The Bus Driver (or the virus bred)
The bus
driver drives the
bus
round and
around his route.
He stops at
every stop,
even at
request stops,
where he
stops without request,
opens the
doors, closes the doors,
moves on,
round and
around his route;
eight hours
a day,
each day,
every day
round and
around his route.
And no one
gets on
and no one
gets off.
At lunchtime
he takes a
break,
he takes a
breather,
carefully
unwraps
the
foil-wrapped sandwich
his wife
has prepared and wrapped
with care:
the thin sausage slices
between
thin slices
of homemade
bread -
ah, the
simple pleasures;
and he
stares out the front window
of his
empty bus,
at the
empty streets,
chewing
slowly,
chewing it
over.
He likes
his job:
The routine,
the
familiarity of the route,
of the
people he sees - they chew the fat,
pass the
time of day;
and each
day just that bit different,
but reassuringly
the same.
And there’s
the pension:
Something
to look forward to.
At the end
of his shift,
he parks up at the terminal,
and he gets off and he goes
home,
walking
down the empty streets,
past the
closed school,
the
deserted square,
the
shuttered houses,
the
blinkered offices,
the idle
factories,
the unopened
shops,
the forsaken
restaurant,
the
unpeopled bus stops,
the locked
church
(though
every day is a Sunday now)
enjoying
the unseasonable sun,
the
unexpected peace and quiet,
unexamined
and knowing nothing,
just being,
unessential,
he breathes
the air,
just thinking
of his dinner –
it’s come
to that.
At home,
he kisses
his wife,
kisses his
kids.
They eat a
frugal supper;
he passes
the salt,
passes the
bread ...
they share
a glass of wine.
He says his
prayers.
He says
goodnight.
He dreams:
There is no
air in his bus,
not even
enough to scream;
and he is
no longer the bus driver,
he’s only a
passenger,
the lone
passenger,
looking out
of the back window
as the bus
moves forwards,
and everyone
is waving
as he goes
round and around the route,
up the hill
and down the hill,
to and fro,
back and forth,
and
everyone is waving
as he goes
around, comes around
endlessly
A comment?
At lunchtime