if you're not busy.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Dinner sounds great. But I don't know
how long I'm going to be tied up
today. Can we take a rain check,
maybe sometime next week?
NARRATOR
Shelia finishes getting dressed and
writes her phone number on a piece of
paper.
SHELIA CRAWFORD
You better call me.
NARRATOR
She kisses Brady on the lips and
presses the paper into his hands
before turning and walking out of the
bedroom.
SFX
(phone ringing)
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Hello?
Brady, is that you?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yeah Captain.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
(phone voice)
Jesus, you sound like shit.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I'm alright.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
(phone voice)
We gotta call, this is serious.
Another girl went missing last night,
looks like our killer's back again.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
The Monster? I'll be ready in
fifteen.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
(phone voice)
Lee Lucas is on his way to pick you
up.
NARRATOR
The phone clicks dead in his hand.
Just the sound of Lee Lucas's name
sent chills up Brady's spine. He has
to be careful. He has to play this
right. There was no point arresting
Lee Lucas till he finds out where
he's hiding the girl. That means that
he needs to make sure Lee Lucas
doesn't suspect that he knows a
thing.
NARRATOR
7.32 am, Detective Lee Lucas’s Sedan.
Brady Hitchcock lights a cigarette
and glances over at Lee Lucas from
the corner of his eye. The tension is
so thick, you could cut it with a
knife. The car fills with acrid blue
smoke and Lee Lucas coughs
uncomfortably.
LEE LUCAS
You mind opening your window Sarge?
NARRATOR
Brady rolls down the window a crack.
He has to figure out a way of getting
Lee Lucas to tell him where the girl
is hidden.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Where'd you say you grew up again?
LEE LUCAS
What's that Sarge?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I was asking where you grew up,
Hindley right?
LEE LUCAS
Yeah. Born and raised.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
You were on the force there weren't
you? Before you came here I mean.
LEE LUCAS
Six years as a patrol man. Then two
in narcotics before I transferred to
homicide.
NARRATOR
He was lying. That was how long he
served up in Shawcross, Brady read it
last night.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
You still got family there?
LEE LUCAS
They died years ago.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
So why'd you move here?
LEE LUCAS
Hindley is a sleepy little town.
Nothing much ever happened there. I
wanted a chance to work in a place
where I could do some good?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
So where are you living in now?
NARRATOR
Lee Lucas looks at him strangely.
LEE LUCAS
(cautiously)
I've got an apartment over in a new
development on Port Perte. Why all
the questions Sarge?
NARRATOR
Lee Lucas looks at him strangely and
Brady realizes he needs to back off
before he raises Lee Lucas's
suspicions.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(laughs)
No reason. Just making conversation.
LEE LUCAS
(cautiously)
Oh. Alright.
NARRATOR
Brady Hitchcock finishes his
cigarette and pitches it out the
window. Every fibre of his being
wants to grab Lee Lucas and beat him
till he gives up where he's hiding
the girl. But he can't risk it. If he
doesn't break and give up Abby's
location then Brady would have to
wait until tomorrow to try again.
There had to be some other way of
figuring this out.
NARRATOR
7.46 am, the EZ Mart. Brady Hitchcock
makes his way through the throng of
onlookers and calls over Officer
Dailey to talk.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Officer Dailey, can you bring me up
to speed.
NARRATOR
Brady goes through the same routine
with Officer Dailey as he does every
morning, as if on autopilot, all the
while watching Lee Lucas. When
Officer Dailey is finished Brady
walks over to where Steve Gilmore and
Dr Amanda Pyke are examining the
finger. Then the girls parents
arrive, her mother screaming
hysterically and Officer Dailey
interrupts telling Brady he needs to
head back to the station for the
meeting with Captain Dodd and the
State Police.
LEE LUCAS
I'll go take care of the parent’s
boss. You go see the Captain and I'll
meet you at the station later.
NARRATOR
Brady looks over at the smiling
detective. He couldn’t let Lee Lucas
out of his sight, not for a fucking
second, or he may never find Abby
Robbins alive.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
You know what, the Captain can wait.
Detective Lucas, you finish up here
with Dr Pyke. I’ll go bag the shoe
and speak with the parents, then
we'll drive to the station together
when I'm done.
