Archive 81 (2022) s01e01 Episode Script
Mystery Signals
1
[woman.]
She's not here.
[frightened breathing.]
[static crackling on video tape.]
[woman whimpering.]
[breathing heavily.]
They took her.
[footsteps pounding.]
Jess, can you hear me? [panting.]
[recorder clicks.]
Please.
Please find me.
Please help.
[yelling.]
No! Get off me! - [man.]
You're gonna be fine.
- Get the fuck off me! [ominous theme music playing.]
- [car horns honking.]
- [jackhammer drilling.]
[man 2.]
I got tapes! Come get your tapes! Cassette tapes! I got tapes! Come get your tapes! Any one Any of those That's the one-dollar box.
Anything in there is one dollar.
The box too.
Want the box? That's a dollar too.
Tape Tape? [chuckles.]
I don't know what you need.
- Hey, what's going on, Dan? - Hey, man.
Picked these up at a storage-space auction last week.
You got first crack at these, man.
Unseen.
Ten bucks a pop.
You know last month you sold me 16 hours' worth of a T-ball tournament? Yeah? [laughs.]
Yeah.
But also, I sold you an uncut version of Phantasmagoria off channel 7.
That's unreleased and very rare.
I just think you need to get yourself a VCR so you know what you're selling.
Yeah, where's the fun in that? Look, five bucks a pop.
If they're shitty, I'll give you store credit.
Look, I know you love the hunt.
All right.
[sighs.]
All right.
My man.
[chuckles.]
Hey, Jill stopped by earlier, said to tell you hello.
- What, this morning? - Yeah.
She picked up some books from a haul last weekend.
Might be able to catch her if you, uh, head that way.
She's just going back to the shop.
You guys are still friendly, right? All right.
See you, man.
Hey, let me know what's on those.
I got tapes! VHS tapes! Cassette tapes! I got a couple of 16mm projectors coming in next week if you're still looking.
And we just got in two reels of Flash Gordon, 1940.
Good condition.
[Dan.]
I'll have the museum call you.
[melancholy organ music playing.]
[on phone.]
 Dan, it's Evie Crest.
The package should've arrived today.
The footage is in terrible shape.
Let me know if you can do anything with it.
[classical fanfare playing.]
[clangs.]
What is it? The Circle.
A horror anthology, 1958.
Sort of like a pre-Twilight Zone kind of thing.
- I've never heard of it.
- That's because it never aired.
William Crest died and all the tapes disappeared.
"Crest.
" Oh, um, that's that Robinson Crusoe guy, right? He made all those movies in the '30s with Brenda Joyce.
- I used to love those movies as a kid.
- Yeah, so did my dad.
Anyway, uh, two months ago, his daughter Evie found a box of tapes buried somewhere on his estate and now here we are.
- [woman 2.]
Ooh.
Some creepy shit.
- Mm.
[woman 2.]
Well, maybe the museum will issue a set and you can write the companion guide.
Get a little glory for all that talent.
I kind of just wanted to give Evie a little piece of her father back.
[musical sting.]
[woman 2.]
Oh, um - From Karen.
- What's this? No idea.
[mysterious music playing.]
Are you ready? [woman 3.]
That's what the little red light means, Mel.
[chuckles.]
Okay.
I'm Melody Pendras, doctoral candidate in sociocultural anthropology at NYU.
My upcoming research project will examine a small New York City community, residents of the Visser apartment building in the East Village, as individuals adapt to cultural shifts at the end of the 20th century.
[exhales.]
They'll talk to me, right? Oh God, no.
No, no, no, they'll spit gum in your hair and shove spiders under your door.
Yes, they'll talk to you.
Everybody talks to you.
It's Maybe I should come with you.
You know, for protection.
From what? I don't know.
Handsy old creeps, sewer rats, vampires.
What if you find a new best friend? [Melody.]
I won't.
Actually sounds pretty fucking boring.
No offense.
It's for my dissertation.
Fine.
Leave me.
I'm not going very far.
I'll be back before you can even miss me.
That's what Amelia Earhart said.
And - [laughs.]
No, she didn't.
- No.
[sighs.]
Wish me luck.
You don't need luck.
[rewinding sounds.]
[man 3.]
But in the middle of the park, there was nothing.
No radio.
No phonograph.
Only the music coming from seemingly nowhere.
The song they had once shared.
Edmond, are you out there? [crunching.]
[actress.]
Is that you? Could Edmond, a city park worker, have unintentionally crossed into another dimension? [ghostly music plays.]
I'm Mark Higgins.
This is Mystery Signals: True Tales of the Secret City.
[applause.]
[Mark.]
So, the guy's totally broke, okay? So he buys his girlfriend, uh, this vintage engagement ring from one of these junk shops on the Lower East Side.
Turns out, two days after he slides that fucking thing on her finger, this girl loses her shit, okay? She says that she's seeing a woman staring at her in the mirror.
What? Fucking what? The fucking ring is haunted, man.
Yeah, I don't believe that supernatural shit.
That's right.
I forgot.
You don't believe.
Mr.
Fucking Paranoid.
Mr.
Someone Might Be Watching Me.
Uh, yeah, I got an early day.
Sorry.
The museum doesn't open till noon.
There's no such thing as an early day.
- Next week, I promise.
- Hey.
Look, you you let me know if you're feeling low again, all right? Seriously.
No fucking bullshit this time.
You'll ask me for help? Yeah, I'll ask you for help.
Okay.
All right.
Don't fuck with me.
[Karen.]
Amazing work on the Hi8 footage, Dan.
Thanks for the quick turnaround.
Oh, sure thing.
You know, it didn't really seem like something the museum would be interested in.
It was a favor for a big donor.
He'd like you to come by his office today to thank you in person.
[elevator dings.]
[Virgil.]
Dan! Great to meet you.
Thanks for coming.
No problem.
Hey, Callie, can I, uh, get an Arnold Palmer? Bring one for Dan too.
Have a seat.
Okay.
Thanks for taking on our little project last night.
Karen said you were the best man around to bring back lost things, and she was right.
Well, she's my boss.
Yeah.
[chuckles.]
Right.
Yeah.
That's actually why I asked you to stop by, Dan.
I was wondering if you might like to change that, might like to come work for LMG.
Temporarily, of course.
