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Confessions from a Luxury Liner
Timothy Lea


Would you like it in bed, Madam?Another exclusive ebook reissue of the bestselling 70s sex comedy series.Timmy and Sid need to get away from it all – so a cruise seems the perfect idea.There are plenty of brave seafaring ladies there too, seeking a bit of something different… Janice and Anthea, who are looking for new types of after-dinner entertainment, Fatima, the belly-dancer, and the admiral’s wife, who had certainly found her sea legs…Also Available in the Confessions… series:CONFESSIONS OF A WINDOW CLEANERCONFESSIONS OF A LONG DISTANCE LORRY DRIVERCONFESSIONS OF A TRAVELLING SALESMANand many more!









Confessions from a Luxury Liner

BY TIMOTHY LEA










Contents


Title Page (#ub1c9ce5e-7dfa-55b1-b0aa-c6a75817dbeb)

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Also available in the CONFESSIONS series

About the Author

Also by Timothy Lea & Rosie Dixon

Copyright (#litres_trial_promo)

About the Publisher




CHAPTER ONE (#u92e6961a-778b-543d-a9dc-076a7316dd32)


�Was it nice, Sid?’ I ask.

Clapham’s answer to Paul Newman grits his Teds like he has plans to make them retractable. �Watch it!’ he hisses. �Just watch it. I’m not telling you again.’

Readers of ConfessionsofaPrivateDick will recall that my brother-in-law and partner, Sidney Noggett, ran into a spot of bother at the end of our career as C Men working for Mission E – or Emission as it was widely known in concentric circles at the Ministry of Defence. I will not spoil the story for those who have not read it by revealing the amazing details, but suffice to say that Sid’s distress was occasioned by an unsolicited sexual encounter – and there are not many of those flying around as far as Mrs Noggett’s little boy is concerned, I don’t mind telling you. Sid usually holds back from nooky the way a freshly sharpened hatchet rests lightly on half a pound of warm butter.

�I’m not asking for the unpleasant details,’ I say.

�Don’t ask for anything,’ says Sid. �Otherwise your lower lip is going to look like Idi Amin’s pyjama case. Anyway, what have you got to rabbit about? You haven’t heard from your precious Retchen, have you?’

�Gretchen,’ I grit.

�No doubt some horny Kraut is introducing her to his Frankfurter at this very moment,’ says Sid, clearly warming to the idea. �Oh yes, I reckon you can say “auf wiedersehen” to that little number.’

I try to look as if the idea is too blooming stupid to comment on but in my heart of hearts I fear that he may well be right. Gretchen went back to Germany three weeks ago and I have not heard a dicky bird since. Our bitter-sweet romance was not helped when the local anaesthetic I used to assist in its consummation sent my dick to sleep half a second after penetration. I would have cried if Gretchen had not beaten me to it. It was all so sad because she went home before I had the chance to introduce her to the full lustre of my cluster.

�She’ll write,’ I say. �Don’t you worry.’

�I’m not worried,’ says Sid. �Not about that, anyway. Of all the bleeding things I’ve got to worry about, your bit of Hun fluff is very low on the list.’ He takes a long sip of Mum’s tea and his face wrinkles in disgust. �Gordon Bennett! Can’t your Mum even make a cup of tea? Look at the brown rings round the inside of this cup. They’ve eaten into the china.’

�Mum puts something with it to make it go further,’ I tell him.

�This isn’t going to go any further,’ says Sid pushing his cup away. �Blimey, I wish I’d brought my clogged-up paint brushes with me. Stick ’em in this lot for a few minutes and you could paint the Mona Lisa with them.’

Sid and I are having a cuppa round at 17 Scraggs Lane, the ancestral home of the Leas, and we are supposed to be discussing our future. No sooner has my brother-in-law emptied the contents of his cup down the sink than my mother enters clutching a couple of letters.

�I didn’t know people still wrote letters,’ says Sid. �Still, when it’s a choice between spending the money on a stamp or a few hundred British Leyland shares …’

�There’s one from Germany,’ says Mum. �Quite a pretty stamp. You wouldn’t think the Germans would have a stamp like that.’

�Here it comes,’ says Sid cheerfully. �The old brush-off, Kraut-style. Get your handkerchief out.’

�Oh look,’ says Mum. �Somebody’s poured their tea leaves into the sink. What a waste. You can dry them and use them again mixed with dandelion leaves. I heard it on the wireless.’

�That was for pipe tobacco, not drinking!’ says Sid. �No wonder it tasted so diabolical. That bleeding tom is always up against the dandelions.’

My finger and thumb are testing the contents of the airmail envelope. It does not seem over-thick for a passionate love letter. Perhaps I would be better off reading it in the privacy of my own very small room.

�Read us out the fruity bits,’ says Sid. He snatches the envelope and holds it under his hooter. �Phew! Eau de Sauerkraut. She must have been off with some bloke when she posted this.’

�She was a nice enough girl,’ says Mum. �For a foreigner, that is.’

�I know, Mum,’ I say. �Their ways are not our ways, are they?’

�That’s exactly what I always say,’ says Mum.

�I know it is,’ I say wearily.

�He’s taking the piss,’ says Sid. �I think love has coarsened him.’

�That’s not nice,’ says Mum.

I suppress a sigh and tear open the envelope. I do wish Sid would spend a bit more time in his trendy Vauxhall pad with my sister Rosie and his two delightful children, Jason and Dominic. He always said how much he loathed Scraggs Lane when he was forced to live here. Now he never stops hanging about the place.

�Dear Timmy,’ I read. �I hope you are well. I am sorry I am not writing more soon but there is very much happening when I arrive home. I have seen many old faces. One of them is Horst. I do not remember if I tell you around him. He is maybe the reason why I leave home. He has told me that he misses me very much and I think that I miss him, too. At Christmas we become engaged so I will not be coming back to England.’

I let the letter drop to waist level and Sid does not have to go to night school to read my expression. �Like I said, eh?’ he says cheerfully. �The big elbow. You can’t say I didn’t warn you.’

�Thanks,’ I say.

�Is there someone else?’ says Mum. She sounds quite perky, too. Of course, she was never keen on me marrying a daughter of the Third Reich, desperate as she was for me to get spliced to someone.

�Seems like it,’ I say.

�Oh well,’ says Mum. �I expect it’s for the best. You never met her people, did you?’

�They were Nazi war criminals,’ I say. �I saw her Dad on Colditz the other night.’

I try and entertain myself by imagining a wedding photograph of Mum standing next to a geezer wearing jack boots, monocle, sabre scars and Iron Cross, but the ache still hangs round my stomach like suet round a kidney. I think that you only really care for a bird when she gives you the boot.