NARRATOR
Detective Lucas shrugs and squats
down next to Dr Pyke, talking to her
about the finger.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady grabs an evidence bag from
Officer Dailey and crosses the
carpark quickly, bending down to pick
up the girl's shoe before the parents
notice it.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
He stops dead. There's something near
the shoe. Something he's never seen
before. A tiny, decorative white
pebble lying on the bitumen right
next to the shoe. It was the same
type of pebble that he found in
Joseph King's pocket when he fished
him out of Red Cliff Creek...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(whisper)
Oh shit.
NARRATOR
Brady looked back at Detective Moore
squatting next to Dr Pyke. Caught in
the tread of his sneakers were small,
white pebbles... the same kind of
pebbles that adorned the driveway at
108 Meadow Drive where that little
old lady lived.... the house just
down the road from where Abby
Robbins.
SFX
(dramatic music)
NARRATOR
It all made sense now. Doreen Hansen,
the woman with dementia they had
interviewed, she had called Lee
Lucas, Mark. She thought he was her
son... because he was her son. She
must have adopted him when he was a
boy. Lee Lucas must be hiding the
children he abducts at her house. And
the poor woman is so confused she
doesn't even know that there's
murderer in her house. Half the time
she probably wouldn’t even recognise
who he was when he was there. That's
why she thinks there are kids messing
around in her basement.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
But it’s been the Monster the whole
time, torturing and dismembering
these screaming children while she
watches the fucking Price is Right.
SFX
(dramatic music)
NARRATOR
But why hasn't he seen this before?
Then it hits him. Every morning at
the crime scene, Brady always sends
Lee Lucas to console the parents so
he doesn't have to deal with them.
The fucking prick must have noticed
the rock and hidden it when he was
bagging the shoe. The answer was
there, right in front of Brady the
entire time, just waiting to be
found. But he'd had been too blind to
see it.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
He bags the shoe and the pebble and
hands them to a uniform, then crosses
the carpark and speaks with the
girl’s parents.
SFX
(girls mother
crying)
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Mr and Mrs Robbins, I'm Sergeant
Brady Hitchcock. I want to assure you
that I'm going to find your daughter
alive.
NARRATOR
As Brady spoke, he glances back over
his shoulder at Lee Lucas. But he
isn’t talking to Dr Pyke or the
uniforms anymore. He's standing by
himself, watching Brady.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
A chill runs down Brady's spine.
Their eyes meet for the first time
and the Monster stares back at Brady
with cold, dead eyes.
NARRATOR
10.32 am Port Perte Metro Police
Station. The drive back to the
station is tense. Neither Brady nor
Lee Moore speak a word to each other.
Brady was always tense when he was
around Lee Lucas, the guy made his
skin crawl, but this was different.
He could feel that Lucas suspected
something. Had he seen him pick up
the pebble? Was it all the questions
he'd asked in the car? Something had
tipped him, but Brady didn’t know
what.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
When they arrive at the station Brady
attends the State Police briefing
then follows Captain Dodd into his
office for their meeting. But he
never takes his eyes off Lee Lucas,
not even for a second. When Brady is
finishes speaking to Dodd, he walks
out into the bullpen and calls
Detective Lucas over to speak to him.
LEE LUCAS
Look Sarge... some of the guys are
talking about your reassignment and I
just wanted to say how sorry I am.
NARRATOR
Lucas looks at him strangely as he
speaks, his eyes are flat and devoid
of feeling. It's as if inside he had
no emotions at all.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Guess word travels fast. Look, don't
worry about it. It's a long time
coming. Anyway, I've got a few things
to take care of before the meeting
with forensics at noon. You mind
doing these follow up door knock
interviews without me this morning?
NARRATOR
Lee Lucas smiles in relief but it
doesn't touch his eyes.
LEE LUCAS
No problem. I've got a couple of
other things I can look into.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Great. Let me know what you find.
I'll see you back to the station
later.
