
The Lion, The Witch & The Rucksack
by Lynn Kilcline
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CHAPTER ONE - THE BEGINNING
Looking back, only a few days into the journey, I realised
that my mind was a complete blank when we closed the door
to 5 Woodhead Road and stepped into the waiting taxi.
I knew that everything that should have been turned off was
off; everything that should be shut and locked was shut and
locked.
No rattling the front door or trying the handle. We were leaving
and we were leaving now.
The run up to our departure had been stressful and tiring.
I had left my job after ten years with the N.S.P.C.C in October
1999, painfully aware that there would be no going back. No
more jobs with pensions and benefits; no more increases to
an annual salary in line with length of service.
I knew that I would be very lucky to find another job with
any prospects or, given my age any job at all.
I was frightened, but, the die had been cast the decisions
made, and the plans long in the making.
Over the past five years we had been buying and restoring
derelict properties which we then rented out, and the rents
were to be our main source of income during our travels.
'Number 8' was the final acquisition in our portfolio and
had presented the biggest challenge to my husband, Brian,
due to its size and the volume of work required.
In addition to planning for the trip I had been nagging him
for the last two months to finish this final addition to our
property empire.
Coming home with the house to finish was not an option for
me, given the possibility that it may be let and would supply
further income.
We worked like mad in those final weeks; Brian tiling, fitting
the kitchen and bathroom while I painted and painted.
The weather became colder and colder and we were outside chipping
paint off railings and rubbing down window frames [when the
ice melted from the sills].
By Christmas Day we were both really ill and spent a whole
day in bed. Christmas Day lunch was postponed, and when it
was finally served we couldn't do it justice.
It turned out to be a very bad time to have to eat our way
through the contents of the fridge and the freezer before
we left for India.
The New Millennium found us cleaning and scrubbing and pretty
miserable. As I painted wood panelling in the cellar with
my fingers freezing in my gloves, I tried to visualise palm
trees and beaches. And I thought: "Next week, next week.''
It was two washed out pieces of humanity that finally set
out on January 3rd 2000 for the big adventure. Perhaps it
wasn't mental shutdown that stopped us worrying about leaving.
Perhaps we were just too tired to care.
I had promised myself for months that when I reached Manchester
airport I would buy the biggest bag of chocolate peanuts ever,
on the basis that everyone is said to lose weight in India.
[As a chocoholic I had been abstaining for the last six months
in order to look bikini friendly.]
I found an Olde Worlde Sweetie Shoppe right in the middle
of the Duty Frees and among the jars of goodies was my heart's
desire.
The assistant tipped 1/2lb of nuts on to the scales and then
poured them into an old-fashioned triangular paper bag. She
then held it by the corners and swung it over and over so
that I ended up with a bag of sweets with two little twisted
ears at the top.
I was so impressed and transported back to the days of junior
school and the corner shop that I bought half a pound of rainbow
drops as well. Heaven!
Brian was chief baggage handler and was sitting comfortably
while I raced about buying cups of tea and camera batteries
and phoning Mum one last time.
Brian couldn't find his bank card when he went to the Duty
Free shop, so this was Mum's first instruction as our P.A:
"Cancel the card.''
We hadn't even left the country yet!
When we boarded the aircraft I was amazed by the technology
available even for economy class passengers. Telephone, personal
video, and excellent food, that was good enough to be called
cuisine.
As the icing on the cake I fancied chocolate peanuts for dessert.
We discovered after emptying the overhead luggage compartment
and all other bags in our possession that the chocolate peanuts
were on a seat in the departure lounge in Manchester.
There was a terrific draught from the emergency exit and
I spent the flight to Dubai with my feet wrapped in the complimentary
newspaper and the plastic bags containing the video earphones.
In Dubai we were both looking forward to the Duty Free shop.
Brian wanted to check out computer bargains and I had bought
my last pay cheque along for a new watch. We were to be disappointed.
Most High Street shops in England were better value for electrical
goods and Manchester airport was cheaper for watches. I consoled
myself with purchasing an outrageous pair of Gaultier sunglasses,
which were a tad expensive, but had my money refunded when
the salesgirl couldn't find a case to put them in.
I was not prepared to carry them in aluminium tin can that
is the Gaultier trademark packaging for perfume. Consolation
arrived in the shape of an over sized and over priced bag
of chocolate peanuts.
We decided to change the airport logo from "Fly Buy Dubai"
to
"Fly By Dubai.''
We managed to find a seat in the hustle and bustle of the
airport and scoffed the peanuts while watching people of all
nations rushing about. I was looking at the different fashions
and headgear and suddenly thought: "HATS!'' [As in: "Where
the hell are mine?'']
I travel with a selection of hats in the hope that by wearing
one in the sun my hair will not turn a strange colour.
I rummaged around the bags we had at our feet, frantically
searching for the shoulder bag that contained all my hats.
The scrambling allowed me to hope the lost item would magically
appear, but a nasty little voice in my head whispered: "No
chance. You can't even imagine where you could have left them,
can you?''
Fortunately Brian could remember, and he calmly walked back
to the security gate where I had left the bag on the conveyor.
It was still there, which perhaps says a lot about my taste
in hats.
The ongoing connection to Bombay was prompt and we had the
unexpected pleasure of being given an upgrade to business
class.
