The Kills: Sutler, the Massive, the Kill, and the Hit (136 page)

They drive out of Limassol, by the castle keep at Kolossi, the air a kind of blanket, folds of heat. After the castle, the refugee camp, bunkers in long rows, then suddenly lines of trees, behind them citrus orchards. Rike closes her eyes, and Tomas watches, and wonders if anyone has ever been so relaxed about him. If this was so he couldn’t remember. Rike holds her arm out to the breeze and suggests that they stop. When they came by here the other day they’d passed a shop, all on its own, which sold fruit and souvenirs. There were baskets out front, hanging from the awning, and she’d liked the look of it but they hadn’t time to stop.

At the next crossroads they come to the store.

The line of trees remind him of New Hampshire – it’s a little unguarded he realizes to give an actual location. Remote, you know, completely out in the woods, and he was cycling along a path and felt something above him, a bird, right at the tree tops overtaking then flying just ahead, broad wing span, bigger than his outstretched arms. This bird, this hawk or something – are hawks even that large? – but there at some height, ahead, following the same path.

‘I heard it.’ He locks the car doors once they are out. ‘I could hear it when I was working, but this one time I could see it.’

Rike, ahead of him, smiling also.

They buy baskets and fill them with oranges and grapefruit. Rike decides that these will be gifts for people in her building. She hasn’t met them yet and feels that it is about time to say hello, see who everyone is.

‘I’ve decided not to worry,’ she announces, walking between the bins of fruit. The grapes look good, tight bunches, sweet, fat, still a little dusty. ‘I’m not going to worry about Mattaus. He’s big enough to look after himself. I’m not responsible. I’m not going to worry about what happens after the summer.’ She leans forward. ‘I’ve even been thinking I might stay. I could find a place of my own and I could teach. I don’t think it’s what I want to do, but it will buy me time until I can decide.’

Heading south now they cut through the groves and the orchards. Of a sudden they give way, the treeline stops, the groves stop, and give abruptly to a savage white plate. They both squint at the salt flats. The fierce brightness sparks about them, the sky peeled a flat burnished blue, an impossible colour. Tomas pushes back his sunglasses, takes the soft curve of the road, which somehow seems to be a kind of expression, a leaning glide, and Rike smiles without reserve. This is, she says, incredible.

‘Isn’t this something?’ she asks him, sincere and insistent. ‘Really something to see.’

The sea lies on either side of the salt flat; a drying lake with a fine furred pink line. Rike explains about the flamingos, repeats Henning’s facts, which again are questions about the birds and how surprising it is that of all places they should end up here.

The heat draws a wind off the gulf, and as they drive Rike is grateful for the cooler air.

*

On the beach she lugs the backpack in both arms insisting that Tomas doesn’t need to help. She kneels as she unpacks it, happy with the job. The sand is fine, with no wind to disturb it. Tomas looks about but there’s no shade. While it’s warm, there isn’t any real heat to the sun. A loose line of people sit and face the sea. Some stand at the shoreline, hands on hips, and look out at a bare horizon.

The first thing she finds in the backpack is a book, a thin hardback without a cover. She holds it up and says that Isa must have slipped it in. ‘I deliberately didn’t pack it.’ After a quick search she finds only the food and drinks she had packed herself.

He watches her read. Is too tired to think it through. It never occurs to him, although he notices how her head gives a small jolt – nothing more than a pulse, a beat, a kind of double-take. She sits more upright, turns the pages, looks through, flicks ahead, and at each page seems more confused.

He asks
what is it
, and she answers
nothing
. She doesn’t, and this is noticeable, look up. Not once.

And then he realizes. She’s reading Finn Cullman’s book.

The change in mood is significant. He can’t quite describe the difference, but he can read the register – she scowls hard at the paper. It’s the same day, no doubt about it, the same blue sky front and back, the same stretch of sea, calm and placid. The same flat plate of white land, of sand a good mile or so on either side. But Rike has hardened.

He never imagined that he would be present when it happened.

When he swims she doesn’t join him. She tilts her book and looks up, appears to examine him.

Ten metres out and he can still stand with the water level at his chest. He tastes salt, remembers how pleasurable it is to swim in the sea, and how surprising it is to be so buoyant. It’s a good temperature, a good colour. Rike, back on the beach, knees raised, together, book slanted down, head up and looking out, her expression still one of concern.