Well, I don't Uh [ice clinking.]
Thank you.
Um What do you guys do exactly? Because I did a little research and You couldn't find anything.
Right.
Makes us even.
I couldn't find anything on you.
Well, uh, I like my privacy.
[Virgil.]
I respect that.
We like our privacy too.
Here's the thing, Dan.
We're looking for an artist.
Someone who can restore a recently acquired collection of damaged video tapes.
Well, what kind of damage? Fire damage.
Smoke, soot, water.
The fragment you digitized is part of the collection.
The fire at the Visser building, right? That's right.
In any case, the contents of the tapes would need to be kept confidential for legal purposes.
The fee would be a hundred thousand dollars.
- Wow.
- There's just one hitch.
Because the materials are so fragile they can't be moved.
So you'd be doing the work at our remote research facility in the Catskills.
It's beautiful up there.
Not a bad place to be all alone.
Right.
Uh Before you say no, Dan, here's why I think you're our guy.
Creating this archive, putting this puzzle together, finding out what happened at the Visser, it would mean the world to everyone who lost someone in that fire.
And I know you have a special understanding of a situation like that.
[suspenseful music playing.]
Sorry? You lost your family in a fire, isn't that right? And it seems you've spent your life trying to bring lost things back to people.
Sorry, I have to get back to work.
I'm sorry, Dan.
Truly, I didn't mean to I'm sorry for wasting your time.
Not at all, Dan.
Not not at all.
Let us know if you change your mind.
[Dan.]
How the fuck would he find out about my family? [Mark.]
Have you heard of the internet? Nope, it's not out there.
It's not public information.
I've looked.
[Mark.]
I'm kidding, okay? Look, come over.
I'll take you out for shitty Peking duck and vodka shots.
[Dan.]
Yeah, okay, I'll call you later.
[boy hums.]
[hums.]
[hums eerie melody.]
[piano note echoes.]
[metronome clicking.]
[sirens blare.]
[metronome clicking.]
[fire crackling.]
[gasps.]
[siren wails in distance.]
[mouse clicking.]
- That's what the little red light - ody Pendras.
No, no, no, they'll spit gum in your hair and [clicks.]
[clicking.]
[mysterious music playing.]
- [Mark.]
You think this is your dog? - [Dan.]
Yes.
Maybe.
Okay, why would a random, hot grad student be in a picture with your dog? I don't know.
"Melody Pendras.
" - One of the tenants who died in the fire? - Officially, no one died.
Thirteen bodies never recovered.
To me, that means they died.
I don't know.
I don't know, man.
I looked her up and I couldn't find anything about her.
I even paid for one of those people-finder sites.
And the only thing I found was a 98-year-old woman living in Orlando and some librarian who died of typhoid fever in, what, 1923? Is this about Jill? What? Because, if you want me to set you up, I can.
You know that.
Just say the word.
I mean, remember that cute barista who curates the anime festival? It's not about Jill.
I saved up three weeks of allowance to buy Cleo a red dog collar that looks just like this one.
I just I think you're seeing something you want to see.
Aren't you the guy that goes on stage and tells stories about demon sex cults and time-traveling and pirate radio stations from another dimension? Yes, but that's my podcast and this is real life.
Look, I did a little digging on LMG, I couldn't find any public information about them.
Okay? No logo, no media presence.
For all we know, they're building a Death Star.
You want to help this Davenport guy build a Death Star? Wouldn't you rather stay here, help with the Mystery Signals spin-off? And what about that show you've been fixing up, The Circle? You've been chasing that thing for fucking forever.
I have to take the job.
This picture's a sign.
- Of what? - I don't know.
You said I was seeing things I wanted to see? Maybe it's time I take a better look.
[suspenseful music playing.]
[Virgil.]
Beautiful country.
Yeah.
You and your family used to live in the Hudson River Valley down in Westchester County, am I right? Background check.
Your key to the kingdom.
[lock beeps, clicks.]
Rec room and living quarters are downstairs.
Little dated, but everything works.
Fridge and freezer are fully stocked.
Deliveries come once a week.
Anything you like, sky's the limit.
We bought this property in the late '80s to use as a research campus.
Mostly used for storage now.
And special projects like this one.
So, unlike the rec room, all the equipment and tools in here are state-of-the-art.
Unfortunately, we don't have internet out here yet and cell service is rather spotty, I'm afraid.
We got a landline.
Real dependable.
You're welcome to make as many calls as you like.
Let me show you the archive.
These are the tapes you'll be working with.
All the material recovered from the Visser Apartments after the 1994 fire.
This is the camera that was used to record the footage.
No reason you'll need it, but we thought it best to keep everything together.
Blank tapes and additional hard drives are in the equipment room.
Let us know if you need anything.
We'll get you everything you need.
Any questions? Good.
We really appreciate you taking on this job, Dan, sharing your talents with us.
Oh! One more thing.
What? You want to make sure I get my steps in? If you're ever in trouble, press the button.
We got medical professionals less than 20 minutes away.
That includes mental health too.
Like I said, Dan, we did a thorough background check.
We'd be negligent if we didn't.
Yeah, I don't know, maybe you might need a stool sample? Yeah? Or blood? Urine? I don't know, maybe you got a fucking Rorschach test in the back there for me.
- You got a clean bill of health, Dan.
- Right.
Yeah.
Your breakdown is in the rearview mirror as far as we're concerned.
I just want you to know that we're here for you should you need us.
Mm-hmm.
Cool.
- I'll leave you to it.
- Okay.
Good luck.
I'll be in touch.
[engine starts.]
[door slams.]
[intense music playing.]
[lock buzzes.]
Curiosity killed the cat.
[static crackling.]
I'm Melody Pendras.
It's March 11th, 1994, 10:32 a.
m.
This is day one of the oral history project on the Visser apartment building.
According to the New York Public Library archives, it was built in either 1932 or 1934, architect unknown.
Basically, it looks exactly like a million other buildings in the city.
Oh, that's okay.
Thanks.
It was built on the ruins of a mansion that burned down in the '20s.
This is strange detail for a building like this.
Same thing here.
[gasps.]
Are you Melody? That's me.
You coming in or not? Mailboxes, community room.
Sorry, elevator's out today.
- Do you mind if I keep filming? - Nah.
Mom used to make me do community theater when I was a kid.
