The table buzzed at dinner. I got the “Where did you get to? We looked high and low.” I said I’d decided to get lost and managed to get a lift from a lady. They were thrilled. Millicent laughed, “Anything to get out of repaying me for that ticket!”
I began to suss out nearby tables. I’m hopeless at seduction, because women are always ahead of me, but they’re sometimes kind and gullible. Chat up someone with whatever line would convince, I might be in with a chance.
Somebody mentioned the cost of sending a fax. I listened, heard there was e-mail available.
“Telephoning’s expensive once we’re out of port,” Jim grumbled, “but at least you can do it from your cabin.”
On the whole they were good company. I felt fond of them. So far, they had provided me with the one opportunity of escape, and here they were almost guiding my next steps. If we were in prison, they’d be offering me files, and shovels to start a tunnel. I began to think what nice people they were. And when Kevin chipped in about going to the morning session on antiques, I brightened more. Today he wore a shiny eye-shadow and loop earrings.
“Come with us, Lovejoy.” Holly Sago perked up. Until then she’d been pretty morose. I’d glimpsed her in the Conservatory when June was trying to convince me I was in clover. I was about to say no when she said, “I mean to the Casino. Help me control Kevin’s gambling fever.”
“That bingo session was a disaster!” Kevin brought out several coloured cards in proof. “Every game, I only needed one number!”
Holly tapped my hand. “He wastes hundreds every cruise. Never wins.”
Kevin pouted. “That’s not true! On the Venice cruise I won a tenner!”
“And lost seven hundred.” Holly confided to the table, leaning forward. “He brings three thousand for gambling money, and goes home with less than a fiver. Can you imagine?”
The table rejoiced at hearing people’s foibles. A chat began about risks.
“Antiques are the worst,” Ivy from the Wirral put in. “They’re coming round with one now.”
“Eh? Where?” I looked, but couldn’t see what she meant. The restaurant waiters thronged and passengers were wading into their dinners. I’d never seen so many crooked little fingers. We were so posh.
“See Mr Semper? He runs a competition, brings round an antique. Whoever guesses the right value wins one!”
I’d seen Henry Semper on TV, the Sunday night favourite show, Antiques on the Road. June Milestone was a frequent visitor on it. The idea was simple: take along some treasure from your attic, experts prove it’s worth a gillion and you can spit in your boss’s eye on Monday. Or, as sometimes happens, not.
“He’s here now.”
Laughter from other tables clued me in, and here came the great Henry Semper accompanied by a plain specky lass in a severe suit. Mr Semper limped, a short bulky man with a stick.
“Evening, all! It’s an antique coffee pot tonight.” He spoke in that gravelly voice now known to the world. “Lauren, show them.”
“This is a wonderful coffee pot by one of the six greatest silversmiths ever.” The girl was in raptures, trying to keep out of the way of the waiters as she lowered her tray so we could inspect the object. “Paul de Lamerie, eighteenth century!”
The tray was glass-bottomed, with cushioned sides. Innocently I dropped my serviette and beat the waiter to picking it up. The coffee pot was beautifully engraved sterling silver. The spout had a small hinged lid, the handle at right angles to the spout.
“It is exceedingly rare,” Lauren said earnestly. “Note the finial on the hinged cover, and the maker’s marks in a line by the handle?”
“Values, please.” Henry Semper placed blank cards on the tablecloth. His smile was his hallmark, they said of him on TV. “Hand in your guesses as you leave, with your cabin numbers!”
“What’s the prize tonight, Henry?” Billy and Kevin asked together, causing a laugh.
“That’ll be telling!” Henry said, limping on with his gravelly laughter rattling crockery round the place.
“Let’s all enter!” Millicent breathlessly filled in her card while Holly tried to peek. “We’ll keep score, shall we? See who wins most by the end of the cruise?”
“They take a small sum from your account,” Ivy explained, seeing me hesitate. “For charity.”
“It’s all in a good cause,” they all agreed. Except me.
We finished the meal. I wanted to see tonight’s film. When I was little, cinema was my only culture apart from books. The difference was, I had to nig in to see a picture, and libraries were free. Civilisation, I always think, is free libraries and pavements. The rest is just window dressing.
On the way out, everybody comparing what they’d written on their guessing cards, I was stopped.
“Lovejoy hasn’t done one!” Millicent said loudly.
“Hasn’t he?” Kevin and Holly handed theirs in to Lauren, who was waiting proudly beside her splendid eighteenth century Paul de Lamerie silver.
“You have to!” Millicent decided. “We agreed!”
“Here, Lovejoy.” Ivy found a blank card and a pencil. The waiters were all smiling as I wrote. I shouldn’t have let my temper get the better of me. Lauren took it with the others, glancing at it as she placed it on the pile. I saw her face change.
There was always a new flower arrangement at the restaurant entrance. I tried to join in conversation when two ladies paused to admire them. I failed, because Lauren, with my card in her hand, quickly attracted the attention of the indefatigable Henry Semper, who was belly-laughing with a nearby coterie of admirers. I had to scarper. People are mesmerised by screen fame and Henry basked in worship. He’d even brought a group of antiques enthusiasts on board to revel in his glory. Get your face on TV, you’re a celebrity, even if like Henry Semper you were running a nasty little crooked scam.
