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Authors: James Hamilton-Paterson

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‘And all this derives from some pleasantry I apparently exchanged with a helicopter pilot last November,’ I say. ‘You’ve got to be impressed by the seriousness of human
lunacy
, haven’t you? It’s easy to see how entire religions arise from hearsay. All you need is the right rural gossip at the right time and people’s superstitious desire to believe any old cock-
and-bull
story does the rest.’

‘What do all these say?’ asks Joan, examining the notes nearest her.

‘They seem to be the usual requests. “Gracious Princess, please cure my paralysed son and I will never doubt again.” “I beg you to let me win the Lotto or I shall be homeless. I am in despair.” “Merciful Diana, my child is dying, you are her only
recourse.” Oh, here’s a good one: “My bastard neighbour Raffaele is an adulterer and a deflowerer of children and merits your sternest vengeance.” The simple outpourings of
desperate
people. I tell you, all human life is here. Except my own, of course,’ I can’t help adding bitterly. I turn to stand at the
fluorescent
tape strung behind the lip of the precipice and gaze over a panorama so familiar it could almost make me weep. Tears of sternest vengeance, naturally.

Joan joins me. ‘Hell of a spectacular place. It must have been a fantastic house.’

‘That it was. Round about
there
’ – I wave my hand at a patch of air some twenty feet away – ‘was the terrace where I wrote much of
Millie!
I’ve half a mind to post a note to Diana myself. “Kindly restore my house. Signed, a homeless admirer.”’

‘The whole damn thing simply vanished, just like that?’

‘Pretty much. First the garage with a self-contained flat above it. Then the main house. Finally the terrace. Piecemeal but effective.’

‘You can say what you like about the hand of Diana but if you ask me you were all pretty lucky to get out.’

‘Everyone says so and I don’t deny it. Yet oddly enough, if I owe my life to anybody it’s probably to Marta. She’s my
neighbour
. That’s her place over there behind the fence – Tuscany’s answer to the Bates Motel. The night of our party she arrived back unannounced after months in America but couldn’t get into her house because I was acting as caretaker and I’d locked it up good and tight. So she left her bags outside her door and came over here. Later, Adrian and I went out to fetch her
luggage
across so she could stay the night with us. It was just as well we did because it was then we suddenly noticed the absence of the garage.’

‘I’ll bet you all made a hurried exit.’

‘As hurried as possible, impeded as we were by badger Wellington, alcohol, magic mushrooms and a general feeling of unreality.’

‘So this opera of yours is really about Marta in disguise.’

‘It most certainly is
not
.’ It isn’t often that Samper is shocked. ‘The opera I’m working on isn’t about angels flitting down from heaven to save people from death, either. It’s about this ludicrous yearning to invent religious heroes to stuff the remaining chinks of life not filled by soap opera. It’s about myth and glam. It’s about credulousness.’

‘So tell me about her.’

‘What?’ I’m distracted from an interior vision of a grand operatic
scena
with a choir of satirical angels all dressed by Marks & Spencer like a lightened-up version of the chorus of demons in
The Dream of Gerontius.

‘This old neighbour of yours, Marta. You talked a lot about her when we first met. In fact, you seemed a bit obsessed.’

‘That’s because she was a protracted pain in the arse. For one thing, you never knew when her East European mafia family weren’t going to drop by in black helicopters. They used to land just over there beyond those trees next to her house. It was one damn thing after another when Marta was here. I couldn’t get any work done. And she was always
coming
over here on some pretext or other. Drink, usually. She was addicted to Fernet-Branca.’

‘You mean she wasn’t after your body?’ says Joan, I hope mischievously.

‘If you go on like this I shall faint with horror and then you’ll be sorry.’

‘Huh. In the Navy we’d just bring you round again with a bucket of seawater. Anyway, I hate to distress you further but there’s someone over by that gate there trying to attract your attention.’

And of course you win no prize for guessing who it is. The devil you talk of is frequently, I find, already present. But have I mentioned that Adrian has passed on the news that the great Max Christ himself says he would be interested to have a good look at any opera whose composer is Marta? You will see why, if she really has fallen out with her flagellistic librettist Sue Donimus, I must woo her as a potential collaborator. The idea
is that together we will make wonderful music (as ingénue lovers once told each other in bodice-rippers back in the days when any insertions took place off the page). I step forward manfully to introduce Joan.

‘Gerree!’ Marta hails me from a distance. ‘I never know you’re here.’