So, is "John Smith" a stage name? What? Oh, nothing.
It's just one of those names that almost sound made-up, you know? I'll tell my mom you said so.
Bedroom through there, bathroom through there, kitchen.
Last tenant left some books and things.
If you don't want it, I can get someone from the church to come take it for a rummage sale.
It's fine.
I don't have much stuff of my own.
This is the key to the building.
This is a key to the front door.
Any questions? Do you know there's a woman named Julia Bennett who lives in the building? Or lived? Can't tell you that.
It's a violation of privacy laws.
Of course.
I was just wondering.
It's just someone I lost touch with.
That's the conclusion of the tour.
Any comments or questions, put 'em in writing.
Do you have any advice? For getting to know people in the building? Stay away from the sixth floor.
[Melody.]
So, this is my apartment.
Standard one-bedroom.
I've actually never lived alone, so Good luck to me, I guess.
[camcorder beeps.]
[faint chanting.]
[camcorder beeps.]
[chanting voices echoing faintly.]
[indistinct melodic chanting.]
[melodic chanting continues.]
[Melody gasps.]
- [chanting gets louder.]
- [rhythmic huffing.]
[huffing, chanting continue.]
[volume increases.]
[rhythmic huffing.]
[chanting, huffing stops.]
Hello? Hello? [on tape.]
Hello? [static crackles.]
[high-pitched whining.]
[fades.]
[Melody.]
God.
Get a grip, Melody.
Jesus.
It's March 12th, 1994, 9:04 a.
m.
This is day two at the Visser apartment complex.
I'm now gonna go knock on some doors.
Wish me luck.
[knocking.]
Hello? Hello? I'm Melody Pendras, your new neighbor.
I'm doing a project on the Visser Apartments for my dissertation.
I was hoping you'd talk about the building and the community who lives here.
[elevator dings.]
[knocking on door.]
[door opens.]
Hey, how are you? Here.
- [woman 4.]
Here you go.
Bye.
- Thank you.
Have a good day.
[door closes, locks.]
I'm Jess.
I work for a bunch of tenants in the building.
Like, uh, get coffee, walk dogs, buy newspapers, pick up Cool Ranch Doritos or Preparation H, or Greek salads from Athens Tavern.
I do laundry, I take out trash, get strollers and sleds out of storage Anything you need, I can handle.
So you know all the tenants in the building.
Mostly.
I've lived here since I was born, so they all know me.
- Could you introduce me to some of them? - Why? Can't make friends or something? I'm working on a project.
It's an oral history of the building, but I can't get anyone to open their door.
- So I thought maybe - What's an oral history? A collection of historical information about a group of people or a place that uses first-person interviews as data.
People tell me their stories and I record them with this.
You wanna know about the Visser? And the people who live here.
Well, I'm pretty booked.
I could pay you.
I don't have a lot, but How much? Twenty-five a week? Who do you wanna meet first? I'm Tamara Stefano.
I was born 30-something years ago in Rome.
I moved to New York when I was ten.
How long have you lived at the Visser? I can't remember exactly.
Six years, maybe.
And what brought you to this building? I needed a place that would fit this giant fucking piano.
[Melody laughs.]
And the rent is really cheap.
So you're a musician.
Composer.
Opera, mostly.
Experimental stuff, not Puccini.
I think I heard you working on something last night.
I was doing a show at the Sanctuary last night.
Must've been someone else.
Here.
This is what I'm working on right now.
It's called "Purgatory.
" It's about a descent into a shadow world.
[choir vocalizing.]
[Tamara.]
This is the chorus of human suffering.
When I stage it, the performers wear those.
[woman vocalizes eerie tune.]
[choir chanting.]
This Didn't I hear this last night? [telephone ringing.]
[woman vocalizes eerie tune.]
[telephone ringing.]
[Tamara.]
Hey.
Yeah.
Yeah.
[voices chanting eerie tune.]
[rhythmic huffing.]
[rhythmic huffing intensifies.]
[Jess.]
Hey, are you okay? [Melody.]
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, I just Doesn't the music make you feel? [Jess.]
Hey, you need some soda or a sandwich or something? Yeah.
[static crackling.]
[tape rewinding.]
[humming tune softly.]
[humming.]
[line ringing.]
This is Mark Higgins with Mystery Signals.
Please leave a detailed message and I'll return your call as soon as possible.
[beeps.]
Hey.
Hey, hey, hey.
Uh, it's me.
Um, I'm here.
It's nice.
Um I guess.
It's quiet, lots of trees.
Um But no internet.
So I was hoping you could do me a favor.
Uh Could you look up a composer named Tamara Stefano? I think I heard one of her songs before.
I just can't remember where.
Uh [static, clicking on phone.]
Hello? [beeps.]
[static, clicking.]
Is someone there? [door knob rattles.]
[door knob rattles.]
[door knob rattles.]
[door knob rattles.]
[door knob rattles.]
[telephone ringing.]
[Dan.]
Hello? [Virgil.]
Dan, it's Virgil.
Just calling to see how you're settling in.
[Dan.]
Uh, fine, great, yeah.
I've already started working.
[Virgil.]
Fantastic.
Remember to eat and sleep.
No burning out.
Clear? [Dan.]
Sure.
[Virgil.]
You let us know if the mattress is too firm.
I want you getting all the rest you need.
[ominous music playing.]
Fuck yeah, dude.
- [loud squeak.]
- [Dan gasps.]
[traps clicking.]
[metronome clicking.]
[plays eerie tune.]
[hums eerie tune.]
[boy.]
What is it? [metronome clicking.]
[boy hums tune.]
[piano plays tune.]
[man.]
What are you playing? [piano playing intensifies.]
[metronome clicking continues.]
[piano continues.]
[inhales sharply.]
[faint squeaking.]
[squeaking continues.]
[Dan.]
I'm not a rat person, but you can stay until your tail heals.
[Jess on tape.]
Sometimes I get low blood sugar too.
But I don't get dizzy, I get mean.
My Home Ec teacher actually keeps little packs of raisins in her desk for me.
Keep me sweet.
Is this the interview? Did we start already? Uh, no.
Sorry.
Um Okay, set.
So, tell me your name and when you were born and how you came to live at the Visser.
I'm Jessica Lewis and I'm a ninth grader at East Village Community High.