�You wouldn’t have had anything to live on,’ says Mum. �There’s that to be thankful for.’

I think I know what Mum means. Sid and I are indeed skint since we parted company with Mission E and the queue at the National Assistance counter grows longer daily.

�Yes, he’s well out of that, there’s no doubt about it,’ says Sid. �She doesn’t know how lucky she is, either. Still, that’s all water that’s been passed under the bridge. We’ve got to turn our minds to thoughts of the future. Talent like ours is too precious to lie mouldering on the shelf.’

�It’s not easy to get a job these days,’ says Mum. �They’re laying off more people than they’re laying on them.’

�You don’t lay on people, Mum,’ I say.

�No, but you do,’ says Sid. Sid has what might be described as a very personal sense of humour. He is the only person to laugh at his jokes.

Mum waits for him to finish. �Look what happened to your father,’ she sniffs. �They nearly made him red - redundant.’

This is indeed true. Dad’s position at the lost property office – slumped over a desk in a posture resembling deep kip – was only preserved by the fact that a lot of people suddenly lost a lot of things and he was able to prove that London would grind to a halt without him. The situation was so desperate that he was actually taking stuff that he had nicked back to the office.

�They should have kicked him out years ago,’ says Sid. �Spongers like him are the reason why this once great country of ours is in the mess it is now. The lazy old git has never done a day’s work in his life and he’s pocketing God knows how much money every week as well as all the stuff he swipes.’

�That’s not a nice way to talk about your father-in-law,’ says Mum.

�No, but it’s true,’ says Sid. �It makes me sick when I think how I’ve embodied the very spirit of Britain’s merchant greatness and ended up without a penny piece to show for it. Look at the businesses I’ve started, look at the initiative and dynamism I’ve demonstrated, look at the employment I’ve offered.’

�Look at the wages you haven’t paid,’ I say. �I’m your most regular employee and I’ve hardly made a couple of quid in four years.’

�You’re a chip off the old block and no mistake,’ says Sid. �Just like your old Dad. Grasping and ungrateful. You’ve had the opportunity to learn more with me than you would in a dozen business schools, but all you can think about is money. You embody everything that is wrong with this country. Frankly, I’ve had enough. I feel that Britain has betrayed me. There’s no place here any more for a man with ideals, courage and untamable ambition. I’ve thought about it long and hard in the last few days, Timmo, and I’ve decided that there is only one thing to do.’

�Emigrate, Sid?’ I say.

�Don’t be stupid,’ says Sid. �I don’t want to chuck away the National Health and the assistance – God knows, I’ve earned it. I was thinking of working out of the country for a bit.’

�The Isle of Wight,’ says Mum. �That’s where I’ve always wanted to go. The climate is very like our own. I don’t like it too hot.’

�Somewhere slightly further afield is what I had in mind,’ says Sid. �I was thinking of blazing the ocean’s trails in the merchant marine.’

�Oh,’ says Mum. �That sounds nice. What did you have in mind exactly?’

�A ship’s steward,’ says Sid. �I was talking to somebody the other night and they made it sound a wonderful job. You meet a lot of interesting people and travel all round the world. It would be like a holiday after what we’ve been through lately.’

�What about Rosie?’ says Mum.

�She’ll be all right,’ says Sid. �She’s got her business interests to look after and – you know what they say – absence makes the heart grow fonder.’

�Like me and Gretchen,’ I say.

Sid does not savour the flavour of that remark and it is necessary for me to invest in a pint of pig’s at the Nightingale before he starts to get back to something like his normal self. �Wouldn’t break you to buy a packet of crisps, would it?’ he says.

�It would as a matter of fact,’ I say. �What do you want?’

�Cheese and onion,’ he says. �And make sure they’re not soggy.’

�How do you reckon I do that?’ I say. �Grind them to powder between my fingers before I cough up the cash?’

�I’ll leave it to you,’ he says. �I just can’t bear it when you can bend them.’

Two minutes later I give him a packet of Oxo flavoured crisps with the explanation that the boozer has run out of cheese and onion.

�You know I can’t stand those,’ he says. �And where’s the packet of salt? They’ve started doing the salt again, you know.’

�Maybe it’s a different make,’ I say. �No, wait a minute, it can’t be. I’ve got three packets in mine.’

�Typical,’ says Sid. �I even miss out when it comes to the bleeding salt.’ He looks at my crisps. �Hey! I thought you said they’d run out of cheese and onion.’

�They have,’ I say. �I got the last packet.’

�That’s disgusting!’ says Sid. �Haven’t you got no manners? Your side of the family are so uncouth.’

�You can’t talk about being uncouth,’ I say. �Look at all those little bits of crisp floating on top of your beer. It quite puts me off my food.’

�Good,’ says Sid. �Then you won’t need your crisps.’ And he grabs my packet and shoves half of it down his cakehole.

Fortunately, that half includes two of the packets of salt as the bloke next door soon finds out when Sid spits them into an ashtray and covers his whistle in ash.

�I don’t know what he was making so much bleeding fuss about,’ says Sid as we hurry through the door. �It was a grey suit. A bit of ash is good for them.’

�Not when it covers up the pin stripe,’ I say. �Where are we going to go now, the Highwayman?’

�No,’ says Sid. �I’m nipping up to the Palais. Do you want to come?’

�The Palais?’ I say. �I haven’t been there for years. I didn’t know you were into dancing.’

�I’m not, am I?’ says Sid. �I’ve got a date with this bird who might be able to help us with the steward thing. Her old man is on the turn—’ at least, that is what I think he says. It is not until I have expressed sympathy that I learn that the lady’s husband serves on a boat called the Tern.

�What do you need me for?’ I say.

�She’s certain to have a friend,’ says Sid. �They always do, don’t they? You can look after her while I sort out Gloria.’

�She goes there a lot while her old man’s at sea, does she?’ I ask.

�She gets lonely,’ says Sid. �You can understand it. Everybody needs a bit of company, don’t they?’

�Is that where you met her?’ I ask.

�No,’ says Sid. �She was in The Highwayman on Friday night. She goes up there for the charity draw.’

�Sounds very public spirited,’ I say. �You giving her one, are you?’

�You don’t ask people questions like that when they’re happily married,’ says Sid. �Bugger! I forgot to buy any peppermints when I was in the boozer.’

I am not over thrilled about going up the Palais because it is not cheap and I can’t dance to keep my joints from seizing up. I took a postal course once but it never showed you how to marry the footprints up to the music and you don’t like to ask your partner when to start and what sort of dance it is, do you? It is also a bit imitation posh and I don’t go a bundle on that either. You have to wear a tie in the Princess Bar and there is a Brylcreem dispenser in the gents – or �Caballeros’ as it is called.

