Read Songs of Blue and Gold Online
Authors: Deborah Lawrenson
The nineteen sixties, the photographs had probably been taken, Bill had said. The biography certainly placed Adie on Corfu at various times from the mid-thirties right up to the seventies. So it was possible, but no more than that. It was as though their connection really had been forgotten, excised from both lives.
Although, had Elizabeth really never mentioned Julian Adie before? Melissa's initial reaction was to be sure she had not, but had she simply never heard her, switching off from the flow because she thought she knew all the stories of her mother's life? So why then, when Elizabeth was only so intermittently lucid, when she seemed barely to know who Melissa was, let alone anyone else, did she press the book of poems on her so urgently?
Why was this so important? What was Elizabeth's connection with Julian Adie and what was Melissa supposed to do with it if she found it? How did Elizabeth fit into his story? So far it was all impressions and conjecture. She needed to clear it all from her mind, in the only way she knew, before it overwhelmed her.
Melissa opened the new notebook she had brought, and started to write.
THE SEA AND
the light constantly moving together, interweaving and patterning, made Melissa aware of being alive, of blood coursing around the body, sun on her arms as she stood at the open window. It had been a good night; she had only woken twice. There seemed to be a slight easing of the spiritual numbness which had become habitual.
Perhaps putting her thoughts down on paper had helped. That had preserved them but put a stop to their noise in her mind.
She was at the tourist office when it opened at nine.
âDo you have a detailed map of this area?' she asked the man at the desk. He was dark, with well-muscled shoulders and a four-day beard which did nothing to diminish his good looks.
âA map of the island?'
âJust this part. I'd like as many details as possible. The biggest scale you have.'
He came round to the front of the desk, and led her past stands of hanging shell and bead necklaces and displays of snorkelling equipment. The way he moved implied he was
well used to being cock of the walk. He pulled a couple of maps off a book rack. âWe have these. The whole island â we don't have a special one for here.'
âCan I see inside?'
He opened both. They were road maps, showing few landmarks smaller than mountains.
âDo you have a walking map?'
He shook his head. âI'm sorry, no. We've sold them all.'
âAnd you won't get any more now until next year?' she guessed.
âThat's right.'
âOh, well.'
She hesitated, wondering whether it was worth asking him about Julian Adie. He waited, seemingly amused that she was lingering â or perhaps he was just pleased with himself.
âYes?'
Something around his mouth reminded her of Richard, and she felt herself blushing.
âI â I think I'll take one of these.' She pulled out a snorkel mask.
âAnything else?'
Don't push it. âJust this, thank you.'
But as she turned to go, she reminded herself she had nothing to lose. If she couldn't find the path to the shrine, the only option was to follow Adie and Grace, and go by sea.
âAre there any boat trips still running?' she asked. She had a vision in her mind of an organised day long sail and picnic that might go somewhere close.
He shook his head. âNot now. It is too late.' He gave a lovely smile. âSorry.'
âOh, well. It was worth asking.'
âIt's always worth asking.' He paused. âPossibly there are a few boats coming north from Kerkyra.'
âI'm sorry?'
âKerkyra â from Corfu Town. You could maybe take a trip from there. They bring bigger boats for tours of the coast. I can find out if you are interested.'
âI could . . . but . . .' The idea didn't appeal. If all else failed, then perhaps she might, but it seemed unlikely she would be able to see anything she wanted from a boat carrying a hundred or so tourists, far less achieve what she really wanted, which was to climb on to the rocks by the shrine as Adie and Grace once did.
He thought for a moment. âYou know the boat hire office near the White House?'
âYes.'
âWhy don't you ask for your own boat?'
âI'd thought of that â but . . . I decided not to.'
âYou don't like little boats?'
âWell . . .' She gave what she hoped was a wry smile. âI'm not an experienced sailor.'
âNervous?'
âA bit.'
âGo and see. Ask for Manolis. Tell him Christos sent you.'
âAll roads lead to Manolis . . .!'