Oh God, those tenses. Can I really face months of closerange Voynovian syntax? But the show must go on. ‘Snap!’ I call.

‘“Snap”, Gerree?’

‘It means I didn’t realise you were here either. May I
introduce
my friend Joan, an old yachting chum of Millie Cleat’s? Joan, Marta. Marta, Joan. Well, what a surprise.’

‘But it was you who tell me on the telephone I must come to Italy and see my house because of the earth tremble and the
pilgrims
to the Princess. So I’ve come. And everything you say is true. Not so good, no. But
ben tornato
, Gerree. I will kiss you.
So!
Please, you will both come in and I will offer you a little Voynovian speciality. It is the best moment of the morning.’

I was afraid of that. As soon as I saw her standing there at the gate in the fence with the spring breeze lifting the
unclotted
portions of her hair and she so clearly the owner of the only house for miles, I had a reflux of the memory (as one might say) and my mind went shrinkingly back to a previous episode of this ex-neighbour’s ethnic hospitality. ‘Not
mavlisi
?’ I ask, trying for a tone of polite anticipation but achieving one more like pleading.

‘No, I have something even better, something even more –’ and she performs that loathsome gesture of hers when she kisses the bunched fingertips of one hand and rolls her eyes up in their sockets to indicate ecstasy. She ushers us in through her back door. I feel like a child being led into the doctor’s
surgery
for another of those little injections they claim don’t hurt.

Marta’s kitchen is exactly as it always was. The same piles of unironed sheets dumped on chairs, the same aura of bohemian chaos. The same low-beamed ceiling and great
damp flagstones. There is her old Iron Curtain upright piano, and there the electronic keyboard hitched to a dusty computer given her by the late Piero Pacini when she was writing the score for his last film. Everything is completely familiar to me, down to the cobwebbed sheaf of porcupine quills in a
handleless
mug on the mantelpiece above the hearth. I used to visit this place regularly in my capacity as good neighbour while Marta was in the States most of last year. The only difference I can see is that she has acquired a new fridge. This might explain the absence of the crypt-like stench that resulted from ENEL cutting off the electricity while she was away and the contents of her old fridge brewing up into something the germ warfare boffins of Porton Down would once have been proud to own.

Marta fettles up the coffee percolator and then lifts a large jug out of the fridge. Into three glass dessert bowls she pours what looks like – and I apologise for this, but one must be accurate – diarrhoea. Sloppy brown gloop with knobs and bobbles. Over the surface in each bowl she scatters
multicoloured
flakes and then cocks her head on one side,
considering
her handiwork. She adds a dollop of white substance to the centre of each bowl and actually claps her hands, for all the world a kindergarten teacher summoning her charges to elevenses.

‘This is purest Voynovian, very special,’ she announces. ‘It is made by the chef of Danubya, our first restaurant in London I tell you about, Gerree. It is our famous
varminty
which he makes the best outside Voynograd. Come, you will try.’

‘It looks scrumptious.’ I was very well brought up, just as I’m glumly expecting my
varminty
to be shortly after I’ve eaten it. I pick up my spoon like a guest at a dinner party thrown by the Borgias. I have to admire Joan. Without a moment’s
hesitation
she sets to with gusto.

‘Hey, this is all right,’ she exclaims. ‘Can’t put my finger on what it is but my tongue tells me it’s pretty decent stuff.’

Marta positively beams at her. ‘It is very old plums purée
with salted
kisi
, um, cherries. It must be five years old at least in store and dark, with herbs and spices like
kimunyi
– I don’t know that in English. Then on top is our Easter speciality, dry ram.’

‘Well, it’s delicious,’ says Joan stoutly.

‘Dry ram.’ I toy with my spoon. ‘And in the middle?’

‘That is just plain yoghurt also from the ram.’

‘Ram’s yoghurt. I see.’ I dab the white substance with the tip of my spoon. She
can’t
mean …? Surely not even
Voynovians
would …?

‘Sheep’s yoghurt,’ says Joan.

Marta beams some more. ‘I’m sorry, yes of course, sheep. This is dried sheep on top also. At Easter we always make like this. We in Voynovia love colours.’

Unlike everywhere else that prefers monochrome, I suppose. Why do foreigners say these damnfool things? Samper may lack patience but never let it be said he lacks courage. I try a mouthful. As usual with Marta’s ‘specialities’ I have an
immediate
mental image of my taste buds withdrawing defensively like coral polyps when touched. It is basically very sweet and yes, I can taste the hundred-year-old plums and things and the salty knobs that might conceivably be wizened cherries. I can also taste the dyed shreds of jerked sheep impregnated with an unidentifiable spice reminiscent of turpentine. For all I know they could be flakes of desiccated jackal. The sheep’s yoghurt, to my surprise, tastes exactly like sheep’s yoghurt.