�Aren’t we going to have a few beers first?’ I say. �It never tastes the same with a carpet under your feet.’

�Stop moaning,’ says Sid. �If we could get a job on one of these boats we could be putting ourselves in line for a new world of experiences. Gloria will be able to tell us all about it.’

�We’d be better off with her old man, wouldn’t we?’

�I hope not,’ says Sid. �Anyway, he’s chugging round the Mediterranean, lucky bastard.’ He squirts an aerosol spray round the inside of the Rover and it is clear the way his mind is working. The Alsatian in the back window will have something to nod about before the night is out.

The Palais does not seem to have changed much from when I last saw it. Maybe the manager has a little more scar tissue round his mince pies than when I last saw him but it is difficult to be certain. He looks just as suspicious and worried as he did in the old days. Sid starts to hum �I’m putting on my white tie’ as he fumbles for his wallet, and my stomach heaves. I have a distant recollection of Rosie’s wedding when they piled the metal chairs on top of each other in the church hall, poured sand from the fire buckets over the pools of sick and danced until the Brownies rolled up. Sid had quite a dazzling quarter turn in those days I seem to remember. And something called the fish tail that involved hopping across the floor as if it was white hot coals and somebody had dropped a jellyfish down your Y-fronts.

I am just about to suggest that Sid might like to buy me the other half when he stiffens and squares his enormous shoulders. It is obvious that somewhere amongst the crispy noodle of lacquered barnet he has spotted Gloria.

�Right, here we go,’ he breathes. �Try and match my mood of breathless suavity. She likes a laugh so cheer yourself up a bit. You look like you dropped fifty pence in a dog turd.’

�Is it true that Laurence Olivier is playing you in TheSidNoggettStory?’ I ask.

Sid does not reply because he has already fixed a horrible smile on his gnashers and is gliding forward full of wild animal magic. I follow a few paces behind him, checking on the position of the exit doors. He is steering for a couple of blondes and from behind they do not look bad. The hair colour comes straight out of a bottle but the rest of them seems natural enough. Only time and the subtle pressure of my sensitive Germans will tell.

�Sid!’ One of the birds has turned round and her face actually lights up. This is quite something at the Palais where it is cool to treat everyone like you are only just too good mannered to tell them that they have terminal BO.

�Hidy hi! How are we then? Looking pretty fantastic, I must say.’ Sid takes both her mitts in his and holds her at arm’s length like the two of them were left over when the screen went blank after an old Doris Day movie.

�You’re not looking so bad yourself, is he Natalie?’

Natalie might be Gloria’s sister and she nods and giggles. Then everyone looks at me. Sid is wearing his fawn denim Sanders of the River safari suit, and both the birds have shiny dresses, so I suppose I am what you might call a bit underdressed. Certainly, Joe Bugner’s sparring partner in the dinner jacket on the door gave me an old-fashioned look. Sid swiftly gauges that the female reaction to me is not exactly white hot.

�This is my kid brother-in-law, Timmy,’ he says. �He’s saving up for a suit.’

�A paternity suit,’ I say. I reckon this is quite quick and verging on the amusing but neither of the birds seem to coco it overmuch. They are too busy running their eyes over my threads like they wish they were vacuum cleaners. I have to admit that my Chinese tank top from �Gone Wong’ in the High Street was a bit of a mistake and someone ought to tell the chinks that we are not all built like spaghetti with shoulder blades. Still, the Judies are clocking me from the best side because it is only when you are standing behind me that you can see where all the seams have gone.

�Pleased to meet you,’ says Gloria without sounding as if she means it.

�Hello,’ says Natalie with less enthusiasm than Gloria.

�Great!’ says Sid, rubbing his hands together. �How would you girls fancy a drink?’

�In a glass,’ says Gloria.

�Oh yes, very good,’ says Sid trying to strike a few sparks off my glazed eyeballs. �We’ve got a couple of bright ones here, Timmo.’

�Definitely,’ I say, trying desperately to work a little enthusiasm into my voice. �What would you like, girls?’

�Pernod,’ says Gloria.

�Pernod,’ says Natalie.

�That’s a kind of absinthe, isn’t it?’ says Sid.

�That’s right,’ I say. �You know what they say. “Absinthe makes the heart grow fonder”.’

Of course, I am wasting my time weaving dizzy verbal patterns round these birds who would probably have difficulty arranging �off piss’ into a well known phrase or saying, and I need my head examined trying a second attempt at humour when the first has been a disaster. If a bird starts off finding you funny, that is great, but if you are up against the strong silent type you might as well forget it. Gloria and Natalie look at me as if I have caused them physical pain and Sid winces.

�What’s the matter with you?’ he says as he elbows me up against the bar. �Are you trying to make them think you’re some kind of nutter? If you can’t say anything sensible, belt up. I’d better go and set their minds at ease. I’ll have a Scotch.’ And with that, he is gone. Lea gets lumbered with the drinks again. I can see them all looking at me. Sid is saying something and the two birds are leaning forward like he is describing the first symptoms of rabies.

�That’ll be two pounds thirty pence, mate.’

�Two pounds thirty pence!’

�This is the doubles bar.’

I pay up and stagger over to where Sid is sitting, determined to see a return on my investment. The last time I laid out this kind of money on a bird I thought she was buying her trousseau with it.

�Haven’t they got any ice?’ says Gloria.

�I’d like some water with mine,’ says Natalie.

Marvellous, isn’t it? You would think my jeans would be sodden with tears of gratitude after all the moola I have lashed out. Instead of that they treat me as if I am a blooming butler.

�Come on, Timmo,’ says Sid. �Get it together. See if you can find some nuts while you’re about it.’

�I think I know where I can find a couple straight off,’ I say.

I leave him to think about it and pad back to the bar. The plastic pumpkin is full of lukewarm water and dead flies, and when I mention ice the barman looks at me as if I have asked for the kiss of life. �It’s finished, mate,’ he says. �People take it.’

�That’s terrible,’ I say, realising immediately that sarcasm is wasted on him. �Is there anywhere here I can get some?’

�You might try the Orchestra Bar,’ he says. �They don’t have the same run on it down there.’

So I pour the water from the plastic pumpkin into a glass, fish out the flies, and take it back to the girls. Natalie does not even say ta but pours it straight into her Pernod.

�Oh look,’ I say. �It’s turned cloudy. Do you want me to take it back?’

�It’s supposed to do that, you twit!’ hisses Sid. �Piss off and find some ice.’

