Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Ten Minutes Too Late, Part III

December 22, 2009

I could wheel my suitcase to the woefully inadequate seating area to wait for a place to sit, then camp all night as penitence, but I have to rebook the flight to Siem Reap that I will miss tomorrow and at least try to email the hotel where my family is staying. There is no airport network in Chennai. I need a hotel room.

There is a little wooden kiosk outside the International terminal. A young man sits in it, alone with a telephone, which he uses to call hotels for passengers who were stranded, or have been too nonchalant about their itineraries. I have been his client before. He gets rather good deals and is always polite and helpful. (This story was written years ago. The man and his booth are no longer there. They have been swept away in a modernization campaign. I was sad when they tore his booth down. It was the only useful thing in Chennai airport, and now it's gone.) Today, he is pleased to hear that I need an Internet connection. Most of his clients want the cheapest room they can get, and haggle over the price as long as he lets them. And here I am, sad and cowed and in need of technology. My misfortune brings him a good commission.

Internet at the Beverly Hotel means sitting in a tiny cabinet to use the business center computer. The connection is slow, but I book a new flight—I choose the last departure of the day, reasoning that there is no way I can miss it—and try to send an email to Cambodia. A fool's errand if there ever was one, but required. I am not murdered. I have not run away. I have missed a flight, and will be delayed a full day. I am sorry.

I have less than four hours' sleep in my expensive bed. The car has not arrived when I go downstairs to check out. I sit in the dark next to a little artificial Christmas tree, haphazardly decorated and twinkling, and tell myself the worst is over.

Continued.

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