The Train Conductor's Warning Hid a Betrayal in the Briefcase-Quieen - Chainityai

The Train Conductor’s Warning Hid a Betrayal in the Briefcase-Quieen

I had taken enough business trips to know the rhythm of coming home. Airports had their own misery, but trains made exhaustion feel slower, more intimate, like fatigue had reserved the seat across from you.

By the time I boarded after two days in Columbus, I wanted nothing dramatic. I wanted stale food, weak coffee, three unanswered emails, and a few hours of pretending my job did not follow me everywhere.

I worked in risk consulting, a title that sounded sharper than the life behind it. Most days, risk meant invoices, contracts, and the dull little lies companies hid where they thought no one would look.

Image

The client that week was tied to freight logistics, a rail-adjacent business with polished conference rooms and fake plants. They smiled too much. They answered too quickly. They made ugly numbers feel carefully rehearsed.

My boss, Adrian Pike, called before I boarded. Adrian was more than a supervisor to me. He had hired me, defended me, promoted me, and taught me how to survive rooms full of liars.

That was why his final instruction stayed with me. He told me to hand-carry a locked leather briefcase to Washington, not to check it, not to lose it, and not to leave it with anyone.

He called it sensitive internal material. In our world, that usually meant a contract nobody wanted emailed, a report legal wanted contained, or a mistake that would become very expensive if seen too early.

I did not ask questions. That was the first mistake. I accepted the briefcase, boarded the train, loosened my tie, and convinced myself the case was just another burden dressed up as urgency.

The rain followed us east in long, dirty streaks across the windows. Outside, farmhouses flashed and vanished. Telephone poles snapped past like black ribs. Inside, everything smelled of damp wool, burnt coffee, and disinfectant.

I had a stale turkey sandwich open on the little fold-out table. The bread tasted tired. The overhead light buzzed faintly. My laptop glowed over a spreadsheet I no longer cared enough to understand.

Rourke, the conductor, checked my ticket about an hour into the ride. He was mid-fifties, maybe older, with kind eyes, square shoulders, and a uniform crisp enough to shame every rumpled traveler aboard.

He noticed the papers spread around me and smiled. “You look like a man losing an argument with numbers.” I told him numbers were easier than people, and he laughed without making it feel like a joke.

That was the last normal conversation I remember from that train. After he left, the wheels kept their steady rhythm, the rain kept tapping the glass, and the briefcase sat beside my shoe like a sleeping animal.

Then someone pounded on my compartment door so hard the window shook. I expected a drunk passenger, maybe someone in the wrong car. Instead, the door flew open and Rourke stumbled inside.

His face had gone pale enough to look powdered. Rainwater dripped from his cap brim and struck the floor in tiny metallic taps. He closed the door behind him with both hands.

“Get out,” he whispered. “Hide in the staff room. Now.” He did not sound like a man enforcing train rules. He sounded like a man spending the last of his courage on a stranger.

I stared at him, still holding half a sandwich. My brain tried to stay ordinary. A misunderstanding. A security sweep. A passenger fight. Something inconvenient, but survivable. Something with paperwork afterward.

Rourke locked the door, then looked around the compartment in a way that made my stomach drop. He checked the corridor, the ceiling vent, the lower bunk, the window latch, and the bag at my feet.

“Under the bunk,” he said. “Now.” I asked him why, because people ask useless questions when terror arrives too quickly. His jaw tightened, and his fingers went still around the edge of the blanket.

“If you want to be alive in two minutes, stop asking questions and get small.” There was no drama in his voice. No performance. Just a flat, practical sentence with death standing behind it.

We never reached the staff room. Footsteps hit the corridor before he could move me there, heavy and measured, not wandering like passengers. Several people were moving together, and every step sounded trained.

Rourke shoved the blanket up from the lower bunk. Dust rolled out, warm air breathed from the radiator, and the narrow gap looked too small for a grown man holding a locked leather briefcase.

I thought of refusing. I thought of demanding a name, a reason, a complete explanation. Instead, something inside me went cold and obedient. I slid underneath with the briefcase pressed to my chest.

Rourke crouched beside me. I could smell rain, metal, and the faint wool scent of his uniform. “They are looking for a courier,” he said. “If they see you, do not speak.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *