The Whispers of Nemesis (32 page)

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Authors: Anne Zouroudi

BOOK: The Whispers of Nemesis
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The hermit frowned, puzzled both by the dog's behaviour and by the stranger's unusually smart dress.

‘
Chairete
,' said the fat man, in the most formal of greetings, as he grew close. He stopped in front of the hermit, laid his holdall on the ground and looked him somewhat rudely up and down, taking in his shabby clothes, his uncombed hair and half-grown beard, and scrutinising his face. ‘So you are Seftos's infamous hermit?'

‘What do you want?' asked the hermit. ‘This is private property.'

The fat man unzipped his holdall, and took from it a paperback book, which he laid on top of the bag.

‘Hermes Diaktoros, of Athens,' he said. ‘Forgive my intrusion, but I am looking, in the first instance, for an acquaintance of mine, a young lady named Leda. Is she, by any chance, here with you?'

‘I am.' Leda stepped out from behind the door, and stood at the hermit's shoulder. Over her own clothes, she wore a man's pullover, and her arms were wrapped around herself, against the cold; her eyes were red and swollen from recent crying.

‘What are you doing here?' she asked.

‘I have to admit,' said the fat man, ‘that I followed you from Vrisi.'

‘How could you have done? I would have seen you.'

‘You might easily have seen me, had I travelled on the same vessels as you; and if I am being pedantic, I should say I did, in fact, travel on those same vessels, but not at the same time. It is a sad fact,
kori mou
, that many things can be bought for money. It was a simple matter to buy the route of your journey from one of the sailors who crewed the boats.'

‘But why?' she asked. ‘Why on earth would you follow me?'

‘For your own sake. But the wind is cold out here, and you are not dressed for it. Is there a fire lit inside? Perhaps we should talk in there.'

The hermit held up his hand.

‘Forgive me,
kyrie
,' he said, ‘but I don't know you, and I'm not in the habit of welcoming strangers into my home. So state your business, and let's be done. Our grocer has a shop to run, and no matter how well you've paid him to be your taxi, I'm sure he's anxious to get home.'

‘You do not speak like an islander, my friend,' said the fat man. ‘Are you not a local man?'

‘I'm as local as the next man, these days. Now, what do you want?'

‘He's the investigator Attis Danas asked to look into my father's death,' said Leda, touching the sleeve of the hermit's dirty jacket. ‘Aren't you?'

‘I am indeed,' said the fat man. ‘Though as it turns out, that is not the mystery to hand. When we first met, Leda, I think we were both looking for something we had lost. What you had lost was never clear, but I had lost a ring, a gold ring. I asked you to look out for it on the road. Do you remember?'

Leda was silent.

‘I'm hoping that you do,' he went on, ‘because I have come, in part, to ask if you might have been lucky, and if you were, if you might return my property to me.'

From neck to brow, Leda blushed.

‘Speak up,' said the fat man, not unkindly. ‘Did you find it, or not? The ring is very precious to me, and I would like to have it back.'

‘I gave it away,' she said. ‘I didn't expect to see you again.'

‘Did you not?' asked the fat man, in apparent surprise. ‘But you knew how to find me; through Attis, it would have been a simple matter to return it. To whom, may I ask, did you give my property?'

The hermit glanced at Leda.

‘I think,' he said, ‘she gave it to me.' He held out his left hand. On the third finger was an antique ring, a band of old gold set with an unusual coin, stamped with a rising sun on one side, and a young man in profile on the other. ‘Is this it?'

The fat man smiled, broadly.

‘It is indeed,' he said. ‘If you would be so good as to return it, I would be grateful.'

The hermit grasped the ring and tugged at it; but it seemed tight on his finger, and wouldn't move over his knuckle.

‘It's stuck,' he said. ‘I don't know why; it was loose when I put it on.'

‘That is a puzzle,' said the fat man. ‘Your fingers, I am sure, are thinner than mine. Please, try again.'

The hermit tugged at the ring, until his finger reddened and began to swell.

‘Oil,' said Leda. ‘I'll get some oil, to grease it.'

She went inside the shack. The hermit continued to tug at the ring, but the fat man's interest had moved elsewhere.

‘You two seem an unlikely couple,' he said. ‘Princess and peasant, almost. What is your relationship, exactly?' Intent on his swelling finger, the hermit didn't answer. ‘I'm sure you weren't expecting that question in this remote location, but, as you're about to discover, your island isn't remote enough. No matter how far you go, it's hard to cover your tracks when those tracks lead to a man's death.'

Leda reappeared, holding a bottle of olive oil.

‘Death?' she asked. ‘What death?'

‘An untimely death by another's hand,' said the fat man, ‘more simply called, in the common tongue, murder. I'm talking of that recent death in Vrisi. The death you have perhaps been persuaded was no more than a convenience.'

‘How dare you call my father's death convenient!' She handed the oil to the hermit. ‘Here,' she said. ‘Take off the damned ring, and let him go!'

‘You shouldn't need more than a drop,' said the fat man to the hermit. ‘I can see by its colour it is good oil, and it would be a shame to waste it. Leda, your commitment to your role is most impressive; that act of indignation would easily fool a more gullible man. As for your father's death, rarely have I heard of one more convenient than your father's first demise. And I'm sure you played your part in that very well, too: the grieving daughter, a figure of tragedy. A difficult role, for certain, even for an actress as talented as you; sustaining the part through a period of years must have been a terrible strain. You got through it all right, though you made one or two small errors. The neglected grave, and the uncared for statue in Vrisi, raised questions in my mind; they seemed at odds with the character of a devoted daughter. Of course you had no interest in either, because you knew your father was not in that grave, nor did he need any stone memorial. Even so, the role was beautifully played; but how did it feel to be asked for an encore? Are you sure you wouldn't like to talk inside? You're shivering, out here.'