One fellow passenger was very wary of this grand gesture
on behalf of Emirates Airlines; he felt it pre-empted a disaster
or at the very least lost luggage. It actually meant neither
and we had a very pleasant flight.
The concerned passenger came along and chatted to us during
the journey.
He was from Barnsley, and he visited India for three or four
months a year. He travelled extensively but also spent time
in Calcutta where he helped in a school.
We made the most of his experiences and took lots of notes,
trying not to worry too much about his story of near death
after eating bad food and being left to fend for himself.
As the plane prepared to land in Bombay, most people seemed
to become very agitated and began strapping their hand luggage
to themselves and looked as if they were preparing for a race.
When the aircrew began disembarkation it was like the first
day of Harrods' sale. People were charging for passport control
like lemmings but we just wandered along to the security check
and were duly processed.
The lemmings looked confused. It seemed that Bombay was notorious
for delays going through customs and immigration. It had been
known to take hours but on this occasion it took about 15
minutes.
The mad dash had been unnecessary.
The airport was very basic and tatty: scratched and dirty
walls and the odd sad-looking plastic chair dotted here and
there.
As we waited for the luggage to emerge I realised my first
tussle with the real India was imminent.
I needed the lavatory.
What I am about to relate is a memory that will stay with
me in glorious technicolour for the rest of my life.
I approached the " Ladies " and saw, piled up next
to the door, stacks of what I can only describe as bedpans.
They were balancing one high, two high and four and five high
and it was impossible not to look at their contents.
Having done so, it was almost equally impossible to drag my
eyes away. My mind scrabbled frantically to identify what
the hell was in them and make some sense of it, before the
contents of my stomach hit the back of my throat.
It was as if the aftermath of an abortion clinic and the
waste from a hospital for terminally ill dysentery sufferers
had congealed in those large dishes.
It looked like guts and intestines and there were flies everywhere.
I was riveted by the horror of it and I kept thinking "You
will see it for what it is in a minute. It can't be what you
think."
I staggered into the toilet.
My eyes had been horrified outside. Now my nose was about
to be assaulted.
Standing by a row of hand basins was a little wizened old
lady.
Her sari was hitched up and tucked in her waistband exposing
bowed, brown stick legs.
She was barefoot and splashing about in a sea of the most
gut- wrenchingly powerful undiluted disinfectant as she ineffectually
brushed at the floor with what appeared to be a horse's tail.
Squelching into the faeces-encrusted squat-down lavatory
almost seemed like a haven.
If it is possible to feel your face drain of colour, I did.
I was shocked, I felt sick, and I was scared. What the hell
had I let us in for? This was only the airport. What would
we find outside?
When I emerged I felt compelled to look at those pans again
and they were as bad as I had thought.
I returned to the baggage reclaim and was speechless; I didn't
have the words then to describe my experience.
Only once during the rest of the trip did I encounter anything
almost as bad, but I wasn't to know that then.
Before we had left home we had a number of conversations with
a former neighbour who had made trips to India.
We had quizzed him about Bombay, its layout, and travelling
in from the airport. He had said he rarely experienced difficulties
as his company booked a car to take him to his hotel.
Although expensive taxi rides were strictly against our budgetary
principles, we decided it might be a good idea so before leaving
home we telephoned our hotel in Bombay and booked a car. What
a bit of luck that turned out to be.
As we stepped out of the airport into the early morning light
we were greeted by a host of old black and yellow vehicles
in varying states of repair.
It was like a bumblebee's knacker yard. These were Bombay's
taxis and they weren't going anywhere.
They were on strike.
We located our pre-booked car and despite it's being a complete
wreck with ripped seats and no door handles, we were glad
to see it.
Our journey towards central Bombay seemed to be mile after
mile of shanty town comprising rows and rows of dwellings
made with rope and old bits of wood draped with tarpaulins
or bright blue plastic.
Cows and dogs were scavenging among mountains of litter and
it wasn't unusual to see the odd rat scampering about.
Children squatted in the road using it as a toilet.
Men in dirty loin-cloths were leaning in doorways cleaning
their teeth and spitting into the gutters; others were urinating
against walls.
Women of all ages sat washing dishes in the same gutters as
the men spat.
Everyone looked very dirty but no one appeared to be starving
and the general impression was of people going about their
everyday business. We were amazed that any child would survive
childbirth or infancy in these conditions.
Within 45 minutes we reached our hotel, The Ambassador.
From the outside the upper floors looked fairly grotty but
the ground floor was quite grand. We walked up the steps to
the entrance and into a pleasant lobby and reception area.
We later found that all reasonable hotels in India charged
five-star prices; they also all had very grand entrances that
looked much better from a distance.
The splendid doormen that stood guard at most of the upmarket
hotels invariably had some dashing white uniform with coloured
sash and turban.
On closer inspection these uniforms were almost always very
dirty and stained, and the collars were always frayed.
Porters and waiters had exceptionally dirty uniforms or jackets
with the type of heavy greasy staining you associate with
tramps. The prices charged by an establishment, or the affluence
of the clientele, had no bearing on the cleanliness of the
staff.
Our bedroom was first class with all the usual comforts. Television,
mini-bar and air conditioning. We were tempted to lie down
on the large double bed and sleep but we decided to go out
and explore - and attempt to stay awake until nightfall.
We showered and put on fresh clothes to dispel the jaded,
tired and bad-tempered feeling that inevitably accompanies
long-distance travel.
We had arrived. India awaited......
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