Chapter II
Work in progress - excerpt from Sow the Wind: a novel.
Demetrios and Andreas came back a little later to
find us sitting demurely on the patio, drinking tea. Iris had now donned a floral
cotton skirt and a low-necked white ‘peasant’ blouse with puff sleeves. I had
noted, as she dressed, that she did not bother with underwear.
“I never wear panties in summer,” she had confided.
“I like to be air-conditioned. And I can’t remember ever wearing a bra in my
life. I used to drive my ex to distraction. He was a real prick! He would have
liked to lace me up in corsets, like his mother.”
“You’re both looking much better,” remarked Andreas
approvingly, as he limped towards us. His face was flushed with the sun and the
unaccustomed exercise. “I should have stayed home with you. As it was I ran a
sea-urchin spine into my foot. Hurt like the devil until Demetrios pulled it
out.”
Iris smiled at me, victoriously. Well, she had got
that one right at least. But that did not mean she was necessarily right about
everything else.
Andreas peered worriedly at his left foot, wincing
as he fingered the cut gingerly, and shook his head despondently. “I hope it
all came out. I’d better see a doctor when I get back.”
Iris laughed. “Andreas! You’re always fretting
about something or other. Relax! You’re on timeless Aegina now, not stewing in Athens. Just lie back and
cultivate kephi, like a good Greek.”
“And what is kephi?”
I asked.
“The art of enjoying life,” said Demetrios. He eyed
his daughter with amusement. “I can see Iris’s been working hard at lying back
and cultivating kephi. She’s
blossomed like a rose. She looks ten years younger than she did at lunch.”
She had the grace to blush.
I came to her rescue. “I’d been particularly
looking forward to seeing the temple
of Aphaia. I suppose it’s
too late to see it now”.
“Not if we
hurry. We’ve got half an hour or so before they close the gates.”
He turned to Iris. “Care to join us on an outing?”
Andreas had already limped off into the cool of the
house to nurse his wound.
She shook her head. “No thanks. Enjoying life has
completely worn me out. Nothing is as enervating as pleasure.”
“And the greater the pleasure, the greater the
enervation. Come on, Hector. Let’s head for the hills.”
Five minutes later we had driven up the steep
hill-road to the temple in Demetrios’s well-worn Peugeot. The temple had stood
there since around 490 BC and so was even older than that other great monument
to Athena, the Parthenon. Built in the Doric style, with six columns on the
eastern and western sides and twelve columns on the other sides, it was in a
marvellous state of preservation. By the time we had admired the beauty and
symmetry of those pink limestone columns set against a background of azure sea,
salmon-coloured clouds, and pale green Attic pines, the sun, bright-haired
Apollo, was already setting. I strolled back to the car to find that Demetrios
was fiddling around under the bonnet, humming to himself.
“Just a spot of trouble with a spark plug. My next
car will be Japanese.”
“Anything I can do?”
“Nothing at all, my dear fellow, except bear with
me.”
I decided to take one last look at the temple,
which was outlined sharply against the darkening sky. Then, even as I halted at
the now barred gate, I saw her again, at the furthest end of the temple. Clad
as always in white, eyes expressionless behind dark glasses, a slight smile on
her full lips, she was standing on the crepidoma,
the three-stepped platform on which the Doric columns stand, looking at me
thoughtfully. I caught my breath, feeling my heart leap and race with shock.
Time stood still. The sea breeze blew her long black hair about and fluttered
her white skirt, but she did not stir. For an endless moment I stood staring at
her across the unbridgeable abyss of those lost years. Then, as she moved away
with that unmistakeable, swaying gait of hers and disappeared over the crest of
the hill, I came out of my trance. Could I scramble over the gate and run after
her? Impossible! By the time I had picked my way across the limestone ruins
that lay between me and the temple, she would surely have disappeared. I was
still trying to pull myself together when Demetrios joined me.
“You know, I’ve tried my damnedest to paint that
temple a dozen times,” he said, wiping his fingers fastidiously with a large
white handkerchief. “But there’s a magical quality about the play of light on
the cella that eludes me. I’d need the help of Aphaia herself to do it.”
