In the summer of 1911, the Zanetti train, a private Italian passenger train, departed from Rome on a bright afternoon, bound for Lombardy. Aboard were 106 passengers, including nobles, businessmen, and a few tourists. Everything was normal until the train entered a newly constructed tunnel near Bologna—and never came out the other side.
Railway officials were stunned. No trace of the train, tracks, or passengers was ever found inside the tunnel. Teams searched for days, but there were no signs of derailment or collapse. It was as if the entire train had vanished into thin air.
Years later, strange reports surfaced. In Mexico, a mental asylum recorded the arrival of two confused Italian men in 1845—66 years before the train disappeared. They claimed to have come by train from Rome. Their names matched two passengers on the Zanetti manifest.
Theories of time travel, alternate dimensions, or a portal hidden in the tunnel still circulate. Locals say that on quiet nights near the sealed tunnel, you can hear the distant rumble of a train, and ghostly voices crying for help.
No one knows what truly happened. But one question remains unanswered:
Where did the Zanetti train—and its 106 passengers—
really go?

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