I was born March 8th, 1980, at 4:21 in the afternoon.
Right out there, in the east stairwell.
Wait, seriously? Yeah.
My mom went into labor six weeks early.
The elevator was out, so she called a cab and started walking down the stairs, but she didn't make it all the way to the lobby.
Holy shit.
That is crazy.
Do you think it's bad luck? What? To be born in this place? No, of course not.
It'll make a good story when you're older at parties.
So, why do you wanna know about the Visser? [Melody laughs.]
Are you interviewing me now? There used to be another building here.
It burned down a long time ago.
And then someone built the Visser right on top.
So, people died here? Oh, I don't No, I don't think so.
I mean I just want to know about the people who live here.
Their friends, their families, what brings them here, why they choose this building.
Because something pulled them here.
What? Did Samuel tell you about this place? Who's Samuel? Nothing.
Never mind.
[breathing heavily.]
Jess? Jess, are you okay? Jess, what's happening? [panting.]
Jess - Jess? - [gasping.]
Jess! [intense music playing.]
[Melody.]
Are you okay? Oh, my God, Jess! [Jess choking.]
[Melody.]
Oh, my God! Jess? Help! Somebody! Come on, Jess.
Somebody, help! [tape slows.]
[distorted.]
Jess.
[distorted squeal.]
[Melody, distorted.]
Are you [distorted squealing.]
[static crackling.]
[distorted growls.]
[distorted snarl.]
[tape distortion.]
[static buzzing.]
- [loud growl.]
- [gasps.]
[suspenseful music playing.]
There's gotta be a fucking signal somewhere.
[line ringing.]
- [Mark.]
Dan.
- Hey.
That message flipped me out, jackhole.
What happened? Why didn't you call back? I thought you got eaten by a fucking bear.
- Are there bears up there? - They were listening.
Listening? Who? LMG.
On the landline.
That is some fucked-up 1984 bullshit, man.
You never trust a fucking landline.
Are you okay though? Uh [exhales.]
Yeah, yeah.
Um I just I thought I saw a A what? Nothing, nothing.
Um Hey, man, this place is screwing with my head.
You're not gonna go Jack Torrance on me, are you? Tell me you're not standing in a hedge maze.
No.
No.
No ax, no maze.
I'm fine.
You sure? [Dan.]
Uh Have you found anything about Tamara Stefano? Uh, maybe she wrote an opera or maybe a song? No.
No composers, no musicians, no artists of any kind by that name.
Guess she never made it to the Met.
Yeah, okay, then just look up whatever you can find about LMG and Melody Pendras.
Anything you can find.
I'm on it.
I'm your fucking Google.
Okay, I'll call you later.
[leaves rustling.]
[suspenseful music playing.]
[branches cracking.]
[man.]
What are you playing? [metronome ticking.]
I don't know.
[man.]
Where'd you hear it? On the tape.
Okay, stop playing it.
Right now.
[plays tune.]
I said stop! [tune stops.]
Cleo's been locked up all day.
Take her out for a walk.
All right.
[boy humming tune.]
[sirens wailing.]
[boy.]
No! No! [screams.]
No! [squeaking.]
[Dan.]
We're friends now, right? You'd tell me if you saw something? On the tape? Right.
No, me neither.
[Melody.]
I don't I God.
Jess? Jess! [Jess gasping.]
Now can I have some Mountain Dew? [Melody.]
Should I call your mom? No.
I'm fine.
For real.
This is just something that happens.
Sometimes.
What is it? Epilepsy? The doctor at the clinic says there's nothing wrong.
He says it's all in my imagination.
Jess, you definitely had a seizure.
That wasn't your imagination.
What does your mom say? She takes me to see Father Russo at St.
Albert's down the block.
For spiritual guidance, you know? She says I should tell him what I see, but What do you see? I don't remember.
I never remember.
Who's Samuel? Does he live in the building? Do you go to church? I used to.
So, you don't anymore? No.
Do you believe there's another world besides this one? You mean, like heaven and hell? No.
I mean, like this one but different.
More than this world.
You know what? I'm sorry, Jess.
I should probably ask your mom for permission to interview you.
Maybe I can meet her after work one day? You think I'm a freak.
I don't think you're a freak.
People at school think I am.
Kids used to call me a freak too.
Fuck them.
Yeah, fuck 'em.
[Melody laughs.]
Do you think I could be more than I am? Like, do I seem strong enough to hold a new world inside of me? [Melody.]
Well, I think you can be anything you want to be.
I'm glad you're here.
Can I tell you something? [static crackling.]
[Melody panting.]
They took her.
They took Jess.
[footsteps pounding.]
[Melody gasps.]
I told you.
Sixth floor's off-limits.
[Melody.]
Where is she? What the fuck did you do with her? - I don't know what you're talking about.
- [Melody.]
You fucking took her! Jess! Jess! Jess, can you hear me? [Melody breathing heavily.]
- [Melody whimpers.]
- [man 3.]
 Ah.
Melody, Jess is gone.
[Melody.]
Fuck you.
Melody Pendras? - [Melody.]
Who are you? - We need you to come with us.
- [Melody.]
Get the fuck away from me.
- [man 3.]
What are you doing? [guard.]
Sir, step back, please.
Please.
Please find me.
Please help.
- Fuck you! - [man 3.]
Get your hands off! - [Melody.]
No! - Melody.
Melody.
- [Melody.]
What are you doing here? - It's okay.
Everything's okay.
[Melody.]
What the fuck are you doing here? Everything's gonna be fine.
- [Melody.]
No! - Dad? [Melody.]
No! No! No! Get the fuck off me! Get the What the fuck? - [Melody.]
What are you doing here? - It's okay.
Everything's okay.
- What the fuck are you doing here? - Everything's gonna be fine.
- What the fuck are you doing here? - Everything's gonna be fine.
- No! - What's happening? [Melody.]
No! No! Get the fuck off me! Get the fuck off me! [intense music playing.]
[Melody.]
What the fuck are you doing here? No! No! Get the fuck off me! - Get the fuck off me! - [Dan.]
Dad? No! What the fuck? No! [Dan breathing heavily.]
Dad, what is happening? What's happening? What's happening? Dad.
[intense music continues.]
[keyboard clacking.]
[Dan hyperventilating.]