NARRATOR
Lee Lucas grabs his coat and his car
keys and heads off in the direction
of the carpark. As soon as he's out
of sight Brady signs out the keys for
one of the departments cars and runs
down to the motor pool. As he's
pulling out of the carpark he sees
his partners shitty brown Ford
peeling off down the street. Brady
follows, keeping at least a block
between them. The brown Ford drives
south for about ten blocks towards
Meadow Ave and the Ez Mart crime
scene then out of nowhere turns east
towards the Port. This puts Brady on
edge. What the fuck is he doing
heading towards Port Perte? Is this
his routine to make sure he isn't
followed or has he already seen Brady
following him? Even worse, has he
already killed Abby Robbins and was
driving around to find a place to
dump the body.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady considers calling it in for a
moment then realizes that it would do
no good. He has no evidence linking
Lee Lucas to the Monster. And if they
pull him over before he goes back to
where he's hiding the girl they might
never find her alive.
SFX
(sound of traffic)
NARRATOR
Up ahead, Lucas starts driving
faster, weaving through traffic. Then
he starts making erratic turns,
flying down side streets for a few
blocks before turning back onto the
main road.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady speeds up and tries to stay
with him, all the while doing his
best not to alert Lucas that he's
being tailed. The traffic becomes
heavier. As if on cue, Lucas suddenly
speeds through a yellow light and
turns south again. Brady floors the
accelerator and swerves out of
traffic, mounting the side walk in an
attempt to keep up with him. The
light turns red just as he flies
through the intersection and another
car broadsides him. Brady smashes his
head on the steering wheel and
everything goes dark.
NARRATOR
11.01 am Intersection on Vine and
Port Street. Brady wakes up groggily
to a crowd of people rubbernecking
around his car. Steams rises from
beneath his bonnet. His head pounds
and his neck is stiff. He feels like
he is in a dream.
BYSTANDER 1
Are you okay mister?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(confused)
What the fuck?
BYSTANDER 1
(concerned)
You were in an accident. Don't move.
An ambulance is on it's way.
NARRATOR
Brady looks around and tries to get
his bearings. His head is bleeding.
BYSTANDER 2
(angry)
You were driving like a maniac. You
could have killed someone.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(dazed)
How long was I out?
BYSTANDER 1
Few minutes.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(in frustration)
Fuck!
NARRATOR
Brady tries to turn over the engine.
It whines and chugs then dies.
SFX
(sound of car that
won't start)
BYSTANDER 2
(angry)
Hey what are you doing? You can't
leave the scene of an accident. The
police are coming.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I am the police. Move out of the way.
NARRATOR
Brady turns the ignition and the car
sputters to life. He drops the
vehicle into gear and speeds off
south towards Meadow Ave.
NARRATOR
11.25 am 108 Meadow Ave. Brady pulls
up outside Doreen Hansen's house and
gets out of the car, careful to close
the door softly. He looks up and down
the street. It's empty. Lucas's
shitty brown Ford is nowhere to be
seen. Brady draws his revolver and
starts towards the front of the
house. The white ornamental stones
crunch beneath his feet as he walks
slowly up the drive. He licks his
lips anxiously as he crosses the yard
towards the front stairs, mindful to
watch for movement in the windows.
They look dark and silent. A strong
wind gusts across the yard sending
brown leaves tumbling through the
grass and a chill running up his
spine. He mounts the stairs and
carefully walks to the top, one by
one by one, then crosses the porch
and listens at the front door. He can
hear muffled music. Voices maybe?
He's not too sure.
SFX
(soft muffled music)
NARRATOR
Carefully, his tries the door knob
but it's locked. He can't get in that
way. Maybe there's a way in round the
back he thinks to himself. Brady
grips his pistol tight and tries to
keep his focus. His head pounds and
his vision is blurry. Slowly he makes
his way around the side yard and
opens an tall mission brown wooden
gate. It squeaks loudly as it opens
and Brady freezes, listening intently
for any movement. But there's
nothing. Not even the dog. He
swallows hard over the lump of fear
in his throat and creeps slowly
around to the back yard, peering
around the side of the house.
The backyard is engulfed in a riot of
overgrown grass and weeds.
A swing set rusts in the back corner
near an old tumbledown breeze block
barbecue. Brady looks across the yard
again and checks for movement, then
starts slowly towards the back porch.
