Lady on the Train

On a journey through the Austrian countryside, two women form a remarkable connection.

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On a journey through the Austrian countryside, two women form a remarkable connection.

She gets on the train in Salzburg. As it pulls out of the station, I see her standing in the passage outside my compartment. A European woman in her late 40s, very well-turned-out in a peach jacket and a long, black, silk skirt. I watch her from the corner of my eye, hoping she would walk on and find a seat elsewhere.

She lingers there for a few minutes, looking up and down the corridor, somehow undecided. Then, sticking her head through the door, she asks hesitantly if the other seats are taken. They are not. There are five of them, all empty. Except that I have my feet up on the one in front. I start taking them off, thinking it inappropriate in this oh-so-formal country to be lolling in my seat with my bare feet stretched out.

"Oh leave them be. That's exactly what I had in mind," she says as she slides her bag on to the shelf above. I smile and put them up again as she settles into her seat, slipping off her fashionable black patent leather high heels and putting her feet up.

With that remark, and my smile in response, a little tennis match of pleasantries begin.

I ask if she is going to Vienna. "No not so far, only to St Valentin."    

She then asks where I'm coming from. Heidelberg, I say.

"Oh, that's where my homeopathic doctor is. I haven't met her yet, but I am in regular email contact," she says, running her hand over her hair. It looks professionally coiffed, turned slightly inwards at the ends and streaked in darker shades of chestnut.

Before I can respond, she adds, "She is treating me for cancer." 

Cancer! So personal. So impossible to leave without comment. Homeopathy against cancer!

I have memories of my friend, Gina, turning to alternative medicine in search of a cure for her breast cancer. Her distrust of chemotherapy, her stubborn commitment to 'green therapies', and her faith in her so-called doctor had been suicidal. Gina died a painful death after an ...

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