It is at this time of the year that my thoughts turn to my
one and only brush with European royalty.
(I realize I have told this story before. But I know I will tell it differently,
because I am incapable of telling a
story the same way twice. It is simply
the way it works. Newly recalled
specifics join the expository parade. Tangential
recollections. I’ve become a more
proficient writer in the interim. Besides,
I do not remember how I told it the last time, nor what I entitled that blog
post, so I could not plagiarize myself if I wanted to. Get ready for the same story, told
differently. Let me also mention in
passing that there are many preambling setups, explanatory side trips and
ancillary incidents that I am choosing not to include. If I did
include them, this story would run – serialized – for maybe a week. And I do not want that. Instead, I’m going to try my best and avoid
meandering and stay on the “main road”, to keep the post length
reasonable. Though I have unhelpfully
just written the most extended parenthetical in the entire history of Just Thinking.)
Okay. So here’s the
story. With no – okay, minimal – meanderings.
In 1967, for ten or so weeks between the beginning of October
and two days before Christmas (I was supposed
to work until the day before
Christmas but I was fired a day early for leading my co-workers out on strike. What was that
about? Sorry. No meanderings.), I was employed at London’s
legendary Harrods Department Store as
a hired-for-the-season member of a ragtag crew of “Holiday Gift” toy
wrappers. (How I ended up at Harrods is a fascinating story itself, but, well…you know the drill.)
As the days grew closer to December 25th, Harrods was unable to insure that their
delivery trucks (for local
deliveries) or Her Majesty’s mail service (for deliveries to the “Continent”)
would be able to get the purchased presents to their destinations in time for
Christmas. And what good would they be
if after that?
“Remember that big holiday a few days ago? Well these are for then.”
Not good. Kids
cry. Possibly the quintessential
definition of an “anti-climax.”
The store’s policy was therefore to cut off their deliveries
five days before Christmas, and instead require all last-minute purchasers to
transport their presents home themselves.
For that purpose, on the store’s Main Floor, a “Purchase
Collection” kiosk was set up, not unlike a “hat check” booth in 1940’s “nightclub”
movies. After the packages were
professionally wrapped by the likes of me and scalawags of my ilk in what we
affectionately though not inaccurately christened “The Dungeon”, the then-wrapped
gifts would be hand-delivered to that kiosk, where, after their “Christmas Shopping”
was completed, the customers would collect their purchases and shuttle them personally
to their destinations.
Okay, so it’s my turn to deliver the packages to the kiosk. Now normally, Harrods’ “Ancillary Help” was invisible to the public. The male employees customers did interact with were all attired in an
obligatory uniform – white shirt and dark tie, a cutaway jacket, and gray and
black striped pants and a pair of black, expensive-looking, spit-polished shoes.
By contrast, when I rolled up – “rolled up”, because the
wrapped presents were stacked high in a shopping cart for more efficient
transportation from “The Dungeon” to the kiosk, I was dressed in a brown,
less-than-recently-laundered pair of corduroy pants, a fading flannel shirt
with a not as white as it used to be t-shirt underneath it, and a pair of beige,
high-topped suede desert boots.
So we really looked different.
A considerable distance before my arrival at the “Purchase
Collection” kiosk, I could already hear a woman angrily berating the Harrods employee behind the counter. When I finally got there – Note: I do not recall my exact words on this
occasion but I specifically recall my
initial words, which were these:
“Lady, you are giving me a headache.”
The woman looked demonstrably taken aback. Not merely by my response, but by the fact
that I was speaking to her at all.
She appeared to be in her mid-to-late twenties. Floor length winter coat with pristine white
fur trim. Her radiant, dark hair, exquisitely coiffed, was pulled back, revealing a face that was marble, not in the sense of
marble being hard and cold and impenetrable, but in the sense of marble being
elegant, milky white and microscopically flawless. (Or am I talking about porcelain. Anyway...)
She was the most beautiful Gentile woman I had ever seen in
my life.
Seeing her relax her guard a touch consequent to my unexpected
opening salvo, I asked her to explain to me – calmly – what was going on. She informed me that her parcels had been
inappropriately wrapped for overseas travel, and that there was a car outside waiting
to take her to the airport, so that the parcel-packing problem needed to be
corrected immediately.
I assured her that I would help her, and I told her,
“Follow me.”
I then proceeded to escort this transparently elegant lady back
to “The Dungeon.”
Our arrival elicited a spontaneous commotion. It was Queen Elizabeth visiting a
coalmine. Since there were no chairs
available, I offered my guest a seat on a large roll of corrugated cardboard,
which, lacking any alternative, she accepted.
Jabbering as I worked, to distract her from the urgent ticking
of the clock and from the fact I had
delivered her to a hellhole, I proficiently went about rewrapping her purchases
for overseas travel.
The repair process pretty much just involved more protective
insulation (corrugated cardboard) inside the box. The packages were then recovered in signature
“Harrods Green” wrapping paper, followed by the final step – the thick, gold-braided
twine, tied in a bow. For that final
maneuver, I solicited – and received – the customer’s assistance. She arose from her cardboard settee and
magnanimously pressed her finger down on the knot.
With the problem now solved, I escorted Milady back to the
Main Floor, where she thanked me for my help, presented me with a five pound
(nearly fifteen dollar) tip, which I huffily rejected but she forced me to take
– “Give it to your favorite charity”, she advised me, in an effort to make me
feel like an equal though we were both aware that I wasn’t.
As I started back to my station, I was suddenly accosted by
a half dozen extremely agitated high-level managers, or something – I don’t
know who they were; I had never run into them before who quickly surrounded me
and bombarded me with questions.
What was the problem?
Where had I taken her? Was she
upset? Was there any talk of litigation? What had I done to her?
“She’s fine,” I assured them. “She had a problem with a parcel and I fixed
it.”
Before heading back back to normalcy, I took a moment to
inquire,
“Who was she?”
To which I was informed,
“That was the Princess of Luxembourg.”
“Oh,” I replied, less excited than retroactively impressed.
“She gave me five pounds”, I reported, then adding,
“Can I keep it?”
I think about her now and then, especially around this time
of the year. I even once thought of
writing a screenplay about the encounter, though in my re-imagined version, she
invited me to Christmas in Luxembourg.
She probably doesn’t remember me. But that’s okay.
It only takes one person to keep a memory alive.
Here is one of your posts on the subject. There are many about London Times, that also address some of these same subjects...though not necessarily the Princess. It posted on December 23, 2011.
ReplyDeleteBelated Apology To Princess of Luxembourg