I walked the entire length of the train at Gare Austerlitz. No car 47. I asked the one of the two SNCF conductors checking tickets at the entrance of the voie. “Ask him,” one said pointing to a young man with a crew cut coming my way.
I did. He said it was there, sweeping his hand along the train. Despite being tired and dragging a suitcase full of my holiday stuff, I walked the entire length again. Nothing. I found five other people all looking for the same car.
Back to the conductors.
“It’s between 46 and 48,” the same young man said.
“Five people can’t find it,” I said wondering why as the only non native French speaker I was spokesperson.
He rolled his eyes and pointed to a man with a Salvador Dali mustache. “Ask him, he’s the chef.”
I did.
The man picked up a piece of paper. “It’s here.” He rattled it at us.
“You have the paper, not car 47 on the train.”
“Ask her.” His moustache quivered as he pointed to a young woman not more than 25.
She at least believed us and called someone on her walkie-talkie. “He says it is at the head of train.”
We all walked back to the head of the train.
No car 47.
I decided to jump on a car that had only seats rather than the wagon lit that would have given me a comfortable bed for the night.
I don’t mind someone messing up and not attaching a car. I do mind rudeness, lying, and the lack of willingness to solve the problem.
The car was air-conditioned to a point that would have thrilled a penguin. I pulled a long skirt from my suit case and wrapped myself up as best I could. Finally I dropped off to sleep only to wake to a woman who felt the need and didn’t resist it singing La Vie en Rose.
Maybe it wasn't the train ride from hell, but only because of the temperature.
Monday, July 03, 2006
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