I could hardly trust myself to speak. “I think that
I may have just seen her,” I said slowly, trying to sound rational and matter
of fact.
He looked at me quizzically, raising his bushy
eyebrows. “Who? Aphaia? Lucky fellow! She’s supposed to be invisible.”
“No. Not Aphaia. Alethea.”
Since we were conversing in Greek, he missed my
meaning. “So you’ve seen Truth at last. I thought she lived at the bottom of a
dried-up well.”
I was looking at him dazedly. “Did you see anyone
else up here? A woman in a white dress, standing at the western end of the
temple?”
He grew suddenly serious, noticing my agitation.
“I’m sorry. I’d forgotten what you told me this morning. What did you see?”
He listened intently as I told him. Later, as we
drove back to the house, I went on to recount what happened to me on the
Acropolis, the previous day, when I had first seen Alethea.
“After I’d
first checked in, I had declined to go up to my suite immediately, wanting to
put off seeing those damned rooms for as long as possible, I suppose.
“I’d like
to stretch my legs a little after that flight,’ I told Andreas. Would you mind
if we walked down as far as the Agora? I particularly want to have a look at the
Stoa Poikile. Last time I was in Athens
it was still unexcavated.”
Andreas had
looked surprised. “Really? When was that?”
“September
1960. I’ve been to Greece
frequently since then but always managed to avoid visiting Athens. The city has changed a bit, hasn’t
it?”
Andreas
smiled. British understatement amused him.
“When you
saw it last, Athens
had under one million people. We’ve now got four million of them, smog in
abundance, and twenty-four percent inflation.”
“The price
of progress,” I told him. “Progress backward.”
Syntagma,
which I had remembered as a pleasant oasis of greenery, was now a roaring
vortex of traffic and tourists. Not that I objected; anything was better than
those intolerable memories. We picked our way through the crowd until we
finally emerged onto Mitropoleos
Square, which surrounds the Cathedral. The guide
books, unkindly but discerningly, remark of this nineteenth-century monstrosity
of a church that it is such a hotchpotch of architectural styles, all of them
undistinguishable, that one can only regret the seventy Byzantine churches
which were pulled down to provide the raw materials for it. I was not
interested in the Cathedral. What I wanted to see was the lovely Old
Metropolis, a diminutive church of the thirteenth century, which nestles in its
shadow.
I was
suddenly overwhelmed with depression, as though a cloud had darkened the sun. The
last time I had stood on this spot it had not been Andreas who stood at my
side, but Alethea. I had been twenty-five then, not forty-nine, and as sure of
life as I was now unsure. Yet, for all my brash confidence, I had lost her only
twelve months later, on her second visit to Athens, in 1961. Engrossed in my memories,
with my Sancho Panza trotting breathlessly behind me, I began to walk towards
that ochre church where I had kissed her so passionately. I never reached there. Halfway across the
square I had suddenly swung round and said to Andreas, “I’ve changed my mind.
Do you think we could walk up to the Acropolis?”
He looked
at me in dismay. First my performance in the hotel, and now this. I was turning
out to have quite a prima donna temperament. “By all means. But it’s quite a
trek, I’m afraid. We shall have to catch a cab.”
I was
almost as surprised by my sudden decision as he was. I had really wanted to see
the Stoa. But the urge to visit the Acropolis had been too compelling to
resist. It was as though something had taken over my will, forcing me to make a
trip I had not intended to make until the next day. Alethea?
“I’d enjoy
a walk,” I told him firmly. “I think I even remember the way.”
He must
have groaned inwardly, for he was too plump to enjoy such unaccustomed
exercise. Nevertheless, he gave in with good grace. Greek politeness, though
often insincere, has its charms. At this stage, I relented.
“Would you
care for coffee before we set out?”
He had brightened
up at once. “There’s an excellent galaktozakheroplasteion just around the
corner. Why don’t we see what it has to offer?”
