Authors: Peter Helton
âIs that why you decided not to have children?'
She stabbed a few times at the remnants of lamb on her plate. âIs that what I decided, then?'
Hadn't she? âWell, I thought . . . you always said . . .'
âHa! Your face! Priceless. Yeah, hon, don't fret. I'm far too selfish, and you don't exactly make ideal dad-material. And Tim . . . Tim would give a baby five minutes, then lose interest and look for the off switch.'
âTalking of Tim, I must see if he's mailed me another picture of Kyla. Actually, while I'm there, I might call him and ask him to check on one or two other things that would be useful to know. I'll do it first thing tomorrow. It's the weekend; he'll be at home.'
âActually, he won't be. He's still at Mill House. Looking after the place while we're both away.'
Still. âWas he at Mill House all the time, then?' This didn't come out as casually as planned; a sudden, illogical stab of jealousy seemed to have punctured my voice.
âMm? Yeah. Does it matter?'
I hesitated. I shouldn't have hesitated.
âI really don't see why it should,' she said. âMill House or Northampton Street â what's the difference? It's not as if we're sleeping together in
our
bed.'
âNo, sure, I mean . . .'
âAnd it made perfect sense because that way I could get a lot more work done than if I had bombed across to his place every day. I'd still be working on the painting now if I had, I'm sure.'
âTrue. It's no problem; it's just different from what I had imagined.'
âYour mouth is saying one thing and your eyes are saying something else. You're not jealous? Please say you're not jealous. And after how many years? It's you I live with. And if I preferred Tim's company, why am I here? I didn't
have
to come out here where I'm being shadowed by weird Toyota drivers, gassed in the kitchen and given evil killer looks by that Helen woman all day.'
âAre you?'
âI am. Did you make a rash promise of marriage or something? She constantly asks me a million questions and all the time I feel like she's pointing a gun at me under the table.'
âI hadn't noticed.'
âOf course not, Mr Detective. Anyway, I'm here with you, not there with him, so be a happy Honeypot or I'll fly home.'
âI'm happy,' I promised.
âYou'd better be,' she said. She shut her mouth around the straw and noisily vacuumed the dregs of fruit juice from the bottom of her glass. âWhy don't you go and talk to the ferry man you saw and order us some more drinks while you're in there.'
âGood idea. Same again?'
âHell, no, get me a beer. I can drive perfectly after a couple of bottles of this Amstel stuff. I remember it well . . .'
After delivering my drinks order at the bar, I looked around for Kladders. It took me a while to spot him at the head of a crowded table right at the back of the restaurant. Two waiters were busy depositing a multitude of dishes in front of the diners, which is why I was halfway to his table before I noticed who he was eating with. All of his companions looked alarmingly familiar. I made a hasty ninety-degree turn away which attracted Kladders's attention. He gave the tiniest sideways jerk with the head while he semaphored âScram!' with his eyebrows. No need: I was making myself scarce at the double, hoping the rest of the company had been too busy looking at the food to take any notice of my odd manoeuvre.
âCheers, hon.' Annis clinked her glass against my fresh bottle of beer. âDid you catch up with your man?'
âNearly.'
âWhat's that mean?'
I took a long draught of beer from the bottle while I realized I had no idea what it all meant. âI didn't speak to him. He had company. A lot of company. He pulled a face at me that said “Not now, you fool”, but I didn't really need the hint. Right next to him was the police officer who had pretended he'd never seen Niko's Taverna when I showed him the postcard.'
âPerhaps he hadn't?'
âI doubt it. He was sitting opposite the bloke who runs it. And
he
is the one who pretended not to recognize Kyla, even though he had her photo on his picture wall.'
âAh. Recognize anyone else?'
âMost of them. One of them, I'm sure of it, is the Italian bloke I told you about â the one with the big dusty Mercedes. He gave me petrol for the bike, but I thought even then he was also threatening me. Now I'm certain of it. Opposite him sat the bloke who runs the kiosk in the village and . . .'
