Last Friday I took an 8 hour train from Florence to Paris.
The journey only really started in Milan. I’d been lucky enough to get a small compartment to myself and was hoping I’d get to just watch the scenery alone when a young Russian girl, no more than 16 and wearing what appeared to be solely a napkin, dragged her mother onboard.
“You speak English? Da? Going to Paris?”
“Da. Si,” I said. “Uh, yes.”
“Good. You look at my mother until Paris, okay? She not speak English.”
I was almost certain she meant “after” but I took a look at her mother anyway: an ageing, bemused woman wearing the kind of low-cut leopardskin dress that would just look trashy on a younger woman but, with her obvious excitement at being on a train, somehow gave her a slight carnival atmosphere. Her boobs moved oddly and seemingly with their own momentum, threatening to spill out like overripe fruit.
“Uh, okay.”
“Look at her until Paris.”
“Da, okay,” I said, mentally promising to keep to the spirit of the agreement but not the letter.
She did make compelling viewing though. As the train embarked, she made noises like a spaceship, mimicking one with her hand.
“Pagliari!” she said. “Yuri Gargarin? Cosmonaut!”
“Da,” I said. “Take-off.”
She grinned, happy, before spotting my guitar. “Ah! Classic? Folk?”
“Uh, rock, blues…” I said. She laughed, delighted, before launching into a full 3 minute rendition of “Summer In The City.” I smiled weakly. My embarrassment complete, she then proceeded to interrogate people as they joined us in the cabin.
They were an interesting bunch too. One spent the entire journey engaged in some industrial-strength crotch adjustment, all the while concentrating fiercely on the phone he was furiously SMSing on. I couldn’t help but wonder if he was locked in some kind of crotch-chess match, such was his concentration - that he was broadcasting each complex, strategic move to his opponent, who was then adjusting his own crotch and responding.
I never got to see ‘check-mate.’
Another man, balding and wearing sunglasses he never removed, seemed to have somehow undone another button on his mustard yellow shirt each time I stole a glance in his direction. I get the feeling he spent the entire journey watching the Russian boobs moving in their leopard-skin cage.
I escaped to the buffet car just as our little carriage became full. I drank a coffee there and stood and watched the mountains move by. A scraggily-looking traveller was doing the same, his patchy goatee and faded denim jacket giving him the look of someone who’d been on the road for years. I considered starting up a conversation but decided we were both enjoying the silence too much to ruin it.
The train slowed abruptly and the traveller quickly downed the rest of his coffee before pulling a shiny gold badge out of his pocket and pinning it to his coat. He was a undercover police officer!
He began moving rapidly toward the front of the train and I quickly finished my coffee and followed him, all the while muttering a theme song I’d made up for him in my head (“Un. Der. Cov. Er. TRAINPOLICE!” was the gist of it.)
In the end he met up with two French border guards who climbed onboard the train and, in a slightly disappointing climax, they proceeded to very politely just check passports and make small-talk with passengers. No-one was even shot or anything.
Disappointed, I returned to my cabin to find the Russian mom had pulled out a small map and was asking everyone there to point out where they were from. It had sparked some conversations. Crotch-adjuster and button-undoer, seemingly both from the same area of Pakistan, were engaged in a heated cricket debate. A French mom was exchanging baby photos with Russian mom, and an Italian engineer was trying to work out where in South Africa I was from.
The temperature dropped as we entered France over the mountains, and Russian mom, a little cold, pulled out a thick, leopard-skin vest to wear over her leopard-skin dress. I wondered if it was the same leopard.
Button-undoer looked a little disappointed, before returning to his conversation about cricket.