The
galaktozakheroplasteion, or “milk and sugar palace”, is a mainstay of Greek
life, selling alcoholic and soft drinks, cakes, puddings, ice cream, coffee,
tea, and dairy produce. They also do breakfast. Once inside, Andreas heaved a
sigh of relief. He ordered coffee, and generous helpings of amigdalota, a
sweetmeat that resembled marzipan scented with orange blossoms, and loukomades,
fried doughnuts drenched in rosewater syrup and dredged through cinnamon sugar.
These places really live up to their name of “sugar palaces”. He ate not only
his share, but my own, for I have never had much of a sweet tooth.
“Life
always looks rosier when one has eaten,” he said, leaning back in his chair
with a satisfied look. “If I weren’t on a strict diet I’d have been tempted to
order a couple of scoops of the fistikia ice-cream for which this place is famous.
Would you like to try it?”
I declined
his offer, wanting to ask him what he ate when he was not on a strict diet, but
forbore; he was probably sensitive about his weight. Once he had satisfied his
hunger, we made our way through the narrow streets of the Plaka, all that now
remains of Ottoman Athens,
past the forlorn ruins of the Roman Forum. Its ghostly pillars and arches were
unchanged since I had last seen them in the company of Alethea, on the very
route we were retracing now. That scorching summer day in 1960 we had chosen to
approach the Acropolis from its northern side, following the line of the
ancient Peripatos. We had set out before dawn, to avoid the heat, arriving at
the Acropolis at sunrise. I recalled her white dress gleaming pallidly in the
gloom, where the great walls loomed high above us, outlined against the fading
splendour of the Milky Way, in a sky far purer than the one above me now. Two
phantoms began holding repetitive colloquy in my mind again.
“Will you
always love me?”
“Always!”
“Promise
you’ll never leave me.”
“I swear
it. Never!”
We reached
a spot above the Herodeion and stopped for a while to rest, for Andreas was
panting from the climb, before setting out for the Acropolis itself. I had
expected to find that little had changed in my absence, for a third of a man’s
life should mean nothing to monuments that have endured for twenty-five
centuries. But I had forgotten the havoc wrought by modern civilization. The Propylaea,
the Iconic Temple of Athena Nike, the Erectheion, the Parthenon itself, now
cluttered with ugly scaffolding, were crumbling away, all slowly dissolving in
a cloud of sulphuric acid, unable to withstand the onslaught of industrialism.
The
Parthenon was charged with special poignancy for me. It was there I had asked
Alethea to marry me.
“Will you
always love me?”
“Always!”
But the
Parthenon was now forbidden ground; for the streams of visitors that had for
years lapped its walls had swollen to a babbling torrent that threaten to
destroy it. A building that had survived Roman brutality, Christian iconoclasm,
Turkish slovenliness, Venetian mischief, and English predatoriness was helpless
against touristic trauma. The past was melting away under the pressure of the
present.
“Do you
remember the words of Pindar?” I asked Andreas. He was walking beside me with
his jacket folded neatly over his arm, mopping his brow with his handkerchief,
and looking as though he would have liked to take off this two-tone shoes and
put his feet up.
“O
splendid Athene, radiant, violet-crowned, worthy of song,
Bulwark of
Hellas, city of the gods.”
He nodded,
to show his appreciation. Greeks love to heat their great poets quoted, even by
foreigners with barbarous accents.
“Pindar
would have a fit if he saw the place now,” he observed. “We’ve even changed its
name, from Athene to Athena.”
Just as
well. There was no real historical connection between the Acropolis, in its
austere, sunlit purity, and the Athens
we could hear droning away far below. Had I voiced my thoughts, he could hardly
have disagreed, staunch Athenian though he was. That labyrinth of steel and
concrete, its raucous streets choking with noxious fumes, its sky smeared with
an excremental brown smog, was not the descendant of the numinous city that had
nurtured Socrates, Plato and Aristotle; Sophocles, Aeschylus and Euripides:
Pericles and Themistocles, Herodotus, Thucydides and Xenophon; Phidias and
Myron. Between the modern world and the world of tradition there lies a great
gap. A profound discontinuity had occurred in history, somewhere around the
time of the Industrial Revolution, which had sundered the modern age from its
roots in the past. This rock-strewn terrace, where the setting sun was now reflecting
blindingly off Pentelic marble, was the ancient heart of our civilization.
