Authors: Sara Craven,Chieko Hara
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
were whisked through with just the briefest formalities. Retrieving
their luggage took only a little longer.
Harriet was glad Manda had persuaded her to blow her savings on
some new lightweight cases, and some new clothes with which to fill
them. At least she wasn't arriving like the poor relation. But she had
been scrupulous about spending the incredible sum of money which
Alex had advanced her through Mr Philippides on Nicky alone, and
she had managed to equip him fully without spending even a quarter
of it.
Maflda had gone shopping with her for her own things, and Harriet
knew wryly that she would not have bought half the things folded in
layers of tissue in her case without her prompting.
'Beach things,' Manda had decreed. 'And not those ghastly regulation
things,' she had added in horror as Harriet had begun to look through
a rack of one-pieces.
'You're going to Corfu, for God's sake, not entering for the school
swimming gala! You need bikinis—and some of those lovely skirts
and shirts to match.'
Harriet's protests that she wasn't going to Corfu for a holiday were
brushed aside as irrelevant.
'Even if you're shut up in some nursery with Nicky all day long,
there'll be these trips that were mentioned. You can't cruise round the
isles of Greece in your office gear. You'll need shorts and tops—and
some of those white cotton jeans,' Manda decreed inexorably.
However much she had demurred at the time, and whatever limits her
bank balance had sunk to, Harriet was glad she had taken Manda's
advice, and was not facing the prospect of confronting the formidable
Marcos clan in last year's summer dresses. The outfit she had worn to
travel was one of her favourites—a smoothly flared skirt in a
cream-coloured silky fabric, with a matching sleeveless top with the
low neckline and armholes bound in a contrasting blue. The same
blue edged cuffs and collarless neck of the long-sleeved jacket which
she had already discarded and was carrying over her arm. She hoped
she looked cooler and more composed than she felt.
She heard Mr Philippides greet someone and turned slowly, her heart
thumping, to find she was confronting the man who had driven Alex's
car in London. He was grinning broadly and scooping their cases up
as if they were stuffed with thistledown, as he led the way to the exit.
Nicky ran ahead with Mr Philippides, but Harriet hung back, panic
chilling her, closing her throat. She tried to tell herself that it was
natural that a car should haye been sent for them, it was only common
courtesy. It did not—would not mean that anyone else was waiting
too.
But he was there. The area in front of the airport was a hive of
activity, but she saw him at once through the moving, talking hordes
of people. Her eyes sought him as if they were magnetised. He was
wearing dark glasses so she couldn't be sure whether or not he was
aware of her presence or not, but he couldn't be unaware of Nicky.
People turned smiling indulgently as the child squealed and ran full
tilt towards the tall man waiting by the car. Alex bent, lifting him,
swinging him off his feet while Nicky squealed again with delight.
Harriet's feet felt like -lead. She watched Mr Philippides reach them,
observed them shake hands. Her own hand felt damp and clammy and
she wiped it unobtrusively down the side of her skirt as she walked up
to the little group.
'Welcome to Corfu, Harriet.' His voice was formal, and so was the
smile which accompanied the words. Any expression in his eyes was
hidden by his glasses. 'Did you have a good journey?'
She said faintly, 'Yes, thank you.'
'I hope the remainder of it will be as pleasant. We have to cross the
island to reach my home.'
Harriet silently took her place in the back of the car, where Alex
joined her with Nicky, and Mr Philippides sat in front with the driver.
It wasn't the sort of limousine he had used in London, but a low-slung
sports-type saloon. As they threaded their way through the traffic
away from the airport, Harriet wondered if it ever got a chance to
demonstrate its full power on the crowded island roads. Glancing
around her as they drove, she thought she'd never seen as many
mopeds and scooters in her life, most of them carrying two laughing
if not very stable passengers. They were all so brown and apparently
carefree, she thought rather wistfully, considering the pallor of her
own skin, and she wished she was one of them, just another
anonymous "tourist with a hotel room and a budget.
She leaned back with a little sigh, stretching her legs out gratefully in
front of her. The plane had been comfortable but confining, she
thought, lifting a hand and rubbing the cramped muscles in her neck.
Aware of a movement beside her, she turned her head slightly and
realised Alex was looking at her, at the thrust of her breasts against
the silky top which her own action had revealed. Embarrassed, she
straightened almost violently tugging, as she did so, at her skirt which
had ridden up slightly over her knees. Alex made no comment, but
the lines beside his mouth deepened sardonically before he turned
away, giving his attention once more to Nicky, who was bombarding
him with not always intelligible questions and comments.
Harriet gazed determinedly out of her own window, struggling for
control of her hurried breathing. Then gradually the sights and scents
and sounds outside the car began to invade her consciousness like a
healing balm, and she started to relax. She could understand now why
some of the girls she worked with scrimped and saved all year for
their few weeks in the sun. It was all so incredibly, exotically
different. Heat, she had expected, and dust and rocks, but she hadn't
bargained for the frantic beauty of the flowering shrubs, pouring over
every garden wall and terrace.
Everywhere she looked there was colour, and even the sheltering
greenery had a more vibrant glow. The car turned a corner, and she
saw watermelons like great green globes, piled high at the side of the
road. For a moment she imagined she could smell them, their clean
fragrance invading the overriding smells of exhaust fumes and suntan
oil which the faint breeze brought dizzyingly through the open
window.
