The thread was written by an elderly man named Eino, who claimed that as a boy in 1952, he met a woman named Julia at Kouvola station. She carried a map of Finland where every rail line was hand-drawn in black ink, and on it, she had marked not just stations and switches, but times — not timetables, but something else. “She said the trains don’t follow the clock,” Eino wrote. “They follow the map. The map knows when a train is late before the conductor does.”
That night, Julia took the photo home. She opened her laptop and pulled up Resiina , the Finnish railway enthusiast wiki. She searched for “Hr1 1128” and found a sparse entry: Retired 1967. Scrapped 1971. Final assignment: Joensuu depot. Then, on a whim, she searched “junat kartalla.” A forum thread from 2005 surfaced, titled: The Lost Notebooks of Julia K. junat kartalla julia
Julia was the new intern. Twenty-two, fresh from university, with a minor in transport history and a major in getting lost. She had been hired to digitize old timetables, but the moment she saw the picture, something clicked. “Junat kartalla” — trains on a map — was an old hobbyist term, used by railfans who plotted every locomotive’s movement across Finland’s sparse postwar network. But “Julia”? That was her name. The thread was written by an elderly man
An hour passed. She felt foolish. Then a cleaning lady with a bucket approached. “You’re the second one to do that this week,” she said in Finnish. “The other was an old man. He left you something.” “They follow the map