|
While
waiting for a train...
I was sitting
alone in Pearse Street station waiting for a train.
I was twenty minutes early and it was fifteen
minutes late. Trains generally are.
They use, as far as I can make out, the same scheduling
system as women. Which is why I wasn’t too
bothered – I’ve learned to make allowances.
I knew, you see, that the poor thing was probably
torturing itself with perfectly sensible worries
about its appearance and odour and had to take
time at each crossing to ask cars if its new paintjob
made its rear carriage look big.
Besides, it didn’t really matter,
because a few minutes later a DART trundled in
to distract me. It was extraordinarily crowded.
The carriages looked like they’d been vacuum-packed.
I’d only seen crowding like it before when loading
cattle for the factory into Con Leavey’s lorry,
and even then Con had to use a cattle prod and
reams of foul language. I assume these people
voluntarily boarded and chose to be squashed,
unless Con has recently taken a position as “Capacity
Planner” with CIE.
As I watched the DART slow, I smiled
in some sort of vacant amusement. It’s the
kind of smile that often creeps across a face
when its owner is having a conversation with himself.
Usually people find their own conversation hilarious
(if you don’t, give up accountancy), but often
keep it to themselves to reduce the risk of being
upstaged by some flash bastard with funnier stories.
Unless you’re schizophrenic of course, in which
case there’s always a flash bastard or three to
swagger in and ruin things.
So I was smiling at a packed green
train, now stationary, and applauding myself on
being such a funny bloke. And then I woke
from my reverie. I realised I shouldn’t
have been smiling. Something terrible was
happening!
Imagine if you will that you’re
doing a thirty-minute commute into work on a DART.
This is an extremely boring way to start a day.
It’s so boring in fact, that you could easily
spend the entire journey intently reading the
label on the jacket the guy in front of you is
wearing. “40% wool, 60% polyester” becomes
the latest John Grisham blockbuster. You
read it eight times in case you missed something
important in the plot. You discuss it later
with friends in an attempt to unearth the moral.
Actually no – you’ll only do this if you’re the
type of person who doesn’t find their own conversation
amusing (see above).
And worse things can happen on DART
journeys. Sometimes, as your eyes wander,
they can meet with somebody else’s and you actually
make eye contact. This is awkward for both
parties, but more so for the person who was actually
caught doing the looking (i.e. The Looker).
That person should feel like a pervert or some
other class of social outcast. He must take
a mental note to never look towards that person
again. If he does, he must poke out his
eyes with Con Leavey’s cattle prod.
Anyway, the point is that these
people are very bored and don’t know what to do
with themselves. So it’s entirely understandable
that they be delighted at the sudden appearance
through their windows of a real living person
with a big smiley head on him. “At last,”
they sigh, “something we can all stare at together”
and they divert their attention towards the poor
misfortunate outside.
So there I was – a smiling distraction
for 800 unexcited DART occupants.
As you might imagine, being unwillingly made the
star of the show didn’t go down well with my self-conscious
nature. My smile vanished and I got mildly
embarrassed. Actually I blushed a little.
What am I talking about – so much blood rushed
to my face that it became an erection. Then
the usual happened. In situations like this,
where it’s clear that embarrassment is inevitable,
my composure deserts me. It sizes up the
situation and decides it’s better off on the other
side. “You’re on your own mate” are its
parting words and, if I listen carefully, I can
sometimes hear it mutter “loser.”
So in its absence, my body went
haywire. I started to sweat. I went
through a series of hot and cold flushes, flashing
between pale and crimson like a cyclist’s taillight.
My face began to twitch like a worm during orgasm
and my pupils dilated like a hedgehog’s in headlights.
None of this helped to divert attention.
So I tried to talk myself into believing
nobody was looking. It’s a trick mammy taught
me when the big boys in school laughed at my brown
cardigan. But then, out of the corner of
my eye, I saw a guy wipe the window with his sleeve
and point at me. Goddam it, mammy’s “trick”
didn’t work back then and it doesn’t work now.
I wanted to cry. But I didn’t. I’m
grown up now and I have to look cool.
Wanting to look cool is natural
in these situations. Particularly if there
is a babe on the train. Then you’re under
real pressure to be slick. I mean, you’re
sitting in a rail-station waiting for a train
so it’s unlikely you’ll have too many opportunities
for slickness. And yet you feel like you must
ceremonially kill the nearest bull with a red
cloth and penknife, catch the congratulatory flowers
between your teeth, and walk away in that limpy
manner caused by the enormous crotch of a hero.
Back in the real world however, where bulls run
you through, you just sit there with the words
“Hi, I’m Mike and I’m seven” written in blue crayola
across your face.
So what did I do, when faced with
this pressure? I started humming to myself
and staring casually at everything in the vicinity
except the faces on the DART. Cigarette
butts and really small pieces of dirt became fascinating.
My hope was that if I stared for long enough at
something, my audience might too. “Oooh
look,” I said, “a squished piece of chewing gum.
I wonder whose mouth that was in? Do you
think it might have been a famous person’s?”
Of course they never buy it.
They’ve been in the same situation themselves
and want to exact revenge. They speared
me with their stares. “Squirm, little man,”
they said. “Squirm.” They said this
to themselves, of course. Saying it out
loud would be crazy, and they’re not crazy.
Just evil. Trying to out-stare them was
useless. I was outnumbered. I felt
like a caveman surrounded by raptors. So
I just gave up and laughed at my embarrassment.
There was no way out. Unless I was airlifted
by my pet pterodactyl.
The thing I noticed though was that
I was being stared at an abnormal amount, even
by my paranoid standards. I feared that
there must have been something really embarrassing
about my appearance. Mentally I ran through
a checklist of such things that had happened before.
Was my Wonder Woman underwear visible through
my open fly? No. Was there a troupe
of snots doing trapeze on the end of my nose?
No. Was there a dog “rubbing” himself against
my leg? No. So what was up with these
people? “Stare at the goddam chewing gum,
why don’t you?” But they didn’t. They
continued to stare.
Eventually, after about nine years,
the DART left and brought all the scumbags with
it. My composure reappeared, apologised,
and asked if I’d have it back. I accepted
and soon I was feeling cool again. My smile
returned because I was talking to myself again
and, God knows, I’m a fierce funny man.
Then my train arrived and I jumped
sprightly on-board. I took a seat by a window.
It was directly in line with the seat on the platform
at which I’d been. There was nobody to see
me, so I began pointing and staring at some pretend
sad bollox sitting there and staring at chewing
gum.
Then a guy sat on the bench.
He couldn’t settle for some reason, and started
to bum-walk to exactly where I’d been. I
guess I’d left a warm patch. Bums are very
good at detecting warmth like that. "Thermotropism”
I think it’s called. Our science teacher
was prompted to lecture us on it after Niall Bracken,
who’d been out the night before and came to the
lab to sleep, lost his eyebrows in an entanglement
with a Bunsen burner.
Anyway, as soon as this guy settled
I saw what had been so interesting to the people
on the DART. Riveted to the railing behind
him was a sign bearing the station name.
But his shoulder obscured part of it. Suddenly
it all became clear. The DART people hadn’t
been unnecessarily curious – I would have done
the same in their position. And then I asked
myself: “Should I tell him, and spare him the
humiliation?”
“Nah, shag it!” I answered. “Let him sit
there in Arse Station”.
|