Authors: Ann Turner
Stephen laughed spontaneously. âI do leave some things behind on holidays, Bec. It's just a work thing, don't worry about it.'
He ate quickly and as soon as I'd finished too, he scraped back his chair.
âLet's go,' he said.
As we walked through the fecund gardens alive with birdsong in the fresh coolness of the morning, I pressed my body into his.
âJust share it? Please?'
Stephen stopped and took one step away. âThen tell me what's going on with you and Burton? You suddenly seem very close.'
I felt a pang of guilt that I was hiding things too. âYou know what it's like when you've just caught up with someone,' I replied. We stood in silence, our secrets hanging between us in a gossamer web as strong as steel.
âCome on. Let's hit the road before I change my mind,' said Stephen.
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I peeled out behind a bus packed with tourists. Stephen held his breath, trying to appear brave. A surge of adrenalin rushed through me as I navigated the crazy scooters and winding, hairpin treachery.
By the time the bustling cafes and souvenir shops of Amalfi came into view I was thoroughly enjoying myself. Stephen had been silent the entire trip. âThat was the worst fifteen minutes of my life,' he said as we crawled along looking for a gap in the endless line of parked cars.
My memory jolted as I glanced at the white jewels of houses bustling up the hill. âThere's a cathedral here with a lot of steps.' I smiled slowly as connections jostled in my mind, overwhelming with nostalgia. There was my mother standing far away at the top of a flight of stairs, blonde hair tied in a scarf, a few escaped wisps blowing in the wind. She was the most beautiful woman alive, even more beautiful than Grace Kelly. Her face was lean with sadness but that only accentuated her deep blue eyes and generous mouth. My brother John was beside her, pulling one arm at a right angle; a lanky thirteen year old, impatient for the dark passages and secret garden inside the cathedral. I'd held my tiny instamatic camera aloft and clicked. Where was that photo now, faded orange with age? Did I still have it? That cameo revealing the awful gap left by death, the overseas holiday to take our minds off things that focused us all the more on being three not four, a single-mother family where just months before we'd been a solid unit, our dad the fisherman always looking out for us, his humour crackling as we laughed at his bad puns and ribald jokes. And coming to the Amalfi coast because it was where Dad had always wanted to take us. A place by the sea where fish were caught in abundance and where he'd fit like a glove.
A space opened up as a campervan pulled out and I shot in. My eyes drifted again to the houses. Subtle colours were emerging, muted yellow, soft terracotta, faded green shutters, the occasional slash of deep marine blue. As I followed Stephen onto the footpath, the sparkling harbour bustling with fishing boats and pleasure craft gave off a fresh breeze full of promises. A ferry ploughed in.
âCome on!' I grabbed Stephen's hand and we ran flat out to a small booth on the wharf. In the nick of time we bought two tickets and joined the last stragglers aboard. I led the way to the top deck where the sun scorched down.
âYou sure you're okay with this?' asked Stephen worriedly.
âYeah, it's a ferry. Not a small boat.' I sounded much braver than I felt, but I was determined to take this trip. It was the only way, given Stephen's fear of the road â and he, after all, had ventured back in the car to at least come here.
The engines churned into reverse and the sun caught the cathedral high on the hill. It glowed like molten gold. Stephen peered into his phone, having difficulty seeing the screen in the bright light. He tensed, frowning.
âSomething wrong?' I asked.
He shook his head as he quickly tapped out an email, then turned his phone to photo mode and rose to stand behind me, goading me to turn around. As he snapped a photo, Amalfi framed my tentative grin. Old memories and new.
I hooked out my own phone, switched places and filled the frame with Stephen, the colourful houses jostling behind. I took photo after photo, Stephen mugging and finally looking directly at the lens with a haunted quality that made my heart jolt.
I sat down heavily. Salt and foam sprayed up in a white mist. Stephen, surprisingly, turned his phone off. I watched him closely, taking his hand in mine. It was hot with a thin bead of sweat. He smiled. âSo, we're off to Pompeii?'
