Tales of Terror and Mystery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 272 pages of information about Tales of Terror and Mystery.

Tales of Terror and Mystery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 272 pages of information about Tales of Terror and Mystery.

A request for a special is not a very uncommon circumstance in a rich commercial centre, but that two should be required upon the same afternoon was most unusual.  It so happened, however, that Mr. Bland had hardly dismissed the first traveller before a second entered with a similar request.  This was a Mr. Horace Moore, a gentlemanly man of military appearance, who alleged that the sudden serious illness of his wife in London made it absolutely imperative that he should not lose an instant in starting upon the journey.  His distress and anxiety were so evident that Mr. Bland did all that was possible to meet his wishes.  A second special was out of the question, as the ordinary local service was already somewhat deranged by the first.  There was the alternative, however, that Mr. Moore should share the expense of Monsieur Caratal’s train, and should travel in the other empty first-class compartment, if Monsieur Caratal objected to having him in the one which he occupied.  It was difficult to see any objection to such an arrangement, and yet Monsieur Caratal, upon the suggestion being made to him by Mr. Potter Hood, absolutely refused to consider it for an instant.  The train was his, he said, and he would insist upon the exclusive use of it.  All argument failed to overcome his ungracious objections, and finally the plan had to be abandoned.  Mr. Horace Moore left the station in great distress, after learning that his only course was to take the ordinary slow train which leaves Liverpool at six o’clock.  At four thirty-one exactly by the station clock the special train, containing the crippled Monsieur Caratal and his gigantic companion, steamed out of the Liverpool station.  The line was at that time clear, and there should have been no stoppage before Manchester.

The trains of the London and West Coast Railway run over the lines of another company as far as this town, which should have been reached by the special rather before six o’clock.  At a quarter after six considerable surprise and some consternation were caused amongst the officials at Liverpool by the receipt of a telegram from Manchester to say that it had not yet arrived.  An inquiry directed to St. Helens, which is a third of the way between the two cities, elicited the following reply—­

“To James Bland, Superintendent, Central L. & W. C., Liverpool.—­Special passed here at 4:52, well up to time.—­Dowster, St. Helens.”

This telegram was received at six-forty.  At six-fifty a second message was received from Manchester—­

“No sign of special as advised by you.”

And then ten minutes later a third, more bewildering—­

“Presume some mistake as to proposed running of special.  Local train from St. Helens timed to follow it has just arrived and has seen nothing of it.  Kindly wire advices.—­Manchester.”

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Tales of Terror and Mystery from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.