Listen

Description

In 1577, during a storm that swallowed the sky over East Anglia, something entered a church.

It did not claw its way in.
 It did not crash through stone.

The door opened.

Witnesses would later describe a “horrible shaped thing.” A great black dog moving calmly down the aisle as lightning struck and thunder shook the walls. Two parishioners were dead before the storm passed. The doors were damaged. The building stood.

But the boundary did not.

In this episode, we return to the storm at Bungay and Blythburgh — and to the legend that followed. Black Shuck. A name given later. A shape pulled from older whispers of a black dog seen on lonely roads and in churchyards, watching from the edge.

It did not rampage.
 It did not linger.

It crossed.

The Dog at the Threshold examines what happens when a space meant to protect you is publicly tested. When the line between outside chaos and inside order collapses in a single moment. When something steps across without permission — and leaves before it can be understood.

Why does folklore so often give fear the shape of a dog? Why are these creatures placed at gates, crossroads, and church doors? And why do they watch rather than chase?

Some stories survive because they terrify.

Others survive because they expose something we’d rather not admit:

That protection is conditional.
 That storms don’t recognize sanctity.
 That every threshold depends on an agreement that can be broken.

The dog doesn’t need to return.

The door remembers.

Because the world is stranger than you think.

--

Music Credit: “Deep Space EVA” by Tabletop Audio
 © 2025 Tabletop Audio. Used under the Creative Commons Attribution–NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).
 No changes were made to the original work.

License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Source: https://tabletopaudio.com/

Used with permission. Tabletop Audio is not affiliated with or endorsing this project.