He can see the old ladies dog asleep,
laying beneath a picnic table on the
crumbling patio. He has to keep it
calm. If it starts barking Lee Lucas
will know he is here. Brady moves
closer to the sleeping dog.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(whispering)
Shh... who’s a good dog?
NARRATOR
The dog doesn't move. He steps closer
and reaches out his hand. Nothing. It
doesn't look up. It looks like it's
asleep. But it's not. The dog is
lying in a pool of blood, its head
cleaved open in a mess of fur and
brains.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(whispering & scared)
Jesus fucking Christ.
NARRATOR
Brady head snaps up and he nervously
looks around. He's alone. There's no
one in the yard. Ahead is a sliding
door that leads into the house.
He didn’t want to go in there. No one
would ever want to go in there. Brady
steeled his nerves and crept towards
the door; he can hear his heart
beating in his ears. His breathing is
shallow and ragged, and his hands are
shaking. His vision swirls before
him. He has to keep calm. He has to
hold it together. Brady tests the
sliding door and it opens. He takes a
deep breath then pulls back the drape
behind the open door and slips
inside.
(louder muffled music)
NARRATOR
Loud rock music and the stench of
death assault him. The kitchen beyond
looks empty. He cautiously steps
inside. Every countertop is filled
with garbage. Flies buzz around the
dirty plates that are stacked high in
the sink and on the kitchen table.
The faucet drips intermittently.
Brady takes another careful step
forward into the kitchen. Suddenly, a
rat jumps out from the filth and
scurries off into the shadows causing
Brady to jump and point his gun in
fright.
SFX
(rat squeak)
NARRATOR
His heart thunders and his hands
shake. The house is still except for
the muffled sound of rock music.
Brady can see soft, flickering light
coming from from the living room
ahead and he slowly crosses the
kitchen and slowly peers inside.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Most of the room is a waist high a
maze of junk and magazines. In the
middle of it all is a couch and a
television. Two figures sit on the
couch staring ahead blankly, the
white static of the dead channel
jumping and shifting like a strobe in
the darkness.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(threatening)
Police. Don't you fucking move.
NARRATOR
Brady points his revolver at the two
figures on the couch. Neither of them
move. They both sit motionless,
watching the snow on the screen. He
circles around slowly, gun trained at
their heads. They're not moving. They
look like dolls. Like life like...
Brady rounds the side of the couch.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
There are two dead bodies. One is
Doreen Hansen, her eyes open wide and
staring at the TV, her throat slashed
deeply from ear to ear. The figure
next to her is the mummified body of
a young girl, her blonde, curly hair
falling down over her shoulders. She
is dressed in a pink Victorian girls
dress, her skin is treated and the
colour of a brown leather bag. Her
eyes, mouth and ear canals are sewn
shut. Brady almost drops his gun and
does his best to stifle a scream.
SFX
(a stifled scream)
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(whispers in panic)
This can't be real... none of this is
real.
NARRATOR
It's like he is in a horror movie.
Like he's watching himself from the
audience at a cinema... he is in a
fucking house of horrors. Brady can
feel his sanity start to slip through
his fingers, all he wants to do is
run away. He needs a drink so badly.
But he has to find Abby before it's
too late. He did his best to pull
himself together.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(whispers)
Where the fuck could she be?
NARRATOR
Brady is quite for a moment,
listening to the house. The muffled
sound of music coming from
downstairs. That's where she is. The
old woman said she heard people in
her basement.
SFX
(loud music)
NARRATOR
Brady opens the door to the basement.
The music is deafening.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
There is no bulb in the fixture
overhead and the only light comes
from lounge room behind. It's almost
impossible to see. Brady grips
rickety railing tight and starts
down.
