The seats go to the victors in the battle of the doorway;
though a couple have, as usual, cheated and scrambled through the window. Then
the aisle fills up, while those seated have to keep ducking their heads lest
they get decapitated by the bags and boxes being slung about as if it were an
empty warehouse instead of a public conveyance full of seated passengers.
At last, there are 35 people in the bus and it is a physical
impossibility for anyone else to get in without bursting the steep side of the
body. Then the conductor arrives on the scene with a palet in his mouth, to
announce that the bus they are in is no longer going. All out! And take the bus
behind. Irate, having fought and won a battle to be robbed as easily of the
fruits of victory, the passengers abuse the government, the railway, the driver,
the conductor and then each other and each other's parents.
Now the scramble to get out instead of getting in takes place.
While this is going on, the seats and windows get damaged and the passengers
emerge to find their clothes torn. The other bus is already nearly full, so
only ten out of the thirty-five get a passage to their home, thirty miles away.
At last, the bus starts. In the aisle, there is a woman who
has settled herself on the floor, clucking like a hen as she does so. She
gradually diverts herself of clothing as if she were home and prepared for bed;
first comes off the stocking and shoe. Then she loosens her bodice and pulls
her skirt up around her waist.
As she makes herself "comfortable", she naturally
encroaches upon the space occupied by her tightly packed fellow passengers.
When they try to assert their rights to the few inches they are sitting, lying
or standing on, she rises, clucking furiously. She looks so formidable that
everyone is silenced and she subdues, bristling her feathers as she does so.
She is the terror of the trip, that is, until two urchins get
in and take up position on either side of her. They lean on her, press on her
head and step on her outstretched nude legs. When she starts to cackle, they
giggle and pay her no mind. At last, she can bear it no longer, rises with a
titanic effort and throws them off, exclaiming, "Crise! You all want to
stifle me!"
As the bus approaches within five miles of her destination,
she starts to re-dress and make her toilet for arrival. Her stockings are
pulled on and then begins the hunt between everybody's legs for the missing
shoe that has got shoved around in the mêlées until it has found itself behind
the tool box next to the chauffeur's seat. She makes such a noise and accuses
so many people of stealing her almost heel-less shoe that everyone joins the
search until it is recovered. The chauffeur, who eventually picks it up and
returns it to her, gets roundly abused for his pains. But he is the only person
in the bus that is her match. In fact, he surpasses her. In the city's tramcar
is written: "It is forbidden for the chauffeur to talk to the passengers
while the bus is in motion", for from the time the bus has left its
starting place, the chauffeur has harangued the bus. Not for a moment has he
let up from telling us about his private life, how he'd been to jail and how he
liked it there.
At one part of his story, he was describing how he beat a
fellow. To lend emphasis to the tale, he would let go the wheel and turn around
to describe to the passengers with his hands how he did it. In the middle of
one of his gestures, a jitney swung around a corner unexpectedly, and the
chauffeur just missed having to describe to the court how it happened, with or
without gesture.
Gradually, the passengers thinned out somewhat, as each
village passed claimed a few, until there is actually a seat vacant. But to the
amazement of the uninitiated, women waiting at the roadside are ignored when
they frantically signal the bus. The chauffeur explains to his audience:
"She alright, oui, let she get the next one."
The next one, as everyone knows, is four hours away. But the
real explanation comes when on approaching the terminus at the other end, the
chauffeur starts stopping every few hundred yards to pick up one or two men,
who, from their conversation, are obviously friends. Together they sit and
stand in the front of the bus, smoking away with their friend, the chauffeur,
while the passengers behind look cynically at the sign right over the
chauffeur's head, which warns that smoking, except on the rear seat, is
strictly forbidden.
At last, the bus arrives at the last stop. The conductor, who
has no further business, as the chauffeur is supposed to collect the tickets,
now stands astride the doorway, making it difficult for passengers to leave.
The passengers themselves have by now become so much a part of the environment
created by the chauffeur and his conductor that they fight one another to get
out of the bus, into the village, which is devoid of anything except for a few
stray pouches slinking around the empty butcher's stall. The bus then turns
around and begins another of its reluctant efforts to transport people.
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