Captain Adrian
For the 44
Indians on a 13-day UK-Ireland Group Tour the Tour Operator had hired a
55-seater Mercedes Benz piloted by two Coach Captains - Mr Craig for the London-Manchester
leg, and Mr Gibbons for the remainder of the trip - who were as different as
apple from coconut. Craig welcomed each guest including the kids with a smile
and his signature greeting: Good Morning, don’t enter my coach without a smile.
Keep smiling all through the day, that’s the best way to make the most of your
holiday.
Very
sensible advice. Why feel grouchy about trifling matters like the unpredictable
English weather, CC’s strict punctuality and ‘No food inside the coach’ rules, and
spoil the holiday mood?
Adrian
Gibbons was nearly seven feet tall with the solid build of a star footballer, large
tattoos on both his forearms, a bald head, and an inscrutable face that
revealed little about what was going on in his mind. He could have been a fearsome
bouncer before he became a Coach Captain. If one were to see this frowning bull-dozer
of a man approaching on a lonely street, a most natural response would be to quickly
step aside or even better, turn back and run.
He spoke
little, smiled less, and even the Tour Manger (Jayesh Mhatre, a Marathi manus
from Mumbai) despite his 25 years of experience of European Group Tours struggled
to make sense of his brief, matter-of-fact, business-like announcements in a heavy
Welsh accent. Adrian opened his mouth on a strict need-to-speak basis, focused
on his driving, and was an excellent driver.
‘Reaching in
five minutes, Dublin Sea Point Beach, our last photo-stop for the day,’
announced the Tour Manager.
After a visit
to the sprawling and sombre Titanic Museum at Belfast, the tourists had driven for
more than two hours through rain to reach Dublin in the evening.
‘Please
hurry. No coach is allowed to stop here but Coach Captain has made an exception
owing to the bad weather.
There is a
light drizzle and a strong wind, so please take your umbrellas and raincoats.
Those who do not wish to get down may stay in the bus which will wait in the
Parking Lot and return at the assigned time to pick up those who got down. Halt
here is for 20 minutes only, enough time to click a few photos.’
The weather was
rather nasty, not unusual for spring in Dublin. The sky was a darkening grey, the
wind whistled menacingly, tall waves crashed angrily on the concrete blocks
dumped on the shoreline to prevent the sea from devouring the promenade. The
beach front was forlorn except for the determined few of this group of Indian holidayers
who wanted full value for their money. Stepping out of the bus they unfurled
their umbrellas and the skimpy, portable Chinese umbrellas immediately turned
turtle. The poor visibility did not deter the determined photo-shooters
including the bubbly couple with the selfie-stick, but they got only hazy
shots.
Before the
bus could drive off to the Parking Lot, the few tourists who had stepped down got
a little soaked and hurried back to the bus. A senior-citizen couple at a
little distance was also returning to the bus. The Coach Captain, usually reticent,
spoke agitatedly, ‘Please hurry. I am not permitted to stop here.’ He had
already risked a parking ticket. There was no policeman, but the cameras were
at their job.
Tour Manager
hailed the couple to hurry and board the bus. The rather brief stop much upset a
gentleman in his forties who spoke sharply to the Tour Manager,
‘What
non-sense is this, why are you asking us to hurry back? Didn’t you say this
stop was for 20 minutes? Why change the plan?’
‘Sir, I did NOT
change the plan. All who had got down returned immediately owing to the bad
weather. Should you and your family wish to enjoy a further stroll on the
sea-front, you are most welcome; the coach would wait at the Parking Lot and
pick you back at the agreed time. All the Coach Captain is saying is that he cannot
park HERE.’
The
gentleman was infuriated. The visit to the Titanic Museum at Belfast earlier in
the day, the long drive from Belfast to Dublin through rain and haze, and the
gloomy weather could have had something to do with the tourist’s irascibility. Maybe,
he was yet to get over the shock from losing all his credit cards and cash on
Day 1 of the trip. While he merrily shot photos of his wife and daughter in
front of the crowded Buckingham Palace, his wife had been quietly relieved of
her purse by a pickpocket.
He raised
his voice a pitch higher, and further harangued the Tour Manager. A few bitter
remarks were exchanged. Since the gentleman and the Tour Manager were still
standing, the Coach Captain could not drive the coach.
‘Please be
seated,’ requested the hapless Tour Manager, but the gentleman seemed
determined not to take his seat till the TM’s explanation along with apology
was to his satisfaction. He stood near his seat at the back of the coach and
gesticulated at the TM upon which the latter rushed towards the tourist,
whether to get him to take his seat or to engage in a fist-fight was not clear.
Before TM
could reach the gentleman tourist, the coach reverberated with a stern, stentorian
voice not unlike a heavy metal ball being dragged on an uneven stony surface and
the tourists found the front of the bus filled with the towering frame of
Adrian Gibbons, looking like an alpha gorilla male thumping his chest.
‘I am the
Coach Captain, and I won’t permit any nasty occurrence in my coach. Gentleman
at the back, please take your seat. Tour Manager, please return to your seat. Fasten
your seat-belts since I am driving off in a minute.’
Gibbon’s thunderous
command had been so effective that no one opened their mouths again except to
eat the buffet dinner at the designated Indian restaurant later in the evening.
The minor
mutiny had been quelled with an iron hand by Adrian, Coach Captain and Boss, and for this once no Indian resented the foreign hand!
***
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