Whirr, zip; the barrier took and gave back her ticket; Zoe stepped through and hurried towards the platform with her waiting train: it would not do to miss it. She hurried up the stairs and onto the bridge that went right over the railway lines, towards where she could see her train standing; waiting, as it did every evening, to take her and the busy workers home towards the coast
Zoe was just in time, with a small jump she was in, the doors closing smoothly behind her with just the faintest hiss. Before she was even seated the train was moving, rolling slightly as it left the railway station out into the night. She had been worried she was going to be too late and not catch her train. It was not as if there were no other trains - indeed there was one thirty-five minutes later - but this was the one she caught. It had not been like that in the past; it was not like that in the mornings; at one time she had not been at all worried which train she caught; had not always been quite sure of the times; did not even now worry too much in the morning; but in the evenings this was the train she caught.
It was odd; she knew it was odd and, what was even odder; it was not just the particular train but also the same carriage that she liked to travel in each evening.
Explaining her obsession, if that was what it was, would not have been easy for her. She was not an obsessive person. She did not, when she left her flat, double try the door to make sure it was closed; did not check her bag on the way to the station to make sure she had really put her laptop in it; did not look behind her as she left the train to make sure she had left nothing on the seat but there was no getting away from it there was one train she caught in the evening and one carriage she sat in preferably at the same set of seats - a bank of three facing a bank of three - and that was how it was.
It had started no more than a fortnight ago, though Zoe could not be sure about that any more than she was quite sure she did deliberately actually catch that particular train each day and not just by coincidence. Leastways she seemed to find herself leaving the office and getting to the station early or a bit late but in time to catch it. She would have said the carriage she sat in was the closest to the stairs but if you looked at the layout of the platform and the position of the train objectively this simply was not true.
Zoe pulled her book out of her bag and began to read. As always there were a lot of people on her train. It was busy and there was some conversation underway but mostly people were reading their newspapers or even dozing. Stations came and stations went. It was a commuter line heading out into the country from the city dropping people off to go to their homes for the evening. After a time reading, Zoe too dozed, the regular sound of the wheels soporific, the busy day catching up on her. Her dream was peculiar
She awoke with a start, her eyes opening all at once. The man opposite her was looking at her, leaning towards her as if examining her, as if he had been watching her closely asleep. Expressionless he leant back in his seat and turned to look out of the window. Zoe blinked as she collected her thoughts. Had he really been looking at her? Where was she on her journey now? What did the dream mean?
The man stood at the next stop and got off without a word. Zoe watched him as he stepped along the platform; twill trousers, tweed jacket, sandy hair, large moustache, all rather military really. Had he really been looking at her?
It was the stop before her own and she began to gather her things together ready to get off. The train trundled the last few miles to the sea and Zoe's attention returned to her book.
As the train drew into her station, the terminus, she stood and looked down the carriage. It was empty. It always was for the last few stations on her line and that day had been no exception - not one passenger in her carriage. There were other passengers for her station but they were in the other carriages nearest to the exit. She followed them out into the night and walked on to her flat. Lentil Lasagne and salad for supper but first a hot cup of tea.
Another busy day, another rush to the station but she caught her train; this time with a few minutes to spare. Zoe sat in her accustomed seat and took her book from her bag, the bookmark still where she had left it that morning. A man she did not recognise got in and sat opposite her, a military looking man with a moustache. Zoe paid him little attention as she got on with her book; she was getting to an exciting bit. She paid little attention to the other passengers, to their comings and mostly goings or really to the stopping and starting of the train at all the stations it stopped at: her book engrossed her. It was only towards the penultimate station, when she had looked up and caught the military looking gentleman seemingly staring at her, had she realised he and she were the only two people left in the carriage. It was a bit scary for a moment but then he got up and walked down the aisle to the door ready to leave at his station. Zoe was relieved, it was not nice to suddenly find yourself alone with a man staring at you, though, probably, there were lots of other people elsewhere on the train.
With a lurch the train set off on the final leg of the journey and Zoe went back to her book.
Zoe was in two minds about reaching the final station - it was good to be home but she had been quite happy sitting in the warm carriage reading her book particularly as she had got to another exciting piece. As the train finally stopped Zoe looked up and put her book away. There was no one else in the carriage. She smiled to herself, she had been so engrossed in her book that she had not seen any of the passengers leave, hadn't paid the carriage any attention since she had got on: really anything could have happened and she wouldn't have noticed. Bean Paella for supper after a nice cup of tea.
The trouble with good books is that they finish. Even 'The Lord of the Rings' comes to an end and that is three books if you don't count 'The Hobbit' and related writings: though it would be a bit foolish to read 'The Lord of the Rings' without reading 'The Hobbit' first. Zoe had finished her book in the morning by the time she had reached the city and that meant she had nothing to read on the train all the way home. Strolling down the platform that evening with plenty of time to spare she thought she would probably have a sleep. That was one of the advantages of getting off at the end of the line - you couldn't overshoot and find yourself further down the line because there wasn't any further down the line. She settled into her usual seat by the window and looked out at the bustling railway station.