A Night Bus to London and a Change of Heart

Learn about words used when travelling by bus (Easy English A2)

BLOG ENGLISCH

Mic. & ChatGPT

1/13/20262 min read

Old German Coach Hanomag
Old German Coach Hanomag

When I got on the night bus in Potsdam, I sat next to a woman with short dark hair. She wore big headphones and looked out of the window. Her bag was on the seat between us.

I said, “Excuse me.”

She moved the bag and said, “Sorry,” without looking at me.

I felt uncomfortable. I thought she was unfriendly. The bus started and drove through Germany and the Netherlands. It was dark, and most passengers were quiet.

When we arrived at the ferry to Great Britain, everyone had to get off the bus. At passport control, British officerschecked our passports. Suddenly, I could not find mine.

My hands started to shake.

The woman noticed me. She took off her headphones and asked, “What’s wrong?”

“I can’t find my passport,” I said. “They will not let me enter the UK.”

She stayed calm. “Take a breath,” she said. “Check your backpack. The small inside pocket.”

The officer was getting closer.

I checked again. Then I felt it. My passport was there.

“You saved me,” I said quietly.

She smiled. “I work in travel. Panic never helps.”

On the ferry, we talked more. Her name was Sarah. She showed me where to sit and how to hold the coffee when the sea was rough.

When the bus arrived in London, we got off at Victoria Coach Station. I felt lost, but Sarah said, “Follow me. This place is busy, but easy.”

At the exit, I said, “Thank you for everything.”

She smiled and said, “People are often nicer than they look.”

This time, I believed it.

Important Vocabulary (Simple Explanations)
  • headphones – things you wear on your ears to listen to music

  • seat – place to sit

  • passengers – people traveling on a bus, plane, ship

  • uncomfortable – not feeling good or relaxed

  • unfriendly – not kind or not nice

  • ferry – boat for people and vehicles, connecting two ports

  • passport control – place where passports are checked

  • officers – people who work at border control or for the police

  • enter – go into a country (or a room)

  • calm – relaxed, not nervous

  • breath – air you take in and out

  • backpack – bag you carry on your back

  • inside pocket – small pocket inside a bag

  • saved – helped someone in a difficult situation

  • panic – strong fear or stress

  • rough – with strong movement (sea); handling something or someone without care

  • lost – not knowing where you are; to miss something

  • busy – many people, lots of activity; doing work

  • exit – way out

  • believed – thought something was true