“Not bloody likely," I thought. Such was my state of naiveté about this country and the way things are done.
The day after I arrived I had to start work, so I was busy
figuring that side of things out all the while believing the hotel was a
temporary thing and unpleasant though it was, I could endure a few days. In the
second and third week we were shown a range of houses. Most were wonderful; some
new, others older, but beautifully appointed and huge with magnificent gardens.
The catch was that none were available just now. We’d have to wait six months. I
still had every confidence the solution was imminent.
Soon we were told that we could move to another hotel, we
just needed to wait a few days for approval from finance. When I heard nothing,
I enquired to find out that now it required government approval. This happened
several times. We were also sent off to inspect alternative hotels, each of which
was equally as appalling. These opportunities waxed and wained, but were
impotent, none bore better accommodation. Then apartments became possibilities.
We were going to move into Ong Sum Ping; a wonderful, newly refurbished
building with luxurious appointments. This was dangled for a few weeks and each
of my enquiries was met with a road
block somewhere up the hierarchy. It was finally laid to rest when it
turned out that there was going to be a high level ASEAN conference in two
months for which dignitaries would require accommodation for a few days. That
ruled OSP out as a possibility for us.
Other apartments were mentioned, but again red tape got in
the way. Then one started to look like a real goer. The previous tenant moved out on April 1 and
the place really only needed a lick of paint. On the 14th we were
assured it would be ready today, April 21st.
We went today to pick up the key. But now it seems we can’t move in until the
30th.
So for three months we’ve been coaxed into enduring just a
few more days. And again it’s a few more days. Obviously a good strategy
because had I known this on day one, I would have done a u-turn and headed
straight back to the airport!
Let me review my current hotel.
Suitable for backpackers. Our suite
is 2-bedroom with a kitchen and lounge. We can’t complain about the size, but
we can complain about everything else. The kitchen is a closet with no windows.
The exhaust fan is covered in years of dust and oily, sticky slime. A wall
cupboard is full of spider webs and greasy, grime. The stove is thick with
caked on slime and grease. Luckily it has a lid, so we shut the lid three
months ago and so it has remained. The tiled benchtops are grotty, and the
cupboards are unusable. We haven’t cooked in three months – dining out for each
meal. The fridge was a disgrace, but I scrubbed it clean at the outset, so we
can at least store drinks.
On to the lounge. K sat on
the couch and the frame gave way, so he fell through to the floor. I have
avoided the lounge furniture ever since. There’s a small balcony off the lounge
half of which is taken up with an enormous, grimy, excruciatingly loud aircon
unit. So the balcony is unusable. The master bedroom came with one bedside
table, no lamps and a bed that has a clearly visible crater in it! On day one I
knew that it was a back’s worst nightmare, so we pushed together the two single
beds in the next room and have been using them for three months. There is no mattress
protector. The sheets are placed
directly onto the mattress, so one wonders how many people’s sweat has previously
graced the mattress on humid Brunei nights – and whether it can bubble to the
surface – yuk! The sheets themselves are adorned with cigarette burn holes and permanent
stains. One time housekeeping must have
run out of sheets because after a hard day, I stripped off, drew back the
covers ready to jump into bed only to find that there was only a bottom sheet,
no top sheet! Once a week we discover
that our towels have been taken, but not replaced.
The tiled floors are mopped with a
substance that leaves them sticky so my thongs ssluuurrrrrrppp, ssslluuurrrrppp
across the floor. The aircon is very old and very noisy and turning it on
involves breaking finger nails.
I haven’t told you about the worst
feature though – a fine mix of cabbage, mould and garbage brewed to perfection
and then let loose through the aircon system. It’s a putrid stench. Opening the
windows does nothing to relieve it as more of the stench is simply pumped
through the aircon. The first time we pointed it out to staff, they offered to
mop the floors with dettol. Incredulous, we told them again that it was coming
from the aircon. Eventually they traced it to a switch in the restaurant kitchen
downstairs that needs to be permanently on. Now when we come home to
unbelievable stench, we ring downstairs. They send someone up to sniff, we tell
them there’s no need to sniff, it’s a problem with the aircon and a switch in
their restaurant kitchen. They offer to mop, we tell them to go to the restaurant
and sort it out. A couple of hours later the place is almost habitable again. This
is a regular scenario.
Anyway, you can imagine my disappointment today when I thought
the move was imminent only to see it thwarted once again. Ah well, it’ll only
be a few more days! :)
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