‘I can tell you, Marta,’ I say, wishing my eyes would stop watering, ‘what you call
kimunyi
is cumin.’

‘Oh yes, now I remember. Cumin. So what do you say,
Gerree
, of our
varminty
?’

‘Fantastic. And you brought it all the way from London?’

‘Well worth the trip, I should say.’ Joan bangs her spoon down beside her empty bowl. ‘I haven’t tasted anything like that since I last put into Port Said. Exotic and interesting.
Tiptop
nosh.’

At this moment the coffee comes through and while Marta
deals with it at the stove Joan surreptitiously helps me out with my
varminty
. What a trouper, I think; but then it occurs to me she may be doing it less for me than to avoid her
hostess’s
feelings being hurt. At any rate by the time Marta hands us our welcome doses of caffeine there are three empty bowls on the table.

‘So you’ve seen the Diana shrine over the fence?’ I ask.

‘Oh yes. It’s terrible, Gerree. Awful. And the people, they come all the time and sometimes they sing together. Can you believe this? How can I work when – ?’ She breaks off –
tactfully
, I imagine, given that she always claimed my own singing used to disturb her work to the extent that it provoked her into cruel parody in her film score. It sounds like poetic justice to me. Whatever these pilgrims sing they surely lack the artistry I lavished on Rossini and Donizetti arias. Good on them, I say. A worthy come-uppance for the last Queen of Le Roccie.

Suddenly I notice a large tear slide down beside the nose that emerges from the tangle of hair that always covers Marta’s face when she leans forward. Her cup, tilted at an unregarded angle, is also leaking coffee onto the table.

‘Oh, Gerree!’ she exclaims in woeful tones, ‘I am so
unhappy
. I don’t know what I shall do. Your house is gone and these singing idiots are changing everything.’ Liquidly she sniffs.

‘Poor Marta. It’s all gone wrong up here, hasn’t it?’

‘It’s a bloody tragedy if you ask me,’ rasps Joan, and leaning sideways she slips a beefy arm around Marta’s shoulders. The anchor tattooed on her forearm glows in the sunlight from the window.

email from Dr Adrian Jestico ([email protected])
to Dr Penny Barbisant ([email protected])

First, well-deserved congratulations on having talked your man into agreeing your new remit! A quick search tells me virtually nothing’s ever been done on seabed fauna specifically around wrecked
munitions
ships & certainly not at the genetic level you’re proposing. The field is yours. And what a fantastic bit of luck having a survey vessel in the area that could divert for half a day & send an ROV down to identify it. I wonder who’s still alive over there who can remember the
Hattie MacAllister
? When you know exactly what the
Hattie M.’s
cargo was & specifically what of it was damaged at the time of the sinking you’ll be able to guess what are the most likely
contaminants
to have been seeping out into the local chromosomes these last sixty-four years.

Duh! Sorry, Penny – you hardly need me to tell you that. But stating the obvious is becoming second nature here at BOIS. There’s a right & a wrong way to put together reports for Defra, & the wrong way is to assume they already know some elementary facts about the environment (or food, or rural affairs). Most fatal of all is to
imagine
they understand anything about the sea, such as that it can both erode
and
deposit, even on the same tide. To be fair, as individuals with doctorates they mostly know these things, but as a Department they don’t. I suppose they need it all spelt out Janet-&-John style for the benefit of the politicians they have to show the reports to. Nothing can be too simple for
them
.