SFX
(steps groaning)
NARRATOR
The wooden steps groan underfoot
after every step and Brady keeps his
gun aimed towards the bottom, finger
poised over the trigger. It's cold
down here, damp. There's a feeling in
the air, impossible to describe,
almost as if the air itself is
stained by the fear and agony and
brutality that inhabited this place.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady reaches the bottom of the
stairs and slowly moves out into the
basement. Shadows criss-cross the
room. The ceiling above is in low,
almost claustrophobic, and it feels
as if the walls are pressing in on
every side. Within the basement's
shadows Brady can see dilapidated
furniture and rows of floor to
ceiling shelves crowded with jars and
toys and tools and junk. He moves
further into the basement, past the
rows of shelves. The light gets
brighter. His eyes are wide and panic
grips his heart... and then he sees
her.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
The basement opens out to a wide
room. Abby Robbins is cuffed by her
feet and hands to a ring on the
floor. Her mouth is gagged and
wrapped in duct tape. She is moaning
and struggling like a trapped animal.
Behind her is a small table with a
8mm projector. It is playing a film
on the wall in front of her. It is a
film of Joseph King being tortured.
Brady's heart starts pounding and he
runs to the girls side.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(whispers)
It's okay. I'm a police officer. I'm
here to help you.
ABBY ROBBINS
(moaning scared)
NARRATOR
Abby screams through her gag and
cowers like a frightened animal. Her
hands are covered in blood from where
her finger was bitten off, her wrists
and her ankles raw meat from trying
to get free. She looks at him and
he's sees the absolute terror in her
eyes.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
(softly)
It's alright. Please, let me help
you.
NARRATOR
He reaches out to try and touch her
gag and she flinches.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
It's alright. I'm not going to hurt
you. I'm gonna get you out of here I
promise.
NARRATOR
Brady tries again. This time she lets
him. But she keeps on screaming
behind the tape, her eyes wide and
terrified. Brady rips the tape down
and starts to pull out the rags she
has shoved into her mouth.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
It's okay. You're okay. I just need
to know where he is? Where's the man
who kidnapped you.
NARRATOR
Brady pulls the last of the rags from
the girls mouth and she gasps
desperately for air.
ABBY ROBBINS
(sobbing in terror)
He's right behind you.
NARRATOR
Her words send gooseflesh prickling
up his spine. He turns and suddenly
he cannot breath. From the shadows
the Monster steps into the light,
naked and insane, a knife in one
hand, a cleaver in the other.
THE MONSTER
(deranged and
terrifying voice)
Do you want to know what pain is?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Please Lee, let me help you. You
don’t wanna do this... you don’t
wanna hurt this girl, do you?
THE MONSTER
(screaming terrifying
voice)
YOU'LL ALL KNOW WHAT PAIN IS!!!
SFX
(all sound becomes slow motion
sounds)
NARRATOR
Time seems to have no meaning. Brady
feels as though he is watching
himself in the basement, like it's a
movie, like none of it is real. He
freezes. Fear courses through his
body. The Monster charges across the
basement. Everything is in slow
motion. The music. Abby's screams.
His own hands trying to raise his
gun. Brady can see who Lee Lucas is
for the first time, who Mark Mason
is. They're both disguises. The
Monster was hiding behind them the
entire time.
SFX
(3 gun shots)
NARRATOR
Gunshots ring out. The muzzle flash
of the revolver, one, two, three. The
Monster stops running as two gunshots
explode in his chest, then falls over
dead as the third hits him in the
forehead. He spasms on the floor and
gurgles before he dies.
SFX
(loud music and
screaming )
NARRATOR
Time speeds up again. Brady sits on
the basement floor cradling the
hysterical girl, the impossibly loud
rock music filling his ears. She was
safe, she was finally safe, and the
Monster couldn't hurt her anymore.
NARRATOR
2.10 pm 108 Meadow Avenue. Brady
stands next to Captain Dodd watching
as Abby Robbins in stretchered out of
the house. Her parents crowd around
her, doting, holding her hand,
telling her everything is going to be
alright. Brady smiles at this. It
might be the first time he's been
happy since his wife left him.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
You did good here today Brady. No one
would have figured that out. Not me,
not the State Police. Nobody.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yeah well, I got lucky.
NARRATOR
Captain Dodd smiles and shakes his
head.
CAPTAIN FRANK DODD
Look, I know you've had a tough
couple of weeks but with this arrest
I'm sure I can get you reinstated and
those charges dropped.
NARRATOR
Brady smiles and lights a cigarette.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
I appreciate everything you've done
for me Captain. I really do. But I'm
giving my notice and I'm gonna plead
guilty to the charges. I don't want
to be a cop anymore, I should have
figured that out a long time ago.
