+++++
Our third day on the road promised to be our most 'interesting' yet; we were leaving the EU so we were in-effect leaving NATOs "protective umbrella", and though active hostilities had ceased between Serbia and Croatia, we were headed into what had been β not so long ago β a war zone. Lingering resentments in the region were simmering, and even if we were 'just tourists' passing through, there was supposed to be real risk riding through the area.
We made Trieste by mid-morning and crossed into Slovenia, then cut south for the Croatian coast, bound for port town of Sibenik. Once we hit the Dalmatian coast in Croatia the world around us changed dramatically: forests, lakes, waterfalls everywhere, hundreds of islands just offshore, and very light traffic...so we made very good time, if you know what I mean.
Sibenik was something altogether new in my experience. The feeling about the town was simply medieval: narrow cobbled streets, an ancient cathedral at the center of the town, a waterfront that seemed purpose built to accommodate renaissance-era Venetian merchant ships (which was true, I learned), but the people there were struggling to rebuild their city after a war-time siege just a few years earlier. Tourism was 'new' here, too, at least as far as westerners were concerned. After decades under communist rule, 'free enterprise' was still something new to these people, and facilities were modest, though seriously lovely. This mystery, this unpredictability, seems to me to be part of the magic this kind of travel affords.
Sam was off the bike and on the prowl almost immediately; it had been two days since he'd been laid and he was getting grumpy. I unpacked and grabbed my Nikon and was about to head off towards the waterfront when Deborah caught up with me and asked if she could walk along with me.
Riding with a group brings people together in a hurry, whether they want to or not. I guess it has something to do with shared experience, combined with the ever present risks of riding a motorcycle. Whatever the reason, as Deborah had pretty much attached herself to me while riding, we were as a result spending more and more time together...at gas stations, at scenic overlooks, when eating meals, and now, when off sight-seeing β as she was with me just then β and she was always talking. Not annoying really, but it was apparent to me she was lonely, and beginning to take certain things for granted. Like me wanting her company.
Yet she was bright. More than that, really; she was educated β in the classical sense of the word, and in a way, she was a real change from the women I'd been with over the years. Being single has it's advantages, I guess, and being in places on the run all my life I'd rarely formed lasting attachments, and I assumed as we walked along Deborah would fall neatly into this way of being. After all, within a week we'd be parting ways and that would be that, but she seemed to know everything about the area, and she didn't mind me stopping to photograph the little things we ran across. In short, she seemed to me a classic Brit; insatiably curious, impossibly well educated, and a born walker.
Me? I didn't know, at the time anyway, much about the classics, and what I'd seen of the world I'd seen from from six miles up while passing over at five hundred knots. I was conversant in FMS programming and how to navigate using inertial navigations systems, I could talk endlessly about redundant electrical buses and ruptured hydraulic systems, but if you put me in a conversation about gothic architecture or Italian opera all of sudden I became a listener, not a participant. Deborah was a bridge to that world, I soon learned, and I began to enjoy listening to her. I began to see that world out the window.
So it hit me as we walked along...how much of the world I'd 'seen', and how little I'd learned along the way. Now here I was in the thick of things, and with a particularly good teacher leading the way. She talked, I began asking questions, and she led me deeper. We went to the Cathedral of St James and I had my first lesson in sacred architecture; I'd gone through life completely oblivious to the geometry and symbolism of these structures, but then, under Professor Green's tutelage, I grew more than a little interested. What amazed me most was her understanding of seemingly everything around us.
We made our way from the cathedral to an open air market, walked through the stalls looking at all the various flowers and foods, then found a sidewalk cafΓ© and sat in the sunshine and had coffee, and Deborah never really stopped teaching.
Something odd happens between first impressions and getting to know someone a little better: you get used to all the imperfections and flaws you thought you saw on first glance, and things you hardly noticed begin to take on new, more interesting aspects. Deborah had kind eyes, compassionate eyes, eyes like Rhea's, though the constant watering troubled her. And another thing: she wasn't skinny. She was lean, fit, and had a serious walker's legs. She was a biochemist, and also a physician, though she spent most of her time working in the laboratory or teaching, and rarely saw patients.
She'd been married once, back in the eighties she told me, but it hadn't lasted long and she'd retreated into the solace of all encompassing work after the dust settled. Time worked it's magic and now here she was, just turned fifty and taking a six-week holiday for the first time in years. She'd taken up motorcycles at college and had always loved riding; it was her one vice, she said, 'the thing she did' to get away from all the cares of her world, and she told me she planned to take a ferry from Athens to Izmir after the tour, then work her way back through eastern Europe to Calais, then home.
We walked back to the hotel and up to our rooms; when I unlocked the door to my room the first thing I saw was Sam's hairy ass pile-driving up and down into some gal, her legs over his shoulders. Deborah was behind me and saw the spectacle; she rolled her eyes and opened the door to her room and started to go inside, then asked if I wanted to come inside with her. I declined, told her I needed to call Rhea, and that I'd see her at dinner.
And of course, I didn't. She didn't handle rejection well, I guess.
+++++
We had a short ride to Dubrovnik scheduled the next day so got a "late start"; Deborah paired off with another couple from the UK and ignored me all morning, and I wasn't surprised. Maybe I'd ignored the signs, or maybe single men and women can't pair up and not have sexual tensions develop. Or maybe I'd given off signs? If I had, well, I was clueless if I had, or maybe I was too caught up in the scenery...
If you've not been to this part of the world, you've missed out seeing one of the most scenic coastlines in the world. Medieval villages line the coastal road, each more gorgeous than the one before, and we stopped on the outskirts of Split for coffee β which must have been one of the most scenic places on earth β until modern development hit, anyway. Gorgeous medieval neighborhoods had been consumed by high rise hotels and apartments, and the waterfront area was being industrialized. Change breeds change, as the saying goes, but still...it was hard to see such beauty pushed aside.
Deborah must've worked it out of her system because she rejoined me for coffee. We talked as if nothing had happened, for indeed, nothing had, and her running commentary seemed to take over where she'd left off. Sam, on the other hand, seemed to be taking an active dislike of the woman and ignored her, but I couldn't, not really. I actually enjoyed listening to her, and I guess that's what she'd picked up on the day before. As we left town, she was once again tucked in close on my four o'clock β like that's where she belonged, or where she really wanted to be. When Sam saw that, he passed me and sped off to the head of our little convoy, and I could see him shaking his head as he roared by.
We pulled into Dubrovnik late that afternoon, after one of the most exhilarating rides of my life. Surreal roads, sharp twisties and long sweepers in a roller coaster succession, all dotted with more villages, more forest waterfalls, and one absolutely brutal thunderstorm that ranged up the coast and just missed us, leaving gusty conditions that made for an 'interesting' ride...really wild, as a matter of fact.
We entered Dubrovnik as the wind and rain cleared, leaving a wild, storm tossed sky to frame the medieval wall that surrounded the old town on the waterfront. To say I fell in love with the town would be an understatement, and the tour company had us in a small seaside hotel right outside the wall. They'd also scheduled a day off for the next day, giving those who wanted a full day in that magical setting time to explore.