All societies, I told Andreas, had found themselves
compelled to give coherent answers to four questions, namely: Where have we
come from? Why are we here? Where are we bound? Who are we?
“Ancient
Greek Society,” I went on, “was intensely aware of these questions, as you
know. In response to these perennial riddles of the Sphinx, it formulated some
of the most powerfully compelling answers the human race has ever devised. No
wonder Whitehead remarked that all European philosophy was but a series of
footnotes to Plato.”
In those days, I habitually thought and talked
like that, God help me. My déformation professionelle must have bored everyone
stiff.
Suddenly,
I became aware that the Acropolis had fallen strangely silent. Even the endless
whirr of crickets had ceased. The sultry air seemed charged with electricity,
as before a thunderstorm, making the ends of my fingertips prick and tingle. I
had an eerie feeling that someone was standing close behind me, their gaze
boring into the back of my head. Startled, I broke off my impromptu peroration,
and turned sharply around.
I saw her
immediately. The shock was so great that my heart missed a beat.
Alethea! It was surely Alethea! She was standing in the lengthening shadow of the Erectheion, less than thirty yards away, looking directly at me. She was wearing a short-sleeved white dress of some lacy material. Her long, black hair hung loosely around her shoulder, reaching, as I well knew, far down her exquisite back. The perfect oval of her face was expressionless, giving no sign of recognition or greeting. Her eyes – those unfathomable, lapis lazuli eyes – were hidden by dark, old-fashioned sunglasses. Across the abyss of the years she stood watching me as though waiting. Time stopped, while I stood and stared back at her, afraid to move lest I break the spell. Then she turned and walked slowly away, vanishing into the crowd that was making its way towards the gates. The Furies had found me at last.
Alethea! It was surely Alethea! She was standing in the lengthening shadow of the Erectheion, less than thirty yards away, looking directly at me. She was wearing a short-sleeved white dress of some lacy material. Her long, black hair hung loosely around her shoulder, reaching, as I well knew, far down her exquisite back. The perfect oval of her face was expressionless, giving no sign of recognition or greeting. Her eyes – those unfathomable, lapis lazuli eyes – were hidden by dark, old-fashioned sunglasses. Across the abyss of the years she stood watching me as though waiting. Time stopped, while I stood and stared back at her, afraid to move lest I break the spell. Then she turned and walked slowly away, vanishing into the crowd that was making its way towards the gates. The Furies had found me at last.
“Swear that you’ll never leave me!”
“Never! I
swear I’ll never leave you. Never!”
I became
aware that Andreas was talking to me.
“Are you
all right?” he kept asking anxiously. He must have thought he was chaperoning a
visionary, for I had broken off mid-sentence and was staring fixedly into space
as though entranced. I found I was trembling uncontrollably, and felt cold and
slightly nauseous with shock. At that time, I did not believe in the
supernatural. Like the rest of my generation I had been nurtured on a diet of
rationalism, behaviourism and logical positivism, mitigated somewhat by my
perfunctorily held Anglican beliefs. I would have scoffed at the very idea of
apparitions. Yet the impact of what I had seen was so powerful, that all my cherished
rationalism was swept away, like children’s sandcastles demolished by breakers
Alethea
was dead, her body long since consigned to the flames; I was sure of that much.
Yet I knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that the woman I had seen had been
Alethea. Not some stranger who bore a fancied or coincidental resemblance to
her, but Alethea herself, at twenty-one, in the height of her youth and beauty.
How did I know this? Not only by her dress, her figure, her distinctive
sunglasses, but also by her ankles, her legs, her arms, her face, her hair.