The ferry sailed high on the waves, plunging into cool troughs before soaring up again like a giant seabird. I tried to adjust to the roll and swell of the open sea, my stomach lurching. I kept reminding myself over and over that a ferry wasn't a tiny dinghy and sought to find pleasure at being back on the water, with Stephen beside me.
Thoughts of the last time I'd been on this boat as a teenager flooded in. I swept away the sadness, brushing my mind clean.
We donned sunglasses and gazed at the rugged coastline where spectacular cliffs fell into the deep blue sea and houses clung on for dear life. A few tiny beaches lay at the foot of the sheer rock.
Beneath the ferry, a frothy white path cut into the intense indigo, a colour so completely different to my own aqua ocean back home. I tried to distract myself with detail to quell my fear.
âI think that's our hotel up there.' Stephen pointed.
âI don't think so. How about that one?' I indicated another that seemed to be suspended in mid-air.
âNot the right shape.'
âThat one!' we cried together. The hulking, sprawling Della Mare was unmistakable. âThere's the beach!' Stephen waved excitedly at the row of buoys marking out the swimming area. The blowhole's massive wall of spray was clearly visible.
âNo way are you swimming.'
âWe'll see about that.'
A small distance on was a proper beach, small and pebbly with a few shacks along its shore. âThat's where we can go,' I said with certainty.
Stephen chuckled. âSee the stairs?'
With dismay I absorbed what must have been well over a thousand steps snaking up the mountain.
âI'm going to find
somewhere
to swim in this gorgeous water.' Stephen sat back, hair whipping in the wind as he surveyed the coast like a sea eagle.
Positano came into view as the ferry churned through choppy waves, heading for the wharf. I tried to relax. Stephen put his arm around me and gave me a supportive squeeze. âI'm fine,' I said, leaning into him and feeling his body warm against mine.
As a crowd clambered off and more filed on, crew dangled homemade fishing lines into the pristine depths. Silver fish darted about. I thought of my father as Stephen ambled down and chatted to a sailor whose bronzed face was etched deep from storms and salt. Dad's face had been like that; so different to Stephen's, which was soft and unlined. Laughing loudly, the sailor offered Stephen a cigarette and for a moment I thought he was going to take it. Stephen hadn't smoked since the kids were born.
Then the ferry roared to life, the sailor deftly flipped up his line, and Stephen came back beside me. âYou're doing well. I'm proud of you,' he said as he entwined my hand in his. I sank into him again and wrapped my arm around his back. I placed my head on his broad chest and felt his heart beating. Did I imagine it, or was it running fast?
He bent and kissed me, chaste and warm, on the cheek.
By the time we arrived in Sorrento, where lemon and white hotels with soft terracotta roofs perched on a cliff-top, merging with the sky, our skin was burned to a crisp from the sea glare. In blistering heat we trundled up a steep, narrow footpath to the train station, avoiding being crushed by a bus only through a miracle. I was terrified, but Stephen was strangely complacent.
A fresh breeze burst through the windows as the train took off, vibrating up to speed as it shot through dense lemon groves heavy with fruit. With rattling ease it brought us to Pompei Scavi, where we disembarked and wove through hawkers touting tours and cold drinks, through a wide new arch, to join a concertina-queue beneath the baking sun.
Finally we passed through the turnstile and walked up the cobbled path to the Marine Gate, a salty breeze ruffling our backs. Stephen stopped and turned to look at the sea, twinkling on the horizon beyond a snarl of new houses. I photographed him within the vast hole of the ancient stone entrance. His craggy white smile was his usual but his stance was tense. I sucked in my breath. How could I reach him if something was wrong? And was he concerned for me too? Picking up the tension I was trying to hide?
We walked through streets crowded with tourists scurrying to keep up with their guides, until we found ourselves alone between silent buildings where life had stopped so suddenly in the summer of 79 AD. Ruins of shopfronts huddled together brought forth the once-bustling world, skeletons of villas still exuded calm and luxury â everything captured in that frozen moment when Vesuvius erupted and spewed ash and molten lava, setting the vibrant city alight as it buried it, with those forced to stay behind, guarding the wealth of their masters, dying in writhing agony. Pompeii was vast, much bigger than I expected. Even in the height of tourist summer you could still get lost.