So I am across the dance floor like a ball of mercury and amazed to find that the plastic pumpkin on the counter of the Orchestra Bar is full of ice. I snatch it up and have taken one step back the way I came when the geezer behind the bar buries his voice in my earhole.

�Here! Where do you think you’re going?’ he says.

�I want some ice,’ I say.

�Well, you can’t take that,’ he says.

�Listen,’ I say. �Don’t give me a bad time. My patience is becoming exhausted. I’m not nicking your bleeding pumpkin for a kiddy’s piss pot. I just want some ice for a couple of drinks.’

�I don’t care if you want it to embalm your pet lizard,’ says the bloke. �You’re not taking that tub.’

As it turns out, the bloke is right. I take another couple of purposeful strides and the ice bucket is jerked out of my hands as if it is attached to a chain fastened to the counter – which it is. A shower of iced balls fly across the floor and four couples fall arse over tit in the middle of their ladies’ excuse me. I am fortunate to be able to pick up half a dozen balls and lose myself in the confusion. When I get back to Sid and the girls, my hands are dripping and the balls have nearly disappeared – I gave them a quick suck in case they had picked up any dirt, which did not help. After all my efforts, I am not overthrilled to find that the birds have finished their drinks.

�That’s great,’ I say. �I’ve got six balls and you don’t want any of them.’

�Stop lying and being disgusting,’ says Sid. �You must learn to judge when you’re giving offence.’ He turns to Gloria. �Would you care to take the floor?’

�Watch him,’ I say. �He won’t even help you carry it out to the lorry.’

I know what I said a few paragraphs ago but sometimes you don’t care, do you? Sid goes past me with a look of disdain illuminating his noble features and soon he and Gloria are dancing their way into the record books. That leaves me with Natalie and my bus fare home. It is for this latter reason that I ignore her blood red fingernails toying with the stem of her empty glass.

�I believe Gloria’s husband is afloat?’ I say, revealing that easy gift for conversation that makes it so amazing that I am one of the few people in the country who has never appeared on the Michael Parkinson Show.

Natalie looks puzzled. �A what?’ she says. �He’s English.’

I think hard and realise that there has been a misunderstanding. �No,’ I say with a light laugh. �I mean, he is a seafaring man, a jolly jack tar, “fifteen men on a dead man’s chest” and all that kind of thing.’ I lean forward and give her my Robert Newton. � “Them as dies ’ll be the lucky ones. Aaaargh, Jim boy. Aaaargh!” ’ Natalie draws back and looks around nervously. Maybe I should have gone a bit easy on the eyeball rolling. Still, you see worse on children’s television. Much worse.

It is not something that I particularly care to be seen doing in public but it occurs to me that in the present situation there is probably no way out. �Do you fancy a—?’ I say, jerking my head towards the dance floor.

Natalie closes her eyes momentarily as if racked by a sharp pang of toothache. �All right,’ she says.

Like I have said before, my dancing is lousy but I don’t think I can come to too much harm because the floor is crowded with snogging couples and they are playing the �Tennisknee Waltz’ or some such tune calculated to act as an emetic if you do not have the strength to shove your fingers down your throat. All I will have to do is change my weight from one foot to the other and hope that she does not leave her plates lying about where harm can come to them. It might even be the start of something beautiful. I push her deep into the scrum of bodies so that none of the herberts standing around the side of the floor can see me making a berk of myself and wait for the loudest of the boum, boum, boums before gliding my left foot forward with an easy flowing motion that catches her just above the instep.

�Sorry,’ I say. �The floor’s a bit fast tonight, isn’t it?’

�Are you barmy?’ she says. �Surely you can do a waltz?’

�I think it’s you,’ I say. �You’ve got me all excited. That’s a lovely perfume you’re wearing. What is it? I’d like to get some for my Mum.’ Natalie does not look as flattered as I would like her to be and I am swift to try and set her mind at ease. �For her birthday,’ I say. �She’d like to smell like you, I know she would. I always get her perfume – sorry, was that your leg again?’

�No, it belonged to the man behind me,’ she says. �Can’t you keep in time with the rhythm? One, two, three. One, two - ouch!’

�Sorry!’ I say. I stop and pull her very close to me so that I don’t have to see the look of suffering on her face. �Let’s start again. Right foot forward.’ I notice one of the bouncers who was near the Orchestra Bar peering at me like he recognises me, and burrow into the centre of the floor as he beckons to one of his mates.

�What was that supposed to be?’ says Natalie.

�That was the Lea shuffle,’ I say. �It’s very handy when you’re being crowded.’

�You’ve ruined my shoes,’ she says. �It’s the first time I’ve worn them, too.’

�They’re lovely,’ I say. �I like that snakeskin pattern.’

�That’s not snakeskin,’ she says. �That’s where you’ve been standing all over them with your rubber soles!’

Before I can make further headway, there is a roll on the drums and Greasebonce, the MC, grabs the mike and leaps to the edge of the stage like he has plans to shove it up somebody’s jacksy. �Yes, folks. It’s the moment you’ve all been waiting for!’ he trills. �Let’s have you all on the floor. It’s time for our Elimination Spot Waltz!’

I have a picture of couples circling round the floor trying to eliminate each other’s spots until the duo that has accumulated the biggest pile of blackheads is declared the winner and given a giant jar of Germolene. It is not the kind of thought you want to dwell on.

�We don’t want to do this, do we?’ I say.

�Oh yes we do!’ Natalie grips me tightly. �The couple last week won a colour TV set.’

�They’re giving them away as paperweights at the moment,’ I say.

Natalie does not reply. An expression of grin-and-bear-it determination has settled on her face.

�Carry on dancing, boys and girls.’ I think Natalie fancies Greasebonce. There is a repulsive glint of desire in her over-made up eyes as she gazes upon his plum-coloured, braid-trimmed jacket and the yellow ruffles piled up on his chest like the overspill from a cracked boiled egg.

I grit my teeth and concentrate hard. One, two, three - ouch! One, two, three - ouch! I am not too worried because we will soon be eliminated. I have never won anything in my life. Boum-ting! The cymbals dash and my hampton gives a nervous twitch – it always does when somebody bashes a couple of cymbals together. Greasebonce leaps from the stage and makes his way to the middle of the floor.

�Everybody behind me—’ he pauses so that all the stupid birds can go, �Oooh!’ – �off the floor please.’

�That’s us, isn’t it?’ I say.

�No!’ Natalie clings to me with an intensity that I would be happy to experience in different circumstances. �Carry on dancing!’

