Saturday, August 22, 2009

Two abreast

Two abreast
As I lazed on the back seat, staring fixedly out of a late-night taxi home from the West End, my vision swam with the hypnotic glare emitted by these knights of the road, these uniform beacons of order and regimentation in a sea of uncertainty and chaos.

Traffic lights at the junction of Old Street and Kingsland Road, Shoreditch, London

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Attending a crash scene

Attending a crash scene
Ferried police to the scene of an accident involving a Honda motorbike and a big Mercedes.

Kingsland Road, London

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Waiting

Waiting
Another bike parked up outside the Yamaha shop on Shoreditch High St. They loves it in there, they does.

Shoreditch High Street, London

Saturday, June 30, 2007

Wrecked

Wrecked
We sat on Thursday evening, side-saddle on the pouffe in the fifth-floor lounge, chewing on some fruited bread and waiting for a table, when I became aware of a smell of something burning. An electrical smell, maybe? Or perhaps plastic? A girl sitting on a nearby armchair turned and sniffed the air at exactly the moment I did; our eyes met and we nodded. Something's definitely burning. She called a waitress to inform her of our concern. The odour wafted away from me and idly I focussed momentarily on the menu; on various private considerations; on the game of backgammon I was shortly to play; then suddenly on the pall of thick black smoke engulfing the chunk of world outside the window. A moment of calm, serene clarity - the floor below must be on fire; we have to get out. Now. The peals of the fire alarm seemed to confirm my instinctive diagnosis.

My friend returned from a quickly-abandoned trip to the ladies' room, from where she'd seen the same display; we exchanged a swift, solemn glance, and headed for the fire exit. By the time we got to the street we could see that flames licked only a motorbike on its side and this adjacent Vespa whose burning vinyl seat had emitted such a voluminous cloud, the pair nestled ultimately safely between a cold brick wall, a cemented pavement and a cobbled street.

We circumnavigated the block so as to grant a decent perimeter to the firemen's activities, and returned to the bar, where a much better seat at a table we could now have to ourselves was waiting, and where the queue to order dinner had mysteriously evaporated, sublimated by the fire into a ghost of past expectations, and a waitress appeared, phoenix-like, to take our order. I won the round of backgammon 4-2, with two of my victories sullied by narrow squeaks and lucky throws.