Chapter 959: Story 959: The Midnight Crossing
The train station stood alone in the dead landscape, its tracks stretching into the darkness like veins through a corpse. A low mist rolled over the rusted rails, swirling at their feet. The moon hung high, unnaturally bright, casting long shadows over the platform.
Mira tightened her grip on the Cursed Book, feeling the weight of the knowledge within. "This isn't a normal train."
Draven stared down the tracks. "Nothing's normal anymore."
A distant howl echoed.
Elias sighed, flicking his lighter open. "Right on schedule."
The Ghoul Trainmaster emerged from the fog, his skeletal frame clad in a tattered conductor's uniform. His eyes burned like embers, and his teeth clacked in something between a grin and a warning.
"The Rotting King has offered you passage," he rasped, voice like wind through a graveyard. "Do you accept?"
Zara scowled. "What's the catch?"
The Trainmaster tilted his head. "You must survive the ride."
The train roared into existence, its metallic body scarred, windows black as obsidian. The doors groaned open, revealing a carriage bathed in flickering red light.
Draven stepped forward. "We don't have a choice."
They boarded.
The inside was worse than they imagined. The walls pulsed, alive with something writhing beneath the surface. The air was thick with decay, the seats occupied by figures draped in shadow—passengers who had long since lost their humanity.
The train lurched forward, speeding into the abyss.
A screech tore through the air, and the first shadow moved. It lunged, its limbs stretching unnaturally, hollow eyes locked onto Mira.
Draven fired—the shot passed through, useless.
Elias pulled a flask from his coat, splashing the contents over the creature. It shrieked as the liquid burned, curling into itself before melting into the floor.
"Holy whiskey," he muttered. "Never travel without it."
The train shook violently. More shadows crawled from the walls, their whispers rising into a maddening chant.
Mira flipped through the Book, searching for a warding spell. The pages twitched beneath her fingers, as if alive.
A deafening clang sounded—something massive landed on the roof.
Zara looked up. "We've got company."
The ceiling buckled, claws tearing through metal. A hulking beast dropped inside—its flesh a rotting mix of bone and sinew, its eyes burning with unnatural hunger.
The Ghoul Trainmaster laughed from the next car. "Your stop approaches. Will you make it?"
Mira found the spell—ink bleeding from the pages as she chanted. The train's walls screamed, the shadows recoiling.
Draven swung his shotgun at the beast. "Keep reading!"
The train shot through the dark, racing toward the unknown station ahead.
And behind them, the Rotting King waited.