âMargarita's dad.'
âWhat? Is he? How do you know that?'
âMorva mentioned it.'
âIn what context?'
âApropos of nothing. It's the kind of stuff women talk about, who begat whom, relationships, connections. You know . . .'
âYeah. Ta. Anyway. Next to Margarita's dad . . .'
âThanassis.'
âWhat?'
âHis name. Her dad's name is Thanassis.'
âAnyway, next to
Thanassis
sat a couple of chaps I saw at the olive oil co-operative. One was an older guy in the passenger seat who kept looking at his watch while his driver told me to get lost.'
âAnd now they're all having a meal with the bloke from the ferry.'
âYes. It's kind of spooky because that's most of the people I've met here so far and now I don't trust any of them for some reason.'
âThen what about your ferry man?'
âKladders . . . I don't know. He pointed Gloves out to me.'
âBut afterwards your notebook with Morva's old address in it had disappeared.'
âTrue, but then he gave me pretty good directions to her place. And just now he seemed to be on my side when he signalled me. I really don't want to meet that policeman at his table again; I feel happier with him thinking I've left the island.'
âPerhaps we shouldn't hang around, then.'
âOn the contrary, we definitely should, but somewhere they can't see us.' I called the waiter over, asked for the bill (cassette one, part two) and pointed at my watch to show we were in a hurry.
While we waited, Annis finished her half-litre of Amstel, then relieved me of my bottle and drained that one, too. âIt's only fair if I'm missing the sweet course,' she declared. There was no arguing with that. This hadn't quite turned out to be the romantic starlit dining experience it was billed as.
Back on street level, I hesitated for a moment. The road was quite busy now with people strolling about and a row of cars parked on one side. âI don't remember â could we see the entrance to the restaurant from our car?'
âDon't know. Let's try it.'
We were walking towards the Citroën when I saw them. âStop, turn round.'
âWassamatter?' she asked as she turned on a sixpence.
âBack there, right in front of ours, are the cars of the guys from Kladders's table â the Merc and the BMW â and there's two guys leaning against the bonnets chatting. One of them is the BMW driver who told me to get away from the Thalassa Oil Co-op. He might well recognize me and I have the distinct feeling I don't want him to. We'll look for somewhere else.'
Not far beyond the entrance to the Lord Byron, we found a bar with a few seats by the roadside from where we could keep an eye on things. I was too busy to take much notice of the fact that both of us were drinking beer now and my designated driver was on her third half-litre in less than an hour. We hadn't been there long when the two drivers came up the road towards us, walking quickly. They weren't chatting now and had a look of determination about them.
âThat's the chauffeurs coming right at us; could mean trouble.'
âNow what?'
âWe'll act stupid.'
âHow hard can it be?'
The two determined-looking men never slowed down. They marched straight past us through the open door to the bar and demanded two large brandies which they instantly chucked down their throats. A minute later, and without having wasted a glance on the tourist couple at the table outside, they were walking quickly back towards their cars, talking animatedly now and lighting cigarettes, underling boredom temporarily relieved.
Just when the sentence âWe could be sitting here all night' began to form on my lips, Kladders's party tumbled into the road. We heard them before we saw them. A heated argument was under way and all of them were talking at once. I obviously had no hope of deciphering any of it, but I distinctly heard more than one language being abused. It appeared that in the heat of the argument everyone had resorted to shouting in their respective mother tongues, except Kladders who appeared to be trying to pour oil on troubled waters in both Greek and Italian, interspersed with English exhortations such as âCalm
down
, everybody'. When the policeman and the Italian started pushing and shoving, Kladders threw up his hands in a gesture of mock despair and walked away from the brawl towards where we were sitting. Behind him, both the BMW and the Mercedes had pulled up to the entrance of the restaurant.
âThere he is.' I got up from my chair and walked towards Kladders.