No one actually seemed to be doing any actual construction work, but
there were half-built houses everywhere, sometimes only a single
storey high, the exposed girders and rods giving them a vulnerable
almost skeletal look.
Feeling pressure against her, she looked down and saw that Nicky
was drooping wearily, struggling to keep his eyes open, and gently
she adjusted her position so that he could slide down putting his head
on her lap. She hoped he would sleep, if the car journey was going to
be a long one as she suspected it might be. She didn't want his arrival
at the Marcos' home to be marred by the kind of tantrum that tiredness
and over-excitement often inspired at his age.
Alex and Philippides were conversing softly in Greek, and half her
mind registered the unfamiliarity of the liquid cadences as she
watched the passing landscape.
The car was climbing now, the tavernas and the souvenir shops left
behind, and Harriet was looking at dark pools of olive groves in the
sharp decline of the valley beside the road. The air was clearer as they
got higher and the breeze held a hint of citrus. The road twisted and
almost turned back on itself as it fought the bleak terrain of the
hillside, and Harriet found herself trying not to care that the driver
hadn't slackened his pace at all, and very much trying not to notice
how stark the drop was becoming only a few inches from their
wheels.
Alex said, 'Relax—Stavros knows this road well.'
She jumped slightly, because she hadn't realised her tension was so
obvious.
She said stiffly, 'Well, let's hope anyone coming in the other direction
is equally well acquainted,' and heard him laugh softly.
'Concentrate on the view,' he advised mockingly.
His advice was worth taking. The hills ahead were grey and purple
against the unbroken blue of the sky, and deep shadows mottled the
valleys. Among the groves, she saw scattered houses with patches of
cultivations like wounds in the thrusting vegetation. Donkeys waited
in the shade, and tethered goats nibbled voraciously, lifting restless
inquisitive heads to stare as the car went by. The blare and bustle of
Corfu town behind them seemed a million miles away.
'And not a tourist in sight,' Harriet said, half to herself.
'Oh, they come here,' he said. 'But generally they're just passing
through to reach Paleo. This is one of the routes.' He saw her puzzled
look and explained, 'Paleocastritsa—it's a holiday resort now, but it is
still very beautiful. There is a monastery there too, which people like
to visit, with some famous icons.'
"Is it near your house?'
He shook his head. 'I live further along the coast—in a comparatively
secluded area,' he added, slanting her an ironic smile.
'Naturally,' she returned with equal irony. 'Do you have your own
beach as well?'
'Of a kind—not very large and rather rocky.' He paused. 'The descent
to it through the gardens is very steep—a mixture of a path and steps.
Nicos must not go down there alone, and I have already given orders
that a gate must be fixed at the top and kept bolted all the time.'
'Does that mean he can never go down to the beach?' Harriet asked in
slight dismay.
'Of course he may, if properly supervised, and the same rule must also
apply to the swimming pool.' He shot her a lightning glance. 'Can you
swim?'
'Of course.'
'Well enough to teach Nicos?'
'I think so,' she said. 'I had planned to take him to the local baths at
home, anyway. They run mother and child classes... .' she paused,
flushing abruptly as she met his sardonic look.
'At least you have been spared that,' he murmured.
The car was slowing and turning off on to a side road which seemed
to Harriet barely wide enough to accommodate it. Citrus orchards
pressed on both sides, and the silver glint of olive trees reached across
the road in places. And ahead of her, suddenly, she could see the
turquoise opalescent gleam of the sea, and she caught her breath. No
matter what problems might confront her when she arrived at the
house, nothing could detract from the lush appeal of the island's
beauty.
The landscape was beginning to change too, cultivation giving way to
rioting shrubs, blazing in pinks and crimsons and purples, and as the
car wove its way down a steep and winding hill, Harriet saw the sun
glinting off a wide expanse of green-tiled roof.It was like an English
garden, only in vivid Technicolor, she thought, • looking at the
enormous brilliantly green lawns, all with their sprinklers working
energetically. The air was heavy suddenly with the scent of roses, and
there were beds of them stretching as far as the eye could see, each
bush and tree almost bowed down with blossom, the vibrant colours
jostling for attention.
The villa itself was something of a surprise—not as palatial as Harriet
had vaguely imagined, but lower- built and more rambling, its
gleaming white walls hung with vines and creepers which wound
their way also round the elaborate wrought-iron of the first floor
balconies. In front of the big double doors, a fountain was playing—a
stone nymph smiling in remote mystery as she allowed the water to
cascade endlessly from the shell she held in her cupped hands.
Apart from the splash of the water, and the constant whirring of the
unseen cicadas, it was very still, and the warmth of the sun seemed
like a benison as it fell on Harriet's unprotected head.
She thought, 'How beautiful,' and tried to ignore the feeling of
apprehension that assailed her at the thought of what might await her
behind the cool privacy of those white walls.
She turned to get Nicky, but found Alex had forestalled her. He
already had the sleepy child in his arms, and was smiling down at him
as Nicky opened uncomprehending eyes and looked around.
The doors swung open, and Yannina appeared, beaming. 'Ah,
pedhi
mou!
' Alex swung Nicky to the ground, and he ran towards Yannina
with a chuckle of recognition.
Harriet tried to suppress the ignoble pang of jealousy deep within her.
She tried to tell herself robustly that it was all for the good, and that
the sooner Nicky settled in his new surroundings, the sooner she