- When Sunday drivers head for bed,
- And caravans drive home instead;
- When people mourn the dead weekend,
- And holidays come to an end;
- When drivers fill the motorway,
- And dread the coming working day;
- On such night will our tale begin:
- A rusty car; a man within.____
- A Sunday night of driving rain.
- Five hundred miles of bleak terrain.
- Alone without a single friend,
- And nowhere near my journey's end.
- The lorries cast up murky spray
- Which turns the headlight beams to grey,
- But still with speed I Northwards head:
- In three more hours I'll be in bed.
- And with that thought I start to dream,
- Still focussed on the headlamp beam:
- The car becomes my trusty stead
- Who trots along with steady speed;
- No need to steer, she knows the way
- And from the path she will not stray;
- A faithful friend, she carries me;
- Tonight my only company…
- But stop! I startle from my sleep,
- So grateful it was not too deep.
- No wonder I can't stay awake,
- It's been five hours since my last break!
- And so before my eyelids drop
- I pull in to a truckers' stop,
- Resolved to rest and have a meal
- To stop me sleeping at the wheel.
- The café sat well out the way,
- Well shielded from the carriageway.
- I dipped the lights, approaching slow
- And halting in the cabin's glow
- I see it's filled with steam and light,
- Although it's late on Sunday night,
- And so the chances look quite good
- Of getting rest and wholesome food.
- I kill the engine, lock the door,
- And back on steady ground once more
- I take a while to stretch my legs
- And think of gammon, chips, fried eggs.
- So with my hunger to subdue
- Take one deep breath and step into
- The portakabin, which does greet
- Me with it's steam, and noise, and heat.
- Beside the counter, near the door,
- The gaffer stood upon the floor:
- A fat man with a shaven head
- Sweat pouring off his face so red
- And acres of his oily skin
- Were stretched below his triple chin,
- Like Buddha, less the friendly face.
- It looks as though he owns the place.
- The empty car park did suggest
- That I would be the only guest,
- Yet fellow drivers filled the place
- Each jostling for eating space.
- They yelled and laughed, they fought and swore,
- I guess they'd eaten there before
- For Buddha seemed to know them all
- And waited on their beck and call.
- But Buddha did not work alone,
- He had a maid to call his own,
- And there she stood, to my surprise,
- An angel with the kindest eyes
- Set within her face so fair
- Surrounded by her golden hair.
- She had the fullest, reddest lips,
- A slender waist, and perfect hips.
- She didn't look like she'd belong,
- She didn't laugh, or join in song.
- And drivers, when they saw her pass
- Would grab her waist and pinch her ass,
- But she'd just blush, and then retreat
- And keep on staring at her feet
- And though I watched for quite a while,
- Not once did I observe her smile.
- I found a table by the wall
- While trying to ignore them all,
- And at the risk of being rude,
- I concentrated on my food.
- The menu had the usual nosh,
- Twas not pretending to be posh,
- With pies and beans or chips or peas,
- And soup, and macaroni cheese.
- Before I'd done selecting food,
- The waitress at my table stood.
- I looked up but she did not smile:
- She only stood and stared a while;
- And always holding eye contact
- As if we shared some secret pact.
- Unconsciously came from my lips:
- "I'll have the gammon, with the chips."
- She turned and left, and as before,
- She went on staring at the floor.
- But I had glimpsed behind her eyes
- The sadness of a thousand sighs,
- Her eyes appeared to speak to me,
- They shouted out, "Please, rescue me."
- And then I knew that I did face
- A prisoner within this place.
- Then as she went to fetch my meal
- She slipped on a potato peel,
- And on the kitchen floor she crashed
- A single dirty plate she smashed.
- The customers, they did not care
- About her safety or welfare,
- They simply cheered, and loudly mocked,
- And of her tender rump they talked.
- But Buddha, to the scene did race
- And slapped the waitress in the face
- And standing o'er her helpless frame
- He called her every vulgar name.
- The cheering from the other men
- Encouraged him to strike again:
- He punched much harder than before
- But still the diners called for more.
- But what was I supposed to do?
