The night at the ruined castle had left Rube decidedly jumpy
and all day he’d been asking me what the plans were when we reached Paris,
would we be able to sleep indoors, how long did we have to stay before we could
go home? I lied to him as convincingly as I could. I didn’t want to tell him
that I hadn’t thought of any of this and was really just taking each day as it
came. I said we’d have nice rooms in Versailles paid for comfortably by the
earnings we’d make from busking the metro. It was beginning to sound a bit like
George telling Lenny about the alfalfa but at least it was calming him down.
We got a lift from a French bloke in a Citroën who said he
was a social worker. I could tell Rube was intent on asking the man for help
but his French wasn’t good enough*.
The social worker man dropped us off outside a camp-site on
the outskirts of Boulogne, probably thinking we must have tents and things. Almost
simultaneously, a storm of biblical proportions started. The sky opened up and
the rains fell. The lightning cracked and the thunder boomed. I thought I heard
it spell out the words in a Gothic ‘Hammer Horrors’ voice, ‘Take Rube home,
this is very cruel. Why did his mother and father allow it?’. Actually, I’ve
often wondered that myself. They must have thought it would do him some good.
Faced with the prospect of being soaked to the skin or
struck by lightning, there was only one place open to us – the camp toilet. At
least Rube couldn’t claim his sleeping arrangements lacked variety.
I don’t know, dear reader, if you’ve ever slept in a public toilet, but it’s not a pleasant experience. For one thing, you don’t tend to sleep as such. There tends to be a lot of human traffic and they leave fragrances that linger with you long after they’ve gone to curl up in their sleeping bags in their cosy tents. They stumble over you and swear. They ask difficult questions like “What the fuck are you doing lying around on the toilet floor?”
Next day the sun was shining and Rube and I made the instant
decision to leave the hitch-hiking lark for the birds and enjoyed a luxurious
train ride to Paris accompanied by a tasty continental breakfast.
As arranged, we met the intrepid Ray under the Eiffel Tower.
He had hitched all night through the storm. He’d been harassed by the Parisian
Gendarmes as he tried to catch some sleep on a bench in the Park du Champ de Mars. He was shivering
and tired.
He doesn’t know to this day about our comfy train ride.
*The only phrase he possessed and thought was funny to ask
people was ‘Voulez-vouz mangez mon pantalon?’ which wasn’t helpful at all. He
could substitute with a number of words, popularly ‘derrière’ but this too
provoked only antagonism.