Read The Whispers of Nemesis Online

Authors: Anne Zouroudi

The Whispers of Nemesis (14 page)

The patron smiled.

‘Thank you,' he said. ‘I like to cook, and the baker is my eldest brother; he took the business on after my father. Simple food, well cooked; in our family, it's a code we live by.'

‘You are to be congratulated,' said the fat man. ‘I shall be back here, before long; be assured you shall have my custom again then.'

‘It'll be my pleasure.' The patron offered his hand, and the fat man took it. ‘I'm always happy to cook for someone who appreciates it. Maybe I'll see if we can find something a bit special, when you're back. You have business here, then, do you?'

‘My business takes me to many places, and this is only one port of call. I shall have covered a lot more ground, more than likely, before we meet again.'

‘Greek coffee, no sugar,' said the patron, with a wink. ‘I'll remember how you take it.'

Outside, a silver car drew up, a ‘For Hire' sign unlit on its roof. The driver gave two short blasts on the horn.

‘
Kalo taxidi!
' called the patron, wishing the fat man a good journey as he left. His other customers lapsed into silence, until the fat man closed the
kafenion
door behind him; then their earnest discussion of his business in Vrisi began.

 

The taxi's paintwork was clean, but there was rust on the sills and wheel arches, and one of the hub caps was tied on with string. The fat man opened the rear door, but as he was about to climb in, the driver stopped him.

‘Sit here, my friend, sit up front with me,' he said, and so the fat man closed the rear door and climbed into the passenger seat, placing his holdall between his feet on a piece of well-swept Persian carpet.

The taxi's interior was warmed to an exceptional degree, the fan blasting out hot air as the diesel engine ran on. The red vinyl of the rear seats was covered with hand-woven blankets, and on the parcel shelf was a bouquet of peach-coloured plastic roses; the over-heated air was potently sweetened with freshener sprayed from a can. A clean-bladed shovel lay length-wise across the seats, along with a flask, a package of food and a fur hat.

The driver held out his hand. He was a once handsome man with a long, grey ponytail and a carefully trimmed goatee; he wore blue jeans and a quilted jacket in burnt orange, and on his hands were a rally driver's gloves, with circles cut in patterns from the tan leather.

‘Hassan,' he said, as the fat man shook his hand. ‘We're travelling companions, and so we should be friends. Where're we going together?'

The fat man asked to be driven to a town with a station, and Hassan for a moment looked doubtful.

‘With the weather coming, that might be tricky,' he said. ‘Still. I enjoy a little adventure. Let's go.'

He put the car in gear, and revved the engine hard so the wheels span on the road, until the car leaped forward with the back end snaking as they moved off.

‘I am Hermes Diaktoros,' said the fat man, gripping the arm-rest of the door as they took a corner too fast. ‘From Athens. But you, from your name and accent, are not from here, I think.'

‘Not I,' said Hassan, as the car passed the last houses in the village. Rounding a blind bend, Hassan swerved to avoid a black-clad woman, and the fat man briefly closed his eyes as a collision with a wrought-iron fence seemed inescapable. Hassan laughed, and gave the fat man a nudge. ‘Nervous passenger, eh? You're safe with me, friend, perfectly safe. Ask anyone who knows me, they'll all tell you the same: I've never had an accident, in all my years of driving. And this weather threatening doesn't trouble me. I was raised in Turkish mountains, real mountains, with real winters. You Greeks know nothing about winter! To see a real winter, you have to go to Turkey.'

They began to climb, and the car approached the first of the hairpin bends which took the road out of the village and up the mountainside. Under the overhanging pine trees, the morning seemed dark as evening.

‘Is there no danger of ice?' asked the fat man, as they approached a bend which overlooked a precipitous drop.

‘Not cold enough for ice,' said Hassan. ‘It wants a few degrees colder yet, before we need to trouble ourselves about ice.' He changed down a gear, and took the bend at speed; there was a slight twitch on the back end as the rear wheels lost traction. ‘I wanted to drive professionally, in my youth, but that's an expensive hobby. My wife wouldn't put up with the expense.'

‘Is your wife a Turk also?'

‘My wife is a Greek. We aren't together, now.'

‘I'm sorry.'

‘I'm sorry too. She fell for the sweet words of another man, and put the cuckold's horns on me. My fault; there's no woman on this earth who can be trusted. I didn't watch her close enough, and I paid the price.'

Hassan fell silent. They passed the shrine at the chapel of St Fanourios, though too fast to make out the skulls; neither Hassan nor the fat man made crosses as they went by. Then Hassan found a smile, and turned to the fat man; the fat man would have preferred him to keep his eyes on the road.

‘So what was your business, in the village?' asked Hassan. ‘We don't get many visitors, this time of year.'

‘I was in the area, and wanted to see the birthplace of your poet,' said the fat man. ‘His work is wonderful, inspiring. Have you read him?'

‘No.'

‘Did you know him?'

‘I knew him, yes,' said Hassan, shortly. ‘Why do you waste your time on him? Poet, and
poustis
, the two are one and the same. He was all posing and sensitivity, never knew a day's work in his life. But you remind me, speaking of him . . .' He lowered the sun-visor over his windscreen and took down an envelope, which he handed to the fat man. ‘They gave me that for you, at his house. Anyway, I'm not one for literature, though if I were, I'd stick to the Turkish poets. The world's best poets are Turks. Fuzuli, for example: you must have read Fuzuli, if you're a poetry-loving man.'

The fat man tucked the envelope into his holdall.

‘No, I'm afraid I haven't. I have travelled a little in Turkey, but I know shamefully little of its culture. You yourself seem such a patriotic man – what persuaded you to come from Turkey to a little spot like Vrisi?'

