The use of quotation marks here baffles me; was there not really a fault? Is the fault a metaphor? A euphemism? Was the fault actually a driver's existential crisis? What do they mean?!
(And before anyone says it; reading the article would be too easy and kill the joke so no!)
Bloodbark trees are prized for their exotic red wood. Also called Murder Trees, they produce large volumes of sap that imitates blood.
Those who strike it become convinced they are killing a person. This is thought to be an adaptation that helps Bloodbarks survive in a deforested world.
I've worked on the railway since 2007, not a long time by any standard, but today has been by far one of the worst I've seen for what goes on behind the veil.
John Randall wrote that there was a 'certain old building' in Madeley, Shropshire that was 'Haunted by Fairies'. On moonlit nights, they could be seen dancing around the building and getting up to all sorts of mischief.