Moving quickly on among the evening crowd, I found myself in the Atrium. Open staircases swept down to a dance-floor where a small band played, with bars and people lounging and chatting. It was affluent serenity. On the first tier of balconies was another lounge bar with shops rimming the walls. Above that, yet another tier with the library, jewellery shops and clothing places. To make sure I’d dodged my fellow-diners, I slipped into the a garment place and gaped at the clothes, tee shirts with embroidered Melissa logos, anoraks, evening dresses, shoes.
“They do a sale after the second sea day,” a lady told me. She was looking through a rack of blouses. I recognised her as one who’d been admiring the flowers by the Pacific restaurant. She’d cold-shouldered me when I wanted to get into conversation. I didn’t need spurning again. I usually find that once does it.
“Right.” I peered about until the coast was clear, and went to the cinema.
The film was sparsely attended. I liked it. Mostly I read American thrillers and Victorian English writers, then anything else I can get hold of. As for films, anything goes. It was late when the film ended. By the time the credits rolled, I’d worked out where to direct my pleas for help. I decided to write a letter, envelope and stamp in the old-fashioned way – “snail mail” as folk now call it – and to post off a fax. Then I’d speak to the captain, who sometimes held cocktail parties. They couldn’t stop me telling him with everybody there, could they?
Margaret Dainty is an old friend. She frets about being lame, but has no reason to. She and I have been friends years. She occasionally lends me her husband’s clothes if I’ve to go somewhere grand, like a wedding or funeral. She’s an antiques dealer without much nous and barely scrapes a living. Her shadowy husband’s always overseas mending fallen companies. Margaret and me occasionally make smiles. She said once she was my Out-Patients Department, which is not far from the truth. She blames herself for being lame, over forty-five, and too plump, as if any of that matters. See how daft women are? I wrote her a letter and a fax on the forms they provide at the Reception desk and handed them in.
It had been a rum sort of day. Worn out, I went to the quiet Horizon Lounge, upstairs at the front of the ship, to listen to the piano and see the distant lights of other ships moving out there in the darkness. I had a drink while I worked out what to say to Margaret on the phone. She isn’t quite the SAS, but is willing. Green cards placed about the ship warned that the clocks were going to be changed during the night. I worked out that Margaret would be home by midnight, whatever she was doing. I’d phone on the stroke.
The lounge was fairly empty, everybody at late-night shows, dancing, and films. I’d assumed it would be peaceful while I worked things out.
The mistake found me when I’d almost made up my mind.
* * *
“I think that was a dreadful joke!” Lauren stood over me, seething with rage.
I sighed. The lounge was wide, muted colours, outside a tranquil sea with occasional lights, the night velvet royal blue and faintly starlit. The piano was playing softly, low armchairs and occasional tables dotted about, stewardesses wandering, occasional quiet laughter from passengers having a last slurp before turning in. It should have been the most placid of scenes. Instead, I get this bottle-eyed fury. She polished her specs furiously, working on a better glare.
“Joke? I never joke, miss.”
“What you wrote on your card, about our rare Paul de Lamerie coffee silverware! Worth nothing?”
“You asked for a valuation.”
“Everybody saw it! Some actually…” she closed her eyes and went for it “…laughed out loud! At Mr Semper! They talked! You are vicious!”
“I tried not to hand one in, but you insisted.”
“Mr Henry was livid! You are despicable!”
“Look, love.” I felt done for. “I don’t want to be here. I don’t like your nasty little boss and his nasty little antiques scam. I don’t like you because you’re helping him to defraud people who’re too ignorant not to fall for his tricks.”
Two ladies further along the lounge were listening. One was the one who’d cold-shouldered me and said about the shops having sales days.
“I shall complain to the captain, the purser, the ship’s officers and the cruise director!” Lauren said, voice trembling. “I shall have you evicted at the very next port! You’re an infidel. That silver piece was made by the hand of one of the greatest – ”
“Ballocks, miss.” I turned in my seat to look up at her. “Paul de Lamarie was a Huguenot refugee from the Continent who worked in London. He was a deeply religious man and entirely honest, unlike your slimy boss. Your illegal faked mark will stand up to ordinary scrutiny, but the coffee pot won’t. It started life a couple of centuries after de Lamerie died – as a plain pub tankard. The handle Semper’s faker stuck on it at right angles is an attempt to make it look old – servants poured sideways like that after coffee first came into fashion when Pasqua Rosee opened London’s first coffee house in St Martin’s Alley, off Cornhill, in 1652. The habit grew, so there’s plenty of elegant silverware about. A real de Lamerie would be worth a mint, but your pot is naff. You’ve no right to defraud history, you rotten cow.”
“The hallmarks – ” She tried to get going, but strangled.
“Your forger bought an ordinary silver tankard, then added a spout and faked de Lamerie’s marks. Tell him he forgot to add the fake marks on the spout and on the finial.”
