"Look at him, silly old goat. Ogling those girls like he's eighteen."
Sun-browned fingers scrabbled for glasses and eyes scanned the far side of the square. A half-smoked Karelia dropped onto the checkers board. They squinted against the weak winter sunlight that warmed their old bones and beheld the embarrassment.
"I mean, those jeans for a start," George mocked, "since when did a man of sixty-eight look good in lycra?"
Alex Papadopoulos's lean was nonchalant. At least he hoped so. Nonchalant appeared cool and girls went for that. Cool got you laid. Except he couldn't remember—well, much—leave alone who last joined him in the sack. You lived in hope, and you looked forward to the girl. Hope remained the force that kept Alex alive and chose his wardrobe.
"Hey, Lothario, it's your damn turn for coffee."
The words echoed around old walls. Legend says that the ancients designed them that way, to discourage discussion and dissent. A normal voice carried for twenty yards. Unless you addressed Stavros, who worked the engine rooms of the big boats out of Piraeus in the old days; now as deaf as his chair. He stared at the pieces, changing his mind back and forth but still slipping behind Nikos Karalis in a grudge match.
Alex sauntered over to the trio outside the cafe, a jacket slung over one shoulder. Five-and-a-half-feet of geriatric Greek chic.
"You old farts cramp my style, I did okay this morning—got a couple of smiles and a wink. That's where it begins."
"What begins?" Nikos asked without looking up, his king taking two of Stavros's men with a clatter.
"Romance, amour, love and sex." Alex threw his arms wide, as if he'd known Aphrodite herself.
George Demetriou, checkers coach, umpire, retired fisherman and professional layabout, hung his browned, hairy arms over a backwards chair and shook his head.
"That's the problem, though. It begins, but never damn well ends. At our age, we can't stay up."
"Speak for yourself, grandad," Nikos said, "no problems in that department."
"Don't make me laugh. I've seen yours; like a forgotten aubergine. Any drier, it'd fall off and get eaten by the pig."
No-one denied that life on Kalliopros changed in 2015. When the first refugees arrived in their ridiculous rubber boats and kids too young to have an even chance washed up lifeless on the beaches, tourists slowed to a trickle. At least, those with money. These days, the Cyclades Islands embraced obesity tourism. The obscene austerity British, with their demands for chips and beer at every meal and their women spilling out of ill-chosen supermarket clothes. The impoverished Russians, money sucked from their very soul by oligarchs, and the diaspora of 'New Europe', content for a cheap flight, crappy hotel, and piss-taking warmed up Turkish food.
Gone were the free-spending Nordic people, their blonde women of every age walking with unfettered breasts, and the wealthy, corpulent Germans, now too wary of meeting a brown refugee as they turned themselves brown on the beaches. Kalliopros today sunk to a European anachronism, dependent on the new middle classes of Nanjing, Shanghai, Chongqing and a hundred other unpronounceable places that no-one heard of ten years ago.
"What about you, Stavros, can you keep it up at all?"
"Washikton Deecee," he replied without hesitation. "A trick question, innit? Everyone says it's New York," Stavros chuckled to himself. George rolled his eyes.
Stavros married a younger woman in his youth. Slovenian or Slovak, from some place not quite Russian. He brought her home and was happy ever after until she ran off with a tourist. Ivanka didn't ask for money, cooked great food, never bothered him and opened her legs whenever he needed. Truth be told, though, the itchy rash became bothersome.
Stavros re-married and achieved relative satisfaction, on account of her being his sister. Or so they say. The couple never bore kids, but dogs that looked like him overran their place up the hill.
George's wife passed at fifty. In life, he hated her like the vegans who ate at his eight-room, self-built hotel loved the smell of George's steak. Now he missed her as much as life itself, but never admitted it. George wanted to fuck every woman that landed on his island—out of spite. He claimed success because he chased the old, single ones.
Spring bookings, already low, collapsed with the coronavirus ravaging China. This season now promised no flights, and no more new-rich tourists that rescued them three years ago. Kalliopros, with a population of three-thousand, faced extinction.
Nikos Karalis, the studious one, and the baby turned sixty last year. A degree in sociology and a doctorate in ancient languages made him an unusual candidate to squeeze existence from a vacation island. Nikos, the local hero behind painting boats in the harbor each spring and their thousands of Instagram posts. The white and blue lookalikes, made from plywood, that bobbed on the tide gathering seaweed and barnacles but never fished because of the EU inshore fishing quota.
When he married the most beautiful woman on Kalliopros, that promised a dream match of beauty and brain. It lasted twenty-six months until she walked out of his life for a Danish internet mogul. Afterwards, Nikos found love with a German modern language professor, but he left Nik for an Ethiopian male model. He stayed in emotional quarantine for a decade but remained unbeatable at checkers.
Five years ago he moved in with Pamina, who owned the boutique on Kalliopros, and all that changed. Pamina, at forty-three, knew how to dress. Saints above, did she ever? She chose clothes with care, an inch away from slut. Skirts a fraction too short, tops with enough tension and cutaway to make men salivate. Never too much makeup, or hair color, and a perfect shade of red for her toenails, Pamina showed off those tight, toned calves of mature women that spend all day on their feet.
Saturdays, she came out to play, hanging on Nik's arm, her heels clacking as they strolled the harbor after dinner at her brother's seafood place on the quay, calling at Spirodos's cafe for portokali liqueur and coffee.
Pamina didn't pay for her drinks. Local men hoping for a flash of thigh or panty hung around drinking until she left.
"Gentlemen, answer me, please," George continued, "a real problem, isn't it? Those blue pills—have you seen the fucking price?"
"Those I got from China gave me terrible wind." Alex said.
George smiled. "You told us before. In 2005."
"The thing is, we've forgotten so much the ancients taught us," Nik said, his king leaping in three different directions, decimating Stavros's defense.
"Shit!" Yelled Stavros, standing and sending his chair crashing backwards.
"Go on," said George with a shake of his head.
"The ancient Greeks. They found all these remedies that time forgot. Modern medicine is rediscovery—a lot, anyway." Nikos explained.
"I don't trust those ancient Greeks. Take my grandad—one crazy guy; died swearing the earth was flat, and the Turks did 911," Stavros said.
Nikos raised his voice, "I'm talking three-thousand years ago, not one hundred."
"Ninety-two, fell off his bike, never got to a hundred," Stavros corrected.
"For fuck's sake, Stavros. Nik, are you saying the ancient Greeks found a solution to erectile dysfunction?"
"Don't remember the details, but they fathered kids until they died."
"Yeah. At thirty-five," Alex mocked.
"You're wrong," Nik protested, "a pile of evidence suggests they lived to seventy. Slaves, a mild climate, good diet, active social life and exercise."
"That's as maybe," George said, "but how? What did they eat, or do, to keep hard at our age?"
The old clock struck an uneven eleven as Nik struggled into the square with a stained canvas newspaper bag over one shoulder.
"Fixing lights at Pamina's shop. Summer collection's on the way from Athens."
Under the table, loins stirred and legs crossed as they imagined the thin fabrics and tight shorts that hot days brought to Kalliopros when the sun rose high.
"Here you go," Nik said, dumping a pile of dusty books, almost upsetting the table.
They studied the spines—familiar letters. And yet not. Bookmarks ripped from cotton and polyester cloth samples hung from the pages. George frowned.