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He paced up and down the aisle on the train as
if he owned the place arrogantly barking instructions into his hands free
headset.
‘I’m being deadly serious, ‘ he said in heavily
accented English. ‘Now is the time to be brave.’
Brave? It was only a train ride between Ostrava
and Prague, it was 3.5 hours long, and subject to delays but I’ve never felt I
needed to be brave to conquer the journey. Resigned to one’s fate maybe, but
brave? I think he was exaggerating.
He was a sharp dresser, his shirt looked like
it was 9 a.m. not 5.30 p.m., his shoes shone brighter than the setting sun. He
wore huge black-rimmed glasses that are all the rage at the moment and had a
neat-fringe haircut that couldn’t hide the growing bald patch encroaching from
behind. Despite the hands free headset, he had his iPhone 6 in his hand to show
the world he owned the latest and brightest gadget. His walk was the
combination of a catwalk model and a prowling tiger, slow careful steps,
showing off his toned figure to everyone else sitting on the train. Each time
he walked passed his colleagues he made a gesture to suggest he’d be back to
them asap but this call really was too important.
Finally he sat down but he didn’t shut up. I could still hear him. He was speaking Czech
now but somehow with an American accent that he hadn’t shown when speaking
English.
I tried to block him out and make myself
comfortable. My bones were aching and I would welcome the chance to snooze.
Despite the quacking of my fellow passenger, I was soon falling into a drowsy
state that meant sleep was not too far away.
But the sleepiness was not going to last. I was
jolted from my dreams by a loud argument. I opened my eyes to see the ticket
collector and the poser arguing. I tried to understand what was going on. Then the penny dropped and I smiled to myself. Mr Wonderful was being asked to leave the
first class compartment because he didn’t have the right ticket. As he was
being led away he looked back pleadingly at his colleagues.
He said something which I could only assume
was, ‘aren’t you coming with me?’ But his colleagues just shrugged, smiled and
looked rather pleased as the poser left the to find his seat amongst the hoi
polloi.
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