âYou know him already?'
âI'm renting one of his apartments.'
âThen ask him â he might give you a special deal.'
Melissa thought about it, but then when she reached the boat hire office, she went on past. She was going to have to work up some confidence for that one. Instead she returned to the wide swimming rock on the curve of the next bay, and
tried out the new snorkel. It leaked a bit (it was really nothing more than a cheap toy) but it was certainly usable if you could get used to the invasive trickle of thick salty water.
In the clear shallows, the seal-brown boulders which had broken away from the cliffs were covered in algae like a dusting of mauve chalk. Brightly coloured fish darted over part of an ammonite the size of a car wheel and off into forests of black sea grass in the bowl of the bay.
She swam around, entranced, for almost an hour, amazed that the water was so warm. Then, just as Adie described in the poem titled âPlunge', dated 1937, she surfaced to birdsong.
Sun-dazed, Melissa made her way back into the village. She had left her watch behind that morning, deliberately wanting to cut loose. But from the tightness and reddening of her skin, she knew she must have sat for hours on the rock, staring at the sea.
A white pick-up van pulled up in front of her, just where the lane became a path too narrow for vehicles. The driver executed a dazzling three-point turn in front of her, then stopped, calling out. Melissa ignored him and carried on walking.
He shouted again before she registered what it was he was saying, and that he knew who she was. âMrs Quiller?'
It was only then she looked up properly and saw it was Manolis.
âI hear you want a boat! Why do you not come first to me?'
âOh!' It was as if she'd been caught out.
âChristos says you were asking about boats!'
âYes . . . yes I was, at the tourist office . . .'
âMany fine boats at Manolis Boat Hire,' he laughed.
âI'm sure there are,' she said. âBut they probably don't come equipped with someone who knows how to drive it.'
He spread his palms. âIs easy! Easy boats for tourists . . . I give a lesson to everyone who takes one!'
Melissa was beginning to shake her head, knowing that would make little difference to her confidence or seaworthiness, when she found herself saying, âAll right then. I'll give it a go.'
The hills opposite were rusting in early evening when she took a wobbly step on to the boat, a basic fibreglass craft about ten feet long with a steering wheel and outboard motor. She had never thought of herself as a brave person physically, but she had a stubborn streak that could be called on to override her qualms if she wanted something badly enough. Sometimes that surprised people who saw her only as the quiet, thoughtful one who loved maps and books, and worked as a keeper of secrets, locking away information in order for it to be found again.
Richard saw her as his sweet, sensible little wife, who was happy to fall in with his plans; who had once wanted to move to Dorset to take up the job at the maritime museum and live in a house with a garden, but who made do with growing herbs on a grimy kitchen windowsill instead; who enjoyed a comfortable life that gave her no right to complain when he worked late so many nights.
What would he think if he could see me now?
She lurched into Manolis's boat. It rocked alarmingly.
âYou can drive a car?' he asked.
âYes.' Her legs were trembling.
âThen . . . no problem. First, the ignition.' He pushed a button and the engine gurgled to life. âThis here . . . neutral . . . forward . . . back . . .' He went through the controls. âNow, we go one hundred metres forward â you are driving.'
And soon, she was.
Out on the wind-wrinkled sea, Albania was merely the other side of a large lake. Heading south, she held a steady speed, not too fast, as Manolis had advised. Within minutes, confidence rising, she was round the headland and across the bay where she had snorkelled (it was called Yaliscary, Manolis informed her), then puttering past Agni and the cliffs where she had looked in vain for the path going down. If it hadn't been for the mention in the guidebook, it would have been all too easy to believe the shrine was another of Julian Adie's personal myths. Would she be able to see it, even from the sea?
It was there.
A small square grey-rendered building was perched just above the shoreline. Just as he described it, the shrine seemed to sail on the crest of storm-flung waves, tossed up on the very edge of the island, the moment frozen in stone when it was caught between a sweeping bowl of fractured rock and taller stacks which leant away at a mad tipsy angle. Proud straight cypresses stood watch above, while a curious light turquoise pool glowed below. She nudged the boat in as close as she could, worried all the time that it might snag on submerged rocks if she ignored Manolis's warnings.
