“No problems sir – I will get you a very good apartment near your office –
just give me a couple of days” said the broker.
The first apartment he took me to turned out to be a complete
disaster. It was in a dilapidated old
building and there was no lift to get to the 3rd floor. Climbing the worn-out, dimly lit stairs made
me claustrophobic.
“Sorry I don’t want to stay in a heritage building” I told
the broker.
The sarcasm was lost on him – “sir, this is an excellent
building, and just walking distance from your office” he said with a sad nod of his
head.
The next apartment had a lift, but from the bedroom window I
could reach out and touch the metro rail.
Every minute a metro train whizzed past rattling the apartment.
“Sir, excellently located apartment, you can reach any part
of Mumbai by using this Metro” he said.
I looked out of the window and marveled at the engineers who had managed to build the gleaming new metro rail just an arms length away from the 3rd floor of a residential building.
“…and, you will soon get used to the sound, sir” he said.
By now he was able to read my thoughts, and pre-empt my every negative comment.
“No, it is not the sound I am bothered about, it is the manner
in which the building shakes when the train passes” I told him.
The next apartment had a lift, had bright large windows, and
was in a quiet neighbourhood.
“Any problems with this flat sir” the broker asked me in a very solicitous tone.
“This flat is good, but the toilets are not well maintained."
"But sir this apartment is so so good - you will never get such an apartment for your budget in Mumbai" he said with anguish.
He is putting me on the defensive. "It is my wife - she is especially concerned about the
toilets” I told him.
He rolled his eyes heaven-wards. I was becoming an impossible to please
client.
“I will not compromise on the toilets” I repeated.
“Sir, I will need to get the help of other brokers to check
whether there is anything available that will meet your needs” he said, and
started calling up other brokers.
2 weeks later and after seeing some 20 houses, I finally
liked a house.
I was talking to the land-lord and finalizing the terms,
when the broker got a call on his phone.
He went to the next room to take the call.
It was obviously another broker calling him to check whether
the deal is finally through.
I heard the broker replying on the phone “Jee, toilet aadmi
ko makaan passand aaya” (Yes, the toilet
man finally liked a house).
3 comments:
;) lajavaab!
As usual, hilarious! :)
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