[exhales shakily.]
[ominous music playing.]
She's not here.
[frightened breathing.]
[static crackling on video tape.]
[woman whimpering.]
[breathing heavily.]
They took her.
[footsteps pounding.]
Jess, can you hear me? [panting.]
[recorder clicks.]
Please.
Please find me.
Please help.
[yelling.]
No! Get off me! - [man.]
You're gonna be fine.
- Get the fuck off me! [ominous theme music playing.]
- [car horns honking.]
- [jackhammer drilling.]
[man 2.]
I got tapes! Come get your tapes! Cassette tapes! I got tapes! Come get your tapes! Any one Any of those That's the one-dollar box.
Anything in there is one dollar.
The box too.
Want the box? That's a dollar too.
Tape Tape? [chuckles.]
I don't know what you need.
- Hey, what's going on, Dan? - Hey, man.
Picked these up at a storage-space auction last week.
You got first crack at these, man.
Unseen.
Ten bucks a pop.
You know last month you sold me 16 hours' worth of a T-ball tournament? Yeah? [laughs.]
Yeah.
But also, I sold you an uncut version of Phantasmagoria off channel 7.
That's unreleased and very rare.
I just think you need to get yourself a VCR so you know what you're selling.
Yeah, where's the fun in that? Look, five bucks a pop.
If they're shitty, I'll give you store credit.
Look, I know you love the hunt.
All right.
[sighs.]
All right.
My man.
[chuckles.]
Hey, Jill stopped by earlier, said to tell you hello.
- What, this morning? - Yeah.
She picked up some books from a haul last weekend.
Might be able to catch her if you, uh, head that way.
She's just going back to the shop.
You guys are still friendly, right? All right.
See you, man.
Hey, let me know what's on those.
I got tapes! VHS tapes! Cassette tapes! I got a couple of 16mm projectors coming in next week if you're still looking.
And we just got in two reels of Flash Gordon, 1940.
Good condition.
[Dan.]
I'll have the museum call you.
[melancholy organ music playing.]
[on phone.]
 Dan, it's Evie Crest.
The package should've arrived today.
The footage is in terrible shape.
Let me know if you can do anything with it.
[classical fanfare playing.]
[clangs.]
What is it? The Circle.
A horror anthology, 1958.
Sort of like a pre-Twilight Zone kind of thing.
- I've never heard of it.
- That's because it never aired.
William Crest died and all the tapes disappeared.
"Crest.
" Oh, um, that's that Robinson Crusoe guy, right? He made all those movies in the '30s with Brenda Joyce.
- I used to love those movies as a kid.
- Yeah, so did my dad.
Anyway, uh, two months ago, his daughter Evie found a box of tapes buried somewhere on his estate and now here we are.
- [woman 2.]
Ooh.
Some creepy shit.
- Mm.
[woman 2.]
Well, maybe the museum will issue a set and you can write the companion guide.
Get a little glory for all that talent.
I kind of just wanted to give Evie a little piece of her father back.
[musical sting.]
[woman 2.]
Oh, um - From Karen.
- What's this? No idea.
[mysterious music playing.]
Are you ready? [woman 3.]
That's what the little red light means, Mel.
[chuckles.]
Okay.
I'm Melody Pendras, doctoral candidate in sociocultural anthropology at NYU.
My upcoming research project will examine a small New York City community, residents of the Visser apartment building in the East Village, as individuals adapt to cultural shifts at the end of the 20th century.
[exhales.]
They'll talk to me, right? Oh God, no.
No, no, no, they'll spit gum in your hair and shove spiders under your door.
Yes, they'll talk to you.
Everybody talks to you.
It's Maybe I should come with you.
You know, for protection.
From what? I don't know.
Handsy old creeps, sewer rats, vampires.
What if you find a new best friend? [Melody.]
I won't.
Actually sounds pretty fucking boring.
No offense.
It's for my dissertation.
Fine.
Leave me.
I'm not going very far.
I'll be back before you can even miss me.
That's what Amelia Earhart said.
And - [laughs.]
No, she didn't.
- No.
[sighs.]
Wish me luck.
You don't need luck.
[rewinding sounds.]
[man 3.]
But in the middle of the park, there was nothing.
No radio.
No phonograph.
Only the music coming from seemingly nowhere.
The song they had once shared.
Edmond, are you out there? [crunching.]
[actress.]
Is that you? Could Edmond, a city park worker, have unintentionally crossed into another dimension? [ghostly music plays.]
I'm Mark Higgins.
This is Mystery Signals: True Tales of the Secret City.
[applause.]
[Mark.]
So, the guy's totally broke, okay? So he buys his girlfriend, uh, this vintage engagement ring from one of these junk shops on the Lower East Side.
Turns out, two days after he slides that fucking thing on her finger, this girl loses her shit, okay? She says that she's seeing a woman staring at her in the mirror.
What? Fucking what? The fucking ring is haunted, man.
Yeah, I don't believe that supernatural shit.
That's right.
I forgot.
You don't believe.
Mr.
Fucking Paranoid.
Mr.
Someone Might Be Watching Me.
Uh, yeah, I got an early day.
Sorry.
The museum doesn't open till noon.
There's no such thing as an early day.
- Next week, I promise.
- Hey.
Look, you you let me know if you're feeling low again, all right? Seriously.
No fucking bullshit this time.
You'll ask me for help? Yeah, I'll ask you for help.
Okay.
All right.
Don't fuck with me.
[Karen.]
Amazing work on the Hi8 footage, Dan.
Thanks for the quick turnaround.
Oh, sure thing.
You know, it didn't really seem like something the museum would be interested in.
It was a favor for a big donor.
He'd like you to come by his office today to thank you in person.
[elevator dings.]
[Virgil.]
Dan! Great to meet you.
Thanks for coming.
No problem.
Hey, Callie, can I, uh, get an Arnold Palmer? Bring one for Dan too.
Have a seat.
Okay.
Thanks for taking on our little project last night.
Karen said you were the best man around to bring back lost things, and she was right.
Well, she's my boss.
Yeah.
[chuckles.]
Right.
Yeah.
That's actually why I asked you to stop by, Dan.
I was wondering if you might like to change that, might like to come work for LMG.
Temporarily, of course.
Well, I don't Uh [ice clinking.]
Thank you.