News from the home front, you ask? Nothing spectacular. My
illustrious
conductor brother-in-law Max is in mourning for his principal
clarinettist, who was arrested in an Ipswich shopping mall for patting children on the head while dressed as Winnie-the-Pooh & led off to be sectioned. The wretched fellow has a history of such episodes & at first they didn’t seem to matter, given his brilliance as an
instrumentalist
. A couple of years ago Max recorded the Weber clarinet concertos with him dressed as a raccoon. It was a great recording that went on to win awards, but only that morning he’d been detained in the same costume for waving his tail at a crowd of kindergarten kids & Max only just got him out in time for the
recording
session. Since when it has reached the point where he will only play while wearing an animal costume. Tricky, really, as there’s no mention of a dress code in the CSO’s contracts. But the sight of a panda taking its seat in the woodwind section excites comment in the concert hall, not all of it favourable. Though that being said, his example did lead Max to give a TV performance of Saint-Saëns’
Carnival of the Animals
where the whole orchestra wore animal
costumes
& it was a massive hit last Christmas. It sold I don’t know how many DVDs. But the poor man became a liability & is now
obviously
too ill to function. Did I tell you he was a guest at Crendlesham at our fateful dinner the night we had Gerry’s hors d’oeuvre of
poisoned
mice? He came dressed as a gorilla. Why? Hard to tell. Maybe he hoped it would please or divert young Josh, but the kid was actually slightly scared & who can blame him. Gossip now talks of the man having become ‘eccentric’ ever since he lost his own daughter, a cot death or something. So, sad rather than sinister. At any rate Max is quite depressed about it & goes around muttering that you can’t replace the equivalent of Jack Brymer & Karl Leister rolled into one (I gather they were ace clarinettists of yesteryear). And he’ll now be adding a dress clause to all CSO contracts.

Gerry called me last night to announce that his ex-neighbour Marta – who, poor lady, quite unwittingly lurches between being his bête noire & the one composer he must have to write the music to his opera – is back home in Italy. But her place has been fatally
compromised
by the landslip and subsequent geological uncertainty about the whole of that little plateau, which I have to say is as
spectacular 
a site for a house as I ever did see. A sort of Space Shuttle’s view of north-western Tuscany. A shame. And now of course it’s
further
blighted by pilgrims of this weird Diana cult. Apparently they come at all hours & hold vigils & sing hymns on the spot where, six months ago, Gerry was still hanging out his socks & boxer shorts to dry. The result is Marta is plunged into gloom because although she now has the sole surviving property up there its future is in doubt & her work is constantly interrupted. Gerry, never the most
accomplished
dissembler, is cock-a-hoop over her misfortune. He says it serves her right for inviting him in for coffee the other day & forcing him to eat what he describes as a diabolical Voynovian laxative made from fermenting prunes with ram’s sperm topping. He’s
probably
just jealous that she came up with something as inedible as one of his own inventions.

Of course I don’t mind your asking questions about Gerry’s & my ‘relationship’, Penny. It’s just that I don’t think I can give you any
satisfactory
answers. I guess in that respect I’m a typical ‘guy’, as you unkindly put it. We guys tend not to ask ourselves about our
relationships
unless we’ve been feminised by all that dismal gay
propaganda
about marriage and long-term responsible blah blah. Whether he & I have any future as an ‘item’ is not something we give much thought to, I’m afraid. At least I don’t, & Gerry’s been a professional bachelor far too long to be capable of any domestic relationship with man or beast (since living with someone & not living with anybody can both become habits). Besides, as we live & work in 2 different countries & that isn’t likely to change for the foreseeable future, there’s scarcely any point in looking at things long-term. So
speaking
for myself I pretty much live from day to day & take things as they come. And I think Gerry does the same, except with him it’s more a matter of lurching from crisis to crisis, which suits his temperament. What does it matter in any case? Things will turn out how they turn out & in a few decades it won’t matter a damn to either of us.

Since you ask, I think what I most admire in him is his conviction that one can only be truly light-hearted & amused in this world if one is a
total pessimist and misanthrope. I still get gloomy & contemptuous about e.g. politics & our infliction of slaughter & suffering on millions of Iraqis under the pretext of replacing one man as head of state – now long dead anyway. Gerry just says I should be ashamed of such remnants of youthful idealism & ought just to laugh because ‘laughter is the whole of wisdom’ – his phrase. It’s a philosophy you’d think would make him horrid but for some mysterious reason doesn’t. Sure, he’s capable of saying mean things (especially about Marta) but they’re usually said out of wit & for momentary effect & because he likes to express himself extravagantly. In actual fact he has been rather good to her. All the time she was away in the US last year he looked after her house, fitted new locks & generally acted as a caretaker, completely unbidden & without her
knowledge
. Beneath the quite genuine misanthropy he’s an often kind person with that peculiar gentleness that goes with resignation. I remember him last summer reading a story about a gang of
drunken
British teenagers kicking an innocent passer-by to death while good citizens hurried past. His comment was ‘if you expect
precisely
zero from your fellow man you’ll never know disappointment’. A quintessentially Gerry remark.

Perhaps I should now ask about you & Luke, except that we guys don’t know quite what to ask. We have to rely on you to tell us. Pathetic or what?

Cheers,
Adrian

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