Authors: Sara Craven
'It wil be a pleasure,' she muttered between, her teeth, and turned abruptly to go back
up the stairs— anywhere, she told herself, away from the sight and the sound of him.
And she noticed as she did so another movement. On the other side of the hal , a door
was closing smoothly and quietly, as if pushed by a draught or an unseen hand,
Helen paused, gripped by sudden uneasiness. Had there been an unknown witness of
the confrontation between Damon and herself? She hoped not. Even if the
eavesdropper spoke no English, the tone of their voices would have left no doubt that
they were quarrel ing, and a report might go to her grandfather. And only a few
minutes before she had promised she would be civil to Damon Leandros.
He, of course, had gone. The hal was empty behind her, and sunlight spil ed across the
tiled floor through the open front door. She hesitated for a moment, then walked across
the hal to the door she had seen moving. A stray draught on this golden windless day?
She didn't think so. Someone had been there listening. She pushed open the door. The
room was empty—the dining room, she noticed in passing—-and the bench
windows to
the terrace stood open, so anyone wishing to avoid discovery could have beaten a
retreat that way.
Helen sighed. She did not regret one word that she had said to Damon, but she had no
wish for it to come to her grandfather's ears. She could only hope the eavesdropper
would keep whatever information had been gleaned to himself.
She walked across to the terrace, but it was deserted. It was evident, however, that
this was where she was to have lunch. A smal trel is-shaded pergola had been
constructed at this end of the terrace, and a table had been set there with a snowy
linen cloth and silver cutlery. Set for three, she noticed, her lips twisting.
She sat down on one of the slatted wooden benches in the pergola while she rehearsed
what she would say.
'Damon couldn't stay, Grandfather. He asked me to give his apologies. He's been cal ed
away on urgent business.'
Perhaps a tinge more regret on her part to add conviction, but otherwise it was a
reasonable explanation for his absence, and far better than admitting the bald truth—
that she had driven him away because... She paused. Because she hated him? Was it
real y as simple as that?
Yes, she whispered lo herself, it real y is that simple. I'l never forgive him for what he
did to me—for the way I was humiliated.
She heard the murmur of voices inside the vil a. Her grandfather must be on his way,
and she schooled her face to receive him, taking a firm grip on her composure—and
tried to ignore the smal mocking voice in her head which told her that although she
could not forgive him, she was going to find it even harder to forget him.
'THE last ten days have simply flown past,' Helen wrote to her father. 'I haven't seen a
great deal of the island yet, because natural y I've been spending as much time as
possible with Grandfather, and although he seems much better, he's stil restricted to
the house and grounds on doctor's orders. I swim every afternoon from a private
beach, and I'm developing quite a tan, but I'm taking it easy because it would be very
easy to burn.'
She put down her pen, as she considered what to say next, At the moment she seemed
to be treading a precarious path between the unvarnished truth and the kind of
lighthearted relaxed chat her father would be expecting and hoping for.
In fact, the time hadn't flown; it had dragged rather. Oh, not when she was with her
grandfather; her time with him was always interesting and enjoyable. She shared al his
meals; they talked, they played back gammon. They were slowly and careful y
constructing a relationship, but it couldn't be hurried. Apart from the age gap, their lives
had been lived in different environments—almost different planets, Helen though!
sometimes. Their experiences, their expectations o each other, were often poles apart,
so they were proceeding with care.
But when she was alone, she was very much alone and the hours hung heavy on her
hands. Apart from her daily visits to the beach, she was also pretty much restricted to
the house and grounds herself. She sighed. She had expected she would be able to visit
the vil age.
Kostas, after al , drove over there regularly, she knew. But somehow it was never
convenient for her to accompany him. In fact, it was almost as if the vil age had been
declared out of bounds for her, although she told herself she was being over-
imaginative about this.
She supposed too that it made a certain amount of sense for her to remain dose to the
vil a. If her grandfather were to be taken il again and need her, she didn't want to be
several miles away. But even the doctor said he was making remarkable progress, and
professed delight with his improvement. So perhaps she wasn't being unreasonable
when she wished she could be let off the hook just for a little while.
If she had had something to do, someone else to talk to, even, while her grandfather
was resting, things would have been different, she thought. But there was nothing and
no one, except for Josephina whose conversational topics were limited. Helen enjoyed
hearing her talk about her mother as a baby and a smal child, but even the fascination
of that pal ed after a while.
And Thia Irini, it had to be admitted, avoided her. Helen had made overtures, had tried
halting Greek, hastily learned from Josephina, but al to no avail. Her great-aunt
seemed to regard her with implacable hostility, and her rattier timid offer to help with
the household duties had met with an open rebuff. Her face flamed as she remembered
it. She hadn't intended to interfere or imply that the running of the vil a left anything to
be desired, but that was the interpretation that Thia Irini had chosen to place on her
words, according to Josephina's frankly embarrassed translation of her great-aunt's
hissed reply. Remembering her glaring eyes and the tone of her voice, Helen thought
rueful y that her reply might wel have been played down by Josephina, and was glad
she didn't understand more than a few simple Greek phrases.
But al this would change when Madame Stavros arrived in the next day or two, and in
spite of her protests that she did not need a tutor/companion, Helen found she was
looking forward to her arrival more than she could have believed possible. She had
been expected over a week ago, but had been delayed by a summer virus.
