Liz was reading the book that I had dropped in the sea
earlier today, Britte was cleaning the bedroom, Patrick was tying the yellow
down with cable-ties and Louie Louie was licking his balls whist the sea kept gently
moving in and the sun hid up behind the clouds. I hid nothing but carbon copies
of your fingers, which I kept in the pockets of my shorts for rainy days.
The sun tucked all of winter’s cruels away and to bed and I
forgot how cold I had been in that old dark house. At 6 o’clock, when I had lay
down to rest off yesterday’s excess, I remembered the name of the man whose lips
I had met last night. Two kisses and many words had passed between us and off
into the night. Now I could not say exactly of what we had spoken so intently,
but I know that we both had broken hearts and that we tried to kiss them away
knowing that really, it was as futile as you and I. He had been in the army and
now he was thinking of what to do next. He said he would stay here forever, on
this island and be content, and I would go back to my island and continue our
tug-of-war over my heart. The sun would not be so brilliant, but you would be,
and the insects were smaller and you would be my fly net on the days that you
were spare.
You could hear the goats in amongst the dry trees, their
little bells clunking whilst they meandered along. When we had walked up into
the hills into a little village, we had gone into the old man’s shop to buy
water and small timid cats with patchy fur had played outside the door. Another
old man sat in the shop drinking lemonade and watching the television. Everyone
was friendly and most people smiled, but not as much as we did because we were
lazy to the core and we were getting fat.
Lots of people rode mopeds and as they rode, they talked.
They rode side by side so they could talk as they went, they said “hello” as
they passed and some of the boys whistled you on the way by. I saw a young boy
of twelve or thirteen riding, his dad on the back, a big proud grin, so big it
covered both of their faces. No one wore helmets, not even the children. Billy
rode drunk last night and I had told him off but Patrick said there were no
rules, or not any that people took any notice of, anyway. Patrick had been out
drinking until 1 o’clock this morning and when Liz had asked if he had
driven-drunk he said “no,” but did a little smile and turned his face away
towards the sea. A man at the bar in a crumpled cream linen suit had come up to
me and said, “You are beautiful,” then stumbled his way diagonally out of the
door and sped off into the night on his moped. A compliment is still a
compliment, even from a drunk. “Is it?” said Elizabeth, laughing to her wine.
The bugs strolled along window, the cats strolled
nonchalantly by our table and we strolled lazy through the days. The only thing
that was busy was the wind, and even that was kind.
Britte was a good cleaner but a better talker. If she
cleaned as much as she talked, we’d all slip off the floors and into the sea. I
like Britte very much. She likes animals and people who have learning
disabilities. She said the world would be a better place if everybody were dogs
or learning disabled. That way, she said, there would be no more wars. She said
the dog followed her all over the island and introduced Louie Louie to us as
her boyfriend. She said he could run miles, no problem. I liked that they named
him twice. If I get a dog I’ll name it twice or give it its own surname for
grandeur.
We slept for four hours then we went to meet Georgos to get
the boat. We could not believe that anyone would give us their boat to use by
ourselves, especially as we were most likely still drunk from the night before.
We found a little beach that you could not reach by land and tied the boat
around a rock and went for a swim. It was noon and the hottest part of the day.
Liz opened the bottle of wine and we drove back around the little bays, the clouds
falling behind in our wake.
Up on the mountainside we saw stone steps that were worn
smooth with four thousand years of footsteps. We took our footsteps carefully
on flip-flopped feet with goosebumps on our shoulders.
Patrick was just passing
us, driving home from the shops but took us took Bruno’s house. Bruno was an
Italian artist who had thick white hair and a white moustache which was stained
yellow where the cigarettes hung. He spoke Italian and Patrick who was South
African spoke in Italian, while Pierre, who was French but lived in Geneva as
an English-French translator, tried Italian and the French doctor spoke English
whilst one of the English girls understood Italian and the other understood a
little French but we all got by apart from the dog who only barked at ankles.
Bruno had painted frescoes on the walls of the old church.
It was a white-washed stone building with a little bell on the top. Bruno had
painted a picture of the forty saints who had been put to death. He had painted
one saint to look exactly like him. In his house was a painting of a nude
with her tongue sticking out suggestively. I looked for her but the forty
saints were all men. I suspected Bruno was no saint.
On the alter were many candles in elaborate golden holders
and above them, right in the middle, hung a wire with an energy-saving light
bulb dangling on the end. Perhaps God and the gold did not shine brightly enough.
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