I check out, then go for breakfast, but always conscious of the pressing need to get out on the road to the office as soon as possible so to miss the worst of the traffic and get a parking space. My empoyer has now outgrown their offices and surroundings, and it is a dash to get there earlier enough each day to nab one of the limited number of parking spaces. Despite what I may hint at in my posts, traffic is pretty busy but it is always ordered, and there is none of the racing around, diving for gaps that is such a factor at home.
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It was the second part of the training, dry as a desert, but it seems we broke the back of it the day before, and completed it all by half ten. Meaning, I had three hours to work, and attend the weekly department meeting. I skipped lunch as the queues for that get ever larger, and anyway, I could get something at the airport. I thought.
As soon as the meeting finished, I packed up my bag and after saying goodbye to the project team, I go to the car and make my way out onto the main road. Too early to be really heavy traffic, so I was able to take my time going south on the motorway before turning off at junction 57 and going cross country to Billund.
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The food is very good; smoked salmon, coronation chicken, ham, salami, two cheeses, bread, olives and more bread.
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We all get on board, and the engines start right away, taxiing to the far side of the airport and turning onto the runway, the engines roar and we spash our way into the air, through thousands of feet of thick cloud and into the clear night sky above.
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We drop below the clouds just as we pass over Dartford, but too dark to see the traffic, along the river getting lower until we bounce down on the runway. Safe at last.
A bus takes us from the most distant pan, dropping us off at the immigration hall. Through there in a minute, my bag was waiting, so I grab that and rush to the DLR station, where a train to Stratford left in a couple of minutes.
When I get to Stratford I find in less than ten minutes there was a train to Dover, so I call Jools to arrange for to pick me up. Then just wait for the train. Heck, I even get a seat, though nothing to read as we speed through the tunnels and inky blackness of a stormy night in the Essex marshes.
Jools is waiting, I load up the car and we drive off into the rain, along Townwall Street and up Jubilee Way to home. Three cats are waiting, telling me they hadn't been fed since I left, and Molly, dear Molly, looked healthier than ever, having put more weight on. Jools and I have some soup, and all to soon it is bed time, another day and nearly another week gone.
1 comment:
Very happy to see the Whisky you bought in Skye still getting a mention all these months later. I am not a Whisky drinker myself, but even I could appreciate the excellent wee shop that it was.
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