Thursday, December 20, 2007

The Trans Indian

This is an account of a journey I'll never, ever forget and want to blog down to, if nothing else, purely laud the fortitude of my travelling companion and myself. Probably the longest, most torturous of train journeys from which I emerged my grimiest, tanned -nay, blackened- best. Before I start, let me make it clear that this is from my college days. i.e. that golden era when your pocket money woes would shame the chana seller at your college gate. That probably is the best reason I can give for foolishly buying non-ac train tickets from Bangalore to Delhi in the month of May. That translated to 36 hours of sweating it out at insanely high temperatures. But who cares if you've stood in line three days in advance to get a 50% discount on your ticket? Gloating that we would cross almost the length of the country in 300 bucks, we awaited our nemesis. Plus I didn't know until afterwards that I had magnetic properties. So what if they exclusively attract The Worst Luck Ever. If Lindsay Lohan knew, she'd probably have offered me her role in Just My Luck. As we boarded the fateful train, we made a last-minute supposedly thoughtful purchase. Grapes. Like some KILOS of them, as if they were an endangered fruit on the verge of extinction that we would never eat again. So we got on our train on time, prim and proper that we were, and promptly climbed on to the upper berths that we had specially asked for since we wanted no disturbance in our sleep on the first day of summer break. All smiles, grape juice, chug-chug, all well. Just a lil hot, thats all. The night went fine, and so did the following morning. But as the day started progressing, the roof right on our heads started getting warmer, together with the air being circulated by the fan right on our reddened faces. Desperately fanning ourselves and munching the now-disgusting grapes, we only prayed for the day to end soon so we could be in Delhi the next day. Night fell, and the sun rose the next day with some more plotting against our fate. Just as the day became unbearable and we resembled baked turkeys with a film of gleaming filth, we heard THE news. A train on the same track had been derailed and we would have to spend an extra day circling in Madhya Pradesh, waiting for the tracks to be cleared. May + Madhya Pradesh= Deep regret. For not buying ac tickets. For choosing upper berths. For not wearing something lighter than oversized tees that weren't thin enough. For stuffing enough grapes to bloat our bellies simply for want of a deck of cards that would have been a sport better than chewing saccharine sweet citrus. Two days later, we finally made it to Delhi. A sour expression on our faces and heavy bags on our backs, we took a bus for the last leg of our journey. We had been travelling close to 40 hours, and sort of had a seizure when the tyre got punctured in the middle of nowhere. Hailing every vehicle that crossed the damn bus, we scowled at each one that didn't stop. After some desperate prayers to the cosmos, we got another bus, and finally reached our destination in merely 50 hours. The one decision I made that actually turned out to be a smart one was the one that I took as I reached home. I decided to make a lesser conspicuous back door entry.

2 comments:

Che said...

Reminds me of my lucknow to mumbai train journey where i fell asleep all alone only to wake up to find that half the coach was full of my relatives who boarded the train some where in the moddle of the night to attend some wedding in mumbai. oh boy was THAT fun. Atleast it was 2nd AC :).

Aseem Prakash said...

Fruit would still have been better than Bhajiya and Samosas! Given you had booked upper berths did you not have a place down to sit during the day? Three of us buddies when in Xavier's once did 48 hours (sleeper class) from Kanyakumari to Bombay as the last leg of our South India tour. The train halted somewhere for a good amount of time and as we managed to find ourselves some coke we exchanged a few words with two fellow travellers both young South Indian men who were trying to hunt for beer! It was a lot of fun and I found it very satisfying especially because it was gruelling. Like a getaway from a sedantary routine I have found hard to break free from living in the city. What about you? Did you like your journey? Or do you look back at it as hard luck?

Awaiting your response,

Aseem