But, but. Six years of chafing at one’s own country is more than enough. Adventure can and must be had. So, into the care of Middle East Airlines, and up, up and away.
And never fear, chaps. All was well. The man next to me on the plane spent $400 on seven different bottles of scent. His monumental Dolce & Gabbana sunglasses bore the colours of Lebanon. His child spoke French, English and Arabic with equal insouciance. In the endless visa and luggage queues, every turn of a head drenched the air with a different expensive parfum. I watched and listened and inhaled.
Under a perfect Islamic crescent moon, a taxi driver in a hurry did not care for my enquiry about the identity of a vast floodlit photo on a hillside of some bearded dignitary. "It is Jesus" he said, dismissively. "The King". In truth, a much smaller statue of the man was above the photo. Was it my French or his view of Westerners' areligiosity? In the garish streets of Beirut, a bride in sparkling white (both impressively whiter than, and adorned with sparkles) rode on the rear bonnet of a convertible car, escorted by tens of men on Harley Davidsons (sunglasses after dark, no helmets in the Beirut traffic), horns blaring for joy. Fireworks in the distance heralded her arrival.
And then there was welcome, there was an apartment ("flat" does not begin to do it justice) boasting acres of polished floors, there were a couple of nice boys upstairs who took me under their wings and fed me gin and tales of Lebanon in the company of one three-legged cat and another named after a famous Lebanese singer. All was hazy, but very well. There was more to come.

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