Now that half the people have left the floor it is much more difficult to hide and I begin to feel a right Charlie as the crowds build up to clock my diabolical style. Everybody else circles round us like Indians attacking a wagon train and Sid is there, rising and falling as if dancing on a switch-back. Gloria has her head turned over her left shoulder as if he has bad breath – knowing Sid, he probably has.

Boum-ting! Surely, this time I will be delivered.

�The first ten gentlemen to bring me a pair of lady’s tights or stockings!’

�Ooh!’ Natalie whips up her skirts and starts undoing one of her stockings. She has a nice pair of legs, I must say. It is quite sexy, really, because all around me, birds are flashing their goodies. Sid is taking it very seriously because his bird is lying on her back and he is peeling her tights off in one continuous pull. �Come on!’ Natalie clearly thinks that I should be lending a hand so I start fiddling with one of her suspenders. I make a lousy job of it because I want to make blooming certain that we do not get in the first ten. Also, because I quite enjoy the feeling of her soft, silky flesh beneath my fingers and the thought that I am touching her up in front of hundreds of people. �Oh, give it here!’ She brushes my fingers away and pulls her stocking down to knee level as Greasebonce announces that he has his ten couples and that they have all been eliminated. Most of the blokes just picked their partners up and carried them over to him, so the striptease was unnecessary.

I am now getting desperate. The floor seems as wide as Horse Guards’ Parade and I hear a burst of laughter as I try and do a turn and sock some bloke on the hooter with my elbow.

�You’re dancing the wrong way!’ hisses Natalie.

�I know I am,’ I say. �I’ve never been properly taught.’

�I mean, you’re dancing the wrong way round the floor,’ she says. �That’s why you keep bumping into people.’ Amazing, isn’t it? I never realised it was like the dodgems. I do another turn and kick her so hard in the shin that she is dancing an Irish jig when there comes another bash on the cymbals.

�Ooh we are having fun, aren’t we?’ says Greasebonce. �What are we having?’

�Fun!!’ shout the idiots lining the floor.

�That’s right,’ says Greasebonce. �Now, how many couples on the floor are married?’ Half a dozen hands go up. �You’re out! You’ve got your prize already. Carry on dancing.’

�Why are you just standing there?’ says Natalie.

�Everybody is looking at me,’ I say. �I’m making a fool of myself. Let’s get off.’

�Don’t be stupid,’ she says. �We could win a prize. I’ll lead. You follow me.’

I do not think that I have ever felt a bigger berk in my life than in the few minutes that I stumble round that floor. Natalie is trying to do the whole �Come Dancing’ bit and I am more flushed than the toilet in a prune tasters’ commune. I wish the floor would open and swallow me up. Why won’t the music stop? Why—? Boum-ting!

�Oh! It’s exciting, isn’t it! What shall we do now?’ Greasebonce pretends not to hear when one of the band tells him. �Right! Who’s got a birthday in November?’

�I have,’ I say.

�Ssh!’ says Natalie. �He’ll have us off.’

�Me, me!’ I shout. I am practically jumping up and down.

�Anybody else?’ There is a long pause and then another geezer sticks his mitt in the air.

�Right! We’ve got our finalists. Everybody else off the floor, please.’

�Oh my gawd!’ I close my eyes.

�Smashing! You are clever.’ When I open them again, Natalie is looking at me with something approaching admiration.

�It’s nothing,’ I say. �I get involved in a lot of road accidents as well.’

To my horror, I see that Greasebonce is approaching us with a couple of balloons in his mitt. �Right!’ he chortles. �One of these on each of your heels. The first couple to burst both the other couple’s balloons is the winner.’

�I can’t stand it!’ I whimper.

�Don’t be like that,’ says Natalie. �You’ve been stamping on my feet all evening. Surely a couple of balloons won’t give you any trouble?’

�Couldn’t they just shoot me?’ I say.

�Finalists at opposite ends of the ballroom, please.’

�Good luck, Natalie!’ Gloria is grinning like an oval xylophone and next to her I see Sid bury his face in his hands and start shaking his head. I feel like a prisoner dragging an iron ball as I trudge down to the band rostrum. If it was near one of the exit doors I would make a break for it.

�When you’re ready, maestro.’ Greasebonce turns to Ted Bennett – him of �Ted Bennett and the Bennettmen’ – and Ted stops picking his nose with his baton and wipes it under his armpit – his baton, not his hooter. Everybody is cheering and shouting and I wish I could feel the adrenalin running through my blood – come to that, I wish I could feel my blood running through anything. �Ready, steady, dance!’

�Right,’ says Natalie, very firm and determined. �Keep cool. Left foot back. One, two, three. One, two, BANG!

I have only stood on my own balloon, haven’t I? A roar of laughter goes up and something inside me snaps. A Lea can only take so much. If these herberts want to take the piss then I will give them something they can really get their teeth into. Fed up with trying to dance, I grab Natalie and charge towards the other couple who are gliding towards us like they are on roller skates. I see the bloke’s eyes widen in terror but it is too late for him to take defensive action. He is locked into a complicated spin turn and at my mercy. I am not quite certain what I intend to do with the lovely creature in my arms but, as so often happens with me, fate takes the decision. I get my feet wrapped round the balloon string and pitch forward so that I throw Natalie on the floor. There are two bangs almost simultaneously and a roar from the crowd. When I prize my hooter off the boards it is to find that both the opposition balloons have been burst and that ours is still intact. The other couple are hopping mad and Greasebonce is clearly undecided what to do. Fortunately, Sid makes an opportune appearance.

�Great dancing, Timmy,’ he says. �That last stem Christie was really something. You’ll soon be on to parallels.’

�Dancing!’ says the beaten finalist in a voice that sounds as if someone has opened an umbrella down his throat. �He can’t dance a step! He threw his partner at us.’

�That’s his ballet training,’ says Sid. �You reveal your ignorance when you talk like that. The Russians have been after him for years.’

�Rubbish!’ says the bloke.

�Careful, Dame Margot!’ says Sid. �If you don’t learn to be a good loser my boot will be doing a double reverse spin turn up your khyber!’

�That’s nice!’ says the bloke. �That’s very nice.’

�I was afraid you’d think so,’ says Sid. �Tell me, are those white streaks in your hair natural or do you keep pigeons?’

�I don’t know quite what to do,’ says Greasebonce.

�I’d declare him the winner,’ says Sid, pointing at me. �It would be nasty if violence broke out and the hall was wrecked. I happened to be here the last time there was a spot of bother and I remember how unpleasant it was. It took months to get the place operational again – and, talking about operations, I’m trying to remember how many stitches the MC had—’

�The winners, ladies and gentlemen! Let’s give them a big hand.’ Greasebonce snatches up my mitt like he is scared it might blow away and raises it aloft with Natalie’s. There is a roar from the crowd and a louder roar from the bloke we were dancing against. Sid has just stood on his instep.

