Through An Artist's Eyes
1
Rebecca wondered what the others in her artist's group would make of the raucous laughter that could be heard drawing closer to the vantage point they had chosen to capture the view. They were gathered, as best as space allowed, along the narrow footpath that wove between the glaring whiteness of the walls to houses that lined its route along the promontory, the blue domes of churches the only color to relieve what some would think the monotony of the scene. But it was so in keeping with the island's architecture and that was to be found on so many others in the Greek Archipelago.
The young men soon jostled past them, scarcely glanced their way nor took an interest in what they were seeking to capture in their sketchbooks; braver ones having carried their collapsible easels, and paints box, through the town's streets. She had been one of them, wishing to capture the scene below her on a small canvas while she had the opportunity to do so.
'Come on Jamie, what's keeping you?'
She caught sight of the young man who had let the others go on ahead of him. He was tall and lanky, well-made judging by the fit of his white cotton V-necked T-shirt and its soft grey-blue stripes. It showed off the tone of his arm muscles and chest. It went so well with sky-blue chino shorts that revealed strong legs and large feet covered by canvas deck shoes. He was not one to mix and match colors, that much was already clear to her.
'I'll catch you up, don't hassle me!' cane his laughing reply to his pals who were soon out of sight.
She couldn't help but like the look of him, how he paused to consider the work in hand but not to intrude. He then moved on and she wondered if he would stop and look at her picture's progress. It showed the broad sweeps of a color wash that captured the blue of the cloudless sky, a darker wash that was the sea and horizon, and then lighter hues that suggested the translucence of the water as it lapped against the foot of the rocky cliff not so far below her vantage point. The outlines of the houses, and a church, were to be clearly seen, and she had sketched in through the use of an artist's pencil.
Jamie stopped as she leaned back against the wall of a house, its shelter from the sun welcome. He paused only to look in the direction of where his friends had gone.
'Do you mind?' he then asked, standing close to her easel and studying the beginnings of her picture. 'You're way ahead of the others, in skill I mean.'
He had said only a few words to compliment her on the work that she had placed on the small easel, for the woman was only too easy on the eye. He had noticed her almost from the moment the group he was with had reached a part of the walkways offering views of the cliffs below and with cruise ships slowly drifting past. Santorini was one of many 'must-see' places in the Aegean. The cobbled pathways meandered through the town, past little kiosks selling holiday trinkets, cold drinks, sweets, and postcards, and where you got pressed closer and closer until you had to stop and let others pass you by.
'I'm glad you think so,' she smiled and decided to take off her straw hat for a moment. It was only too ungainly, but she favored it over a baseball cap, its wide rim keeping out the brightness of the sun that was directly overhead. 'Are you an artist too?'
'Graphic designer and advertising...I draw and paint in my spare time. I may get to do some of that while I'm here, and if those I'm with will let me, give me some space.' He looked in the direction his mates had gone. 'I seem to have been deserted, but Thira's not too big a place.'
'But there are many people about,' she said, looking at him more closely. He had been seen to shudder as if a bad memory, aroused by what he had just said came to mind. 'Have I reminded you of someone, or brought her to mind?'
'No, neither of those or not quite.' Jamie wondered where to go with this now and stepped away from her, just a pace. 'A relationship ended, I got dumped...she went off with a friend of mine. The guys I'm with, here and now, aren't like that, but...but then, I thought that of someone else I trusted.' He shrugged. 'You've got me talking, and we've only just met.'
She looked away and saw that her group was preparing to leave. 'I've got to join the others, move on...capture a different view.'
'It's a small island, so we may meet again,' he ventured, watching her gather up the artist's paraphernalia that she managed to carry, somehow.
'We may,' she smiled, yet perplexed by his familiar ways with her. She looked at him. 'I hope you don't tell everyone you meet of what you've just told me...er?'
'Jamie...Jamie Pettyfer.'
'It's an uncommon name,' she suggested, 'one I've not heard of before.'
'There are a few of us about,' he soon smiled on answering her, 'my family's origins go back to people returning from the United States in the late nineteenth century. They say that before then it was of French origin and meant iron foot.'
'Pied de fer!' she laughed on realizing the significance of the original meaning. His look back at her suggested that he was impressed by her instinctive use of the French words.
'Quite, now I'll let you go...uhm?' he said, smiling and on a tilt of the head in inquiry.
'Rebecca...'
'Well, thank you for talking and showing me your picture. You capture the colors so well, Rebecca.'
'The light's perfect for that, almost too good and with no tricks...'
'And we can't have that, any tricks in what we see or what we say when we meet someone.'
'Go and find your friends, Jamie,' she suggested, woodenly, on hearing his teasing ways in answering her. Was he flirting with her? 'Talking like this, and with you, is something I'll have to explain to myself and everyone else in the group!'
'Keep it to yourself then, because I will.' He knew that she was ready to leave him. 'I'm going to the art museum they've opened set up in the town square, so I may see you there. I have my sketchbook with me all the time, just as you do. We can contrast and compare styles...what one artist sees is different from another.'
Jamie saw Rebecca shake her head as if to dismiss the very idea. H watched her as she walked slowly away from him without a backward glance.
'You made me say what I had to say,' he murmured before he strode up the path and along the route he hoped his friends would have taken that led up into the town.
A bar and a few beers were the usual plans for this time of the day, and them. Casual hookups were their game, but he had settled and had been loyal, consumed by the sight and company of his ex-girlfriend. Older Rebecca might be, but she hadn't brushed him off; nor had she given him any encouragement. But in their art, there was a common thread, and he would have to pursue that line if he was lucky enough to meet the captivating woman again.
He sure wanted that to happen as she made no secret of what she brought to his sight, her voluptuousness that he had seen shaped so enticingly by her sky-blue sleeveless top, the neckline finishing at her breastbone, the fabric ruched to make it look like a bow. Her washed-out khaki shorts revealed shapely, not overly fleshy legs and only too practical ankle socks and fashionable suede trainers that he found sporty, stylish even. He was captivated by the sight of her shapeliness, the tumble of her auburn hair that had its reddish strands brightened by exposure to the sun, by the freckles on her softly tanned skin and how her bangled bracelets slid over slender wrists. The sweep of her hands to adjust the fit of her sunhat had revealed her long-fingered hands that were adorned by a ring on each middle finger, the gemstones large and colorful.
'The place is too small for me not to keep that hope alive.'
With his mind elsewhere he failed to see the others, five of them, amongst the drinkers outside a noisy bar.
'Jamie, you've got a beer to catch up on!' he heard one pal say and on a tap to his shoulder to make him stop, mid-stride. 'You should know better than to chat up...'
'Quite!'
He had snapped back an immediate response, his friend given no time to finish what he was going to say, the predictable line that would include 'older women'.
'I'll have my beer and then I'll move on. It's each to their own, after all, as we agreed when we planned on being here.'
2
'You're with us again,' Susan Marriot smiled, the leader of the group choosing to walk by her side when the narrow pathway allowed that. 'There's so much to see, and that catches the eye. You wonder what to sketch or to paint.'
Rebecca wondered if there was more to what she was saying.
'I'm just concentrating on capturing a view that will remind me of the island and the caldera...the white walls of the houses and the blue contrast. There's so much of it on doors and windows!' she enthused with a soft laugh. 'It's as if the Greek flag is painted on every house and church.'