‘My wife,' he said. ‘I came for love. I was in the merchant navy for a while; we met when the ship I was with put into Nafplio. She was working in a
kafenion
there, helping out some relative. One thing led to another, as things do. I stay now to see my kids. But I shall go back home, where I belong, some day.'

‘There's no hope of a reconciliation?'

‘That's something you must ask her.'

The taxi driver became melancholy, and thoughtful. They drove on in silence for a while, the fat man always gripping the arm-rest of his door.

‘I had an excellent meal this morning, in the
kafenion
,' he said, at last. ‘The patron there is a good cook, and his brother the baker likewise.'

‘You're right there,' said Hassan. ‘You should try his
mezedes
. Of course the Greeks can't compete with Turkish cooking – all Greek cooking is adapted from Turkish anyway – but his
mezedes
are good, by Greek standards. Especially tasty with a glass of ouzo, I'm told, though I myself don't drink. If you come back to Vrisi, we'll go there together and eat
mezedes
.'

‘I would like that,' said the fat man.

‘And then I'll make you some Turkish specialities, give you some real food. You'll think you've died and gone to heaven.'

The fat man smiled.

‘That would be excellent, too,' he said.

The road had reached its apex, and they began their descent on the mountain's far side. With the downhill gradient, Hassan's speed increased.

‘We'll stay ahead of this weather easily now,' he said; and changing up to the highest gear, he took his foot off the brake, and allowed the taxi to pick up more speed still.

Not wishing to give offence, the fat man forced his eyes to remain open; and to take his mind off the danger he saw in the roadside chasms, he hummed himself a tune: the melody was Hatzidakis's famous
Swans
.

Ten

There was trouble with the engines, and the island's ferry was severely delayed; she docked in Seftos harbour three hours after her scheduled time, as night was closing in and the lights along the quay were coming on.

The passengers were few. Strong winds had been forecast for the crossing, and the journey had been rough; the women had made dramas of their seasickness, groaning and puking into waxed-paper bowls, whilst the indifferent men smoked and played cards, drinking coffee from cups which slid across the table tops as the boat rolled.

The hermit was amongst the first to disembark. The evening was damp, with lamplight reflected in broad pools of rain­water. Against the harbour wall the sea was choppy, rocking the moored boats which tugged at their anchor-lines. Fragments of old tunes squeezed from an accordion drifted from the
kafenion
; behind its condensation-fogged windows, inebriated men laughed loud.

The hound tied to the trestle-table outside the general store sniffed the air, raised his head and whined. As the hermit approached, the dog leaped to his feet and strained in a frenzy towards him, springing from the ground in his excitement.

The hermit smiled, and rubbed the dog's head vigorously. He let himself be pawed and licked, until the dog was calm. Leaving both his haversack and the dog at the shop door (where the dog whimpered his distress in fear of losing him again), he made his way inside, between the sacks of rice and lentils.

The shopkeeper sat on his stool behind the counter, a bottle of
tsipouro
at his elbow, a measure in a glass close to hand. A dim bulb cast shadows on shelves of chocolate bars and tinned squid, on shaving cream and boxes of incense. The cheese fridge hummed; the despondent linnet hid its head under its wing. On the radio, a young man sang of homesickness, of missing his dear mother and the island of his birth.

‘
Kali spera
,' said the hermit to the shopkeeper.

The shopkeeper was eating roasted peanuts. He looked up from the shell he was cracking and at his customer, struggling to put a name to the face.

‘
Mori!
' he said, at last, dropping the peanuts back on to their plate. ‘It's you, our hermit!
Kalos tou, kalos tou!
Well, you've certainly smartened yourself up on your travels! Have you been at the barber's all this time? No offence, friend, no offence. And new clothes too:
kalo risiko, kalo risiko
. Did you come in on the ferry?'

‘I did, and it was hours late,' said the hermit. ‘Why do they publish a timetable at all?'

‘It'd be the engines, was it?' asked the shopkeeper. ‘She's an old vessel. It's a miracle they keep her afloat, especially in such weather.'

‘I believe it was the engines, yes, but that's irrelevant. It's late, and it'll be dark, now, before I get across, so I'll take what I need, and be gone. The dog's in good health, by the way. Thank you for taking care of him. I'm obliged to you.'

The grocer waved his hand.

‘Not at all,' he said. ‘My kids got quite fond of him. They've given him a few treats, so he hasn't gone short, though he eats the same as two grown men. It's a mystery to me how you afford to feed him.'

‘He feeds himself, where he can hunt,' said the hermit, finding his wallet. ‘He catches rabbits. He's fast, and they're stupid. I remember I promised you something for his good care.'

He handed over two banknotes; the shopkeeper pocketed them, and held up the bottle of
tsipouro
, but the hermit shook his head.

‘Will you cut me some cheese?' he asked. ‘And I'll take some ham.'

The shopkeeper moved to the fridge, and loaded a block of smoked cheese on to the slicer. As he cut, he glanced covertly at the hermit, who was selecting ground coffee and canned milk from the shelves.

‘You been far, then?' asked the shopkeeper, with apparent disinterest, as he wrapped the sliced cheese in waxed paper.

‘A fair way,' answered the hermit. ‘I'll take a kilo of sugar, whilst I'm here.'

‘Family, was it?' asked the shopkeeper, fastening the parcel with an elastic band.

The hermit turned from the shelves.

‘Business,' he said. ‘Have you heard the forecast?'

The shopkeeper sucked in his breath, and as he replaced the cheese with a leg of ham, he shook his head.

‘Not good, not good at all,' he said. ‘They say there's been more snow, to the north. No danger to us, this far south, thanks be to God. But they say there'll be storms blowing through, the next couple of days. You'll have to wait it out, hermit; you'll have to stay here with us, until it passes.'

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