There was no one else in sight, neither on land nor sea. She was as close as she would ever be to seeing it as Adie and Grace
would have done in the nineteen thirties, before the Ionian was churned by pleasure craft full of brightly dressed tourists.
She gazed at the narrow chamber of water that gleamed below the drunken fissures and the shrine. Was that the pool where he described her diving for cherries? It must have been, though the rocks looked too jagged and hard to lie down or even stand on. It was an odd moment, entrancing yet unsettling. There were elements of obsession here. Or should that be possession, by the spirits of the past?
Her trial hour with the boat was up. On the way back she was glowing deep inside. It was hard to explain. She had done it, though it was such a little thing. There was definitely a sense that she had conquered some fear, perhaps that of taking a risk on her own.
But I am on my own. This is it, from now on.
From her shifted perspective, as she guided the boat back into Kalami the bay was a wider expanse, the village sparser and more vulnerable in contrast to the looming rise of the green mountain behind.
Manolis was waiting. She cut the engine as he had shown her when she approached the mooring, let down the anchor, then threw the rope for him to catch. He caught it with one hand and reached out the other to help her on to the landing.
âHow was that â good?'
âFantastic!'
âI said it was easy.'
âWell . . . good boat, good teacher!' She was full of her achievement.
A few waves away were the rocks where Adie and Grace had sat and talked and gazed and swum, where they had laughed and argued on summer nights with literary friends from London and Paris, splashing into silver and eating grapes at midnight.
âWho owns the White House now?' Melissa asked.
He gave his look of slightly absurd surprise. âWe do. We've always owned it.'
âYou mean your family rented it to Julian Adie?'
âOf course.'
She was taken aback by the simplicity of the facts.
âI don't suppose . . . does anyone still remember when he lived here?'
âMy father was a boy when Julian Adie lived here, but he remembers him well.'
âDid he come back to Kalami, after he had moved away?'
âYes, many times.'
Melissa's heart jumped.
Was it possible that he had ever brought Elizabeth here too? âDo you think I might be able to talk to your father about him sometime?'
âYou like the books?'
âI do.'
Was any further explanation going to be required? It seemed not.
âI will tell him,' said Manolis.
Manolis, kindness pleating the corners of his eyes as he smiled, was slotting a note under the door to her apartment when Melissa returned with breakfast the next morning.
âAh! Mrs Quiller! A little invitation for you â'
She smiled warily, suspecting some kind of special tourist deal on a boat, an ever-so-gentle hard sell. âThanks.'
âMy mother says it is the perfect time for you to come, so you must! She is the wise woman of the village!' He laughed, wagging a finger to suggest that she should take him up on whatever offer was being made. âShe says she can tell you like tea, and not the cocktail drinks in the colours of the rainbow!'
âRight . . .'
He gestured at the door with an open palm, so Melissa put the key in the lock and opened it. On the floor was a folded piece of paper, which read:
We hope you can come to tea at the house called Seraphina on the hill behind the boat office at five o'clock today. Manos and Ekaterina Kiotzas.
âYou can ask them about Julian Adie,' said Manolis.
âThat's lovely! Thank you so much . . . will you thank them, and say yes, please!' She was burbling, she knew, embarrassed by her ungracious misreading of the situation.
He nodded. âI'll tell them you are coming.'
It was warm enough, if wrapped up, to lie reading on the egg-shaped stones of Kalami beach. There were few other people on its wide crescent that morning. None of them braved the sea. A stiff wind had brewed up a few grey clouds to which were thrown upward, indignant glances.
At lunchtime Melissa wondered about trying to find the shrine path again after trying one of the three promising-looking tavernas at Agni, but in the end she packed up her
bag and wandered in the other direction. The road rose up over the northern headland, and swiftly dipped down again to Kouloura.