Tomas turns away from the land, swims at a steady pace directly out, with Limassol on his left, the beach immediately behind him. He wants to know exactly what is disturbing her,
which element gave him away?
He can’t understand her stillness. He draws thirty strokes in one burst, but still, when he stops, finds the sea no deeper, only Rike is smaller. He bounces on his toes and looks up. It isn’t Rike he’s looking at. In fact, there isn’t anyone directly in front of him.

He steadies himself in the water, allows his legs to fall back and floats on his stomach facing the land, a slight strain to keep his head upright, consciously drawing in breath. She isn’t on the beach, not directly in front of him.

Tomas takes a few strokes back, he keeps the pace deliberately slow. How, here, and at this point, could anything go wrong?

She isn’t in the water either. Looking away, toward the military base, he doesn’t see her. But further down the beach, where the umbrellas start, he thinks he sees her, but isn’t entirely sure. There’s a girl, what looks to be a girl, further up, speaking with a family, and yes, she appears to have a backpack.

He swims back now, faster, but not hurried. He walks out at a stride. His clothes are still folded beside his towel, and where Rike sat are the contents of the backpack, set carefully aside.

With his towel over his shoulder he walks toward the umbrellas. The first group, two adults, two children, appear to be in a hurry. A woman with big sunglasses, a canary-yellow swimming costume, pink shoulders and thighs, glowers in Tomas’s direction as she walks away. Rike steps quickly over the sand,
not
looking at him. The woman, Rike, and two boys make a slightly chaotic path to the line of cars parked on the shoulder of the beach.

As Tomas draws nearer they break into a run, in response he starts to jog. The mother opens the doors, and throws her bags into the trunk. They have left their umbrella tilted in the sand. Tomas reaches it, nothing but sand and footprints.

When he reaches the car the woman is pushing her children inside and telling them to hurry.

‘She doesn’t want to speak with you. You better stay where you are.’

Rike, in the back seat, sits with her head bent forward, a penitent, a doubter, her hair covering her face. She isn’t dressed either, is still in her swimsuit, he can see her shoulders. She won’t look up.

‘I’m serious. You don’t come any closer!’

Tomas stands in front of the car.

‘Rike? Rike?’

‘Just keep where you are.’ The woman holds the driver’s door open, as if this is an adequate shield.

‘Rike. Can you get out of the car?’ Tomas steadies his voice to sound reasoned, in control, as if this is something that has happened to them before. As if this is some kind of episode. ‘I need to take her home.’ He smiles at the woman, a wan and patient smile. A man who has suffered because his girlfriend, his wife, his sister is irrational. And now a softer, cajoling, ‘Rike, are you coming with me?’

‘I said, stay where you are.’

‘Rike?’ Tomas slaps his hands to his side, draws his towel from his shoulder. As he walks to the side of the car, Rike instinctively turns away.

The woman, now seated, starts the motor and as she reverses, clumsy and unsteady, he can see an element of panic. Tomas can touch the car. He tries to open the door, but the car is moving, the door is locked. The two children, one in the back seat beside Rike, the other in the front, both look at him, both uncertain of what is happening. As the car lurches forward and begins to pick up pace, Rike looks at him, a long and low look, a face so sucked of joy that as he runs after the car, he’s certain that she has discovered that everything he has told her is a lie. Everything is stolen. This realization, right at this moment, must be blossoming within her. Who is Tomas Berens? She has to be thinking this. Why has he done this?

He watches the car round the salt lake. Small and silver, shimmering. He starts running as it joins the road and heads toward the green bank of cypresses, almost gone. Of all the scenarios he’s worked through, none were this complicated. Tomas looks to the town. This wasn’t supposed to happen until after he’d left.

A man walks into a desert. He walks for four days, maybe five if he carries or comes across water. He’s found by an archaeological team. The man is unrecognizable. He looks like scabbed raw meat. His head, his hands and arms alive with flies.

