| PRINCESS
and the £23, 000 PEA
It’s good not to hanker after things you cant afford.
I’ve never really
gone in for it, myself. I’ve spent so much of my life
longing for people that
material things seem almost ridiculously abstract by comparison.
If you’re
self-analytical an obsession with that unreachable dress or
bauble just isn’t
much fun. It’s a fool’s game, a hollow form of
compensation, you tell yourself
sagely. What you really wish for is something more sustaining,
you chide,
the Austrian notes in your accent flaring. Finally you snap.
Your patience
dwindles. Hey, buster, what’s with the sudden surge of
low morale? Look,
you’re bigger than that.
My Christmas list this year was quite modest. It featured
Henry James and
the Art of Dress by Claire Hughes, a bumper pack of lemsip,
a few two finger Kit
Kats, some Wolford Synergy 40s and a Hello Kitty toaster like
my friend
Sally’s. I was feeling pretty well equipped, possessions-wise.
I thought of asking
for a voucher for a tooth whitening process, but decided it
was a bit sordid.
I was happy.
Then a slim grey book turned up on my door mat featuring the
Dior fine
jewellery range and in the Milly-la-Foret section I spied it.
The utterly
beautiful (and I’m not making this up) “Petits
Pois” ring. This exquisite cocktail
confection fashioned from yellow gold features a shiny green
pea pod and next
to it three pearls representing the peas nestling among some
emerald and
diamond embedded pea leaves and pea shoots. Now, I like peas
very much. I hold them
in high esteem, especially those very young tender ones you
get at the
beginning of the season, but never was this humble vegetable
so elevated. I once
heard a talk about Rothschild palaces which claimed the interior
decoration was
faultless apart from the fact all genuinely exceptional good
taste should
involve a small, balancing peasant element and that this element
was sadly
lacking. Well, the way this extremely glamorous ring paid homage
to the plain old
garden pea would have satisfied any such arbiter. It really
was a delight to
behold: witty, sophisticated, modern, fresh, highly original
and a little bit
insane. I loved it. I imagined the interest it would produce
when worn on my
finger. Years ago, people used to tell me regularly that I
could possibly make
it as a hand model, and although this compliment never quite
made my day, I
welcomed the idea that my hands might once again become a talking
point. I
thought how the ring would compliment my new tweed and fox
coat. I imagined
the renewed fervour for vegetable eating it would inspire in
Mary, worth the
price in health terms alone, no? Feverishly I flicked to the
back to find out
the cost. I felt my heart sink in sharp, hulking thuds. I shook
my head.
“
Bague petit pois, or jaune,diamonts,emerauds,chrysoprase et
perles de cultures:
£
23,200.” Oh.
I went to Harrods straightaway and asked to see the Petits
Pois ring, dimly
hoping that it would not be so wonderful in the flesh and then
I’d be off the
hook. The charming assistant smiled at me sadly. It’s
not in London. It is
New York then coming to Paris this week and I could have it
in London for you
in five days approximately. Of course a ring such as this would
have a hectic
schedule. But how could she be so certain that no-one would
be buying it? I
tried to think who would spend that much money on a ring fashioned,
beautifully, to look like some shelled peas, whose value lay
not in its stones which
were very small, but in its concept and design and highly intricate
manufacture. Briefly I remembered my geography teacher’s
obsession with the huge scale
frozen pea processing plants of East Anglia. I imagined a besotted
pea baron
presenting this ring to his vegetable adoring bride after the
birth of their
first child. I couldn't quite see it.
‘Who would buy such a ring, do you think?’ I
asked the assistant. ‘Well, someone with an eye for exceptional
design,’ she smiled to suggest
that she and I figured amongst such women. She looked at me
indulgently. ‘You
wouldn't believe the work involved. It was clear that she almost
could not
believe it herself. ‘I’ll call you the moment it
arrives.’
‘
If it’s coming anyway...’ my voice trailed off. ‘I
could always pay it a
visit,’ I continued, to make it clear that I wouldn’t,
ever, be buying.
‘
I’ll bring it a little gift,’ I almost added. She
nodded, as if to say the deep
respect I would show the piece would be almost as good as hard
cash. We
understood each other entirely. neither of us would never actually
own the ring,
but on the rare occasions that it was passing through London
occasional
access in-store, for bouts of admiration and fantasy, could
probably be arranged.
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