
Not sure there's much to cover in this one since Storytrails books have no rules. I figure this is good time to do a horror book since October is spoopy Halloween time. Without further ado:

A google search suggests that 40k GBP in 1982 (when the book was originally published) is worth about 122k GBP today, or about 157k USD. Anyhow, there's no choice for believing Mr Crabtree, so it's on to page 2:Mr Crabtree leaned forward, pushed a pair of thick, horn rimmed spectacles further down his nose and looked at me over the top of them. Seated there at his large desk, he looked every inch the lawyer.
'How well did you know your uncle Jasper?' he asked me.
I told him hardly at all. I had met him once when I was a small child. I knew that he had been hurt in a riding accident when he was still a young man and that he could only get about in a wheel chair. I knew that he lived in some big, old house, and that was all.
Crabtree sniffed.
'Well,' he said, 'it seems that your uncle has remembered you better than you remember him. He has left you everything in his will.'
I didn't know what to say. I had never expected my uncle Jasper to leave me anything.
'It isn't a fortune,' said Crabtree. 'There's not a lot of money. There is the house, of course—Marsh Hall. The only thing to do with that is sell it.'
'I think I'd like to see it,' I told him.
'You wouldn't,' he replied. 'It's big, it's old, it's gloomy, and it's falling to pieces. Leave the selling to me and I might get you forty thousand for the house and its contents.'
I told him that I would still like to see it. He pushed his spectacles back onto his nose. 'Oh dear!' he said. 'I can see that I shall have to tell you. I'm a lawyer, so it isn't my job to know about ghosts and haunted houses, but I do know about Marsh Hall. Heaven knows why your uncle lived in the place. He couldn't keep servants. The local people won't go near it. I'll tell you—I'm not a nervous man, but I wouldn't spend a night in Marsh Hall. There's only one word to describe Marsh Hall—"evil". Please take my advice, and sell it.'
Do you believe Mr Crabtree, or would you rather make up your own mind about Marsh Hall? If you want to find out for yourself, then turn to page 2.
It was beginning to rain as I stepped out of the train onto the platform at Marsh End Station. I still had four miles to go to reach Marsh Hall. I had been told that there would be a taxi, but the road outside the station was empty.
The porter who had taken my ticket was in the booking office and putting on his hat and coat. I asked him about the taxi.
'Couldn't say,' he said, 'not for sure. Most times he comes. Others, he doesn't. Where would you be wanting to go to?'
I told him, Marsh Hall. He stopped fastening his coat and gave me an odd look.
'Nobody doesn't want to go to Marsh Hall,' he said.
I thought that he might be more helpful if I told him that I was the new owner. I explained that my uncle had left the Hall to me in his well.
'Didn't do you no favour then!' was the reply.
I began to think that some of what Crabtree had said about the Hall must be true, but that wasn't going to solve my problem of how to get there.
'If I walk,' I said, 'then which way do I go?'
'That's easy,' he said. 'Just follow the road out of the village. That way, it doesn't go nowhere except across the marsh to the Hall.'
He took out a bunch of keys from a hook on the wall and started moving towards the door.
'Got to lock up now. Last train's gone and station's closed 'till seven in the morning.'
He locked the door and we walked together into the road. The taxi still hadn't arrived.
'If you does decide to walk,' he said, turning his collar against the rain, 'then don't try no short cuts. If you gets into trouble in the marsh, there won't be nobody to hear you—nobody what's human, that is!'
I had to get to Marsh Hall before dark. The caretaker had the only set of keys and he left the Hall at sunset. I had about an hour. If I waited too long for the taxi, then I might not have time to walk. I wasn't feeling too happy about spending a night in the Hall, but I certainly didn't want to spend the night outside it!
Did I wait for the taxi, or did I walk from the station?