NARRATOR
3.45 pm Home of Heidi Hitchcock.
Brady parks outside his old house and
walks up to the door, knocking softly
and waiting for his wife to answer.
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
You stood me up today.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yeah, I'm sorry. I couldn't help it.
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
I saw you on the news. Are you okay?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yeah, I'm okay. Look, I don't want to
fight anymore...
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
(interrupting and
angry)
Brady this isn't up for discussion. I
want a divorce...
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Yeah, I know you do. I'm here to sign
the papers. Whatever you want.
HEIDI HITCHCOCK
Are you serious?
BRADY HITCHCOCK
You're right to be angry at me and
I'm sorry. But that's not going to
change what I've done to you or Ellie
or our family. I know that now. I
know I can never make that right or
get you both back. And I'm not asking
you to forgive me. I'm just asking
you to understand that I'm sorry. You
tell your lawyer to send through the
papers and I'll sign whatever they
are, I'll agree to whatever custody
arrangement you want. Truth is, I'm
going to go to jail for a long time.
We all know I was a shitty husband
and an even shitter father. So you
and Ellie should move on. Maybe one
day, if I'm lucky, Ellie will let me
be in her life again.
NARRATOR
Brady smiles and kisses Heidi on the
cheek.
BRADY HITCHCOCK
Just know that I never stopped loving
either of you. I was just too much of
a fuck up to realise how good I had
it.
NARRATOR
8.16 pm Brady Hitchcock's Apartment.
He sits on his couch, a bottle of
whiskey, and a loaded syringe on the
coffee table before him. It had been
a long day. After Brady had said
goodbye to his wife he drove to the
hospital and sat at John Bailey's
bedside. He was in a vegetative state
and would probably never wake up from
the beating Brady had given him. He
shouldn't have done that. He always
knew he was wrong. Brady had told
himself that the rage and the drugs
had taken over and made him do
something that he wouldn't normally
do. But that was a lie. The truth
was, he was an angry person. A
horrible man with no control over
himself or his emotions. But
admitting that didn't change
anything. John Bailey was still in
coma with a machine breathing for
him, no apology was going to fix
that. Brady had robbed John of the
chance of vindication and justice the
day he bashed him with a tyre iron
till he was almost dead. What made it
all the more tragic was his son was
about to turn himself in as the
driver in a couple of hours.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady takes a long drink from the
bottle and opens up the one photo
albums Heidi had given him in the
breakup. It was of a trip they took
with Heidi's sister to a lake. Ellie
was young in the pictures, no more
than four years old. He remembered
the day so clearly because there were
swans at the lake and they were
nesting. At one point one of the
birds had charged at Ellie when she
got to close to her eggs and Brady
had protected her. It was one of his
favourite memories. It always made
him feel like a great dad. But as he
pages through the pictures it doesn't
play out that way.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
There's shot after shot of him
drinking, of his wife and her sister
with Ellie and he's nowhere to be
seen. He starts to think that maybe
none of this ever even happened, that
he simply wasn't there, just a
delusion along with everything else.
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady ties his arm off and picks up
the needle. He lets himself dream for
a moment imagining himself back at
that lake. Was this eternal return?
When he saved Abby did he save
himself or was all of this just a
jumble of memories he could no longer
make sense of anymore. Was it all a
test that he needed to pass or was he
just simply losing his mind?
NARRATOR (cont'd)
Brady presses the needle into his
vein and gasps as he pushes down on
the stopper. A rush like a freight
train rumbles through in his heart.
He falls to the carpet. He gasps
once, then twice... Maybe he'll wake
up tomorrow and know the answer... or
maybe, just maybe, he'll never wake
up again.
SFX
(Theme Music Rises.)
BARON SORDOR
(evil laughter)
What a wonderful way to end such a
bizarre, brain bending tale. I trust
that you, my most valued audience,
have savoured this evenings
entertainment as much as I have.
Unfortunately this is where we must
part, but remember, we will open our
doors soon for another tale of
terror, horror and suspense. I bid
you all farewell, until the next
episode of Baron Sordor's Theatre of
the Doomed.