I got a commission from a London-based newspaper to write an article on learning salsa in Cuba with your own Cuban dance partner then booked a trip for September with the same tour operator; their groups went out every three months.
‘I want a piece that explains why Cuban salsa has become so popular,’ said the travel editor, who danced Colombian-style salsa herself. ‘I want sun, sex and more sex.’
There was a woman named Mary in the Air Cubana queue at Gatwick who I recognised from my last visit to Santiago. She was in her mid-fifties with rimless specs and a feathery chestnut crop with blonde tips. She was heaving a suitcase onto the check-in scales, shoving it in with her knees.
‘Everybody was asking me to take presents over for the Lucumi guys,’ she said as we waited at the gate. ‘But I’m just bringing stuff for my Kico.’
I got a flash of the little fine-boned Afro-Cuban guy with cornrow plaits who wore cut-off shorts and midriff tops and understudied all three of the female dancers in their official performances.
‘Kico,’ I said. ‘Wow.’
‘It took us both by surprise,’ she said.
‘It was the same for me and Oscar.’ An older Scottish woman was sitting with us. She had also been towing an enormous suitcase.
‘You and Oscar?’ I said.
I’d emailed Patricia, the older Liverpudlian redhead I met on my last trip to Cuba, and who as far as I knew had been Oscar’s girlfriend for a couple of years - to see if she was coming on this trip and she’d emailed back to say that she’d just been out for Carnival in July, and wasn’t going back again until Christmas. She sent me down a couple of short-sleeved shirts and a pair of khaki combat trousers to give to Oscar. Cuba’s postal service was notoriously light-fingered.