Um What do you guys do exactly? Because I did a little research and You couldn't find anything.
Right.
Makes us even.
I couldn't find anything on you.
Well, uh, I like my privacy.
[Virgil.]
I respect that.
We like our privacy too.
Here's the thing, Dan.
We're looking for an artist.
Someone who can restore a recently acquired collection of damaged video tapes.
Well, what kind of damage? Fire damage.
Smoke, soot, water.
The fragment you digitized is part of the collection.
The fire at the Visser building, right? That's right.
In any case, the contents of the tapes would need to be kept confidential for legal purposes.
The fee would be a hundred thousand dollars.
- Wow.
- There's just one hitch.
Because the materials are so fragile they can't be moved.
So you'd be doing the work at our remote research facility in the Catskills.
It's beautiful up there.
Not a bad place to be all alone.
Right.
Uh Before you say no, Dan, here's why I think you're our guy.
Creating this archive, putting this puzzle together, finding out what happened at the Visser, it would mean the world to everyone who lost someone in that fire.
And I know you have a special understanding of a situation like that.
[suspenseful music playing.]
Sorry? You lost your family in a fire, isn't that right? And it seems you've spent your life trying to bring lost things back to people.
Sorry, I have to get back to work.
I'm sorry, Dan.
Truly, I didn't mean to I'm sorry for wasting your time.
Not at all, Dan.
Not not at all.
Let us know if you change your mind.
[Dan.]
How the fuck would he find out about my family? [Mark.]
Have you heard of the internet? Nope, it's not out there.
It's not public information.
I've looked.
[Mark.]
I'm kidding, okay? Look, come over.
I'll take you out for shitty Peking duck and vodka shots.
[Dan.]
Yeah, okay, I'll call you later.
[boy hums.]
[hums.]
[hums eerie melody.]
[piano note echoes.]
[metronome clicking.]
[sirens blare.]
[metronome clicking.]
[fire crackling.]
[gasps.]
[siren wails in distance.]
[mouse clicking.]
- That's what the little red light - ody Pendras.
No, no, no, they'll spit gum in your hair and [clicks.]
[clicking.]
[mysterious music playing.]
- [Mark.]
You think this is your dog? - [Dan.]
Yes.
Maybe.
Okay, why would a random, hot grad student be in a picture with your dog? I don't know.
"Melody Pendras.
" - One of the tenants who died in the fire? - Officially, no one died.
Thirteen bodies never recovered.
To me, that means they died.
I don't know.
I don't know, man.
I looked her up and I couldn't find anything about her.
I even paid for one of those people-finder sites.
And the only thing I found was a 98-year-old woman living in Orlando and some librarian who died of typhoid fever in, what, 1923? Is this about Jill? What? Because, if you want me to set you up, I can.
You know that.
Just say the word.
I mean, remember that cute barista who curates the anime festival? It's not about Jill.
I saved up three weeks of allowance to buy Cleo a red dog collar that looks just like this one.
I just I think you're seeing something you want to see.
Aren't you the guy that goes on stage and tells stories about demon sex cults and time-traveling and pirate radio stations from another dimension? Yes, but that's my podcast and this is real life.
Look, I did a little digging on LMG, I couldn't find any public information about them.
Okay? No logo, no media presence.
For all we know, they're building a Death Star.
You want to help this Davenport guy build a Death Star? Wouldn't you rather stay here, help with the Mystery Signals spin-off? And what about that show you've been fixing up, The Circle? You've been chasing that thing for fucking forever.
I have to take the job.
This picture's a sign.
- Of what? - I don't know.
You said I was seeing things I wanted to see? Maybe it's time I take a better look.
[suspenseful music playing.]
[Virgil.]
Beautiful country.
Yeah.
You and your family used to live in the Hudson River Valley down in Westchester County, am I right? Background check.
Your key to the kingdom.
[lock beeps, clicks.]
Rec room and living quarters are downstairs.
Little dated, but everything works.
Fridge and freezer are fully stocked.
Deliveries come once a week.
Anything you like, sky's the limit.
We bought this property in the late '80s to use as a research campus.
Mostly used for storage now.
And special projects like this one.
So, unlike the rec room, all the equipment and tools in here are state-of-the-art.
Unfortunately, we don't have internet out here yet and cell service is rather spotty, I'm afraid.
We got a landline.
Real dependable.
You're welcome to make as many calls as you like.
Let me show you the archive.
These are the tapes you'll be working with.
All the material recovered from the Visser Apartments after the 1994 fire.
This is the camera that was used to record the footage.
No reason you'll need it, but we thought it best to keep everything together.
Blank tapes and additional hard drives are in the equipment room.
Let us know if you need anything.
We'll get you everything you need.
Any questions? Good.
We really appreciate you taking on this job, Dan, sharing your talents with us.
Oh! One more thing.
What? You want to make sure I get my steps in? If you're ever in trouble, press the button.
We got medical professionals less than 20 minutes away.
That includes mental health too.
Like I said, Dan, we did a thorough background check.
We'd be negligent if we didn't.
Yeah, I don't know, maybe you might need a stool sample? Yeah? Or blood? Urine? I don't know, maybe you got a fucking Rorschach test in the back there for me.
- You got a clean bill of health, Dan.
- Right.
Yeah.
Your breakdown is in the rearview mirror as far as we're concerned.
I just want you to know that we're here for you should you need us.
Mm-hmm.
Cool.
- I'll leave you to it.
- Okay.
Good luck.
I'll be in touch.
[engine starts.]
[door slams.]
[intense music playing.]
[lock buzzes.]
Curiosity killed the cat.
[static crackling.]
I'm Melody Pendras.
It's March 11th, 1994, 10:32 a.
m.
This is day one of the oral history project on the Visser apartment building.
According to the New York Public Library archives, it was built in either 1932 or 1934, architect unknown.
Basically, it looks exactly like a million other buildings in the city.
Oh, that's okay.
Thanks.
It was built on the ruins of a mansion that burned down in the '20s.
This is strange detail for a building like this.
Same thing here.
[gasps.]
Are you Melody? That's me.
You coming in or not? Mailboxes, community room.
Sorry, elevator's out today.
- Do you mind if I keep filming? - Nah.
Mom used to make me do community theater when I was a kid.
So, is "John Smith" a stage name? What? Oh, nothing.
