(First published in the Manawatu Standard and on Stuff.co.nz, March 18).
Not long ago, my wife and I spent a largely sleepless
Saturday night in a Hawke’s Bay motel. The experience confirmed one of two
things: either we’re lousy judges of places to stay, or we’ve been condemned by
a vindictive god to share accommodation with the most inconsiderate fellow
guests on the planet.
I admit there have been times when the former explanation
may have been true. There was a memorable night many years ago when we
ill-advisedly booked into a budget-priced San Francisco hotel where every other
room appeared to be occupied by hard-partying Mexicans.
Our fellow guests caroused with such manic energy that you
could have been excused for thinking they’d been told the Apocalypse was
imminent and they were determined to make the most of their final hours. Riotous festivities raged all around us throughout the
night, the din so all-encompassing that for much of the time we couldn’t
identify exactly where it was coming from. Sometimes it seemed to be from the
floor above us, sometimes below, and sometimes on the same level.
At times the revelry took on the character of a moving
carnival, briefly subsiding in one part of the hotel before suddenly erupting
with renewed vigour somewhere else. We felt as if we had blundered into a
madcap celebration that involved everyone in the building except us.
Two or three times in the course of a long night I phoned
the unfortunate clerk on the desk. He was sympathetic but there wasn’t much he
could do in the face of such formidable odds.
I can’t recall whether we got any sleep. What I do know is
that when we passed through San Francisco again a couple of weeks later, I made
sure we booked into a reputable chain hotel where we could expect order to
prevail.
Then there was the night when we stayed in a hotel in downtown Sydney.
This time we were kept awake by male guests barking into their phones all night
in what sounded like an Eastern European language. This was
punctuated by the sound of doors being slammed shut or loudly banged on. My wife was convinced that our fellow guests were members of
an international drug cartel setting up a deal, in which case they were the
most comically indiscreet criminals since Pulp
Fiction.
Perhaps hardened – or more likely discouraged – by our
San Francisco experience, I didn’t bother complaining to the desk.
I could have confronted our tormentors, but there were
several of them and one of me. I had to weigh up the moral certitude of having
right on my side against the unpleasantness that would result if they took
exception to being told off. I mean, what if they really were hardened
criminals packing Glock pistols?
So, cravenly rationalising that it was for only one night,
we decided to tough it out.
The scene now shifts to Auckland – to a motel in Grey Lynn. We were woken in the early hours by anguished and prolonged
caterwauling from below us. A woman visiting a ground-floor unit had outstayed
her welcome and been ejected. Now she was standing in the carpark wailing at
the top of her voice and piteously imploring to be let back in, insisting –
improbably – that she lived there.
The police were eventually called and the unfortunate woman,
who appeared to be under the influence of some mind-altering substance, was
persuaded to leave quietly.
Tribulations like these have led us to ponder whether such
experiences are commonplace or – a more likely explanation – that we’re somehow
jinxed. Certainly, we have learned to exercise caution in choosing
accommodation.
Alas, that’s no guarantee of anything. The Hawke's Bay motel we stayed in not long ago was respectable and well managed, but we still had to suffer the
familiar Saturday night curse of inconsiderate guests returning after a night
of revelry, shouting to each other and noisily banging on doors.
This time, though, we experienced something new and bizarre.
At about 3am we were woken by the sound of a diesel motor idling immediately
outside our door.
When the noise persisted, I went outside to check. Sure
enough, there was a ute parked with its motor running – and no sign of a
driver. It was as if the Marie Celeste had been reincarnated in the form of a
Ford Ranger.
Having no idea where the driver might be, I went back to
bed. Not long after, we heard someone get into the vehicle, emphasising his
indifference to sleeping guests by slamming the ute’s door as he did so, and
drive off.
That was at about 3.30am. At last we could look forward to
some undisturbed slumber.
Ha! Fat chance. Five minutes later, though it was pitch dark, a blackbird began singing its heart out in a tree beside our unit's front door. It's true then: we're jinxed.
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