Of Damon Leandros there had been no sign since he had walked out of the vil a that
day. Michael Korialis had grumbled about his continued absence, but had accepted her
original explanation without question.
Helen told herself that he would keep away until she was safely back in England, but
she was oddly on edge each day, just the same, and the image of him intruded on her
thoughts far more than she even wished to admit. She supposed he would have
returned to Athens, and found herself wondering if the dark-haired beauty she had
seen in his car that day was with him. Her gibe that she could not be bought had been
foolish and unnecessary, she thought. Damon would never need to buy a woman, even
though she had resented the arrogance of the assertion at the time. She wished she
could press a switch and blot him out of mind and memory, or at least stop this endless
recital inside herself of everything they had said to each other. At least when Madame
Stavros came she would have something else to occupy her mind.
She picked up her pen and ended her letter to her father, thrusting it into an envelope
and sealing the flap. Presently she would leave it with the rest of the outgoing mail on
the table in the hal , but what happened to it after that was anyone's guess. She
supposed Kostas took the letters into Kyritha as part of his other duties, and that al the
mail left for the mainland on the evening ferry, but she couldn't be sure, and her
grandfather was clearly bored by discussion of such mundane details as the operation
of the island's postal system.
She got up and walked over to her bedroom window, thrusting her hand into the large
patch pockets on the front of her skirt. She was wearing a cotton dress today, dark red
and sleeveless with a low neckline and ful swirling skirt. She was thankful that her
instinct to concentrate on feminine clothes in her luggage had been ful y justified. Her
grandfather's reaction to her appearance in jeans had been exactly as she had ex-
pected, so she was careful to avoid them in his presence, although she usual y wore
them for her beach excursions.-
She wandered out on to the balcony and stood looking about her. She was bored, there
was no denying it. Her grandfather always rested in the morning and lunch on the
terrace was a long way off. She had to find something to occupy her. There were no
English books or magazines at the vil a, but surely there would be some in Kyritha. On
at least one day there was a market, she knew, because she had heard her grandfather
mention it. There would be stal s sel ing dress material perhaps, and she could buy
some and make herself a wrap-over skirt, and maybe a blouse as wel . Josephina had
an elderly sewing machine—and at least it would be something to do.
She glanced irresolutely at her watch. She had better take her letter downstairs or
Kostas would leave without it. Perhaps she could persuade him to buy her some
material, if she described what she wanted—draw a sketch of the kind of pattern. Helen
took a breath.
'This is utter nonsense,' she announced to the room at large. 'I'm not a prisoner here. I
can go into the vil age myself.' She grabbed up her handbag and went out of the room.
Kostas was in the hal , arguing cheerful y with Josephina over the contents of a list she
had just given him. He flashed Helen a wide smile as she descended the stairs, holding
out his hand for the letter she was carrying.
She withheld it, returning his smile. 'Today I would like to go with you, Kostas. I want
to do some shopping in Kyritha.'
She had spoken slowly, and he should have under-Stood her perfectly wel , but instead
he turned to Josephina, frowning, obviously asking a question. Josephina looked
concerned too.
'There is little to see in Kyritha, pedhi mou. Kostas wil bring you anything you need.'
'But I want to go.' Helen stood her ground. This was the
kind of argument that had
been put forward on other occasions. 'I want to buy some dress material, and he can't
choose that for me. Besides, I'd like to see Kyritha. So far I've caught one brief glimpse
of it, and that was at night. There are shops, aren't there? And tavernas? I'd just like a
change of scene for an hour or two. We'l be back in time for lunch, won't we, Kostas?'
She smiled at him again, but his broad face was unhappy, and he avoided her gaze,
looking appealingly at Josephina who shrugged in resignation, and said something to
him in Greek.
'Oh, for heaven's sake,' Helen broke in impatiently. 'I'm not asking to be taken to the
moon, just to the vil age. What's the matter with the place? A plague epidemic hasn't
broken out there, has it?'
Josephina said something in a low voice about it 'not being the wish of Kyrios
Michaelis'.
'That's utterly ridiculous,' Helen protested. 'I'm sure you must have got hold of the
wrong end of the stick, Josephina—misunderstood him, I mean. But if that's what you
think—wel , it can be our little secret, if you like. Kostas wil get me back here wel in
time for lunch, and Kyrios Michael is need never know anything about it.'
Driving away from the vil a beside a plainly sul en Kostas, Helen reviewed the situation
in some bewilderment. So she had not been imagining things, after al . It seemed that
her grandfather had indeed declared the vil age out of bounds for her. But why? There
seemed no sense in it. Her grandfather could not expect a girl of her age, brought up in
total freedom as she had been, to meekly submit to dividing her time between the vil a
and its beach, as if the outside world did not exist.
The thought struck her that perhaps Michael Korialis was afraid that she might follow in
her mother's footsteps and elope with a comparative stranger, and a smal derisory
smile touched her lips. That was nonsense, if so, and he must be aware of it.
She would have to talk to him frankly, she decided, and make it plain she could not be
expected to pass her days like a nun in a convent. She would also put his mind at rest,
if necessary, about the possibility of her finding romance in Kyritha. Who did he
visualise her with? she wondered, suppressing a giggle. Another artist or a young Greek
fisherman al bulging biceps and tar-stained vest? The whole idea was ludicrous, and a
little sad as wel .
She settled back in her seat to enjoy the scenery. For such a smal island, if was quite