As I stood at the side of a villa, in what were once slave quarters, I reluctantly drew myself back to the present and flicked on my phone while Stephen was a distance away studying frescoes in faded reds and pinks. Birdsong filled the air as I registered with disappointment that there was no news from Athens. I clicked the phone off, impatient, impotent, wishing I could be there investigating. The desire to discover who had set up and accessed the Athens accounts burned with a fury. I double-checked my phone, just in case I'd missed something. Scrolling through I found, to my horror, an email from DiStasio.
Dear Professor Wilding,
I have received information that alleges you visited the branch of the bank in Athens where the accounts were set up. We view this matter very seriously and request that you phone or reply in writing as to what you were doing. Please do not try to access the accounts.
Regards,
Margaret DiStasio
âLet's go to the Basilica?' Stephen called and my phone dropped skittishly as I rushed to put it away. Picking it up, brushing off dirt, I wondered if the bank manager had alerted DiStasio. Or was it the second visitor that day, the person who had come after me?
Our footsteps echoed through the cobbled streets as I thought of what I would say to DiStasio. Who had told her about my visit? I was caught in a web that was being drawn tighter but I had no idea who was doing it. I fended off panic, feeling helpless. In the distance the chatter of tourists bubbled like a stream but nearby there was no other human life. Behind us, Mount Vesuvius rose on the horizon.
We entered the Basilica, where a few pillars cast long shadows on the packed earth.
âIs this ancient graffiti?' Stephen's voice made me jump.
He was peering at a line of faint Latin script carved roughly into the stone wall.
ââ“Chius, I hope your haemorrhoids flare up in pain, and may they burn worse than ever, forever!”â' I translated and Stephen roared with laughter.
âThe Pompeians were straightforward,' I said. âI wish we could be too.' I felt I was becoming as bad as him. I looked over but he kept staring at the graffiti. We returned to the streets, Stephen searching for more graffiti etched into the ruins.
ââ“If you bugger the
accensus
, you burn your prick,Ӊ' a voice echoed through time. I thought of graffiti I could write, filled with fears of Stephen's infidelity.
ââ“I wish I could be a ring on your finger for an hour, no more,”â' I translated, and turning to Stephen, I saw sadness in his eyes.
âMaybe that's all we get. An hour, in the scheme of things,' he said, taking my hand. âCome on, we've got a train to catch and one of us needs a swim.'
Cicadas screeched in the oppressive heat as we made our way back along the cobbled streets to the Marine Gate. Stray dogs trotted behind, ribs sticking out of lean bodies, watchdogs for the ruins once dusk settled. Dust burned our noses and the sense of loss and destruction grew deep until it swirled in our veins. By the time we caught the train, neither of us felt like speaking.
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As soon as Stephen dived into the deep indigo water I picked up my phone from the warm, rocky ledge where I lay on my towel. Marco was swimming in languid strokes towards the line of white buoys and Stephen followed. The horizon was misty blue, Capri a pink smudge, the sea calm in the evening torpor. The wind of the morning had disappeared and now the private beach was friendly, peaceful.
I'm on the Amalfi coast, not in Athens,
I wrote to DiStasio.
Apologies for stopping by the bank, but of course I'm concerned as to who set up those accounts.
Regards,
Rebecca
The less said the better. I held my breath and pressed send, heart thumping as I heard the whoosh of its dispatch.
The phone bleeped. How could DiStasio be so quick?
But it was a text from Burton.
Call me.
âCome on in?' Marco had swum back to the ledge and was looking up like a sleek, friendly seal.
âDon't have bathers,' I smiled politely.
âYou do not need them. We are all grown ups.' He grinned cheekily. âAnd the water is beautiful. Like a warm caress!'
âThen you don't need me.'
âBut of course we do, Rebecca!' He said my name like a warm caress itself, his dark eyes crinkling with laughter giving him the look of a water nymph.
âBec doesn't swim,' Stephen called, lolling about, gazing at the clear sea floor metres below.
âLet me teach you?' replied Marco, astonished.
âMy father drowned,' I said abruptly, and from the corner of my eye registered Stephen's amazement. âI don't usually talk about it,' I added.