Welcome Onboard Monsieur.
“Yes, eh,
unfortunately I am.”
“Juan- right
here, will show you to your room.”
“That would
be great – thank you.”
“You’re very
welcome – enjoy your stay.”
“I do hope I
will.”
The walk to
Jim Clay’s room was made in silence. Jim wasn’t much for talking – he was tired
from the travel of the day. A series of head gestures and hand signs bridged
the language gap that existed between a forty-one year old bachelor from
Ireland - and a twenty something year old slight Asian man.
Broken
English, serial head bowing and white-gloved pointing demonstrated to Jim where
everything was in the balcony ocean view room. The cruise liner was the fleets’
finest and his cabin was on the top floor. Jim thought this would do nicely.
The young
Asian man moved anxiously as Jim pawed him a ten euro note to thank him for his
troubles. He hesitated before exiting the room, as if wanting to tell him
something more.
“Are you
okay? Juan, isn’t it?”
“Yes, Meester
Clay.”
“What is it?”
“I hope you
have very good stay.”
Juan made
eye contact for the first time – holding it longer than he should normally.
“Em, okay.
Thanks - I’ll try.”
Jim unpacked
his scant belongings and lay on the bed. This was supposed to be a trip for
two.
He had a
forty minute nap and woke to find a note under his door. It tabled the events
for that night. Tonight was going to be the “Gala Night under the Stars.”
He was going
to dress up anyway for the night. He had brought his tuxedo and dress shoes.
Before the note appeared he was going to order a bottle of champagne to his
room. Then order some lobster and steak. And then some fine French wine. That
would be the final act.
But here he
had an opportunity to command the stage once more in front of a large audience.
Twenty one years of artistic drama had taught him how to hold the attention of
the gathered masses. One final bow.
Jim took his
time, taking the two hours to preen himself to the highest degree. His tuxedo
was somewhat creased though – this would not do for a performance of such
gravitas. Calling room service, Juan appeared back at his door with an iron and
a smile. Jim realized he had opened the door in his underwear, and smiled back
at the young man.
Almost one
hour later, Jim stepped out of his room with a big grin on his face and colour
in his cheeks. Maybe there was life in him after all.
Dinner with
wine for all the guests at his table soon lead to sparkling conversation and
witty banter. Other tables looked on in envy as they all moved onto the show
with champagne in hand. Jim had slipped a twenty to Juan to reserve the finest
seats in the theatre for him and the four others at his table.
After the
show, Jim insisted they visit the casino for further entertainment. Jim was
having such a good time that he had forgotten his earlier, dark plans. At 1am,
his table friends soon began to filter away to their cabins for the night. But
Jim was still full of vigour, and took up a stool at the roulette table. Two
other guests sat entranced by the wheel amid the prospect of riches.
Jim watched
for a few minutes, gazing into how the ball was falling. Dropping one hundred
euro on the table, he took the chip colour of pink – his favourite.
Four spins
of the wheel later, Jim had over three hundred chips and counting. His Mum’s
age before she died, was seventy six. Numbers 7, 6 and 13 came up. Was his luck
changing?
As Jim
pondered his possible sudden change of fortune, a tall French man sat on a
stool two away from him. Negativity oozed from his every pore. His shoulders
sagged, his face grey. He was about the same age as Jim, yet his skin bore the
hard edge of someone far older than he. He looked like a man that worked hard
his entire life.
Jim’s sudden
wealth evaporated rapidly. So did everyone else’s. Only Jim and this sullen
Frenchman remained. Jim became intrigued.
“It is a bad
night for you?”
“You will
have to excuse me – my English is, not good. C’est la vie.”
“I
understand. My life has been ‘merde’ over the past while too.”
“That is the
word. La vie merde.”
“What has
you so ‘merdey’?”
“I was
supposed to eh, cruise with mon dame. She die two month ago from eh, canceur.”
“Oh I’m so
sorry. Je suis eh, so sorry.”
