Chapter Two: Tuesday's Child — Landing in Africa
(Monday departure, Tuesday arrival, Wednesday morning, and a car with 7,000 miles ahead of it) Monday: The Machinery of Departure There is a specific variety of calm that descends on experienced travellers at airports. It is not relaxation. It is the disciplined suppression of everything that could still go wrong, maintained through forward momentum and the studious avoidance of checking the time too frequently. We arrived at Gatwick early on Monday, which is the only sane way to arrive at Gatwick. Online check-in had been completed in the civilised surroundings of home, which meant that our business at the Norse Air desk was the focused, practical matter of surrendering luggage rather than the extended paper-shuffling exercise it might otherwise have been. The luggage, it should be said, required a moment. There were the standard bags. And then there was the oversized case — the one that needed its own conversation with the check-in agent, its own special tag, its own separate journey into the belly of the airport. Inside it, carefully packed and padded against the rigours of hold travel, was a collection of cameras and lenses — not ours, not this time. These were destined for a photography group of African children, kids who would learn to see the world through a viewfinder the way we had learned ourselves, decades ago in different circumstances on the same continent. Also in that case: art materials for Gareth's mother, chosen with the specific knowledge of what she would actually use and enjoy. Two gifts, one unwieldy case, one slightly anxious moment on the scales. It was fine. It always is, until it isn't, and this time it was. Security was security — the universal choreography of laptops out, liquids surrendered to small bags, belts removed, dignity temporarily optional. Customs, the gate, the wait. The particular airport suspension of normal time. And then boarding — and the settling into seats with the specific exhale of people who have made it this far and can now, finally, do nothing useful except eat questionable food and watch films they'd never choose at home.