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- @ SCREAMING EXPRESS
-
- # By Andrew Campbell 1993
-
-
- The underground train came to a gradual halt at Chalk Farm and the
- dirty, metal doors squealed open.
- Mark Ramsey came clattering onto the platform carrying a small, black
- briefcase. A rushing, red-faced teenager bumped his shoulder and
- carried on without apologising.
- "Ignorant sod!" Mark shouted. He swung back around and skidded to a
- halt. At the opposite end of the platform he could see a plump,
- middle-aged railway attendant crouched beside a fallen old man.
- "Hey," he shouted, voice bouncing from the walls. "Hey is he alright?"
- "Nothin' I can do," the attendant yelled back. "He's dead."
- Mark's eyes widened. "Dead?"
- "Hey mister, doors are closin'." the attendant boomed. "Get outa here.
- I can handle this."
- Mark took a sharp breath and leaped through the narrowing gap in the
- railway carriage doors. He stood on his tiptoes and thrust his brief
- -case forwards.
- "Alright." He whispered. A rare thing had just happened: he had
- successfully boarded the train.
- As the underground platform began to drift past the windows, Mark made
- his way down the deserted compartment, hanging on to the silver rails
- above the seats. There was an unpleasant smell of tobacco and chewing
- gum lingering in the air.
- He sat down, just as the windows turned black and the noise of the
- speeding wheels increased. He looked around at the empty seats and
- shivered ; the carriage seemed oddly lacking in atmosphere and, staring
- out at the dark, endless void beyond the windows, he felt completely
- isolated from the world.
- The fluorescent lights on the roof flickered.
- Gently rocking with the motion of the speeding train, Mark looked
- upwards. As though his eyes could drain their power, the lights blinked
- out and the carriage turned black.
- "Oh for God's sake," Mark cursed and stood up. There was nothing for
- him to see, but plenty to hear ; the train was travelling so fast now,
- it sounded to be screaming like a tortured soul.
- Seconds passed...
- Minutes.
- Light suddenly exploded in from the windows forcing Mark to fall back
- into his seat with surprised relief. The over-head lights came back on,
- once again revealing the dull, vandalised interior of the carriage.
- The train halted jerkily at a platform that was generously sign-
- posted "OLDTOWN SWITCH". Mark took out a small map of the railway from
- his coat pocket and examined it.
- "What...?" he whispered to himself, following the blue and red lines
- across the diagram with his finger. "There isn't a bloody Oldtown.
- Where the hell am I?"
- The doors of the carriage opened up and an old man dressed in near
- rags came staggering inside. He was completely bald, his head was pale
- and grotesquely shrivelled, and his eyes were as black as charcoal.
- Mark said nothing when the man sat down opposite him. He pretended to
- concentrate on his map. But he was fully aware of those frightening,
- lifeless eyes observing him.
- The doors closed and the vehicle began to move again.
- Out of the corner of his eye, Mark watched the seemingly non-existant
- underground station slide past the window. Then slowly, almost mechani-
- cally, he allowed his gaze to shift to the ghostly old man.
- Mark had never before seen such a repulsive, monstrous human being.
- The man's skin was so thin and white it seemed almost transparent.
- There were thick, purplish-blue veins in his neck that seemed to
- pulsate, and beads of runny mucus wobbling under his gigantic,
- misshapen nose.
- The train began to howl and scream as it rocketed through the black
- tunnels beneath the city. The lights danced on and off, cold air
- seeping in from the tiny gaps around the doors blew sweet wrappers and
- cigarette ends around until they formed minature tornadoes. The pale,
- wrinkled monster leaned left and right, bobbed up and down, and stared
- perpetually at Mark through eyes darker than the underground tunnels
- themselves.
- The lights died again and Mark tensed in his seat. He fumbled with
- the map until it was back inside his pocket, then started to fidget
- furiously.
- The train shrieked and bright yellow sparks began to bounce against
- the glass outside.
- "Something's wrong." Mark said to the blackness, his voice merely a
- croak. "Hey mister, can you hear me?"
- Nothing.
- Mark's limbs began to stiffen. Pulsations of fright swirled before
- his eyes, churning the darkness into a confusing web of animated
- colour.
- Sparks pattered against the window and the old man's grinning face
- shimmered for a split second like fireworks revealing a golden
- gargoyle.
- Mark tried to rise up from his seat but he couldn't. There was no
- physical obstruction stopping him, but his body seemed to have been
- drained of all it's energy.
- He groped blindly with his hands for a suitable grip, found a hand-
- rail and lifted himself up by a few inches, but his legs gave way and
- he collapsed back onto the seat again, coughing with exhaustion.
- The train emmited a final, ear-splitting, scream before shooting out
- into the brightness of another underground station. The lights on the
- roof came back on and the circling sweet-wrappers on the floor
- scuttled underneath the seats like insects.
- Once again, the doors hissed open.
- Squinting, Mark wearily sat up and looked out of the window at the
- empty platform. His gaze then drifted back inside the carriage.
- Sat where the monster had been was a young, rather handsome man... a
- man who Mark found horribly recognisable.
- Mark watched this man pick up a black briefcase and smile vaguely.
- Mark tried to shout with anger and protest, but the voice he heard was
- merely a feeble, crackly whimper.
- When the man scampered to the doors, Mark staggered after him. His
- stomach was bloated and he could feel liquid splashing around inside
- it. He looked at his hands and saw big, heavy bones wrapped in crinkly
- skin.
- "Nooo..." he wailed. "Nooooooo...."
-
- A railway guard, stood with his hands behind his back, watched a young
- business man with a black briefcase walk briskly to the exit tunnel. He
- then observed a repulsive creature slither out of the train and
- collapse onto the platform.
- Instead of helping the fallen man, the guard wrinkled up his nose and
- looked in the opposite direction.
- Poor bastard will be better off dead anyway, he thought.
-
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