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If you’ve never
ventured out of north India and decide to take a ri de
deep into the south for the first time, make sure you are a stoic
before making the leap.
Indian Railways provide services of a remarkable
standard. In the air- conditioned comfort of a first class cabin,
there is hot food, the ubiquitous chaiwallah (tea seller) who
peers over every half-drawn curtain and efficient and courteous
service. Contingent, of course, on being able to produce a confirmed
ticket for the conductor.
The problem would seem to ultimately lie with the
indecisiveness of the Indian mind. Compelled by this Hamletesque
affliction, the system of the Railways has found it prudent to
prepare an extremely long waiting list of travellers over and above
confirmed passengers for the actual journey. If any do change their
minds at the last moment, there is still a reasonable equivalent of
the Mongol Hordes to take their place. This would in turn imply that
you could have moved up from position two hundred and thirty four to
third on the waiting list but you’d still be without a seat; and as
anyone who has had the bad luck to find out, a miss is as good as a
mile.
There are some, however, who prefer to circumvent
the rules of the land. For whatever reason, travelling even by
wait-listed ticket seems to have too high an opportunity cost to be
avoided. An almost sure-fire method of having to do so is by relying
on someone else to get your ticket confirmed.
It was in such a situation that I found myself,
along with three other unfortunate companions. After being struck by
a sudden fit of adventure and half a bottle of rum, it was decided
to make a journey deep into the heart of the South, to Chennai.
The first hundred kilometers after boarding the
train isn’t so bad. There are plenty of empty seats, and one begins
to relax a little bit. The tension of finding a berth, or ways of
throwing other passengers off the train, a la Indiana Jones,
gradually seeps out of you. For uninitiated travellers like me, that
is. Seasoned travellers seem to have no hesitation in assuring
greenhorns of the boarding of confirmed ticketwallahs from
other stations, the intractability of train conductors, and the
discomfort of the passageway, to which we’d ultimately be relegated.
It wouldn’t be that bad, I proclaimed. We had one
berth, where at least the luggage was safe. And the romance of the
Railways was sitting by the open door, watching great plains and
dusty railway towns pass by, with grubby little children running
alongside.
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