We walked to Borough Market, where Ramsay and his tribe do their food shopping. Under its vaulted roof is a church for gourmets. There was a French-windowed restaurant inside the market, buzzing with bankers at lunchtime. Wine and roasts flew fast and furious from kitchen to table. Outside, the raw materials waited wild boar pâté, bubbling vats of mussels, bright slopes of fruit, barrels heaped with chocolate truffles, slow-moving lobster manacled by string, disk upon disk of cheeses &mdash goat cheeses, Goudas, Stiltons, and the Stinking Bishop, so named because the cheese is washed in the Stinking Bishop pear&rsquos juice. You can wander the market tasting bits and pieces, or buying yourself a streetside meal of roast duck or pancakes. &ldquoIt&rsquos great for tourists, not good for business&rdquo, complained a shopkeeper&hellip &ldquoTourists just look, they don&rsquot buy, and the crowds have scared away regular shoppers.&rdquo
The Millennium Dome in early evening was a neighbourhood version of Disneyland. Boiled down to the fundamentals, it was an over-large tent that covered a shopping mall and an amusement park. We were headed for the British Music Experience, an exhibition at the O2 arena (exhibition and concert hall) in the Dome, which turned out to be the gig whose very thought killed Michael Jackson.
By this time we were all tired from our flights, ill-tempered and sleep-deprived. Even so, the O2 woke us up, restoring us with music. Talismanic skirts and shirts and drums stood in glass cases the flute Ian Anderson had played David Bowie&rsquos costume You could swipe your smart ticket on screens for information and commentary. It was a technological wonderland. The still flute in a glass case began to play in your ear, the voices of your idols materialised on demand. You could dance before a camera that recorded you and then played you back in 3D laser images. We discovered that most of the women didn&rsquot mind looking like fools before a camera. The men did. And Miss Okinawa did. She had vanished.
The next day we found her, in a demure skirt and blouse ensemble. All the women were toppling about in very high heels in readiness for our audience with Prince Philip. Miss Okinawa wore sensible shoes. Her only sign of rebellion was that tropical bag. She spoke little, perhaps because of a language problem. Or she just preferred silence.
The 70-person group was herded into two red double-decker buses of the old iconic kind. They are now trundled out only for ceremonial occasions. People took pictures of us as we rode in them to Buckingham Palace. We hoped the Prince would make one of his renowned politically incorrect gaffes. A frisson of excitement rippled through the &lsquoseen-it-all&rsquo hacks. One of them leaped towards Prince Philip with a birthday card (he turned 88 that day). The alarmed security guard plucked it out of the air and made it disappear.
We were taken through Buckingham Palace&rsquos grand staterooms and art collection by its knowledgeable curators. Canalettos and Vermeers, a rare Rembrandt that was bought for a fortune in more prosperous days, when the Empire thrived. Now the hard-pressed Queen has had to throw the Palace open to visitors to raise funds for the repair of Windsor Castle.
It was Miss Okinawa, unexpectedly, who confessed boredom with the British royalty. She had just come out of the Royal Yacht Britannia in Edinburgh. The enormous yacht was more royalty-tourism it was used by the British royal family for decades before being decommissioned and parked at the Leith docks in Edinburgh as a tourist sight. You can ogle Princess Diana&rsquos bed and have tea on deck. But in the taxi back, Miss Okinawa expressed her first opinion &ldquoThe cakes were very dry and I did not find the yacht interesting.&rdquo
It was when we walked up a hill that gave a view of Loch Lomond that I saw Miss Okinawa come to life. Her camera emerged for the first time. She crouched to take pictures of the humming, flower-sprinkled woods, the dense green of it, and the still water of the endless lake. For the first time, she took off her jacket, revealing the defencelessness of her bony elbows and wrists. By now the rest of us had exchanged confidences, gossip and malice. Not Miss Okinawa. She had been with us each day only as long as duty demanded, said only as much as politeness required. I had to know about her. &ldquoWhat do you like to do, Miss Okinawa, in your spare time&rdquo I demanded. She looked startled. She had been interrupted, but betrayed no irritation. She switched her camera off and considered, &ldquoTravelling. I like to travel.&rdquo After a pause, as if confiding something very private, she added &ldquoAnd I play golf. On weekdays it is cheap to play golf in Tokyo.&rdquo
London in summer had a festive feel. People smiled, flowers bloomed. At Regent&rsquos Park&rsquos rose garden, the arches and arbours drooped with roses of many colours and maddening scents. You can pay to get a rose hybrid manufactured for a special occasion. Strollers crowded the South Bank of the Thames, which is fronted by a row of great theatres, museums, second-hand bookstores. It was a beautiful, buzzing city.
And yet there was not one person among us who did not rejoice when we reached Scotland. The pace grew more relaxed, the air was sweeter, the hills and lakes were within reach. On our train journey to Edinburgh, brilliant yellow fields of rapeseed and curving seacoasts flashed past. Something inside all of us loosened to let us breathe easier. We inched towards friendship.