�Here, blow your nose on this,’ says my brother-in-law, wrenching the silk rose from his partner’s dress so that her knockers bounce out like they have been rung up on a till.

�Ooh, how wonderful!’ squeals Natalie. She clings to my arm and only breaks away long enough to hug Gloria. Sid catches my eye and winks. �Nice going, Timmo,’ he says. �We’ll be in like Flynn after this lot.’

�But when are we going to talk to them about getting on a boat?’ I say.

�There’s plenty of time for that,’ says Sid. �The night is young. Go and collect your prize.’

Natalie is thrilled out of her teeny mind because she cops a wicker basket full of picnic stuff and I am not exactly choked to receive a blooming great bottle of champagne. We even get our photograph taken by a bloke from the Sentinel. It is practically film-star treatment by SW12 standards.

�Ooh, I can’t wait to get it home and look at it properly,’ coos Natalie, hugging her basket. �The knives have got bone handles.’

�Fabulous,’ breathes Sid. �We’ll be able to christen the beakers with Timmy’s champagne.’

�Oh yeah,’ says Natalie, looking at Gloria.

�Yes,’ says Gloria. They look at each other like their minds are keeping pace with Sid’s and I have the feeling that we may be on the verge of a nooky feast. Certainly both birds seem to be much more attuned to my magnetism since I revealed my terpsichorean talent (it’s all right, you can’t get arrested for it).

�Is it all right if we go to your place?’ says Gloria.

�Yes,’ says Natalie. �I’ve got enough Nescafé.’

�Nescafé?’ says Sid. �You just give us the goblets.’

�I beg your pardon!’ says Natalie, coming on like Mary Whitehouse finding that someone has dropped the bog paper down the Karsi.

�I said, give us the goblets,’ says Sid. �Honestly, girls, you do jump to conclusions.’

�You live alone, do you?’ I say as I snuggle down with Natalie in the back of Sid’s Rover.

�I do when my husband is away,’ says the lovely creature.

�Is he at sea, as well?’ I ask.

�Completely,’ she says.

�You must get very lonely,’ I say, giving her arm a squeeze and nuzzling her barnet – it is like a pan scourer with all that lacquer on it.

�I do,’ she says. �Especially at nights. It’s not sex.’

�No, of course not,’ I say hurriedly – I mean, I would never think of that, would I?

�It’s the companionship. Somebody to talk over the events of the day with.’

�Exactly,’ I say. �I know just how you feel.’

This is not strictly true but I am working on it. I run my hand up Natalie’s arm, lightly dust my digits over her bristols – almost accidentally, like I did not know they were there – and then descend for a warm, friendly squeeze of the hand. She smiles up at me and I kiss her on the end of the nose. Tender stuff, I am certain you will agree and not far removed from the love interest in a Walt Disney movie. Still, there are more ways of skinning a cat than by leaving a dead mouse at the bottom of your spin drier, and a lot of storms start with a small ripple running across the surface of still water – watch the old movies on the telly if you don’t believe me.

�You’re different to what I thought you were,’ says Natalie. �Underneath, you’re shy, aren’t you?’

It is always favourite to agree with this kind of statement because it allows the bird to plot her own downfall. They all have this fantasy about introducing a shy, inexperienced boy to the delights of sex – even if they have never found them themselves – and you can discover yourself immersed in a lot of grumble and grunt if you let them have their way.

�I wouldn’t say that,’ I say awkwardly.

�Wouldn’t say what?’ says Sid getting into the car and reaching across to open the door for Gloria – I don’t know what he was doing to her in the doorway but it looked as if he was trying to sit her on the doorknob.

�He’s trying to tell me he knows what it’s all about,’ says Natalie.

�Don’t believe him,’ says Sid. �He’s a babe in arms where you-know-what is concerned. Keeps asking me embarrassing questions about where babies come from. He tries to talk big but it’s all a front.’

�I thought so!’ Natalie sounds pleased with herself and grabs hold of my arm. �There, there, Timmy. Don’t be frightened. Aunty Natalie isn’t going to eat you.’

�If you’d have told me that earlier, I wouldn’t have come,’ I say.

�All talk,’ says Sid. �Coarse but harmless.’ He winks at me and shoves the car into gear.

117 Marsh View Gardens is not a lot different to 119 and not totally dissimilar to 115. I don’t take a lot of notice because it is late when we get there and there is more activity from the neighbouring houses. An old biddy pops out of 115 and says that some men have been looking for Natalie and the curtains of 119 are stirring as if fanned by a strong breeze.

�Nosy old bitch,’ says Natalie, though I don’t know who she is talking about.

�They’re terrible round me, as well,’ says Gloria. �The tongues never stop.’

�What a lovely thought,’ says Sid rubbing his hands together.

�You are awful, Sid!’ says Gloria delivering a playful push. �I’m not surprised your first wife left you.’

�What’s that?’ I say.

Sid looks uncomfortable. �Gladys,’ he says. �You remember Gladys?’ There is a note of pleading in his voice

�Oh yes,’ I say. �I didn’t think you could bear to mention her.’

�I can’t usually,’ says Sid. �But you know what it’s like. Sometimes the past opens up like a book.’

�I’ll get the glasses,’ says Natalie. It is clear that Sid’s words have touched her.

�That’s right,’ says Gloria. �Don’t let’s get morbid.’

�It’s a lovely picnic basket,’ says Sid. �You did well there, Timmo. How are you doing with that bottle?’

I don’t have to answer him because the cork shatters the Toby jug on the mantelpiece and the champagne soaks the china ducks like they have flown into a heavy rain storm.

�You’re a suave bugger, aren’t you?’ says Sid. �Noel Coward must have snuffed it without a care in the world when he knew you were following on behind.’

�It doesn’t matter,’ says Natalie. �I never liked that jug anyway.’

�I’m sorry,’ I say. �I—’

�Don’t worry about it!’ Natalie ruffles my hair and pushes me into an armchair. �I’m in too good a mood to worry about that.’ She takes the bottle from my hand and starts filling the glasses. Sid gives me the thumbs-up sign behind her back.

�Shall I put a record on?’ says Gloria.

�That old cow next door will start thumping on the wall,’ says Natalie. �Still, I don’t care. It’s Saturday night, isn’t it?’

�That’s right,’ says Sid. �Let yourself go. Let it all hang out.’ He unbuttons his shirt down to the beginnings of his paunch and runs his hand up the back of Gloria’s leg underneath her skirt.

