Aickman _verified_ — Ramsey

She smiled. It was not a nice smile. It was the smile of a nurse about to tell you something you would rather not know. Then the train passed through a tunnel—the only tunnel on the whole line—and when it emerged, the door was gone. The wall was just a wall.

Mr. Pargeter felt his chest tighten. He had never seen her before, and yet his heart performed a strange, arrhythmic lurch , as if recognizing a tune he had never heard. ramsey aickman

He found it easily enough. The brickwork was real. The lichen was real. But where the door should have been, there was only a shallow recess, as if something had been carefully removed. And in the recess, pressed into the damp mortar, was a single button. Mother-of-pearl. From a cream-colored dress. She smiled

But the button remained. And late at night, when he held it to his ear, he thought he could hear a train that was not his own—a slower, older train, pulling into a station that had no name, on a line that had never been mapped. Then the train passed through a tunnel—the only

You left the door open, Mr. Pargeter. You just didn’t know it.

Between Murkwell and Upper Splatt, the train usually passed a long brick wall, blotched with lichen, that enclosed a disused ropeworks. For three years, Mr. Pargeter had looked at that wall. It was the still point of his journey. Tonight, however, a narrow wooden door stood where no door had been before. It was painted a deep, bruised purple, with a brass handle shaped like a sleeping serpent.

He blinked. The train did not stop.