She gaped, her mouth opening like a fish working against the stream.
“I hate bad fakes, love. I don’t mind good forgeries, because at least somebody’s tried.” She made a woman’s exclamation, “Oh!”, in anger and turned aside. I said after her, “I said it was worth nothing because it’s illegal. It can’t be bought or sold.”
She spun, her face white. “I shall have you put ashore!” she rasped, and turned away to flounce off.
“One more thing, Lauren.” For some reason I felt so sad, because now she seemed nothing more than an ignorant dupe – like the rest of us, I suppose.
“Haven’t you said enough?” she spat.
“No, love. It’s a chocolate pot, nothing to do with coffee.”
She marched off. I relaxed, and saw the two women nearby looking hard at me, and that other people were finding their evening suddenly a little less mellow. Conversation slowly picked up, and the piano regained composure. The two ladies rose and crossed over to my group of three armchairs. I was going to get another wigging. Had the women on board the Melissa nothing better to do than ballock me, for God’s sake?
“I do apologise.”
“Eh?” This was new.
Her friend retreated to the exit, smiling. “You were trying to escape,” the remaining lady said. “I didn’t realise. In the shop.”
When I’m not in the wrong my mind thromboses and I can’t find anything to say, used to being useless I suppose. Speech is overrated, but sometimes it’s worth giving it a go. This was the first time for weeks I’d not been savaged. Did she mean real escape? Then the penny dropped. She meant I looked furtive by the flowers and those tee-shirts. I groaned inside.
“I could have been kinder, and made it easier for you to avoid your friends.”
“Yes, sir?” a stewardess said. The lady declined with a headshake, but sat in the next armchair.
“I’m Lovejoy. How do.”
“Delia Oakley.” She smiled, at ease. “Are you on a terrible table? You can always ask to be changed. Speak to the head waiter.”
“No, they’re fine. Friendly.”
“Is that so,” she said evenly. “We think you’re a happy bunch. We’re the next table, the one with only four on. Rather dull, I’m afraid.”
“You can always ask to be changed. Speak to the head waiter.”
She gave it a laugh, though it wasn’t much of a quip. “Was that true about the silverware? Fern and I were really interested. No shame in eavesdropping.”
“Sorry.” I went red.
“How marvellous to be an expert on silver!”
“Wish I was. Dates are hard to remember.”
“I wondered what you were doing, deliberately dropping your serviette then stooping to pick it up. Fern thought you were being amorous.” And explained, “Lauren’s legs.”
“Dates should be stamped about the base, or lined up near the handle. It’s illegal to fake up a silver tankard as a coffee pot then sell it as a true antique without marking the changes you’ve made.” I shrugged. “So I wrote zero on her card.”
“I’m one of Henry Semper’s antiques group.” She grimaced. “Groupies, you might call us.”
“You run an antiques shop?”
“Not yet. I’m hoping to start a small antiques business now my husband’s gone. Fern does antiques in Salford. People joke about cruise ships, don’t they? Full of widows and all that. Fern is the real expert. We were friends at school. It was her idea to come. I’m new to cruising. It’s lovely, isn’t it, everything you could possibly want?” She waited for my story, but I said nothing. She told me about her husband’s fatal car crash. I never know what to say. “Fern was wondering how you knew it was a chocolate pot, not for coffee. Aren’t they the same thing?”
“No.” I spoke with relief, on safer ground. “The finial on the silver cover – the projecting knob – comes off, leaving a hole into which the lady of the house would insert a swizzle, to stir the chocolate lees. You didn’t need do that for coffee. Making a new screw finial is always difficult. I’ve made similar mistakes. Mine wobble, like hers did.” I coloured up, cursing myself for clumsiness. “Er, I mean I suppose that’s what forgers do.”
She did her woman’s amused non-smile. “Why did you come, if you hate cruising?”
“I’m just desperate to get off.”
“We saw you slip away from our Rijksmuseum group. You looked so desolate returning in that lady’s motor. Quite like a prisoner.”
“I hoped to make it back…” Back where, though? “Home,” I completed lamely.
“You can leave any time, Lovejoy. Just tell the purser’s office. The shipping lines have port agents at every landfall. It’s a legal requirement.”
“Sounds easy.” She looked kind and ready to talk, even though it was getting on for midnight. Could she be trusted? Better not; I’d already opted for Margaret in East Anglia. “I’m sorry, er, Delia. I have things to do.”
“Not at all. Perhaps I’ll see you in Mr Semper’s antiques lecture tomorrow? Or in Oslo.”
“Oslo? Isn’t that in the other direction?”
She laughed, shaking her head. We parted at the lifts. I avoid unneeded conversation by using stairs instead of elevators. A lift is hell on the nerves, especially if other people are full of boisterous snippets. Still, Delia Oakley might turn out to be someone neutral, if not exactly an ally. So far I’d unerringly picked out enemies, so maybe my luck was changing. I went to ring Margaret and beg for help. Oslo, though? There were ferries from our east coast – Newcastle, was it? – to Norway.
No reason for optimism. Optimism never did me any favours. I’ve found that.