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The trip from Tangiers to our base camp was made in yellow converted army trucks probably WW2. 30 of us sat facing the wind, faces frozen in the process. I thought of life after death, if there one and hoped there was. When we stopped at the base camp, we went in the cafe at the camp for coffee or tea or coke or maybe something stronger until our faces unfroze. Miriam who had sat next to me in the seemingly death ride talked through stiff lips: that was some ride, she said, my hand got frozen to yours. I rubbed her hands with mine; we sipped our coffees. She talked of home and her parents and university; I spoke of music and Kant, all the while studying her small, but neat ******* (which I had see before but only in the darkness of our tents). Who are you sharing with? I asked. Still the quiet girl I was with, but she's gone off the ex-army guy she told me as he talked non stop of his mother and her new partner and how he hated him; who are you with? She said. I'm with Bill now he's ok, good laugh, I said. Where's ex army? She said. Went off and shared with someone else, I said. After that we went and found our tents, separated male from females by a narrow path. Have you seen the bogs? Bill said, they're just two bricks in a walled off area; the girls won't like that standing on two fecking bricks. He laughed, and we unzipped our tent, and we put our suitcases in, and put out our sleeping bags and lay down, looking at the top of the tent. And there's fecking scorpions they say, and maybe big fecking spiders, so if you hear screams the girls have found them, he said smiling; they can see my snake any time. I later saw Miriam in the bar and she moaned about the bogs too but the showers are ok, she said, but a bit primitive. She'd showered, and was tip-top, she'd come share, (if Bill was not there) she said, my tent and camp bed.
0
Aug 7, 2016
Aug 7, 2016 at 2:13 AM UTC
CAMP OUTSIDE TANGIERS 1970.
The trip from Tangiers to our base camp was made in yellow converted army trucks probably WW2. 30 of us sat facing the wind, faces frozen in the process. I thought of life after death, if there one and hoped there was. When we stopped at the base camp, we went in the cafe at the camp for coffee or tea or coke or maybe something stronger until our faces unfroze. Miriam who had sat next to me in the seemingly death ride talked through stiff lips: that was some ride, she said, my hand got frozen to yours. I rubbed her hands with mine; we sipped our coffees. She talked of home and her parents and university; I spoke of music and Kant, all the while studying her small, but neat ******* (which I had see before but only in the darkness of our tents). Who are you sharing with? I asked. Still the quiet girl I was with, but she's gone off the ex-army guy she told me as he talked non stop of his mother and her new partner and how he hated him; who are you with? She said. I'm with Bill now he's ok, good laugh, I said. Where's ex army? She said. Went off and shared with someone else, I said. After that we went and found our tents, separated male from females by a narrow path. Have you seen the bogs? Bill said, they're just two bricks in a walled off area; the girls won't like that standing on two fecking bricks. He laughed, and we unzipped our tent, and we put our suitcases in, and put out our sleeping bags and lay down, looking at the top of the tent. And there's fecking scorpions they say, and maybe big fecking spiders, so if you hear screams the girls have found them, he said smiling; they can see my snake any time. I later saw Miriam in the bar and she moaned about the bogs too but the showers are ok, she said, but a bit primitive. She'd showered, and was tip-top, she'd come share, (if Bill was not there) she said, my tent and camp bed.
A BOY AND GIRL AT A CAMPSITE OUTSIDE TANGIERS IN 1970
TerryCollett
Written by
Aug 7, 2016
Aug 7, 2016 at 2:13 AM UTC
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