It's just one of those names that almost sound made-up, you know? I'll tell my mom you said so.
Bedroom through there, bathroom through there, kitchen.
Last tenant left some books and things.
If you don't want it, I can get someone from the church to come take it for a rummage sale.
It's fine.
I don't have much stuff of my own.
This is the key to the building.
This is a key to the front door.
Any questions? Do you know there's a woman named Julia Bennett who lives in the building? Or lived? Can't tell you that.
It's a violation of privacy laws.
Of course.
I was just wondering.
It's just someone I lost touch with.
That's the conclusion of the tour.
Any comments or questions, put 'em in writing.
Do you have any advice? For getting to know people in the building? Stay away from the sixth floor.
[Melody.]
So, this is my apartment.
Standard one-bedroom.
I've actually never lived alone, so Good luck to me, I guess.
[camcorder beeps.]
[faint chanting.]
[camcorder beeps.]
[chanting voices echoing faintly.]
[indistinct melodic chanting.]
[melodic chanting continues.]
[Melody gasps.]
- [chanting gets louder.]
- [rhythmic huffing.]
[huffing, chanting continue.]
[volume increases.]
[rhythmic huffing.]
[chanting, huffing stops.]
Hello? Hello? [on tape.]
Hello? [static crackles.]
[high-pitched whining.]
[fades.]
[Melody.]
God.
Get a grip, Melody.
Jesus.
It's March 12th, 1994, 9:04 a.
m.
This is day two at the Visser apartment complex.
I'm now gonna go knock on some doors.
Wish me luck.
[knocking.]
Hello? Hello? I'm Melody Pendras, your new neighbor.
I'm doing a project on the Visser Apartments for my dissertation.
I was hoping you'd talk about the building and the community who lives here.
[elevator dings.]
[knocking on door.]
[door opens.]
Hey, how are you? Here.
- [woman 4.]
Here you go.
Bye.
- Thank you.
Have a good day.
[door closes, locks.]
I'm Jess.
I work for a bunch of tenants in the building.
Like, uh, get coffee, walk dogs, buy newspapers, pick up Cool Ranch Doritos or Preparation H, or Greek salads from Athens Tavern.
I do laundry, I take out trash, get strollers and sleds out of storage Anything you need, I can handle.
So you know all the tenants in the building.
Mostly.
I've lived here since I was born, so they all know me.
- Could you introduce me to some of them? - Why? Can't make friends or something? I'm working on a project.
It's an oral history of the building, but I can't get anyone to open their door.
- So I thought maybe - What's an oral history? A collection of historical information about a group of people or a place that uses first-person interviews as data.
People tell me their stories and I record them with this.
You wanna know about the Visser? And the people who live here.
Well, I'm pretty booked.
I could pay you.
I don't have a lot, but How much? Twenty-five a week? Who do you wanna meet first? I'm Tamara Stefano.
I was born 30-something years ago in Rome.
I moved to New York when I was ten.
How long have you lived at the Visser? I can't remember exactly.
Six years, maybe.
And what brought you to this building? I needed a place that would fit this giant fucking piano.
[Melody laughs.]
And the rent is really cheap.
So you're a musician.
Composer.
Opera, mostly.
Experimental stuff, not Puccini.
I think I heard you working on something last night.
I was doing a show at the Sanctuary last night.
Must've been someone else.
Here.
This is what I'm working on right now.
It's called "Purgatory.
" It's about a descent into a shadow world.
[choir vocalizing.]
[Tamara.]
This is the chorus of human suffering.
When I stage it, the performers wear those.
[woman vocalizes eerie tune.]
[choir chanting.]
This Didn't I hear this last night? [telephone ringing.]
[woman vocalizes eerie tune.]
[telephone ringing.]
[Tamara.]
Hey.
Yeah.
Yeah.
[voices chanting eerie tune.]
[rhythmic huffing.]
[rhythmic huffing intensifies.]
[Jess.]
Hey, are you okay? [Melody.]
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, I just Doesn't the music make you feel? [Jess.]
Hey, you need some soda or a sandwich or something? Yeah.
[static crackling.]
[tape rewinding.]
[humming tune softly.]
[humming.]
[line ringing.]
This is Mark Higgins with Mystery Signals.
Please leave a detailed message and I'll return your call as soon as possible.
[beeps.]
Hey.
Hey, hey, hey.
Uh, it's me.
Um, I'm here.
It's nice.
Um I guess.
It's quiet, lots of trees.
Um But no internet.
So I was hoping you could do me a favor.
Uh Could you look up a composer named Tamara Stefano? I think I heard one of her songs before.
I just can't remember where.
Uh [static, clicking on phone.]
Hello? [beeps.]
[static, clicking.]
Is someone there? [door knob rattles.]
[door knob rattles.]
[door knob rattles.]
[door knob rattles.]
[door knob rattles.]
[telephone ringing.]
[Dan.]
Hello? [Virgil.]
Dan, it's Virgil.
Just calling to see how you're settling in.
[Dan.]
Uh, fine, great, yeah.
I've already started working.
[Virgil.]
Fantastic.
Remember to eat and sleep.
No burning out.
Clear? [Dan.]
Sure.
[Virgil.]
You let us know if the mattress is too firm.
I want you getting all the rest you need.
[ominous music playing.]
Fuck yeah, dude.
- [loud squeak.]
- [Dan gasps.]
[traps clicking.]
[metronome clicking.]
[plays eerie tune.]
[hums eerie tune.]
[boy.]
What is it? [metronome clicking.]
[boy hums tune.]
[piano plays tune.]
[man.]
What are you playing? [piano playing intensifies.]
[metronome clicking continues.]
[piano continues.]
[inhales sharply.]
[faint squeaking.]
[squeaking continues.]
[Dan.]
I'm not a rat person, but you can stay until your tail heals.
[Jess on tape.]
Sometimes I get low blood sugar too.
But I don't get dizzy, I get mean.
My Home Ec teacher actually keeps little packs of raisins in her desk for me.
Keep me sweet.
Is this the interview? Did we start already? Uh, no.
Sorry.
Um Okay, set.
So, tell me your name and when you were born and how you came to live at the Visser.
I'm Jessica Lewis and I'm a ninth grader at East Village Community High.
