
'Champi,' said the barber, making a rubbing motion with his hands. 'Champoo-ing too good…'
'Shampoo?' Zachary had never heard of this substance: loath as he was to allow it on his person, he gave in, and to his own surprise, he was not sorry afterwards, for his head had never felt so light nor his hair smelled so good.
In a couple of hours Zachary was looking at an almost unrecognizable image of himself in the mirror, clothed in a white linen shirt, riding breeches and a double-breasted summer paletot, with a white cravat knotted neatly around his neck. On his hair, trimmed, brushed and tied with a blue ribbon at the nape of his neck, sat a glossy black hat. There was nothing missing, so far as Zachary could see, but Serang Ali was still not satisfied: 'Sing-song no hab got?'
'What?'
'Clock.' The serang slipped his hand into his vest, as if to suggest that he was reaching for a fob.
The idea that he might be able to afford a watch made Zachary laugh. 'No,' he said. 'I ain got no watch.'
'Nebba mind. Malum Zikri wait one minute.'
Ushering the other lascars out of the cabin, the serang disappeared for a good ten minutes. When he came back, there was something hidden in the folds of his sarong. Shutting the door behind him, he undid his waist knot and handed Zachary a shining silver watch.
