There are moments in life that feel almost like the tide itself — unhurried, rhythmic, and constant — until something unseen shifts beneath the surface and forces a sudden pause. For Jolanda Mahu-Van Leersum, a woman of 58 who devoted nearly 35 years to guiding others through the complexities of global shipping, such a moment arrived not on open water, but through an unexpected phone call that would linger in memory long after the day’s work was done.
Her connection to containers, labels, and destinations spanned decades. Like a lighthouse keeper familiar with every curve of the coastline, Jolanda knew the language of cargo and customs — the weight of crates, the paperwork detailing their contents, and the invisible story behind every shipment. Yet even she had never encountered a message quite like this: the unmistakable report of “an unbelievable smell” emanating from a sea container awaiting transport, a stench that hinted at something deeply unsettling and quite beyond the ordinary concerns of logistics.
The caller, a colleague or partner in that vast network of global freight, spoke with a tone that was part hesitation, part disbelief. It was the kind of description that makes one lean closer to a receiver, straining to place a reality behind the words and the pungent suspicion they carried. Jolanda, seasoned by years of cargo slips and manifests, felt instead an unfamiliar ripple of unease. Even the ocean can turn brackish, she might have reflected, but some scents are not meant to blend with salt and sea air.
Inside that container, nestled among the promise of goods destined for another shore, something was unmistakably wrong. The frustration of a transport worker is usually measured in paperwork, delays, or customs holds — not in the creeping dread that comes with an odor that defies simple explanation. The call Jolanda received was less about schedules and more about the weight of human concern, the kind that makes time stretch and attention sharpen.
There was little in the way of immediate public detail about what was found, or how authorities responded in the hours that followed. For Jolanda, and for those she guided through months and years of shipments around the globe, the experience was a reminder that behind every container number and sticker lies a story — sometimes ordinary, sometimes freighted with mystery and the unexpected.
Cargo moves in patterns, like the ebb and flow of tides, carrying the familiar and the foreign between ports and people. Yet every so often, it brings a moment that halts the routine, asking us to pause and consider what lies beneath the surface — whether it’s a package of silk or something far heavier, both in scent and in consequence.
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Sources : De Telegraaf