I was born March 8th, 1980, at 4:21 in the afternoon.
Right out there, in the east stairwell.
Wait, seriously? Yeah.
My mom went into labor six weeks early.
The elevator was out, so she called a cab and started walking down the stairs, but she didn't make it all the way to the lobby.
Holy shit.
That is crazy.
Do you think it's bad luck? What? To be born in this place? No, of course not.
It'll make a good story when you're older at parties.
So, why do you wanna know about the Visser? [Melody laughs.]
Are you interviewing me now? There used to be another building here.
It burned down a long time ago.
And then someone built the Visser right on top.
So, people died here? Oh, I don't No, I don't think so.
I mean I just want to know about the people who live here.
Their friends, their families, what brings them here, why they choose this building.
Because something pulled them here.
What? Did Samuel tell you about this place? Who's Samuel? Nothing.
Never mind.
[breathing heavily.]
Jess? Jess, are you okay? Jess, what's happening? [panting.]
Jess - Jess? - [gasping.]
Jess! [intense music playing.]
[Melody.]
Are you okay? Oh, my God, Jess! [Jess choking.]
[Melody.]
Oh, my God! Jess? Help! Somebody! Come on, Jess.
Somebody, help! [tape slows.]
[distorted.]
Jess.
[distorted squeal.]
[Melody, distorted.]
Are you [distorted squealing.]
[static crackling.]
[distorted growls.]
[distorted snarl.]
[tape distortion.]
[static buzzing.]
- [loud growl.]
- [gasps.]
[suspenseful music playing.]
There's gotta be a fucking signal somewhere.
[line ringing.]
- [Mark.]
Dan.
- Hey.
That message flipped me out, jackhole.
What happened? Why didn't you call back? I thought you got eaten by a fucking bear.
- Are there bears up there? - They were listening.
Listening? Who? LMG.
On the landline.
That is some fucked-up 1984 bullshit, man.
You never trust a fucking landline.
Are you okay though? Uh [exhales.]
Yeah, yeah.
Um I just I thought I saw a A what? Nothing, nothing.
Um Hey, man, this place is screwing with my head.
You're not gonna go Jack Torrance on me, are you? Tell me you're not standing in a hedge maze.
No.
No.
No ax, no maze.
I'm fine.
You sure? [Dan.]
Uh Have you found anything about Tamara Stefano? Uh, maybe she wrote an opera or maybe a song? No.
No composers, no musicians, no artists of any kind by that name.
Guess she never made it to the Met.
Yeah, okay, then just look up whatever you can find about LMG and Melody Pendras.
Anything you can find.
I'm on it.
I'm your fucking Google.
Okay, I'll call you later.
[leaves rustling.]
[suspenseful music playing.]
[branches cracking.]
[man.]
What are you playing? [metronome ticking.]
I don't know.
[man.]
Where'd you hear it? On the tape.
Okay, stop playing it.
Right now.
[plays tune.]
I said stop! [tune stops.]
Cleo's been locked up all day.
Take her out for a walk.
All right.
[boy humming tune.]
[sirens wailing.]
[boy.]
No! No! [screams.]
No! [squeaking.]
[Dan.]
We're friends now, right? You'd tell me if you saw something? On the tape? Right.
No, me neither.
[Melody.]
I don't I God.
Jess? Jess! [Jess gasping.]
Now can I have some Mountain Dew? [Melody.]
Should I call your mom? No.
I'm fine.
For real.
This is just something that happens.
Sometimes.
What is it? Epilepsy? The doctor at the clinic says there's nothing wrong.
He says it's all in my imagination.
Jess, you definitely had a seizure.
That wasn't your imagination.
What does your mom say? She takes me to see Father Russo at St.
Albert's down the block.
For spiritual guidance, you know? She says I should tell him what I see, but What do you see? I don't remember.
I never remember.
Who's Samuel? Does he live in the building? Do you go to church? I used to.
So, you don't anymore? No.
Do you believe there's another world besides this one? You mean, like heaven and hell? No.
I mean, like this one but different.
More than this world.
You know what? I'm sorry, Jess.
I should probably ask your mom for permission to interview you.
Maybe I can meet her after work one day? You think I'm a freak.
I don't think you're a freak.
People at school think I am.
Kids used to call me a freak too.
Fuck them.
Yeah, fuck 'em.
[Melody laughs.]
Do you think I could be more than I am? Like, do I seem strong enough to hold a new world inside of me? [Melody.]
Well, I think you can be anything you want to be.
I'm glad you're here.
Can I tell you something? [static crackling.]
[Melody panting.]
They took her.
They took Jess.
[footsteps pounding.]
[Melody gasps.]
I told you.
Sixth floor's off-limits.
[Melody.]
Where is she? What the fuck did you do with her? - I don't know what you're talking about.
- [Melody.]
You fucking took her! Jess! Jess! Jess, can you hear me? [Melody breathing heavily.]
- [Melody whimpers.]
- [man 3.]
 Ah.
Melody, Jess is gone.
[Melody.]
Fuck you.
Melody Pendras? - [Melody.]
Who are you? - We need you to come with us.
- [Melody.]
Get the fuck away from me.
- [man 3.]
What are you doing? [guard.]
Sir, step back, please.
Please.
Please find me.
Please help.
- Fuck you! - [man 3.]
Get your hands off! - [Melody.]
No! - Melody.
Melody.
- [Melody.]
What are you doing here? - It's okay.
Everything's okay.
[Melody.]
What the fuck are you doing here? Everything's gonna be fine.
- [Melody.]
No! - Dad? [Melody.]
No! No! No! Get the fuck off me! Get the What the fuck? - [Melody.]
What are you doing here? - It's okay.
Everything's okay.
- What the fuck are you doing here? - Everything's gonna be fine.
- What the fuck are you doing here? - Everything's gonna be fine.
- No! - What's happening? [Melody.]
No! No! Get the fuck off me! Get the fuck off me! [intense music playing.]
[Melody.]
What the fuck are you doing here? No! No! Get the fuck off me! - Get the fuck off me! - [Dan.]
Dad? No! What the fuck? No! [Dan breathing heavily.]
Dad, what is happening? What's happening? What's happening? Dad.
[intense music continues.]
[keyboard clacking.]
[Dan hyperventilating.]
[exhales shakily.]
[ominous music playing.]