Christmas is the best time to travel, so I booked tickets to Montreal. Nina and I arrived at JFK early, like good citizens. I had brought some salami and bread, and she had brought Quaker Oats granola bars, so we munched in the terminal, waiting for our flight to begin boarding.
The terminal was crowded with what must have been a whole slew of Jews. But apparently they weren’t going to Canada. Departing flights for Columbus and Rochester emptied our gate, and our flight began boarding… late of course.
The sole stewardess looked like a big bleached Florida Jew, and the guy in front of us flaunted a Red Hot Chili Peppers yamaka. I had on my new square glasses, indicating intellectual status. The stewardess served me coffee, water, and Belgian biscuits. Nina had cran-apple juice with her biscuits. Before we had fully digested, we had begun our descent above Montreal, which looked very orderly, snowy, and depressing. Each block had an equal number of low-rise houses of the same design. Save for a big barren snowy hill, there with very few parks or other landmarks to break up the flat topographically uninteresting sprawl.
Debarking the plane, the airport seemed empty. Not even the passengers from our own flight were in view. Except for a handful of people, the arrival area was desolate. I was treated matter-of-factly by the passport official. And without indicating a reason, he asked me to see “Immigration”, another set of desks where they grill suspicious foreigners.
The immigration officer was a little too muscular for my liking. He swiped my American passport, and asked me whether I had ever been to Canada before. I mentioned that I had come as a kid with my parents, but never since. He then asked whether I had not had problems with Canadian immigration on a previous visit in 1995. A quick flashback reminded me that, yes, I had been to Canada another time, and that it had not gone well at immigration. At that time, I was not yet a US citizen. My friend Alex and I left Rochester, where we were in school, to go clubbing in Toronto for a night.
Stupidly, that time, I had not brought my green card, so upon exiting the country, Canadian immigration officers had detained me for several hours, interrogating and strip searching me. It had been an all-around unpleasant experience. Eventually, the US authorities confirmed my resident alien status, the Canadians relented, and I was allowed to re-enter the US, but not before they had drained my car of all gas (I’m guessing it was in an effort to find drugs in the gas tank, although they never admitted to having done it).
So I confirmed to the immigration officer that I had been to Canada on a long-repressed previous visit. He then asked whether or not I had any other citizenships. To this, I pulled out my British and Israeli passports. He asked why I had these other passports on me. I responded that I always traveled with them in order to be able to answer questions from people like him. He asked why my Israeli passport was expired. I responded that it was not something I worried about. He asked when was the last time I had visited Israel. I responded that it was only a few years ago. He asked which passport I had used to enter Israel. I responded that I had used my American. He asked why. I responded that it was because my Israeli passport had expired. To this, he responded that “this raises some red flags for me. I have dual-nationality: Canada and France. When I travel to France I use my French passport, and when I travel to Canada, I use my Canadian. I would never think of entering one country with the passport from another.” I agreed that this was the best practice, but that while I would also never do such a thing in England, the Israeli authorities did not seem to care, so why should I?
He flipped through the pages of my American passport, pausing on a particular page, saying, “I can’t read this… what is it, Cyrillic?” Yes, I told him, I traveled to Belarus, where she is from, pointing to Nina. “Vey gavaritye pa Ruskie?”, he asked her, without a hint of an accent. She burst out laughing, not expecting him to speak Russian. It was only later, after we had argued with a relentless African man about the over-charging on a fixed-price menu, that we realized that the immigration officer could not have really spoken Russian since he hadn’t recognized the Cyrillic alphabet. The man then began interrogating Nina, before we were able to convince him that she had nothing to do with my immigration problems.
Without much further ado, he allowed us both to enter Canada, and we proceeded to the customs officers. They asked for our customs forms, which I was not able to immediately locate in my bag. Rather than allowing me to fill in a new form, they sent me to the baggage check. Nina followed along, beginning to exhibit signs of resentment at my inability to leave the airport.
The baggage check officer was a mixed blood black woman, who spoke just enough English to comprehend that I had lost my customs form. I said that the immigration officer had forgotten to return it to me. She dispatched another officer to pay a visit to the immigration officer in search of my form, but also asked me to check my bag again for it. Of course it was in my carry-on bag, where I had put it. But this did not put an end to the proceedings.
She began by checking Nina’s bags, despite the fact that she had shown the customs officials her perfectly-filled in form, and had only gone to the baggage check to accompany me. Nina locks her luggage when traveling, so she unlocked it in order to grant the customs official access. Upon opening her suitcase, she found a note on the top of her clothes stating that the US Transportation Safety Administration had also opened her suitcase, sifted through her belongings, and politely re-closed her dinky little lock before sending the luggage on its way.