“Thank you.”
“I was
supposed to take this trip with my mother. Mon mere. She died too.”
“Oh! Je suis
desole aussi! Le canceur aussi?”
“No! Jaysus
no – twas her electric chair. Kinda funny when you think about it really.”
“Her chair?
Chaise? Pourquoi ca?”
“She was
bleedin’ electrocuted. She was going upstairs to bed in her little chairlift
and the bloody water-tank burst right down on top of her through de attic. She
fried right there and then until I returned home from work the following
morning. Twas a terrible sight to see. She was still smouldering at eight in de
morning.”
“I don’t
understand – fry? She blood?”
“Sorry I
went off on a tangent there, didn’t I? She was electrocuted – no blood. Brown
bread in seconds’ dough, according to the doctor that called it.”
“She die
quickly then?”
“Yeah – Gawd
bless her. We were very close. I was her only son.”
“Electrocution
is good way to go. Is quick. Canceur is no.”
“I can only
imagine. Can I get you a drink?”
Jim and the
Frenchman stopped playing roulette and took seats at the bar. Jim listened
while the Frenchman relayed his story in a mixture of French and English. He
talked of how his wife walked, talked and loved life. His family was of no help
to him and her family was devastated at the loss. He didn’t know what to do.
They swapped stories of their lives and work, Jim telling him of his mundane
job working in Information Technology Systems. The Frenchman was as Jim expected
- a manual labourer.
At 4am, they
said their goodbyes and went to their own cabins. They both had rooms on the
thirteenth floor. Jim didn’t even know his name. As he entered his room, he saw
rose petals from the entry.
The
following morning, Jim didn’t feel like breakfast. He had drunk too much, but
Juan had fixed him a Thai hangover cure that worked wonders. Reading the
material from the ship, he got up to date on what was happening onboard today.
The crazy
feelings didn’t even cross his mind for four days. Jim was actually enjoying
himself and thinking about the future. Meeting the Frenchman and hearing his
life’s story made him feel better about him and feel sorry for him. They never
told each other their names.
Two days
before the end of the seven night cruise, Jim strangely read the back of his
room keycard and onboard ID. The weather outside was raining and not conducive
to tanning oneself in the lashing Mediterranean rain. A weird but legal statement caught his eye.
“By
accepting this card, you agree to be responsible for all purchases charged on
your account.”
Jim checked
his account. He had been living hard over five nights to the tune of E775. He
told Juan, who asked him if he had the cash or credit to cover it. He did but
he didn’t really want to pay it.
“There may
be a way to get around it. On computer.”
“I hadn’t
thought of that.”
Forty minutes later, Jim’s bill was nearly
clean. He hacked the cruise-liners’ website and left himself a bill of just
E75. Juan was mightily impressed.
“Do my
wages!!!”
Juan soon
had four hundred more euros in his wage slip for the current month. He wanted
more but Jim said that anything exorbitant would draw attention. Juan
disagreed, but finally relented.
“If only you
could stay one more week!”
“I know
Juan. But everything good comes to an end.”
That night
was the last of the Gala nights. Jim adorned his tuxedo once again and posed
for photographs with the Captain of the Ship. He bumped into the Frenchman
again in the casino after midnight. The casino was mad busy. The Frenchman
looked even more depressed than usual. Jim caught his eye at the full roulette
table. The Frenchman smiled back and got up from his prized stool at the wheel.
They sat and
talked again. He was seriously depressed. He had one more week on the boat and
just wanted it all to end. He wanted what he couldn’t have.
A thought
crossed Jim’s mind.
They were of
similar age, similar build. Their complexion was a little different though.
Their gait was worlds apart. Their hairstyles were completely different.
Jim didn’t
see why not. Hair and make-up could fix those problems.
He would
have another week with Juan. On someone else’s account.
He just had
to play this right.
1 comment:
Very good! The mothers death was hilarious!!
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