�Stop it! You’ll give him ideas.’

�Natalie knows how to handle him,’ says Sid. �Come here!’ He hauls Gloria on to his lap and starts double parking his lips.

�Don’t you want a drink?’ says Natalie. Sid continues trying to rearrange Gloria’s cakehole, so she comes over to me and perches on the edge of the armchair. �You’d like a bit, wouldn’t you?’

�Definitely,’ I say. I take the glass and stare at her knockers over the top of it. She must have loosened something while I wasn’t looking. She is wearing a black bra and I can just see the lacy bit at the edge.

�What are you looking at?’ she says.

�Nothing,’ I say.

�Nothing! That’s not very nice.’ Natalie looks down at her bristols with a hurt expression on her face.

�On the contrary,’ I say. �That’s very nice.’

�Oh,’ she says, her voice perking up. �You’re a bit forward, aren’t you?’

�Some of me is,’ I say glancing down to where Percy is beginning to play Snakes and Ladders up the inside of my Y-fronts. From the feel of him, he has just thrown a double.

�Cheeky boy.’ Natalie takes a sip of her champagne and ruffles the hair at the back of my neck. I turn my head and kiss the inside of her arm. �It’s nice, isn’t it?’

She is talking about the champagne and I nod. �We earned it, didn’t we? I’m sorry I dumped you on your fife. It’s all right, is it?’ I don’t wait for an answer but pull Natalie closer to me and start massaging her sit feature. Sid and Gloria have now disappeared behind the settee and I don’t think they are looking for a missing caster.

�It’s getting better,’ says Natalie. She tilts back my chin with her forefinger and settles on my north and south like she is frightened that she might bruise my lips. Very gentle, it is. I squeeze her tighter and pull her on to my lap, parking my champagne glass beside the armchair. From now on I am going to need two hands. Natalie dips her fingers in her glass and pushes them inside my shirt so that they lie cold and damp against my chest. I shiver because I know that I am expected to and feed a couple of inches of brewer’s bung into her cakehole. This has all the makings of a cosy evening before they discovered television and I begin to feel more kindly disposed towards Sid and his quest for nautical information. They way things are going I am going to get my two pounds thirty pence back with interest. Natalie prises her lips off mine long enough to take a swig of champagne and then thoughtfully pours the rest of the glass over my trousers.

�Oh dear,’ I say. �I’ll have to take them off, won’t I?’

�You can hang them on top of his,’ says Natalie. �My dress is a bit damp, too.’

Sid’s clobber is building up on the back of the settee like the vicar’s wife’s counter at a jumble sale and I strip down to my Y-fronts before you can say Roger Carpenter.

�You’re losing your inhibitions, I see,’ says Natalie, stepping out of her dress and looking round for somewhere to put it – there is hardly a spare surface left.

�I was thinking of keeping them on,’ I say. OK it’s a daft mumble but it gives her a natural opening to put her wicked fingers to work in the ferret fondling department.

�No chance,’ she husks, pushing me back against the settee and pursing her lips. �Let’s see what you’re made of.’

�Sugar and spice, and all things nice,’ I say.

�That’s little girls,’ she says. �You’re a puppy dog’s tail.’ She leans forward to chew my lower lip and the tips of her boobs brush my chest. It is a very sexy feeling and that is what I am soon getting at crutch level as Natalie’s banana peelers get to work.

�That’s not a puppy dog’s tail,’ she says.

�I just traded it in for a pink mamba,’ I tell her. I slip my hand into her panties and she tightens her grip on my prod rod as I set my pinkies typing �Now is the time for all good men to come’ on the inside of her jive hive. A few more hits or misses and it is clear that we are both ready for the main feature. What she is doing to my underpants clearly threatens the tensility of the material and with clothes the price they are these days, no man can afford to destitute himself in the cause of love. I prise my sit feature off the settee long enough to whip my Y-fronts down to my knees and allow Natalie to conduct them on the rest of their journey to the floor. I am now lying naked on the settee with a hard like the Eddystone lighthouse flashing a warning to low flying aircraft and Natalie is straining forward as she reaches behind her for her bra strap: It is a pretty sight – well, she is – and only capped by that magic moment when she skips out of her knicks and attempts to snuff out my doughnut duffer. One knee on either side of my thighs and she grabs my hard handful and tickles her fuzz with its glowing tip.

�What a lot I slot,’ she breathes, easing herself down with a sigh.

�All right, are you?’ Trust Sid to have a horn in – not literally, thank goodness – at such a moment of private ecstasy. I have been sparing sensitive readers a description of the noises wafting up from behind the settee but it is as clear as the sweat pouring off Sid’s boat race that sexual intercourse of a very energetic kind has just come to an end.

�Piss off, Sid!’ I say. �Go and read the TV Times.’

�Fancy a drink?’ says Sid. �There’s a lot of this champagne left.’ He takes a swig from the bottle and pours some over my belly. I jump about six inches into the air and Natalie cops the benefit.

�Ooh! That’s cold.’

�Stop messing about, Sid!’

�I can’t help it. I always feel chirpy after a bit of the other. Where’s that record player?’

�Don’t worry about me, will you?’ says Gloria, rising up from behind the sofa and picking some carpet fluff off her generous knockers – �Oh no! You’re lying on my dress! Do you mind!’ She leans across the back of the settee to get at her dress and I can’t resist giving one of her pink Manchesters a nibble.

�Dirty sod!’ says Natalie.

�Let’s get on the floor,’ I say. �The springs are cutting into my bum.’ I give Gloria’s grumble a tickle and by the time that Sid has put on the Confessions LP – available from all high-class record shops, folks – I have sunk to the carpet with both our new friends. This time, I am on top and I drive into Natalie like she is the last berth on a crowded car ferry. Gloria is doing something very naughty to me from behind and Sid turns up the volume on the record player and takes another hefty swig from the champagne bottle.

�Ride ’er cowboy!’ he shouts. �Up the blues!’

�Do give over!’ says Gloria. �You’ll wake all the neighbours.’

At that very instant, there is a loud thumping on the wall and Natalie groans. �That’s Mrs Burgess,’ she says.

�Shut up, you old bag!’ Sid puts his mouth against the wall beside the fireplace and shouts at the top of his voice.

It is clear that he is pissed out of his mind. It is so inconsiderate. How can I be expected to perform in these circumstances? I grit my teeth and try and work up a measured rhythm. Thump! Thump! Thump! I am not certain whether it is me, Sid or Mrs Burgess. Everybody is dishing it out.

