Pure Travel
  • Travel Resources
  • Destination Inspiration
  • Tips & Advice
  • Did You Know?
  • Guide
  • Supporters
  • About
  • Conservation
  • Privacy
  • T&C
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Conservation
  • Privacy
  • T&C
  • Contact Us
Subscribe
Pure Travel
Pure Travel
  • Travel Resources
  • Destination Inspiration
  • Tips & Advice
  • Did You Know?
  • Guide
  • Supporters

Everything stops for tea!

  • September 22, 2020
  • admin
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0

Klaus would sit still for hours. It became a game to see if he moved, like spot the difference. He would stare straight ahead, his hand resting on an ebony walking stick. Despite the stifling heat, he wore a navy blazer and grey flannel trousers. He had piercing blue eyes, taut skin and a thatch of silver hair. He must have been in his seventies, but he sat ramrod straight.

‘Do you think he was in the War?’

Mum almost knocked the glass ashtray from our table.

‘Shush. He’ll hear.’

‘He won’t.’ I thought Klaus was a little deaf.

‘His generation don’t like talking about the War.’

‘Granddad does.’

‘Your granddad’s different. And anyway, his side won.’

Mum made the Second World War sound like a game of cricket. Klausliked to sit in the shade of the bougainvillea. Sparrows would flit on the marble at his feet. Once I saw a salamander pause on a chair beside him. Our waiter, Stefan, said that Klaus spent one month each summer here. He preferred the long drive to flying, so he could bring his dog.

Rolf was Klaus’s Airedale terrier. He sat beneath Klaus’s chair, keeping a constant vigil on the old man’s belongings and space. He had a short, coppery coat like fuse wire and a booming bark that echoed round the terrace.If you got too close Rolf would raise his head and stare with those currant-black eyes.

I never saw Klaus away from his seat until the morning I was sick. I’d woken at six with a foul, stale taste and gone out onto the balcony to stretch. Below, a man in a mustard swimming cap was doing lengths of the pool. There was barely a ripple. There was only the faint tinkle and chink of waiters preparing breakfast and the sucking of the pool pump. Mesmerised by the man’s steady, silent crawl, I watched him swim some forty lengths. I do not know how many he had completed before I woke. It was only when he stepped from the pool and into a white towelling dressing gown that I realised it was Klaus. I decided to find out more about Klaus.

  • ****
Mum enforced siestas. ‘It’s what the locals do. When inRome….’

‘Except we’re not, are we?’

‘What?’

‘We’re not in Rome.’

Dad woke with start. He wanted tea. ‘It’s this dry heat. I’m spitting feathers.’

Dad drank more tea than a builder. So I was sent with a 500 dinar note to the hotel basement. I waited while Dominic rattled cups and saucers onto a tray and searched for a milk jug.

‘Would you like milk or lemon?’

The Slavs always gave you a neatly trimmed segment of lemon and a squeezer, unable to understand why anyone chose milk. Soon British tourists got a taste for lemon and the quirky little squeezers, which found their way into suitcases. But, once unpacked, they only served to remind that holidays were over. They were consigned to sideboards with dusty Christmas crackers.

Dominic helped me into the lift. I tipped him with Dad’s change. The doors were snapping shut when an ebony stick parted them. Klausstood there. Rolf, as ever, was at his side. His head tilted, the way dogs do when they’re listening.

‘Ha, ha, it is true!’ Klaus said. It was the first time I’d seen him smile.

‘Sorry?’

‘It doesn’t matter where you British are. Everything stops for tea!’

Klaus leaned in to inspect the contents of the tray. He was reassured by what he saw, as if checking an inventory. ‘Good,’ he said.

When the lift reached his floor Klaus got out, chuckling.

‘Of course, everything must stop for tea.’

From then on Klaus would always smile, or find a few words for me. Klaus imagined I lived in a world of pin-stripe suits, bowler hats and umbrellas. I trimmed the crusts from my cucumber sandwiches, clipped bouncers to boundaries, opened doors for ladies and took tea with military precision.
How wrong could he be? But then, I had Klaus all wrong too, didn’t I?

I’d never been to Berlin and, it seemed, Klaus had never been to Birmingham.

R Lakin

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
admin

You May Also Like
View Post
  • Tips & Advice

8 Tips for Finding Cheap Flights in 2023

  • Jules
  • March 28, 2023
View Post
  • Destination Inspiration

An Insider’s Guide to Planning The Ultimate Trip to South Florida

  • Jules
  • March 28, 2023
View Post
  • Tips & Advice

On the Road in Style: The Ultimate Men’s Travel Fashion Checklist

  • Jules
  • March 28, 2023
View Post
  • Destination Inspiration
  • Tips & Advice

Top Holiday Destinations For Your Early Summer Escape

  • Rob
  • March 27, 2023
View Post
  • Destination Inspiration

Top 10 Scenic Road Trip Destinations for Families in Europe

  • Jules
  • March 23, 2023
View Post
  • Destination Inspiration

The 4 Most Historically Significant Buildings

  • Jules
  • March 23, 2023
View Post
  • Action & Adventure

4 Amazing Islands to Explore by Bike

  • Jules
  • March 23, 2023
View Post
  • Tips & Advice

Airport Hotels on a Budget: 6 Strategies to Cut Costs

  • Jules
  • March 23, 2023
  • 8 Tips for Finding Cheap Flights in 2023
    • March 28, 2023
  • An Insider’s Guide to Planning The Ultimate Trip to South Florida
    • March 28, 2023
  • On the Road in Style: The Ultimate Men’s Travel Fashion Checklist
    • March 28, 2023
  • Top Holiday Destinations For Your Early Summer Escape
    • March 27, 2023
  • Top 10 Scenic Road Trip Destinations for Families in Europe
    • March 23, 2023
Recent Comments
    Twitter Feed
    Pure Travel
    A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step

    Input your search keywords and press Enter.