Scarf Collectors Chapter 01 Title and copyright page
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Copyright Oggbashan July 2002/May 2004 The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
Scarf Collectors Chapter 01
We met in a charity shop. I was looking around at the bric-a-brac when I noticed something interesting out of the corner of my eye. I wasn't really looking but I reached out just to check.
As my hand fell on the Gucci labelled silk scarf another hand reached it as well. This was a woman's hand.
"Do you mind?" she said sarcastically. "This is a woman's scarf."
"I know it is." I replied "A genuine Gucci silk one too."
I had realised that it was genuine expensive silk as soon as I'd touched it. Shame. I had probably lost it now.
I had.
She lifted it off the shelf and took it with her to the counter. I followed with my few items. I watched as she paid the stupidly low price they asked. I paid for my items and followed her outside.
"You have a real bargain there." I said to her as we reached the street. "That scarf was the only worthwhile item in the whole shop."
"I know." She said complacently. "I had to have it and I wasn't letting a mere man get away with it. Sorry."
"You're not sorry at all." I replied wryly.
"No. All's fair in love, war - and shopping." She laughed.
"I'm sorry my hand didn't reach it before yours."
"What would you do with a silk scarf? Give it to a woman who might not appreciate it?"
"No. I collect them."
I'd said it out loud to a stranger in a public street. I'd admitted that I collected silk scarves. Why had I done that when I'd been keeping it a secret for years? My ex-wife was the only one who knew and she wouldn't talk about it. Despite the divorce we were still friends.
"You collect silk scarves and I've deprived you of a real bargain. I think I owe you at least the chance to talk about your collection. We might have something in common."
It was only then that I stopped thinking of her as a rival who'd outwitted me and looked at the woman. She was worth looking at. She was tall, elegant, with long straight blonde hair held in a ponytail with a silk scarf. Another scarf dangled from her expensive shoulder bag. She looked as if she could afford to buy designer scarves at the normal retail prices instead of looking for them in charity shops.
"OK. I said. "I would be honoured if you about join me for some coffee over there."
I pointed to a restaurant that had pavement tables.
"Thank you, sir," she said in a teasing tone of voice "I accept your kind invitation."
When we'd sat down and ordered I introduced myself.
"I'm Jonas Smith."
"I'm Cecila Dupont."
"That sounds French. Yet you don't seem to be French except for your exquisite dress sense."
"Thank you, Jonas. I try. My grandfather was French. He married an English girl and stayed here. Although I can speak French we've used English at home for most of my life. What do you do, Jonas - apart from collect silk scarves?"
"I have a light engineering company. We specialise in one-off car parts for vintage and veteran vehicles."
"That's your job. Are you married?"
"Not any more. I've been divorced for some time. And you?"
"I'm divorced as well. It's a long story. I'm far more interested in why you collect scarves."
"Well. I'm not sure how to start. My wife wore scarves when I met her. While we were courting she almost always had a scarf round her head. I liked the feel of them against my skin when we snuggled together in the back seat of the cinema. After we married she gradually stopped wearing them because the fashion for headscarves had changed. I missed them but that wasn't why our marriage broke up. We're divorced because I spent nearly all my time on my business and virtually no time with my wife and children. Now the business is established I have the time but..."
"I see," said Cecilia "Your wife was wrong about scarves. If the scarf is expensive silk and worn as part of an elegant outfit it is still fashionable."
"I know, Cecilia. I couldn't convince her."
"So, Jonas, you collect scarves to remind yourself of your youth?"
"Yes. That's part of it. I actually like to handle them as well. As a man I can't wear them but I can run my fingers through them and enjoy the feel of the silk."
"I think you are missing something, Jonas. Shall we part just like ships in the night or do you want to continue this conversation later?"
I leapt at the hint.
"Cecilia. Would you like to go for a meal?"
She nodded with a smile on her face as if teasing me for being so slow.
"What sort of meal? French? Italian? Mexican or what?"
"I think I'd like an Indian meal as long as we eat early in the evening before the crowds arrive."
Indian? I hadn't had an Indian meal in years.
"Can you suggest anywhere, Cecilia? I don't know which Indian restaurants are good and which are bad."
She pointed across the road.
"The Taj Mahal is good during the day and early evening. Their menu changes after 10pm to more basic food for drunks. If we start at seven we should finish before the crowds arrive."
"Sounds good to me? When?"
"Tonight?" Cecilia suggested.
"Tonight!" I was surprised. "Yes. Tonight would be fine. Shall I collect you?"
"No. I'll meet you outside on the dot of seven. I won't be late. Please be there."
"I will be, Cecilia, I will be."