Sunday—Jeff introducing Chris
Christopher
Huang––better known as Chris to those of us who see him at seemingly every
major book conference on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean––was born and raised
in Singapore, studied architecture at Canada’s McGill University in Montreal and
now lives in Calgary where he writes exclusively in post-WW1 Britain. His first
novel, A Gentleman's Murder, was published in 2018; it was followed by Library
Journal’s star-reviewed Unnatural Ends in 2023. His third book, a
sequel to his first, is expected in May 2025. Chris dabbles in interactive
fiction and has difficulty passing up a good "full English"
breakfast.
When
I asked Chris a month ago at Bristol UK’s CrimeFest to consider writing a guest
post for MIE, little did I expect that this man known for his conservative sartorial
splendor would share a nigh on “bare it all” tale of his post-CrimeFest adventuring
through an expanse of suburbia extending northwest from London known as Metroland,
and his harrowing efforts to escape the clutches of his Metroland hotel.
Enjoy.
When I ran
into Jeff Siger on my first night at Crimefest this year and he suggested that
I contribute a post to this blog, I wondered what to write. A deep and terribly
learned treatise on the history of train travel, perhaps? A survey of various
executions of the full English breakfast? As it turned out, however, Fate would
soon take a hand.
Now, I
think we can all agree that overseas travel is expensive. So if I’m going to
cross seven time zones, you can bet I’m doing a little more than just Crimefest
before heading home again. After all, I’m a Canadian writing in a British
setting; and as Cathy Ace pointed out to me in 2018 when I first cancelled my
original flight home in favour of tromping all over the North Yorkshire moors
in the dress shoes and suit intended for a weekend of sitting around a Bristol
hotel, the best sort of research is actually being there. Most of my
post-Crimefest adventuring, therefore, has been about research in one way or
another.
This year,
my focus was Metroland.
That’s the
expanse of suburbia extending northwest from London along the old Metropolitan
Railway line. Housing development there began in the 1800s, but really took off
around the early 1900s as the men came home from WW1 demanding a better life. I
found a cheap hotel in the heart of that suburbia, and I wasn’t too particular
since I wasn’t there to enjoy its amenities. The bathrooms were shared,
something I’ve experienced before but have yet to get used to. I mean, what’s
the dress etiquette when you’ve first rolled out of bed? Most people don’t pack
a dressing gown nowadays. But as long as you remember to bring your keycard
with you, all should be well. Right? Besides, the staff was accommodating
enough to check me into my room four hours early, which I appreciated.
My first
day passed without a hitch. I hit up the London Transport Museum, on the
grounds that half my research always seems to be about how people got from A to
B in the 1920s — the price of writing historical fiction, I suppose. Besides,
Metroland was originally developed by the Metropolitan Railway and
intrinsically linked to the idea of an easy commute to and from the City of
London, so this was a good place to start.
My
particular period of interest is WW1 and its aftermath. Aside from learning
about the recruitment of women workers and the requisition of buses for
military transport, I also learned that corporations have been making
questionable advertising decisions since forever …
The next
two days were spent invading the countryside from Harrow to Amersham. The urban
furor of London seems to fade a little with every stop northwest, which is to
be expected. At Amersham, for instance, the green pastures promised by the old
Metroland brochures were much more in evidence. Meanwhile, the residential
houses of each old suburb are a lesson in how the same cookie-cutter design can
be dressed up in an infinite variety of ways; and, given about eighty to a
hundred years of renovation and repair, that “dressing up” can settle into a
bone-deep individuality.
Also, no
Metroland suburb is complete without its own WW1 memorial. Somewhere
in the middle of this was when my hotel keycard first died. It was no matter: a
quick stop into the reception soon resolved the issue.
Day four, I
visited Highgate Cemetery, which subverts the usual expectation of ordered
graves set in manicured lawns with winding paths amid dense foliage. Never mind
the famous people buried here, from Douglas Adams to Karl Marx: what truly
impresses is the sense of civilisation being absorbed back into nature.
I found
that my keycard had died again when I returned that night. The clerk had it
re-reactivated, and I thought nothing more of it. After all, my flight home was
the next morning. What could possibly go wrong in the next twelve hours?
Of course,
any savvy reader knows that I wouldn’t have mentioned any details of my hotel
situation if, in fact, nothing went wrong.
The plan
was to leave at 6:30 AM and catch the bus, which should get me into Heathrow
Airport by 8:00 AM, to give me plenty of time for my 10:15 AM flight. I awoke
at about 5:45 AM, left my room to use the facilities … and found that my
keycard had died a third time.
So there I
was, locked out of my room wearing nothing but my underwear, with a
transatlantic flight coming up in a matter of hours. I headed down to the
reception, only to find it empty. Perhaps it was too early … or perhaps the
clerk was napping in the back room? Rather uncomfortably, the reception was
actually separate from the main hotel, which left me stretched across the porch
area, in full view of the public street, with one foot wedging open the main
door as I hammered on the reception door. No one responded, but hope springs
eternal, as they say.
I honestly
considered breaking a window to get either into the reception or my own room.
But the first would achieve nothing, since I had no idea how to work the
keycard machine; and I had no way up the side of the building to my room
window. Meanwhile, suburban London zoomed by on the street before me, hopefully
too focused on the workday ahead to notice the guy standing there in his … uh,
did I say underwear? No no, these are workout clothes. Clearly. Nothing to see
here as I do my stretches before heading out for a pre-breakfast run …
barefoot. I will never complain about hiking the North Yorkshire countryside in
a business suit again.
A couple of
other guests, noticing my predicament, were kind enough to try calling the
hotel management on their phones; but it wasn’t until 7:00 AM that the clerk
showed up — half an hour after my planned exit. I got my keycard
re-re-reactivated, hurriedly dressed, and caught a taxi instead of a bus to
arrive at Heathrow much as originally planned.
Given the
focus of this blog, I should share a few lessons I learned from this experience
outside of my intended research:
1. Allow
plenty of time for things to go wrong, because they invariably will.
2. Wear
clean underwear, preferably of the sort that can pass at a distance for casual
wear.
3. If your
keycard dies twice while nobody else’s does, it could mean that the card itself
is wearing out. Get a new one rather than simply reactivate this one, even if
you’ve only got twelve hours left on your stay.
Last year,
my already-extended post-Crimefest adventure was made longer when my flight
home was cancelled at the last minute by an airline strike. This year, this
happens. If I didn’t know better, I’d wonder if Britannia wants to keep me for
her very own.
––Christopher
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