The Canadian baggage officer did not consider the US TSA’s baggage check to be sufficient. She lifted out Nina’s gigantic bag of contraband Russian medication, peered through a few pairs of panties, and silently returned the medication to its proper place. Then she turned on my suitcase. Coming upon my small bag of a few assorted pills, she asked me what each of them was for, and whether they were really mine. Not satisfied with not having found anything suspect, she wiped a sterile gauze pad all around the lining of my suitcase, and then fed the pad into an antiquated-looking machine that presumably was built to detect narcotics or explosives or both. She called over another official and the two of them hovered over the machine for a few tense minutes. The other officer was dispatched who-knows-where, and came back with a third officer. As I was finally resigning myself to spending the next few days in jail, the original officer said we were free to go.
Once through this ordeal, we decided to find the address of the hotel which we had booked online in preparation for arranging a taxi. Nina was very excited, since we had been able to secure a room in Hôtel Jazz, TripAdvisor’s #1 rated Bed & Breakfast in Montreal. There’s nothing that pleases Nina more than a cozy top-rated Bed & Breakfast with a well-reviewed breakfast offering. Furthermore, I had been able to book the room for four nights using rewards points on my Citi Professional credit card. And there is only one thing that makes Nina more enthusiastic than a cozy Bed & Breakfast, and that is getting something for nothing. This was going be a treat!
When I found the paper with the address, Nina contradicted me. She said, “No, it’s not on Rue Ontario Est, it’s on Rue St Hubert! Where did you get that address from?” I had assembled our itinerary, and all the relevant addresses from a variety of sources, including official reservation confirmation emails, and things found on the web. To be sure, I broke out my iPhone, and checked the official confirmation email. Indeed, the hotel was on Rue Ontario Est, as I had said. Nina pulled out her own printout from the official hotel website, and said, “Look!” Indeed, the hotel website claimed to be on Rue St Hubert. After a few moments of deliberation, we came to the only logical conclusion: I had booked a room at Hotel Le Jazz, the wrong hotel with a similar name. Needless to say, I was not a popular guy with the audience in the Montreal airport.
Outside of the airport, we found an official taxi. The driver did a drive-by of our hotel, before U-turning through the snow and coming to a rest outside of a crumbly-looking row of houses. The sign said “Jazz Hostel”. We had certainly not booked a room in a shabby hostel using credit card reward points accumulated at a cost of $40,000 over a period of 5 years. But apparently this is exactly what I had done. The driver, sensitive to our dismay, as only a man trained in the transportation of people can be, asked rhetorically, “It looked very different on the internet, did it?” He offered sympathetic grunts (in a heavy French accent) and a copy of a brochure containing the addresses of other hotels.
Actually, the room inside was quite nice. There was an elegant queen sized bed, exposed brick, a sitting area with a small table, exposed stone, a mosquito net (for decoration), a fake fireplace, and an antique window looking out to the street. This hostel was not a hostel in the usual sense of the word. Apparently this was a hotel run by a hostel company. There were 8 rooms, each with a private bathroom. A few of the rooms do have the bunk-bed, hostel setup, but we didn’t see those until later. The only real shared space was a shack out back where they claimed to serve breakfast and do “activities”, which I was intent on avoiding at all costs.
We happily deposited our bags, and went out for a walk to explore the area. I considered myself lucky to have ended up in the wrong hotel with a room that I considered very comfortable, although Nina was going to take some working on to come to the same conclusions. We ate our first mediocre Quebecois meal (croque and soup), and carried on, refueled by greasy comfort food and caffeine. Several hours later, after getting lost, slipping continuously on the chronically icy sidewalks, we returned to the hotel to find that our room did not have adequate heating for the cold French Canadian nights.
Nina began freaking out. Of course, I had already resigned myself to sticking it out in the cold room – I am not the type of guy to complain and demand better treatment. By the time we discovered that we needed a new room, the hotel employees had begun one of the scheduled activities in the grimy shed out back: watching a corny DVD on a dirty pleather couch and celebrating Christmas with mulled wine ($2.50 CAD a glass). I was wont to disturb their revelry, but what can you do when you have a pushy Russian Jewish girlfriend?
Before long, I had found myself demanding a new room on a warmer floor upstairs, with functioning heaters. Several hours later, we had moved into our new quarters, which were as nice, if not nicer, than our previous room, and warm. Nina had triumphed… not for the last time.