A screen at the end of the carriage kept track of our speed. At one point, we hit 298km/h. Apart from the time a police dog chased me in Umbilo, it was the fastest I'd ever gone on land. Nobody else seemed as excited as I was. They stared at their phones or nodded off in their comfy seats.
I was transfixed, silently urging the bullet-nosed beast to go faster. Just two kilometers an hour more! Inexplicably, the perverse driver kept it at 298. I certainly would have taken it to 300 if I were behind the wheel. But then I'd push it to 310 and 320 and wouldn't stop until the passengers were screaming and soiling themselves while the train came perilously close to leaving the rails and smashing through a village on the outskirts of Perpignan.
Imagine if we had a train like that. Joburg to Durban in under two hours. Or Cape Town in four and a bit. Imagine the carnage when it came around a corner and one of the tracks had been stolen. Or a head-on with an oncoming train because the signaling equipment had been vandalized. We just can't have nice things.
There were even police officers on the train. For a while, anyway. Just long enough to escort a couple of black passengers off. Probably not because they were black, although you never can tell with the French, but more likely because when the cops asked to see their papers, they couldn't produce much more than a box of Rizlas between them.
This story is from the December 04, 2024 edition of The Citizen.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 04, 2024 edition of The Citizen.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Tourism after US terror
New Orleans is a city of tremendous spirit - Biden
Fatal mistakes in route-planning
You're going nowhere quickly in Cape Town
Shiraz's visual tapestry
Alley art reminiscent of Surrealism
Zuko maintains his positive vibes
Mamelodi Sundowns defender Zuko Mdunyelwa is optimistic about winning his place back in the team after overcoming a groin injury.
A giant nail-biter
SA20: DURBAN FRANCHISE GRABS VICTORY FROM THE JAWS OF DEFEAT
Cheetahs have no room to slip
The Cheetahs are under no illusions that a loss against Italian side Zebre could spell the end of their race for the Challenge Cup title.
Mpeku handed his Lions debut
BIG TEST: VD MERWE ALSO BACK TO FACE MONTPELLIER
Aldcroft named to lead Red Roses
Zoe Aldcroft is set to lead England at this year's Women's Rugby World Cup on home soil after being named as the team's captain for 2025.
Bulls are not chucking game
While Bulls director of rugby Jake White (above) said they are not kidding themselves about their position and prospects in the Champions Cup, from a coach's perspective he owes it to his players to follow the strategy he set out at the start of the season and rotate his squad regularly.
Stormers treating every Cup match 'like a play-off'
The Stormers are banking on the return of several stalwarts to beef up their team for their must-win Champions Cup game against English side Sale Sharks at Cape Town Stadium today (kick-off 3pm).