- I really didn't have a clue.
- I was no shining armoured knight,
- My trusty stead was rusty shite,
- I didn't have the fearlessness
- To rescue damsels in distress
- Or slay such beasts. A child could see
- He weighed three times as much as me.
- And finally the beating stopped,
- The crumpled form lay where it dropped,
- The diners, back to normal went,
- Their moment of excitement spent.
- Buddha spread his shoulders broad
- Unlike the peaceful Buddhist God.
- So not like him, I have to tell,
- He seemed more like the Beast from Hell!
- The waitress, looking bruised and sore,
- She picked herself up off the floor,
- And tidied up the scattered mess,
- While swiftly straightening her dress.
- The whole act done so fluently,
- As if this happened frequently,
- But I was sickened to the bone
- And swore I'd rescue her alone.
- But how was I to get her out?
- And how, while Satan charged about
- With all his ghoulish cronies there?
- Stand up to him? I wouldn't dare.
- But it was time to take a stand
- and take this matter in to hand,
- For if I just ignored her plight
- My guilt would plague me every night.
- So when she came to bring my steak,
- I reached out and her hand did take
- And so that no-one else could see
- Into her hand I placed the key
- To my old faithful, rusty car
- In which we could escape, a-far,
- She squeezed my hand, as if to say
- "I understand you, all the way".
- So back she went to grease and grime
- And waited for the perfect time
- When Satan faced the other way
- Then out she slipped, without delay.
- I waited to make sure she'd gone
- And just about to follow on
- When Satan yelled, "Hold on a sec,
- Where is that girl? I'll wring her neck!"
- And at that moment, I just froze.
- He turns to me and then he knows.
- "You think you've worked it out so well?
- You think you can escape from Hell?
- Well, better men have come and tried
- And every single one has died.
- Your silly plan you can forget
- For you'll be here a long time yet."
- So I was trapped in Satan's den,
- And never to be free again.
- He blocked the exit to the door,
- A headbutt knocked me to the floor,
- And as he reached my neck to squeeze
- I quickly ducked between his knees
- Escaping from the devil's lair
- Into the rain and nighttime air.
- But just as I raced out the door,
- I heard my own car's engine roar.
- The lights did glare, the tyres did squeal,
- The gravel flew from every wheel,
- And off she sped, into the night:
- The captive bird had taken flight.
- Abandoned, facing him alone,
- I'd have to fight him on my own.
- And all this time, the demons chased,
- And out into the dark we raced,
- But when I saw my car was gone
- I knew I'd have to take them on
- So halted, and I turned around
- To face the ghouls, but then I found
- That there were hundreds, many more
- Than had been sat inside before.
- And some held burning torches high,
- The flames flew up and licked the sky,
- Just like a Wild-West lynching mob,
- Intent upon the self-same job.
- Surrounding me, they hemmed me in
- And formed a ring with me within
- And kept me there 'til Satan came
- So out of breath, so fat and lame.
- "Escape so close, and yet so far.
- So nearly free, but no cigar.
- And now a slow and painful death."
- Satan paused to catch his breath.
- "I'll give you praise where praise is due:
- No man has got as far as you.
- You almost slipped right through our hands
- But your eternal torment stands."
- And so I faced eternity
- In Hell, my final destiny.
- But though I thought all hope was gone
- My brave accomplice battled on,
- For while it seemed she stole my car
- She didn't mean to take it far,
- In fact, she merely turned it round
- And raced to where I stood my ground.
- She ploughed the car straight through the crowd
- The ghouls were scattered, wailing loud,
- Their limbs and bodies everywhere,
- A sight no man should have to bear.
- And halting with a handbrake slide
- She stopped it inches from my side.
- The nearside door was left ajar
- And so I leapt inside the car.
- And off towards the road we raced
- While Satan and his demons chased
- And for a while they stayed quite near
- And kept me looking back in fear,
- But as we neared the motorway
- The gruesome figures slipped away.
- Both car and driver had done well
- To save us form the gates of Hell!____
by Albert Semple
240 lines over 30 stanzas.