Came back yesterday evening from London. I was curious to see if the bombs have changed the city. Yes, almost everyone I asked, agreed that the city has changed, but I couldn't see the changes.
They said, there is no night life, nobody goes out in central London. Perhaps, Hammersmith is too far away from the centre but at 10 PM the restaurants seemed full, people were there in the bar in spite of the typical mild English rain. Even the tube was full as usual. But the train and tube services seemed to have worsened.
For example, the Stansted express, which connects Stansted airport to London, was a scandal. The publicity is hyperbolic as usual but the train seemed like a local train in Mumbai. It stopped every five minutes. The whole tube system seems to be coming apart at the seams. Bomb scares, lack of maintenance, staff shortage, all the possible problems seem to plague it.
Yet outside on the streets, people were rushing around as usual. Tourists speaking different languages with their cameras clicking furiously seemed unchanged. I walked in the Banks area, and it seemed much nicer than when I was there around 10 years ago. There were flowers every where and sparkling new buildings with strange shapes, futuristic pubs in glass-walled structures - London looked wonderful.
I always stay in the same place near Hammersmith tube station. I must have stayed in that hotel for fifty times at least, over the past decades. The old staff knows me very well. It seems to have worsened too. They must be cutting costs. The breakfast is a pale shadow of its past and its timings are restricted. In the room, the hair dryer and pants-pressing machine were both out of order. The telephone did not work. May be someone else has bought that hotel but does not know how to run it? Every few years, it changes names and owners, the prices increase and services improve, then slowly, every thing comes down. Perhaps, its location is not good so that it does not get enough clients, even if Hammersmith is a good central location?
I remember the time some years ago, when they had found an IRA terrorist staying in that hotel. I had woken up during the night after some noise and switching on the light, I had looked out of the window. The hotel was surrounded by police with guns in their hands. They must have looked at me with amazement, nude with just wearing my undies, standing near the window, lighted from behind! My heart thumping with fear, I had switched off the light and crawled back into the bed, waiting for the guns to start shooting.
Yet outside on the streets, people were rushing around as usual. Tourists speaking different languages with their cameras clicking furiously seemed unchanged. I walked in the Banks area, and it seemed much nicer than when I was there around 10 years ago. There were flowers every where and sparkling new buildings with strange shapes, futuristic pubs in glass-walled structures - London looked wonderful.
I always stay in the same place near Hammersmith tube station. I must have stayed in that hotel for fifty times at least, over the past decades. The old staff knows me very well. It seems to have worsened too. They must be cutting costs. The breakfast is a pale shadow of its past and its timings are restricted. In the room, the hair dryer and pants-pressing machine were both out of order. The telephone did not work. May be someone else has bought that hotel but does not know how to run it? Every few years, it changes names and owners, the prices increase and services improve, then slowly, every thing comes down. Perhaps, its location is not good so that it does not get enough clients, even if Hammersmith is a good central location?
I remember the time some years ago, when they had found an IRA terrorist staying in that hotel. I had woken up during the night after some noise and switching on the light, I had looked out of the window. The hotel was surrounded by police with guns in their hands. They must have looked at me with amazement, nude with just wearing my undies, standing near the window, lighted from behind! My heart thumping with fear, I had switched off the light and crawled back into the bed, waiting for the guns to start shooting.
Or the time when a car alarm had gone off around 11 PM and gone on and on for about 4 hours, probably till its battery had exhausted. Couldn't believe that in London, there was no police or someone to trace the owner of a car to make it shut up and it had continued to make terrible noise in a thickly populated residential area for four head-aching hours. I swear that it was worse than all the night-long jagratas combined in Delhi.
This time also I had two of those memorable moments. First, there was a fight. It must have been from one of the houses at the back of the hotel. I had gone to sleep with my window partially open and woken up in the morning listening to a women shouting, "Leave the house, leave, ....leave". It seemed like an old record stuck on the word "leave". At first I couldn't hear the man. Then slowly the fight heated. 'Fuck offs' and 'sons of bitches' flew around till the woman started shouting, "Get off me, let me go. I don't want you. Leave me. Let me go now." Then suddenly there was silence. Probably he had strangled her. Or may be, he had picked his things and left. Who knows. Or, may be she had hit his head with a broom. I hope they don't call me as a witness.
My second memorable moment this time was at the Buckingham Palace. I was at the palace gate clicking pictures, when I saw a policeman pointing straight at me. Then one of those palace guards wearing the bear-caps came towards me. I wanted to run away, but I forced myself to stay. Perhaps I have taken some picture which I was not supposed to take, I thought. However, the guard was interested in a guy standing next to me and gave him a folded paper, perhaps some kind of message. "Whew" I broke out in relief after he walked away.
My last image of London is that of a banner at the airport. It was the publicity of a bank. "24 hours service. Real people from UK answer you." Means, no Indian call centre here!
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