Read No Sharks in the Med and Other Stories Online
Authors: Brian Lumley
Tags: #Brian Lumley, #horror, #dark fiction, #Lovecraft, #science fiction, #short stories
“But the next night she did!” George enthused.
“And then they ran off,” said Petula, brightly. “Eloped! As simple as that. We saw them once, on the beach, the next morning. Following which—”
“—Gone!” said George.
“Maybe their holidays were over and they just went home,” said Gwen, reasonably.
“No,” George shook his head. “Gordon had come out on our plane, his holiday was just starting. She’d been here about a week and a half, was due to fly out the day after they made off together.”
“They paid for their holidays and then deserted them?” Geoff frowned. “Doesn’t make any sense.”
“Does anything, when you’re in love?” Petula sighed.
“The way I see it,” said George, “they fell in love with each other, and with Greece, and went off to explore all the options.”
“Love?” Gwen was doubtful. “On the rebound?”
“If she’d been a mousey little thing, I’d quite agree,” said Petula. “But no, she really was a beautiful girl.”
“And him a nice lad,” said George. “A bit sparse but clean, good-looking.”
“Indeed, they were much like you two,” his wife added. “I mean, not
like
you, but like you.”
“Cheers,” said Geoff, wryly. “I mean, I know I’m not Mr Universe, but—”
“Tight in the bottom!” said Petula. “That’s what the girls like these days. You’ll do all right.”
“See,” said Gwen, nudging him. “Told you so!”
But Geoff was still frowning. “Didn’t anyone look for them? What if they’d been involved in an accident or something?”
“No,” said Petula. “They were seen boarding a ferry in the main town. Indeed, one of the local taxi drivers took them there. Spiros.”
Gwen and Geoff’s turn to look at each other. “A strange fish, that one,” said Geoff.
George shrugged. “Oh, I don’t know. You know him, do you? It’s that eye of his which makes him seem a bit sinister…”
Maybe he’s right
, Geoff thought.
Shortly after that, their drinks finished, they went off to start their explorations…
The village was a maze of cobbled, white-washed alleys. Even as tiny as it was you could get lost in it, but never for longer than the length of a street. Going downhill, no matter the direction, you’d come to the sea. Uphill you’d come to the main road, or if you didn’t, then turn the next corner and
continue
uphill, and then you would. The most well-trodden alley, with the shiniest cobbles, was the one that led to the hard-packed path, which in turn led to the beach. Pass the ‘booze shop’ on the corner twice, and you’d know where it was always. The window was plastered with labels, some familiar and others entirely conjectural; inside, steel shelving went floor to ceiling, stacked with every conceivable brand; even the more exotic and (back home) wildly expensive stuffs were on view, often in ridiculously cheap, three-litre, duty-free bottles with their own chrome taps and display stands.
“Courvoisier!” said Gwen, appreciatively.
“Grand Marnier, surely!” Geoff protested. “What, five pints of Grand Marnier? At that price? Can you believe it? But that’s to take home. What about while we’re here?”
“Coconut liqueur,” she said. “Or better still, mint chocolate—to compliment our midnight coffees.”
They found several small tavernas, too, with people seated outdoors at tiny tables under the vines. Chicken portions and slabs of lamb sputtering on spits; small fishes sizzling over charcoal;
moussaka
steaming in long trays…
Dimi’s was down on the harbour, where a wide, low wall kept you safe from falling in the sea. They had a Greek salad which they divided two ways, tiny cubes of lamb roasted on wooden slivers, a half-bottle of local white wine costing pennies. As they ate and sipped the wine, so they began to relax; the hot sunlight was tempered by an almost imperceptible breeze off the sea.
Geoff said: “Do you really feel energetic? Damned if I do.”
She didn’t feel full of boundless energy, no, but she wasn’t going down without a fight. “If it was up to you,” she said, “we’d just sit here and watch the fishing nets dry, right?”
“Nothing wrong with taking it easy,” he answered. “We’re on holiday, remember?”
“Your idea of taking it easy means being bone idle!” she answered. “
I
say we’re going for a dip, then back to the villa for siesta and you know, and—”
“Can we have the you know before the siesta?” He kept a straight face.
“—And then we’ll be all settled in, recovered from the journey, ready for tonight. Insatiable!”
“OK,” he shrugged. “Anything you say. But we swim from the beach, not from the rocks.”
Gwen looked at him suspiciously. “That was almost too easy.”
Now he grinned. “It was the thought of, well, you know, that did it,” he told her…
Lying on the beach, panting from their exertions in the sea, with the sun lifting the moisture off their still-pale bodies, Gwen said: “I don’t understand.”
“Hmm?”
“You swim very well. I’ve always thought so. So what is this fear of the water you complain about?”
“First,” Geoff answered, “I don’t swim very well. Oh, for a hundred yards I’ll swim like a dolphin—any more than that and I do it like a brick! I can’t float. If I stop swimming I sink.”
