I
think the rumour of available work first arrived through local connections in particular
districts: in any case, by the time I
first ventured ‘abroad’ it was guaranteed
that good, well-paid work was easily obtained.
My first venture into Kent was in the
company of a couple of school-mates from the Abbey A Level class. It was essential that the ‘job’ would help
house us too in the first instance, for we had no place to stay – and little
cash left over after we had paid our fare.
And
so I found myself standing alone (funny
that, I cannot remember where my mates had gone or whether they were separately
catered for in the employment field) in the Inspector’s Office of the East
Thanet Autobus Company in the Isle of Thanet near Margate. I had arrived only hours before and barely knew what county I was in,
let alone the immediate neighbourhood.
The
questions came thick and fast and in a strange accent I had difficulty in
comprehending. If this was England, I
thought, why could they not talk without an accent, the way I did? But I didn’t think it was my place to
criticise.
Did
I have any questions?
I indicated my
desperate need for immediate work and accommodation and I distinctly saw a grin
spread over his face and he winked at his secretary at a nearby desk. She rose and backed towards the door with her
hands behind her back. I distinctly
heard a lock click!
I
should have suspected from that moment but I was raised to respect my
elders.
He was coming towards me now
carrying a box-shaped metal object hanging from a leather strap. Before I knew it, the
object was hanging round my shoulders.
With
that he mimed a circular clockwise motion at belly-height with his right
hand. And what would happen then? A ticket for the customer would come out ? I
ventured, warily.
‘Exactly!’
he crowed triumphantly. ‘You’re a
natural-born bus conductor!’
I
doubted it - but now he was hanging a leather pouch round my other
shoulder. Your cash bag, he explained,
with a suspicious grin.
Do
you know what this is? he was asking now, reaching out a plastic-covered card
with a grid and spreadsheet-like pattern on its face?
No,
I did not.
This
little beauty will keep you right! he
concluded triumphantly. It tells you
where you are, and the fare between any two points.
Boy! Was I glad to hear that?
He
unlocked the office door and pushed me out.
‘That’s
your bus there, Number 29, with the engine ticking over.
Hurry
along now. The driver is waiting for
you.’
‘But
… but… but ..’
‘You
don’t want the job?’ he asked,
incredulously.
I
wove my precarious way carefully across the diesel-smoke-filled depot towards my
very first job in pagan England.
…more…..