Low Barnet
"A sunken church with docking ports. Sediment has built up against the lower walls, and long ago choked neglected crypts and crooked tombstones. The interior is sealed; yet the deep peals of the tower's bell can be felt even through a zubmarine hull."[1]
Low Barnet is a sunken church in the Unterzee near London.
The Storyteller's Haven[edit | edit source]
"The competition? The best story wins. Cap'n says it's all in the delivery, but you need a fine yarn to spin, too."[2]
Low Barnet is a church with a wrecked organ, no pulpit, no sermons, and no god;[3][4] rather, it is a house for the worship of stories.[5] Zailors from all over the Unterzee join the congregation here to share accounts of their adventures, regardless of their politics or other animosities.[6] The church hosts competitions to determine who can recite the best story; embellishments and lies face little scrutiny here.[7] Winners are awarded the chance to enter Low Barnet's bell tower,[8] which is usually guarded by two vergers wielding tridents.[9] The bell's peals here are so loud they are audible even from a zubmarine,[10] and those who ring the bell do not return.[11]
Lytton of the Seven Against Nidah has taken refuge here in a corner of the church, and his body is encased in solid coral.[12]
The Bell[edit | edit source]
"You close your hands around the glistening rope and pull. BONG. The noise reverberates around the narrow confines of the tower. As the bell swings, the rope tugs at your grasp. You cannot let go! Your feet lift off the ground and the walls flash past as you are yanked inside the bell -"
"You are light, all of you. The sun that turns; the touch that burns. The voice of fires and falling spires. The wheel within the wheel within the wheel, contemplating, constructing, consuming. Each click of the cog, the circles colliding and guiding -"[13]

Low Barnet's bell is a mysterious and seemingly animate object that was constructed and installed by members of the Admiralty loyal to the New Sequence.[14] It can be rung by pulling its rope, like any other bell - but those who do so are yanked up into the bell's maw, where they are rapidly ground into gore[15] amidst a cacophony of spinning lights and gears.[16] It is possible to escape the bell's grasp, but those who do so return without their souls.[16] The bell's ropes actively flinch from the hands of the soulless;[17] considering all its known properties, it is likely that its true purpose is to harvest souls for the Dawn Machine.
Historical Inspirations[edit | edit source]
The name "Low Barnet" pokes fun at High Barnet, another name for the town of Chipping Barnet in the greater London area. The church itself might have been St John the Baptist Church, also known as Barnet Church; Low Barnet follows the traditional cross-shaped cathedral structure. The Barnet joke recurs in Sunless Skies, with Sky Barnet.
References[edit | edit source]
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