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A
R C H I V E S
CAPTAIN
CARGO
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Meet
Captain Cargo, a real person plying the airways above a city near
you. Here begins “A View From The Bridge—The Adventures of Captain
Cargo.” We appreciate your comment. |
"A
VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE"
Everyone
seems to think a pilot leads some sort of glamorous lifestyle jetting
round the world and seducing stewardesses in five star hotels, so I think
it’s about time I put the record straight. Perhaps long haul crews start
out like this, but I doubt the novelty lasts - they’re permanently jet-lagged.
Commuter crews and no-frills airlines types do the same routes, week in
and week out, working round tight slots and irritable passengers, with
less fuel than they’d really like.
As for me, I fly an aeroplane that’s older than
me, delivering parcels around Europe at night. No stewardesses, not much
glamour - unless hanging around an office in Brussels or a portacabin
in Cologne listening to a bunch of tired pilots talking rubbish about
aeroplanes and drinking plastic coffee out of plastic cups in an effort
to stay awake for the next sector is considered an exotic life-style.
The aeroplane is dirty, noisy, and hardly ever gets around the routes
for a week without breaking down somewhere. The money is good, but my
ex-wife gets nearly half of it. Most of the people I work with are hard-core
conservatives and think Jeffrey Archer should have won the Booker Prize.
They mostly drink too much, always in Irish pubs, of which there is a
mysterious profusion round Europe, and weekends away are spent trying
to dispose of all their flight pay while amassing expensive hangovers.
Actually, weekends are usually alright; it’s the
weekdays that are the big problem - trying to sleep while the hotel is
going about its normal daytime business, the maids looking for do not
disturb signs so they can have a conversation outside the door. There’s
a guy with a hammer drill stalking me round Europe; he checks into the
room next door and drills holes in the bathroom wall. Once in Shannon,
Ireland, after a prolonged discussion of the weather outside my door,
the housekeepers phoned me up to ask at what time I wouldn’t mind being
disturbed. I got out of bed, threw on my clothes and stormed down to reception.
A guy with buck teeth and a complexion like pizza smiled insincerely at
me.
“Can I help you, Sir?”, he asked in his best catering
school voice. I threw the Do Not Disturb sign I had ripped from the doorknob
on my way out of the room.
“I want a new one of these! ”I demanded. “This
one’s broken.” He looked with a puzzled expression at the sign, then saw
the rip where I’d torn it from the doorknob, and suggested he could put
some Cellotape on it, the expression on his face one of polite amusement.
“No!” I exclaimed, psychotic from lack of sleep
,”You don’t understand! This one’s broken! It doesn’t work!”
He looked confused for a moment, and then smiled
and offered me a free cup of coffee. Just to make sure I really was awake.
He disappeared and came back with the Assistant Manager.
“What appears to be the problem, Sir,” he asked
in a broad Dublin accent.
“My Do Not Disturb sign is broken. I hung it on
the door, but I keep getting disturbed by the maids.”
He laughed nervously and assured me all would
be quiet from now on. I’d got back to the room before I realised no-one
had asked me my room number. The guy with the hammer drill had turned
up. I gave up and went for a walk on the estuary.
Ah, the glamour. We love it really.
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