Read The Whispers of Nemesis Online
Authors: Anne Zouroudi
âBut there must be no question of public transport!' said the flustered Dean. âWe shall arrange something for you, of course! If you will give me a few minutes . . .'
âMight I offer?' asked the secretary, looking up shyly from the coins she was stacking in careful piles. âWherever you're going, it would be an honour for me to drive you.'
Responding to discomfort â the rhythmic and persistent stabbing of an object in his lower back â the man unwillingly came to, and waved his hand weakly towards the prodding, which stopped, but too late to avoid the return of consciousness; and consciousness brought awareness of urgent nausea (which he swallowed down as best he might), of severe headache and of a mouth so dry, his tongue stuck to his mouth-roof, and produced a strange, crackling sensation as he peeled it free. There was a bad smell around him, a reminder of his grandfather in his incontinent dotage.
Nausea, and headache: he closed his eyes against them, but as soon as he did so, the stabbing came again.
He opened one eye on a familiar vista â the rose-patterned fabric of his daughter's sofa. He could make out the roses clearly, and so concluded it must be day. Blinking both eyes open, he winced at the mid-morning light that filled the room, and turned his head from the sofa-back to find the source of his tormenting.
His young grandson stood beside him, earnest in his concern.
â
Pappou
.'
The man's nausea threatened eruption. The only cure was sleep.
âGo away, God damn it!' he shouted at the boy. âLeave a man to sleep, why can't you?'
Through the pounding of his head, the man heard small feet pad across the room, as far as the doorway. From there, the boy called out,
Mama, Mama
, and from the yard outside, his mother responded.
âWhat is it, Myles? I'm busy.'
âMama,
Pappou
's wet his trousers!'
The man opened his eyes, and sniffed. The bad smell, the old people's smell â was that him? In consternation, he put his hand under the blanket and touched his groin. The cloth of his trousers was damp.
He heard his daughter hurrying through the kitchen, and her instructions to the boy to go outside. The man pressed his face to the sofa-back. There were quick footsteps, and the blanket was ripped away.
âPapa! Papa! Get up!' She shook his shoulder. âFor God's sake, look at the state of you! Get up, get up now, and get out!'
Even through the haze of his hangover, the heat of her anger was disturbing. His headache was immediately worse.
âHush your noise, woman, and leave me be!' he demanded. âLet a man sleep!'
âLeave you be! To stink up my house, lying there in your own
piss
, like an animal! Get up, and get yourself cleaned up, whilst I see what I can do with this mess! And when you've cleaned yourself up, pack a bag. Enough, now! You can't stay here any more.'
He opened his eyes, and saw the roses on the sofa-back with fresh clarity.
âWhat do you mean?' He turned his head to look at her. She stood over him, hands on hips just like her mother, a tired, run-down woman, getting old before her time.
âYou have to go,' she said. âI can't cope with you any more. And Yiorgos won't allow you in the house, not after last night. You can't blame him, Papa. Not after what you did. And this . . .' She wafted a hand over the sofa, over him. âYou have to stop the drinking, Papa. Take yourself to a doctor, please! You're killing yourself! You must see that, surely?'
He pulled himself up to a sit and put his head in his hands, pitying himself his misery.
âWhat do you care?' he said. âA daughter who puts her own father on the street!'
âWhat can I do?' In exasperation, she spread her hands. âHow many chances have I given you? I love you, Papa, but you have to leave here, for a while. For everyone's sake â for Myles's sake. You frighten him when you get like that.'
âLike what?'
He looked up at her, blinking.
âLike last night. When you get violent.'
âViolent! I'm never violent!'
Tears grew in her eyes.
âHow can you
say
that, Papa? You hit Yiorgos! He's gone to work with a black eye!'
âThat faggot you married? He should stand up for himself! He's not much of a man to let an old man like me land one on him!'
âPapa, you woke the neighbours again, you woke Myles. You terrified him so badly, he was screaming! And when Yiorgos asked you to stop singing, you hit him in the face!'
The man laughed.
âDid I, by God?' He examined his knuckles, where there were grazes and the blue of bruises. âLooks like I got him good!'
âIt isn't funny, Papa. I'm sorry, but you have to go.'
The man shook his head.
âMy own daughter,' he said. âIt's a dark day, when it comes to this.'
Â
He put only necessities in his bag: clean underwear and socks, a change of shirts, what money was left under the mattress, a half-bottle of ouzo she hadn't managed to find. As he left the house, she cried, and tried to hug him.
He pushed her away.
âYou take care of yourself,' she said. âPlease, get some help. There are places where . . .'
âWhere what?'
She didn't go on, but pressed something into his hand: a piece of paper, folded over coins.
âTake this, and look after it. It's our phone number. I wrote it down. I know what your memory's like, these days. Call me when you get settled. And keep that money by; don't spend it. It's for the phone, for emergencies. And you'll let me know where you are, won't you? Papa?'
âAs if you cared,' he said, slamming the door.
The boy banged on the window, and waved goodbye.
His grandfather blew him a kiss, and walked away.
Â
He caught a bus as far as the port town, and found himself a bar where they bought him drinks, as long as he amused them with his ramblings. But when his ramblings turned to ranting, they threw him out; so he staggered along the waterfront, singing for his own amusement, and shouting to anyone who passed to come and drink with him.
At the last berth on the quay, a ferry was preparing to sail, the crewmen ready to cast off the heavy ropes which bound the vessel to the shore; and struck by a fancy to journey who-knew-where, alive with the thrill of adventure, he called out.