That unforgettable hair! I knew it by her inimitable stance – poised, still,
head thrown slightly back at an unmistakable characteristic angle. Above all, I
knew her by her walk. A woman may superficially resemble another woman as long
as she remains still; but once she moves, the illusion vanishes. Our walk is
our signature: and Alethea’s gliding motion, with its tender dislocation, its
sensual balancement des hanches, her feet in their high-heeled sandals
treading an invisible narrow ribbon without deviating an inch, was inimitably
her own. It was as idiosyncratic as her italic writing with its distinctive
Prussian blue ink: I would have known it anywhere. Yet I had not seen that
gliding, sinuous walk since that day in Cambridge,
twenty-four long years before, when she came with me to the railway station for
the last time. She had walked down the platform, thus, waving goodbye until I
could see her no more. Gone forever. I sat down on a nearby slab of Parian
marble and tried to get a grip on myself again. It was some considerable time
before I could recover.
“I’m sorry,”
I told Andreas. “I think I’m a bit jet lagged. I’d better go straight back to
the hotel.”
He looked
relieved. Jet lag has such a reassuringly scientific ring about it. Besides, my
sudden indisposition had saved him from the long walk back. He could now catch
a cab, with a clear conscience, and charge it to the society.
By the time I had finished my story, we were parked
in the long, tree-lined drive that led to the house. Demetrios and I sat in
silence for several minutes, listening to the endless complaint of the
many-voiced sea in the cove below. The last light was waning now, and the world
was dissolving around us, caught in the shadow time between day and encroaching
night.
“I accept the supernatural,” he said at last. “I
have to. Iris lives with it, day in, day out. So I have no problems accepting
that you may have seen a ghost. But I can see this business has upset you. I
only wish I’d been there to see Alethea too. That might have made things
easier.”
“What you’re telling me is that I can never really
know whether I was hallucinating or not, because you weren’t there to testify
to the objective reality of what I’d seen. But that might have made it just a folie à deux, a shared illusion. Why
should your seeing Alethea make her any less unreal?”
“Where do you draw the line between illusion and
reality? Suppose three people, not just two, had seen her? Would have that have
made her more real? Or three thousand people? Or three million? What about a folie à cinq billions? Is that perhaps
what our worlds really is? A collective dream traversed by individual dreams?
Many mystics said it is.”
“I find it almost impossible to accept the
supernatural,” I told him, stubbornly. “All my life I’ve lived by reason and
logic. Phantoms have no place in my world. There must be some purely natural explanation for what I’ve seen. Perhaps
the woman I glimpsed in Athens
was a tourist, who just happened to be visiting the temple this evening.”
He turned to me, his face now no more than a blur
in the gloom under the cypress trees. In the dark, one can say things one would
not say in the light.
“I gather, from the marks on your neck, that you
slept with my daughter this afternoon. Can you still say, after seeing her in
trance, that you can’t accept the supernatural?”
I had no reply to that. He laughed, clapped me
amiably on the shoulder, and restarted the car.
“Come on, Horatio! There are more things in heaven
and earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy! I’ve got a couple of dozen
bottles of vintage Beaujolais in my cellar
that will solve the riddles of the universe for us. Let’s go and see if we can
make a real dent in them.”
Iris came to my bed that night, silent as a ghost.
Without saying a word, she fastened her mouth on mine and ran her hands over
me, until I woke up, stiff as stone, and took her yet again. She was so slim
and delicately boned, I thought she would melt away in my arms. This time, much
to my relief, she eschewed trance, merely moaning softly with delight while
sinking her teeth passionately into my neck. Was she apprenticed to Dracula,
not Hera?
“I don’t want to emulate that amateur exhibitionist,
Pomona” she
told her afterwards. “Every time she comes, which is fairly often these days,
you can hear her histrionic screams and bucolic groans way down in Aghia
Marina. I think Daddy eggs her on, just to show off.”
We chatted together in the dark, like old friends,
for hours after that. She lay drowsily in my arms, her head on my shoulder, and
told me the story of her life, while I listened with unaffected attention. Historians
should be interested in people; for people make history. On an impulse, I asked
her if she would care to join me on a trip around Greece, after I’d finished my
lectures.
She sighed. “Hector, it’s sweet of you to ask me.