“So don’t stop.”
“When you get tired, you stop.”
“What was it that made you frightened of the water?”
He told her:
“I was a kid in Cyprus. A little kid. My father had taught me how to swim. I used to watch him diving off the rocks, oh, maybe twenty or thirty feet high, into the sea. I thought I could do it, too. So one day when my folks weren’t watching, I tried. I must have hit my head on something on the way down. Or maybe I simply struck the water all wrong. When they spotted me floating in the sea, I was just about done for. My father dragged me out. He was a medic—the kiss of life and all that. So now I’m not much for swimming, and I’m absolutely
nothing
for diving! I will swim—for a splash, in shallow water, like today—but that’s my limit. And I’ll only go in from a beach. I can’t stand cliffs, height. It’s as simple as that. You married a coward. So there.”
“No I didn’t,” she said. “I married someone with a great bottom. Why didn’t you tell me all this before?”
“You didn’t ask me. I don’t like to talk about it because I don’t much care to remember it. I was just a kid, and yet I knew I was going to die. And I knew it wouldn’t be nice. I still haven’t got it out of my system, not completely. And so the less said about it the better.”
A beach ball landed close by, bounced, rolled to a standstill against Gwen’s thigh. They looked up. A brown, burly figure came striding. They recognized the frayed, bulging shorts. Spiros.
“Hallo,” he said, going down into a crouch close by, forearms resting on his knees. “Thee beach. Thee ball. I swim, play. You swim?” (This to Geoff.)“You come swim, throwing thee ball?”
Geoff sat up. There were half-a-dozen other couples on the beach; why couldn’t this jerk pick on them? Geoff thought to himself:
I’m about to get sand kicked in my face!
“No,” he said out loud, shaking his head. “I don’t swim much.”
“No swim? You frighting thee big fish? Thee sharks?”
“Sharks?” Now Gwen sat up. From behind their dark lenses she could feel Spiros’s eyes crawling over her.
Geoff shook his head. “There are no sharks in the Med,” he said.
“Him right,” Spiros laughed high-pitched, like a woman, without his customary gurgling. A weird sound. “No sharks. I make thee jokes!” He stopped laughing and looked straight at Gwen. She couldn’t decide if he was looking at her face or her breasts. Those damned sunglasses of his! “You come swim, lady, with Spiros? Play in thee water?”
“My…
God
!” Gwen sputtered, glowering at him. She pulled her dress on over her still-damp, very skimpy swimming costume, packed her towel away, picked up her sandals. When she was annoyed, she really
was
annoyed.
Geoff stood up as she made off, turned to Spiros. “Now listen—” he began.
“Ah, you go now! Is OK. I see you.” He took his ball, raced with it down the beach, hurled it out over the sea. Before it splashed down he was diving, low and flat, striking the water like a knife. Unlike Geoff, he swam very well indeed…
When Geoff caught up with his wife she was stiff with anger. Mainly angry with herself. “That was
so
rude of me!” she exploded.
“No it wasn’t,” he said. “I feel exactly the same about it.”
“But he’s so damned…persistent! I mean, he knows we’re together, man and wife…‘thee bed—just one.’ How
dare
he intrude?”
Geoff tried to make light of it. “You’re imagining it,” he said.
“And you? Doesn’t he get on your nerves?”
“Maybe I’m imagining it too. Look, he’s Greek—and not an especially attractive specimen. Look at it from his point of view. All of a sudden there’s a gaggle of dolly-birds on the beach, dressed in stuff his sister wouldn’t wear for undies! So he tries to get closer—for a better view, as it were—so that he can get a wall-eyeful. He’s no different to other blokes. Not quite as smooth, that’s all.”
“Smooth!” she almost spat the word out. “He’s about as smooth as a badger’s—”
“—Bottom,” said Geoff. “Yes, I know. If I’d known you were such a bum-fancier I mightn’t have married you.”
And at last she laughed, but shakily.
They stopped at the booze shop and bought brandy and a large bottle of Coca-Cola. And mint chocolate liqueur, of course, for their midnight coffees…
That night Gwen put on a blue and white dress, very Greek if cut a little low in the front, and silver sandals. Tucking a handkerchief into the breast pocket of his white jacket, Geoff thought:
she’s beautiful!
With her heart-shaped face and the way her hair framed it, cut in a page-boy style that suited its shiny black sheen—and her green, green eyes—he’d always thought she looked French. But tonight she was definitely Greek. And he was so glad that she was English, and his.
Dimi’s was doing a roaring trade. George and Petula had a table in the corner, overlooking the sea. They had spread themselves out in order to occupy all four seats, but when Geoff and Gwen appeared they waved, called them over. “We thought you’d drop in,” George said, as they sat down. And to Gwen: “You look charming, my dear.”