âWait for me!' he said, âI'm coming with you!'
âCome on, then, friend!' The crewmen laughed behind their hands, winking at each other. â
To malaka!
Come on, you'll make us late!'
He staggered up the ramp, and fell down amongst the cargo. The crew left him alone, and at the ports they called at through the night, still didn't wake him, but let him sleep, unconscious, until the first rays of a red sun lit the sky.
Â
As the same dawn broke over the university, the faculty secretary left the poet's hotel room. Hair dishevelled, her make-up left behind on the pillowcases, she made her way downstairs to the lobby with a new lilt to her hips, which the yawning night-porter appreciated, as he unlocked the front door to let her go.
Â
By the time Hassan reached home, that first light had touched the chicken coops and set the backyard roosters crowing.
He slipped off his down jacket, and laid his car keys on the table alongside the night's takings. In the children's room, the baby and his young son were both sleeping. Hassan stood a few moments over the cot, and leaned down to touch the soft, black curls on the baby's head.
But in the neighbouring bedroom, his wife was wide awake. Fully clothed, she lay rigid on the bed, her arms wrapped round herself against the chill.
âWhat's wrong?' he asked. âAre you all right?'
She turned to face him. Her usual smile of welcome wasn't there.
âHassan,' she said. âYou and I need to talk.'
Â
Another night, and far from the city and the university, cold rain was falling on the village of Vrisi. In the study of the old house, Santos Volakis sat alone in the candlelight, his chair drawn up close to the dying fire. The last glass from a bottle of indifferent wine stood beside him on the hearth; on his lap was a typewritten letter, signed in blue ink. He laid back his head and stared up at the lime-washed ceiling, where the oak beams were solid and straight, but the plaster was swollen with water damage and yellowed by smoke, and strands of broken cobwebs wafted in the draught from the hallway. The rugs on the stone-flagged floor were worn and faded; the shelves Santos's grandfather had made â where old calfskin-bound volumes of mythology, philosophy and biography stood beside modern works of poetry and fiction â were riddled with woodworm.
The poet's eyes stang with weariness and wine, and he rubbed at their lids as if his knuckles might soothe their redness. The candles had burned low, and he switched on a lamp to brighten the room. Taking up a ram's-head poker, he knocked a shroud of ash from the hot embers, and placed several small pine logs on the fire. New flames grew from the fresh fuel; when the blaze was at its height, he dropped the letter on to the fire, and watched the paper's centre char in a round of black, before flames caught its edges and consumed it.
He stood, and crossed to the window. Hands in pockets, for some minutes he looked out; but the lamplight and candlelight together showed him nothing but the sheen of wetness on the yard, and rain falling in silver needles from a sky where the stars were hidden by clouds.
The phone rang. The caller was persistent, but the poet seemed indifferent as the phone rang on, and on. When it at last fell silent, he returned to his chair, and drank down in two swallows the wine left in his glass. He held up the empty glass, twisting it to catch the firelight in the crystal's facets, until he held out his open hand and let the glass fall to the rug, where, dribbling its dregs, it rolled beneath his chair.
The phone rang again. From his chair, the poet watched it, until seeming to find resolve, he stood, and picked up the receiver; but before the caller could speak, the poet depressed the cradle and broke the connection. He lifted his fingers, and the dial tone buzzed in the earpiece.
He laid the receiver alongside the telephone.
As the small hours approached, the wind's force increased; sharp squalls bent the pine trees and smattered dead needles on the window, where rainwater held them fast. Troubled by his dreams, the poet drowsed uneasily in his chair, called back to wakefulness by the wraith's touch of a draught on his neck, or the rattle of a loose latch somewhere in the closed and sleeping house. One by one, the candles all went out.
In the hour before dawn, the headlamps of a car shone through the window. Outside, the driver cut his engine.
The poet blinked away sleep, and rose from his chair. In the chill of the hallway, he switched on no lights.
His suitcase was ready at the stair-foot. When he left, he closed the door behind him with no noise.
Sirens were wailing across the city; the cold wind carried smoke and fragile fragments of charred ash. On the roof terrace, summer's chairs were piled up and bound together with rope; all but one of the folded tables were stacked and secured in chains. As Attis Danas climbed the stone steps to the terrace, his view was of the city's geography painted in lights: an arc of streetlamps marking the curving shoreline, with the sea black behind; drifts of house-lights making bright the eastern and western suburbs; and to the north, amongst the foothills, scattered lights reaching up to the famed church of Ayia Triander, high on its floodlit rock. At the head of the stairs, the savour of seared meat from the taverna's charcoal grill was displaced by the smell of burning, and the diners' chatter below gave way to tourist music, piped through speakers strung from the spindly cordons of a winter-naked vine.
At the terrace corner, overlooking the intersection, a single table held a wine bottle and a flickering candle burning in an amber tumbler. Leaning on the terrace wall, looking down on to the street below, a man swilled burgundy wine in his glass and sniffed at its bouquet.
â
Kyrie
Yorgas Sarris, if I'm not mistaken,' said Attis, with mock formality.
The man turned, and gave him the warmest of smiles.
âAttis! How are you,
pedi mou
, how are you?'
With clasped hands and back-slapping, the men embraced; as they broke away from each other, Yorgas ran his amused eyes over Attis, and raised his eyebrows in exaggerated admiration of Attis's clothes.
âLook at you,' he said, âthe man-about-town. And what have you done to your hair? You dog! Have you been dyeing it?'
âDon't be ridiculous,' said Attis. âI make an effort, at least.'