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“How was London?” Johnny knew he was asking
for trouble questioning Steve about his travels, but it felt impolite not to.
“Yeah not bad,” Steve said, fiddling with a
beer mat. Johnny nearly fell off his chair; He didn’t know if he’d ever heard
Steve utter that phrase before in his life. He waited a minute to see if there
was a but, but there didn’t seem to
be.
“That’s
good then,” Johnny said, still feeling a little confused by his friend’s lack
of complaints.
“If anything, it was too good,” Steve said.
“Too good?” Johnny wanted to get a
thermometer out to see if Steve had a temperature.
“Yeah, train was on time, meeting was good,
train nearly empty on the way back.”
Johnny looked around, maybe he’d sat at the
wrong table last time he’d been to the bar. But no he was sitting in the right
place.
“And get this,” Steve said. “I was in the
quiet carriage.”
Ah here we go, thought Johnny. The quiet
carriage rant. Not very original, there must have been at least ten facebook
updates this week ranting about quiet carriage misdemeanours.
“and you’ll never guess what, but it was
actually quiet,” Steve continued. “Not a message notification or a phone call
in earshot, no bleeding headphones or bleeding kids playing their bleeding
video games. No loud middle class people telling each other why those opposing
Brexit were only thinking of themselves. Nothing, it was like a library, the
odd sniff, the odd cough and a rustle of a packet of crisps, but otherwise
silence.”
“That’s amazing,” Johnny nodded.
“I know, I was so pissed off,” Steve replied.
“I mean what is this world coming to? People actually obeying the rules. People
showing consideration to their fellow passengers. I only travel in the quiet
coach so I can passive-aggressively tut at my fellow passengers. But there wasn’t
one tutting opportunity, not one! Even
when the ticket collector came through he whispered tickets please.” Steve took a mouthful of beer. “It’s just not right,”
he looked genuinely hurt as if the gods were conniving against him.
Johnny smiled, only Steve could turn a positive
into a negative.
“Stop feeling sorry for yourself and go and
buy the beers,” he said. “I’m sure next time you travel they’ll be a kid
watching Peppa Pig in your earshot.”
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