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| Arley Station credit Adam Rutter |
Wednesday, August 6th, 2025
It was a beautiful day. The weather was hot and sunny. So I went out for a drive in a new white open top car, which was given to me on my birthday. To feel the air blowing through my flowing hair in the sweltering heat was so refreshing. I smelt the whiff of tar in the warm breeze as I was going along a twisty road in the countryside. The air felt cooler when the road cut through a deciduous forest. I turned off at the junction in a tiny village, and went down a country lane, winding its way towards the bottom of a valley. I ended up in Arley, the Worcestershire village that lies on the edge of the forest. I pulled up on a grassy car park near the banks of the River Severn. Arley has managed to hold onto its peace and tranquillity, considering the rural location being popular among tourists. It is a typical English village that has kept its charm.
I stepped out of the car, and walked to the Severn Valley Railway, just up the road from where I parked. Mum and Dad arranged to meet me at the railway station. I sat on a bench, waiting for the 11.46 train. The station was a recreation of the Great Western Railway-era. There were posters of advertisements from yesteryear dotted around the station premises, promoting products that were no longer commercially available. Both station platforms were lined with gas lamps: a feature that would not be seen on the modern railways. I looked up and down the platform. It was empty. A slight drop in ambient temperature gave me goose bumps. Was there a change in the weather? Nothing was mentioned in the forecast. The sky was cloudless. Yet the temperature felt unusually cooler for the time of year.
A motor car chugged over the arched railway bridge, going down the same lane that I drove on. From the corner of my eye, I caught a fleeting glimpse of a dark green grille bonnet through the gap between the bridge and a hedgerow. I looked at the vintage car without a second thought. There was not a motor rally in the area; at least, not that I was aware of. I had no recollection of such an event taking place on this particular day. The riverside was very quiet, which was also strange, because lots of day visitors flock there in the summer. I never heard a murmur. Not even laughter. All I heard were birds singing and a crow’s relentless caw. What did catch my attention was the church bells chiming two o’clock. This was not right. I left the house at 10.50. According to my watch, the time was 11.46 precisely. The time that Mum and Dad were due to arrive. I looked at the down platform towards the bridge. There was no sign of the train. Twenty minutes later, it still had not come. Towards the lower end of platform 1, a door opened on the station building. A man wearing a black cap and dark suit stepped out. I removed myself from the bench, and ran down the platform, my high heels clattering on the concrete. As he was about to walk out through the gate, I called him.
‘Excuse me’, I said.
He took no notice.
The second time that I said it, he stopped before shutting the gate behind him. The man turned. I stopped running. He stared back at me, stern.
‘Is there a train due?’ I asked.
‘No miss. There’s not a train for another hour.’
‘What happened to the 11.46?’
‘There wasn’t an 11.46.’
‘I’ve waited nearly half an hour for the 11.46 from Kidderminster.’
‘Kidderminster?’
‘Yes.’
‘There ain’t no train due from there.’
‘You’re joking.’
‘I’m not joking miss.’
‘So when is the next train?’
‘Three o’clock.’
‘Three o’clock!’
‘Yea. From Worcester’.
‘Worcester?’
‘That’s right miss.’
‘But isn’t there gonna be another train from Kidderminster?’
‘Yes.’
‘When.’
‘Five o’clock.’
‘You mean I’ll have to wait for three hours?’
‘Yes miss. Where are you going, by the way?’
‘Nowhere.’
‘What d’you mean, nowhere?’
‘I’m here to meet my family.’
‘Huh! You’re a bit late for that miss.’
‘Why?’
‘The train passed through this station four hours ago.’
‘Four hours ago?’
‘You heard what I said. You should look at the timetable.’
The man pointed at the times written in chalk on the notice board.
‘It’s all on there,’ he highlighted. Then the man said, ‘Now, if you’ll excuse me miss. I have work to do.’ He closed the gate.
My chest rose up to my throat. I stared blankly at the gate. Everything that the man said was like being punched in the face. It hit me so hard, I felt as though I had been knocked out. My struggle to make sense of it all was just as hard. I never shared this bizarre event with anyone. Not even with my closest friends or immediate family. I decided to remain silent over the awful and most strangest affair.
As I write my account of the uncanny and terrifying experience, I am still struggling to process on exactly what had occurred.
What really happened, I do not know. All I know is that Mum and Dad were going to meet me for a belated birthday. A birthday I shall never forget. A birthday that never was.





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