While looking in a different direction, Kladders said urgently, âGo away.'
âI want to talk to you.'
âNot now, Mr Honeysett; ignore me and walk past.'
âOK, but I want to ask you some questions.'
âAnother time.'
âWhere can I find you?'
âYou can't; I'll find you.'
Typical. Everyone was always confident they could find me on this island; so why did I have such trouble finding Kyla? We had passed each other by now and I stooped and picked an imaginary coin out of the grit by the side of the road, then turned round while studying it in the palm of my hand. I had come quite close to the brawl, which was now breaking up, and I was being overtaken by the police officer with the neon skin and walrus moustache. He crossed the road in an angry strut and got into a large and shiny red Nissan parked in the drive of a villa. He performed a hectic U-turn, which brought him close enough to our table outside the bar to make me think he might drive through it. He was frowning straight at me as he scrunched past, then accelerated away towards town. A couple of minutes later, first the BMW and then the Mercedes roared past in the same direction. Kladders had disappeared.
âDid you see where he went?'
âHe got into a green Citroën â one of those hire cars.'
âGreat, there must be a thousand of them.'
âOnly one with this number plate,' she said, pointing at the table top. She had written it out in Amstel beer. She shrugged. âIt's all I had. Better get a pen before it runs.'
âS
orry, I gave my last Alka-Seltzer to Charlie the other day,' Helen said cheerfully. Then she clattered around with her portable easel for a bit before noisily setting off into the glaring sunshine for her painting session. I was convinced everyone was making a lot more noise than necessary this morning and I was sure the sorry apparition in the shape of Annis Jordan hunched beside me at the long table would have agreed had it been capable of coherent speech.
By the time we had got back to Ano Makriá from the Lord Byron the previous night, we had convinced ourselves that we had utterly and tragically sobered up. And for no reason at all, except that there was no beer in the cooler, we had started on a two-litre bottle of the local red. Each.
The planned trip into town to check emails and get in touch with Tim was postponed for obvious reasons: one pothole and my head was going to break open like a Chocolate Orange.
One by one, the ghost-village inmates had expressed their sympathy or amusement and gone their own way to paint, and eventually Morva had gingerly hobbled after them on two sticks to check on their progress. Charlie, who was now working on the room next to ours, had promised to find something quiet to do, clearing the place of rubbish and levelling the hard earth floor, but by noon he had run out of quiet pursuits. Without warning, he fired up the petrol engine of the ancient cement mixer in the yard to make concrete for the floor.
âMorva's beautiful sound,' groaned Annis.
âLet's get away from here.'
âWhere?'
âAnywhere. Just away from that noise.'
âInto the bright stuff out there? I don't know what's worse.' We slunk away into the grove behind the house.
âWe're a pathetic pair,' I concluded.
Annis looked back over her shoulder. âMargarita seems to think so. Did you see the look she gave us from the doorway?'
âShe always looks at me like that. Let's keep under the olive trees â not so bright here. I think I know how vampires feel now.'
We clambered up several crumbling terraces into the overgrown olive grove until the noise of the cement mixer had receded like a toothache numbed by codeine, then slowly picked our way around the slopes on the edge of the village. The place was still lush from the recent rains, but already the fierce heat was trying to bake it into submission. The borders between sun and shade were hard-edged; the light shimmered painfully on the stones, reflecting blindingly on the bits of whitewash remaining on the back of the deserted church. Beyond the churchyard with its untended graves and waist-high grasses, I could see Rob dabbing methodically at his little canvas. Here the olive terraces came to an end and the shoulder of the hill sloped back towards the village. We clambered downwards on a stony goat track that took us in the direction of the holly oaks where the motorhome was parked. Every time my foot slipped on a loose stone, the juddering movement translated into a circle-dance of headache around my skull.
âWas it my idea to go for a walk?' I enquired as I negotiated the goat track like a tightrope walker.
âCertainly was. I feel much better, don't you?'