�Come here!’ Sid pulls Gloria to her feet and starts having it off with her against the wall that separates us from Mrs Burgess’s front room. The noise is diabolical and a couple of bits of plaster fall down. The light is swinging backwards and forwards like a pendulum.

�OOOH!’ Natalie has closed her eyes and her mouth is opening wider with every O. I am glad that she is coming because I have the feeling that the evening cannot go on like this much longer. I am all for a party atmosphere but this is getting ridiculous. Judging my moment like a surfer picking a wave I hug Natalie to me and roar in on the crest of a breaker.

�AAAARGh!’ The white tip curls and I wipe out in a froth of honeyed warmth. Sid, too, is steaming up one of the china ducks with his knackered breath and I sense that he has just enjoyed a similar pleasure to myself.

�That was lovely,’ says Natalie, giving me a squeeze. �Be a doll and turn the record player down.’

I stagger to my feet and kick over the champagne bottle. It does not matter because it is now empty.

�Don’t turn it off,’ says Sid. �I like a bit of music.’ He starts dancing round, stark bollock naked. �Oh, a life on the ocean wave, a life on the ocean wave—!!’

I look across to the window and see that there is a gap where the curtains have not been drawn properly. �Weigh, hey, up she rises! Weigh, hey, up she rises. How do you fancy a hornpipe, darling?’ Sid starts giggling and climbs on to the settee.

I have never seen him so Chopin. The banging from next door starts again and Sid leans forward to turn up the record player. He pitches forward and knocks a pile of records on the floor. I help him up on my way to the window and glance out before pulling the curtains closed. What I see makes my blood run colder than a penguin’s chuff. Two blokes are coming up the garden path carrying suitcases.

�Sid!’ I scream, diving for my pants. �There’s someone coming.’

Sid starts to bounce up and down on the settee like a chimp on a trampoline. �It’s not me,’ he says. �I couldn’t. I’m knackered. Rule Britannia! Britannia rules the waves. Britains never, never will be – good evening.’

The two men framed in the doorway do not answer Sid. They are breathing heavily and certainly, when I glimpsed them, they were hurrying towards the front door. You can almost hear their eyeballs clicking as they take in the scene. I manage to get my second leg into my Y-fronts and pull them up round my waist. The girls snatch at whatever lies handy and hold it in front of them.

�Welcome ashore, maties,’ says Sid. �You have a good trip, did you? I’m glad you’ve shown up because there are a few things my friend wants to ask you. I’ve got to—’

�You bastard!’

�No need to get excited,’ squeaks Sid. �We were only playing charades – ooh!’ He stops talking when one of the herberts belts him in the Newingtons. The girls start screaming, Mrs Burgess is still trying to bash the wall down and the record player packs it in with a shriek of agony second only to that of the geezer who cops both Sid’s plates in his mug as our hero swings from the light fitting and lashes out with his tootsies. It is very Errol Flynn, with the subtle difference that the light fitting stayed in the ceiling when Errol swung from it. This one comes down with a blinding flash and a cloud of plaster. The room is plunged into darkness and all that can be heard are screams and thuds as Sid and I try to avoid copping an Irish face-lift.

In fact, we do rather better than that and by the time the police car arrives (Mrs Burgess must have rung for it) both the homecoming mariners are stretched out on the floor taking forty blinks and Natalie is having hysterics.

�Oh, Henry! Henry!’ she screams. �Why did you have to hit him with the coal scuttle?’

�Because he was trying to rearrange my cluster with a poker!’ shouts Sid. �Control yourself, woman! A few stitches can only improve that Jem Mace. Get out there and stall those bules.’

At the same instant there is a banging on the side door and both Sid and I put a foot in the same trouser leg.

�We’ve got to get out of here!’ says Sid unnecessarily. �Grab your clobber and follow me.’

�Supposing there’s someone waiting at the back?’ I say.

�There won’t be,’ says Sid. �Ta ta, Gloria. Thanks for everything.’

Gloria is cradling the nut of one of the blokes who is groaning on the ground. �You bastard!’ she says. �What am I going to tell him?’

�Tell him you love him,’ says Sid.




CHAPTER TWO (#u92e6961a-778b-543d-a9dc-076a7316dd32)


Sid is right. There is no one waiting outside the back door. We are over the wall, through the cucumber frame and two streets away before I realise that I have taken the wrong jacket.

�That’s marvellous,’ I say. �They’ll get me for thieving now. What a wonderful end to an evening. We must do this more often.’

�You’re not nice when you’re sarcastic,’ says Sid. �What’s it got in it, anything worth nicking?’

�They’re going to trace us from the car,’ I bleat. �Oh my gawd. Why didn’t I stop at home and watch World in Agony? I can’t stand doing any more bird.’

�Fifty quid!’ says Sid, thumbing through a bundle of notes he has produced from one of the pockets of the jacket. �Blimey, he must have been planning to buy Britain.’

�We’ll have to send it back,’ I say, getting desperate. �I don’t want to get lumbered with that.’

�Umm,’ says Sid. �We’ll have to see.’ He puts the money in his back pocket and produces another piece of paper. �This is interesting. “Memo to cabin staff. Owing to the breakdown of the refrigeration system, the ship will call at Southampton for repairs. Crew members who obtain passes from me will be allowed ashore until 0600 hours on the 24th. P.Pervis, Purser. SS Tern”.’

�Lucky swines,’ I say. �That’s where we ought to be.’

�Just what I was thinking,’ says Sid thoughtfully. �It’s Waterloo for Southampton, isn’t it?’

�What are you on about?’ I say. �You’re not thinking of taking their places, are you?’

�This seems like as good a time as any to take our leave of the old country,’ says Sid. �I can always send Rosie a postcard from Port Said.’

�But what about when the other blokes roll up?’ I say. �The police aren’t going to hold them, are they?’

�I don’t know so much,’ says Sid. �One of their suitcases burst open during our little frackarse and I couldn’t help clocking a butcher’s at the contents.’

�Three month’s dirty washing?’ I say.

�Not so much as a soiled cuff let alone an unmentionable stain,’ says Sid. �Watches.’ He dives a hand into his pocket and produces a flash job with a metal bracelet and enough dials to launch a space probe. �Handsome, isn’t it? There were about two hundred like that.’

�And you nicked one, Sid? That’s downright dishonest. You don’t have any scruples, do you?’

�I got one for you as well,’ says Sid.

�Oh.’ It’s difficult to know what to say, isn’t it? I don’t want to hurt Sid’s feelings even though he has been naughty. A generous impulse should not be punished, especially when in Sid’s case it may never be repeated. I shove the watch deep into my pocket and clear my throat. �Ta, Sid. You think they were – er, half-inched, do you?’




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