He isn’t dead, which is somehow more shocking. And he resists being helped. They haul him into a jeep. No one wants to sit beside him. And the man, who has made no movement, makes it clear that he wants to get out of his clothes. The skin on his chest and back is a sore crimson, but not broken, not erupted, unlike the fully exposed skin. Under his pants, right at the buckle, there’s a line where the red immediately cools, and the body becomes human again and can’t be compared to meat, or a crust, or something infernal.

The archaeologists aren’t naive, and they understand how suffering doesn’t compare to anything else. It is exactly what this is: a person reduced to animal function.

11.7

 

Rike asks to be brought into town. Once away from the beach she’s embarrassed about her reaction. The woman, Sarah, says that she will take her home, or to a police station. She advises Rike to talk to the police.

‘That man was harassing you, and you should report it.’ She senses Rike’s reticence. ‘Look, it was you today, and you got away. The next one might not be so lucky.’

Rike agrees, feels a little shame over the story she’d told to the woman.
That man is bothering me. He won’t leave me alone
. Given the circumstances she’s not happy about lying, but how else to explain this?

She promises that she will speak with someone. Promises. But insists on being let out as soon as they reach Limassol waterfront.

Rike waves goodbye to the children then hurries from the car, slips down a pedestrian street busy with tourist trade, the tables of carved wood goods, T-shirts, place mats, bangles, and finds a café where she can look again at the book – because this is crazy, this hasn’t happened. Somehow she has this all wrong. She sits in the café and marks up passages with a pencil. At each page the discoveries are familiar and deeply unsettling. Rike sits with the book and reads. She doesn’t like to have the book in her hands, doesn’t like to read, line for line, the stories Berens has passed as his own. It helps that the book isn’t very good. She can justifiably dislike it on these grounds. It’s an effort to sit with it, a conscious effort.

It doesn’t take much to find the material. The discoveries are so immediate she begins to think there’s something a little dumb about the whole thing. It’s just plagiarism, that’s all this is. Petty theft.

Not clever. Not at all.

She returns to find the apartment empty and a note from Henning with a mobile number she doesn’t recognize. The note is simple.
Isa is in hospital. It isn’t serious. It is a precaution
. She calls the mobile number and speaks with Henning.

‘How serious is this?’

‘It’s nothing. They’re just being careful.’ He’s with Isa right now and she’s laughing. He probably shouldn’t be on his mobile.

Rike says she’ll come directly to the hospital.

Henning tells her not to worry. ‘They have her on a stretcher,’ he says. ‘She’s behaving as if she’s lying on a sunbed. This is just a precaution. It really isn’t that serious.’

Rike asks what the problem is.

‘She had a little bleeding. It’s nothing serious.’

They’ve heard news about Mattaus. He’ll speak with her when he gets back.

Rike can hear the medics telling Isa to breathe slowly.

‘I’m coming,’ she says. ‘I’ll be there as soon as I can.’

Henning doesn’t discourage her, and asks if she could bring Isa’s overnight bag. It looks like they’ll want to keep her in overnight.

Rike takes a taxi. Grateful for a little time to digest what’s happening. Baby. Mattaus. Tomas. And while she’s spared an excruciating discussion with her sister (what did I tell you about the man? What did I say? The minute I heard the story about the dog,
I knew
), she’s mortified by the possibility that the situation, with an unborn child, has shifted into territory none of them want to revisit. While she’s recently felt secure in the fact that she’s hit bedrock, that things couldn’t get worse, she’s beginning to realize that this isn’t the case. Things can always get worse. Even now the situation is unstable, worse could be about to happen. She concentrates on the immediate moment and focuses on arriving at the hospital. She sits in the front passenger seat and ignores the driver as he tries to be polite.

‘Nothing serious’, the hospital advises. Henning comes out of Isa’s cubicle. It’s what they call
spotting
, he says, scratching his head. Which both is and isn’t unusual at this point depending on who you speak with. It’s only a problem if it doesn’t stop. To be on the safe side they want to keep her under observation. It’s a little unexpected but they’ve told him not to worry. He doesn’t know what any of this means. Doesn’t know either how long they will keep her. He’s never heard of
spotting
before, nor how long it might continue? An hour? A day? Until the baby is born? He’s called Udo, because Udo wants to speak with him about Mattaus, and because Udo needs to know what is happening. If Rike could do him a favour and keep Udo busy, just for the moment. The information from the doctors can only be described as random.

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