The ghost in the train

29
GHost in the train

The night was darker than usual when Emily boarded the old train. It was a route she had never taken before, cutting through the foggy mountains on her way home. The stationmaster, an old man with tired eyes, warned her, “Be careful. There’s something different about this train.” She brushed off his words as nothing more than a local legend, but soon she would discover the truth about the ghost in the train.

As the train rattled down the tracks, Emily noticed something unsettling. The few passengers aboard were unusually quiet, almost lifeless. The dim lights flickered erratically, casting long shadows across the aisles. She felt a chill creep up her spine. A cold gust of air swept through the carriage, yet no windows were open. The ghost in the train was closer than she realized.

Suddenly, the train plunged into a tunnel, and the world outside vanished into darkness. That’s when Emily saw it—a shadowy figure at the far end of the car. It wasn’t just any shadow. This one had form, substance, and glowing eyes that seemed to pierce through her soul. The air around her grew heavy, as if the entire train was suffocating under the presence of the ghost in the train.

The lights flickered again, and in that brief moment of brightness, the figure vanished. But Emily could still feel it. The icy fingers of dread crawled over her as she heard faint whispers, voices that didn’t belong to the living. She gripped the edge of her seat, heart racing. Was it a hallucination? Or was the ghost in the train trying to communicate with her?

Determined to find out, she stood up and walked through the eerie silence of the train. Each step echoed louder than the last, her pulse quickening with every door she passed. The other passengers sat frozen, their eyes wide open but unseeing, as if trapped in a world between life and death. The ghost in the train had claimed them.

Finally, Emily reached the last car. The door creaked open, revealing the source of the supernatural presence. There, sitting in an old, tattered seat, was a pale woman in a long, white dress, her face obscured by a veil. The air was frigid, and the hairs on Emily’s neck stood on end. The woman lifted her head, revealing hollow, sunken eyes that gleamed with sorrow. “You shouldn’t be here,” the ghost whispered, her voice like the wind through dead trees.

Emily froze. She had heard stories of haunted trains but never believed them. Now, she was face-to-face with the ghost in the train. The woman’s story unfolded in fragmented whispers, of a tragic love, betrayal, and a journey that never ended. She had died on this train, and now her spirit was bound to it, forever seeking peace.

But peace would never come, and those who boarded the train were doomed to the same fate. Emily could feel her energy draining, her body growing colder. She realized she was becoming just another passenger in the ghost’s train—trapped, lost, and forgotten.

The train screeched to a halt at an abandoned station. In a last desperate attempt, Emily bolted for the door, her feet pounding against the floor as she escaped the clutches of the ghost in the train. She tumbled out onto the platform, gasping for breath. When she looked back, the train was gone—vanished into the mist, leaving behind only the echo of its haunting whistle.

The town she arrived in was abandoned, but she didn’t care. She had escaped. Or had she? As she walked toward the empty streets, she noticed the faint whistle of the train in the distance, and she realized with horror that no one ever truly escapes the ghost in the train.

Emily shivered as she stepped into the ghostly silence of the abandoned town. The faint whistle of the train echoed behind her, sending an icy chill down her spine. She quickened her pace, desperately trying to shake off the feeling that something was still watching her. The ghost in the train may have disappeared, but its presence lingered, like a dark shadow hovering just out of sight.

She stumbled upon an old, decrepit inn at the edge of the town. The sign above it creaked in the wind, barely holding on. With nowhere else to go, she pushed the door open. Inside, the air was thick with dust, and the dim light from a flickering candle barely illuminated the space. As she crossed the threshold, a sharp gust of wind slammed the door shut behind her.

“Welcome…” a raspy voice called out from the shadows. Emily jumped, her heart pounding in her chest. An elderly woman emerged from behind the counter, her eyes glazed over with an eerie glow. “You must be tired from your journey.”

Emily swallowed hard, her instincts screaming that something wasn’t right. “I—I just need a place to rest for the night,” she stammered, glancing around the dimly lit room.

The old woman smiled, but it was far from comforting. “Of course, my dear. But beware… no one truly escapes the ghost in the train.”

Emily’s blood ran cold. How did she know? Before she could respond, the woman motioned her to follow down a narrow hallway, leading to a small, windowless room. “Rest now. The train always comes back,” the woman muttered as she closed the door, leaving Emily alone.

Emily’s heart raced. She sat on the edge of the bed, her mind spinning. The woman’s words echoed in her head—the train always comes back. Was it possible that the ghost had followed her? She tried to calm herself, convincing her mind that the terror was over.

But just as she closed her eyes, she heard it—a soft, distant whistle. She froze. The sound was unmistakable. The ghost in the train was coming back.

The room grew colder, and a low rumbling vibrated through the floor. Emily’s breath hitched as she saw the light bulb in the corner of the room flicker and die. Her pulse quickened, and then—silence.

A knock echoed from the door.

Emily’s heart leaped into her throat. Slowly, she approached the door and swung it open, only to be greeted by the sight of a shadowy figure standing in the hall. It was the woman from the train—the ghost in the train—her hollow eyes burning through the darkness.

“You didn’t think you could run forever, did you?” the ghost whispered, her voice curling like smoke around Emily’s ears. “Once you’re on my train, you belong to me.”

Emily backed away, fear gripping her entire body. But there was nowhere to run. The inn began to warp and shift, the walls twisting as if they were being pulled into another realm. The faint sound of train wheels screeching against steel tracks filled the air, growing louder by the second. The room itself seemed to tilt, and suddenly, Emily was no longer in the inn.

She was back on the train.

The ghost stood in front of her, smiling with eerie satisfaction. The other passengers were still there, frozen in their seats, their lifeless eyes locked on her. The train rumbled forward, the tunnel looming ahead, and Emily realized with growing horror that she had never truly left.

“Let me go!” she screamed, her voice cracking with desperation.

The ghost leaned closer, her icy breath chilling Emily to the core. “You’re already dead, Emily. You died the moment you stepped onto my train. This is your fate now. Forever.”

Emily’s mind reeled, flashes of her time on the train racing through her memory. She had felt cold, sluggish, as if life itself was slipping away, but she hadn’t realized the truth until now. The train wasn’t just haunted—it was a vessel for lost souls, doomed to ride the tracks for eternity, with the ghost in the train as their eternal conductor.

The tunnel swallowed the train whole, plunging everything into darkness. Emily’s last thought was of escape, but she knew there was no running from this fate.

When the train emerged from the tunnel, the stationmaster watched it pass with a heavy heart. He had seen it all before. The train never stopped, not for the living. As the ghostly whistle faded into the distance, he turned and muttered under his breath, “Another soul claimed by the ghost in the train.”

And so the train carried on, an endless journey through darkness, collecting lost souls along the way.

The End.