The Nitelink

Shane Hegarty 's encyclopaedia of modern Ireland

Shane Hegarty's encyclopaedia of modern Ireland

In a socially sanitised Ireland, keen to purge itself of hedonism and excess, there is still one place where anything goes. A place where laws of social etiquette are flouted. And where the heating doesn't always work. It is called the Nitelink. And if Michael McDowell wants to do something about it, he can drive the bus himself.

There will never be a cafe culture on board the Nitelink. It won't become a welcome lift home after a hard night of sipping latte at a poetry reading. It is for people who go for one quick pint after work, only to stay for several slow ones and miss every bus and train home until they finally have no choice but to stumble into sense and wobble towards a Nitelink. It is a party bus. The last venue on a night out, rattling through the suburbs as at least one happy drunk conducts fellow passengers in umpteen verses of Stop the bus, I Want a Wee-wee. And Dublin Bus, which operates the service, knows its reputation. A couple of years back, its advertising slogans included such double-entendre delights as At the end of the night it's a guaranteed ride and What comes more quickly than your boyfriend? It's Club 18-30 at 1.30. And 2.30. And finally at 3.30.

As with every party, there are always those who can't take the pace. Anyone who regularly uses the Nitelink knows what it is like to wake up and have absolutely no idea where you are, what time it is and whether you're alive or dead. You rest your eyes for just a moment and, the next thing you know, the driver is shaking you awake in a garage at the end of the line, miles from home, at five in the morning and with the rain pelting down outside. There are urban legends telling of passengers who have taken an early Nitelink, fallen asleep and been carried up and down the route until waking just in time to get off at their stop - only three journeys and four hours later than originally anticipated. Typically, each Nitelink has at least one sober passenger, who will inevitably end up sitting beside the drunkest and discover the delights of having a sot fall asleep on one's shoulder. An immovable lump, dribbling like a baby until he wakes, realises it's his stop and scrambles over the seats and into the night.

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Let's not forget that the driver is an unsung hero, steering this most obliging of paddy wagons. It's understandable that he just wants to get home as quickly as possible. There are times when the bus doesn't stop as such, only slows down just enough for passengers to step off, so that they roll from the Nitelink like cowboys jumping from a train. You cannot blame the driver. He must be getting quadruple pay, time in lieu, extra pension credits and extensive post-traumatic-stress counselling to drive these things. And, no, he will not stop the bus because you want a wee-wee.