A hospitality industry adventure
The Bus That Couldn't Slow Down
One man, one bus, one job, and two opportunistic jerks that delivered the hangover to beat all hangovers.
Tenth Anniversary Edition
Prologue
I'm calling this the 'tenth anniversary' because the best version of this story was written while I was in my final year of Journalism at QUT in 2016. The actual incident itself took place in Samford Valley way back in October 2012, and I put the original version together as a three-part blog in 2014 which only included my point of view. In 2016, I interviewed some pals who were there and rewrote it for an entirely different website (now defunct).
Now - in 2026 - it's back home. This update will be the final iteration.
The anniversary of this story comes at an interesting life juncture - just as it did when it first originated. Putting myself back in this headspace one more time really helped remind me how much has changed and how far I have moved forward since that time.
I was 25 years old, and I had stayed at the Samford Valley Hotel (aka The Dungeon) long enough to experience at least three distinct different eras of folks working there. In the end, I utterly hated the work I was doing. In any regular sense it was just time to move on.
The situation in that workplace at that time, while supremely low stakes, was actually quite diabolical. My memory is of a really terrible operating environment with even worse stuff to do. The expectations from minimum wage staff were sometimes ridiculous or illegal, and the vast majority of the clientelle were horrific. Further, heaps of my friends had walked out a few months earlier after a really fiery staff meeting where we were told by the venue owner we were all "born with a silver spoon in the mouth".
Pete - the long-time publican - had also even moved on by this time, and his replacements were neither here nor there (literally).
In this anniversary update, all your favourite characters are back in Pog form. Shanelle's hijinks in the bus. The derro criminals. The fuckwit defence lawyer. Like all your favourite Star Wars action figures - they're all here.
In terms of additions or changes - because it has been so long since the event, I am now much more specific about where everything happened. I also included a few more precious memories, sprinkled around like the salt which is still oozing through every pore of my body.
In reading this again many years later, there were also a handful of reflections and realisations. Such as the side story of the hero actively working to unemploy me for some time up until this event took place. But we'll get to that later.
Speaking from experience - the only truly excellent folks you deal with in the hospitality industry are the ones that work it with you, and I'm delighted that many of you still choose to be my friend, talk to me, and or throw me the odd like on social media.
Some of you feature in this story - either as supportive souls, or perhaps as peripheral perpetrators. No matter where you fit in to it - this tale is dedicated to Pete and my friends from the Samford Valley Hotel.
Buckle up
Introduction
"I saw this in a movie about a bus that had to speed around the city, keeping its speed over fifty, and if its speed dropped, it would explode!
I think it was called 'The Bus That Couldn’t Slow Down'."
-Homer Simpson, modern-day philosopher
Part One: Bush Bashing
And there it was indeed: the purse, a full hundred meters closer to the main road than we were searching. Tremendous.
Part Two: The Derro Dimension
"They didn't look like the most straight-edge people I'd ever seen."
The Right Hook
Let's take a breather for a moment and talk about the personal characteristics of certain charmed individuals we all cross paths with. The kinds of folks who work their way up towards punching down. The kind who pretend to be your friend as they wait for you to turn around. You might even get along with them; share a few laughs.
These people are not your friend. These people are only looking out for themselves. I had one of those friends at the Samford Valley Hotel.
When I looked back at this time again, that person emerged from the shadows into broad daylight. At first they were just another nerd just like me, hired to sort out the back-end till system. Eventually they became sort of a second-in-charge, and the work towards ejecting me began.
There was the free soft drink thing, sure - a gotcha obtained under the false pretense of being "off-duty". Congratulations on your achievement. But I realised there were actually a number of other low-fi attempts to direct blame towards me as an individual for things that were shared at a group level. The individual's goals were generally similar to that of a puppy - rounding up balls of illicit operational knowledge to drop at the owner's feet, begging to be patted for their ill-gotten detective work.
That is not honest work, and it's not good work. I wouldn't say you did a particularly good job of it either. I was a casual so it's pretty easy to manage someone out in that scenario.
I hope both sides of your pillow are hot permanently.
The Aftermath
“Somebody text me that night: ‘the bus got stolen’… I was drunk at the time and thought it was funny... It wasn’t until I got to work the next day that I realised how hectic the situation actually was.
That (sort of thing) just doesn’t happen in Samford. And if it was going to happen to anyone, of course it happened to Sam.”
-Lauren
A passenger from the ill-fated Shanelle run
Part Three: The Rocket Man and Lord Defence
The blame for the arson aspect was being shifted, and Captain Firestarter was there to tell the jury who really did it. You'll forgive me if I didn't join them for lunch.
Then, to some relief, the Crown Prosecutor's whip-boy came in: "You're up".
The defence lawyer: "What if I told you the pub wasn't actually where you say it is?". My look of disbelief was intercepted by the judge who finally piped up and told him to get on with it. The location was a fact. The arson was a fact.
At this point, I simply didn’t care what any of them thought about me or my character, and as such I was cleanly defeated by Lord Defence in the Battle of the Bus Embers. After this, I was excused and thanked for turning up. I insist, thank you.
Final thoughts
On one quiet Samford Saturday afternoon after the court case wrapped, you'd never guess which two "former friends" and partners in crime I happened to see dropping in to the local for a tipple...