But if I go with you I might fall for you like a schoolgirl with a crush. And I
don’t want to do that because I’m afraid of you.”
“Afraid? Of me? Why?”
“Because
of what I’ve seen. I’m frightened. You’re a vortex, Hector. You sweep everyone
into the whirlpool of your destiny and drown them. God knows who you’ve been in
your past lives! Hector himself, dragged dead around Troy? Or Orestes perhaps? Part of me wants
to give myself to you completely. And part of me wishes I had never set eyes on
you. You’re haunted! All the time I’m with you I can sense a woman’s presence.
This evening I even thought I saw her out of the corner of my eye.”
”Where?” I asked tensely. This was disturbing.
”Where?” I asked tensely. This was disturbing.
“Under the cypress trees along the drive, at dusk.”
She paused and nuzzled my neck again. “Do you read Lucretius?”
Once again she had surprised me. What had this fauve, tawny dryad, to do with that
super-rationalist admirer of Epicurus?
“As a matter of fact I do. He’s one of my favourite
poets. His materialism appeals to me. And his compassion.”
“Well, Daddy insisted I had a good classical
education. He had the professor of classics from the university come and tutor
me for years, in exchange for paintings. Professor Zoitakis is a very rich man
now. We read all the Greek and Latin poets together. Lucretius was one of them.
Two lines from De Rerum Natura
somehow stuck in my mind. I discovered that by repeating them over and over, I
could send myself into trance. Even now, I feel giddy when I recite them.
Listen!”
Lying beside me in the dark she began to recite the
Latin verses in a low, musical voice:
Haud
igitur lēti praeclūsa est iānua caelō
Sed patet
immāni et vasto respectat hiātu
‘For the
door of death is not shut tight on the sky
But stands
open, facing us, with frightful gaping maw.’
I construed the lines slowly, as though I were back
at Winchester,
listening to Dr. Danson, county cricketer, reading the text to the classical
Sixth.
Moved by her words, I took her in my arms until she
fell asleep, with a slight smile on her lips, snuggling up against me like a
contented child. It was a long time, however, before I could get to sleep. When
I eventually did so, it was with Alethea’s name on my lips, as though my
whispering could summon her back from the dead.
I may have succeeded. That night a summer storm
swept the island, which seemed to shudder in the dark under its weight of memories.
Woken by the thunder, I got up to close the window, where the curtains were
already billowing out eerily in the wind. Lightning flashes lit up the
tempestuous sea and sky as I stumbled across the unfamiliar room. Still
half-dazed, I fancied I heard a voice call my name. The moon was almost full,
its cold brilliance fitfully obscured by scudding, black clouds. Then,
instantly, I was wide-awake. Alethea! She was standing below under the wildly
tossing cypress trees, her white summer dress blown about her by the gale, her
black hair streaming around her shoulders. Yet her dress was dry, in spite of
that furious downpour; and the face turned whitely towards me, but a few years
from our window, bore traces of tears, perhaps, but not rain. She was, and she
was not, of this world. For an endless time we stood and gazed at each other
wordlessly, sundered by death, while the storm howled around us. Then she
stretched out her slender hands, as though to imprecate a curse, and faded away
into that immense darkness, gliding towards the phosphorescent glimmer of the thundering
surf, leaving me racked with the anguish of guilt, like Orestes. “Haud
igitur lēti praeclūsa est iānua caelō,” I found myself muttering.
I was shaking now like the storm-swept trees
themselves, ice-cold, my teeth chattering uncontrollably with shock. Behind me,
a woman was writhing in some black nightmare, griding her teeth, unable to
awake. So the door of death was not shut tight on the sky. Lucretius, that old
master, had been right, in a way he had never intended. But it was only when I
was back in bed, vainly trying to comfort a weeping Iris, awake now and
trembling with terror, that I remembered that other ominous line.
Sed patet
immāni et vasto respectat hiātu.
The door of death was indeed open and facing us,
with gaping maw.
The Erinyes! You
cannot see them but I can…
That night, for the first time, I knew the sour taste
of fear.
COPYRIGHT (C) 2010 J D FRODSHAM