The hermit poured a dribble of oil on his finger, and placed the oil bottle at his feet. He twisted the ring; it left his finger easily.

‘Here,' he said, wiping the ring on his jacket and holding it out to the fat man. ‘Take this, and go.'

With a bow of his head, the fat man accepted the ring, and slipped it on to his own, fatter, finger.

‘How strange,' he said, admiring it. ‘It fits me better than you. I shall leave you, soon enough. But it is your father's second death that interests me, Leda. That death was trickier, wasn't it, involving as it did an actual body. You must have found that difficult, to look upon a very unpleasant corpse, with the eyes of the police watching your reaction. That's a great deal for a man to ask of his own child; to face a stranger's corpse, and lie to the authorities.'

‘I lied to no one!' objected Leda.

‘Oh, but you did,' smiled the fat man. ‘You lied as you'd been told to by this man here. You misidentified the body as that of your father, Santos Volakis, but it wasn't him, was it? How could it be, when Santos Volakis stands here with us, as large as life? I know you, Santos; hide though you may, you cannot ever be far enough away from me. I shall show you the proof of it. Look.' He picked up the paperback book from the holdall, and held up the author photograph on its back cover: a dark-haired man, clean shaven, with intense, grey eyes.

‘You're mad,' said Leda.

The hermit laughed.

‘You think that's me?' he asked, stabbing a finger at the book. ‘She's right, you're mad! Santos Volakis was a world-renowned poet, and a handsome man. Perhaps I should be flattered that you see his face in mine.'

‘But I do,' said the fat man. ‘You are he; I know it. But if you continue to deny it, I shall leave you and contact the police instead.'

‘To what end? What do you have to say to the police that could possibly concern me?'

The fat man took a step closer to the hermit.

‘Don't take me for a fool,' he said. ‘I tracked your daughter here with no difficulty at all, and you'll find me very skilled at tracking down whatever I want to find. I might want to find the place you killed your victim, and the vehicle you used to carry him to Vrisi. You'd be surprised what people remember, when their memories are prodded: a car on an empty road, a late-night traveller who thinks himself unseen. Without a doubt, you've left a trail, which I shall find, if necessary. But if you put me to that work, it'll go the worse for you. Tell me the truth now, and perhaps some unpleasantness can be avoided. You might yet avoid seeing Leda punished for her part in this ugly business. You chose a good hiding place, but by letting her in, you have let the world in, too. I am the world; I represent it. Tell me the truth of what you've done, and give me reasons; tell me who he was, and let me assess the damage that you've done.'

‘Who are you?' asked the hermit. ‘On whose authority do you question me?'

‘On the highest possible authority,' said the fat man. ‘On behalf of those who will not tolerate crimes unpunished. For you have committed a crime, have you not? Tell me – and tell your daughter, if you have not already done so – exactly what you did.'

A smile spread to the hermit's lips, and he spread his arms wide in the air, and threw back his head.

‘Behold!' he shouted, so loud the shopkeeper in his boat looked up from the lead weight he was tying on his line. ‘Behold before you Santos Volakis, the twice-dead poet, this century's greatest talent of Greek literature!'

Abruptly, his features became earnest, almost desperate.

‘Have you told my secret, stranger?' he asked, grabbing the fat man's arm. ‘Is the cat out of the bag?'

‘The bag is still knotted at the neck,' said the fat man, looking steadily at the poet, ‘but do not be getting ideas about silencing me. I am a difficult man to silence, even more so when offered force. But persuade me of the merits of your case, and we might yet come to some arrangement.'

The poet looked down towards the jetty, where the shopkeeper was now showing some interest in what was being said.

‘Walk with me,' he said, ‘a short way to the island's end and back, and we'll talk. I suppose I must talk to you, since you have found me; I suppose you are determined to extort money from me for silence, or sell my story to the gutter press.'

‘On the contrary,' said the fat man. ‘I am a man of independent means. I have no use for your money.'

‘What, then? Leda, wait inside.'

Leda left them, and the poet and the fat man set off along the beach, where ragged fragments of fishing nets lay bleached amongst the stones, and the incoming waves brought lustre to the shingle and the many-coloured pebbles. They came across a woman's slipper, waterlogged and sandy, washed up by the sea, and the poet picked it up, and tossed it further up the beach, away from the water's reach.

‘I've been here some time now, and yet the detritus that washes up here still surprises me,' he said. ‘Every day, I clean the beach, and every day, some new object brings its story to my door. Where might that slipper's pair be, do you think? Did it slip off some woman's foot, or was it thrown by a naughty child, or an angry husband? Is it from someone drowned? Is its mate still on a rotting foot, on the seabed?'

‘You have a vivid imagination, and a somewhat morbid one.'

‘Ah, but my imagination is what makes me remarkable,' said the poet, with some arrogance. ‘That, and my mastery of language.'

‘And has your imagination become more morbid recently, Santos?'

The poet looked away from the fat man, across the sea.

‘Why do you ask?'

‘Because in my experience,' said the fat man, ‘those who have stepped across certain lines become prey to their imaginings. Are you seeing shadows at your shoulder? Are you hearing noises in the night? Such things may be the products of a guilty conscience. If you want your conscience cleared, unburden yourself to me. Believe me, it will help.'

The poet veered away from the fat man, and took a few paces towards the water. He bent to pick up a flat stone, and threw it with some skill on to the water, so it skipped several times across the surface before it sank and disappeared. As he bent to choose another stone, the fat man came and stood close to his shoulder.

‘Why have you come to disturb me?' asked the poet, as he set another stone skimming on the waves. ‘Are you not a lover of the arts?'

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