From my front door I can see the tiny deserted settlement I have named Karvounari in this story. In reality it was abandoned in the 1950's and 1960's as it became more and more difficult to scrape a livelihood. The village I know grew a scant crop of barley for bread-making, and olives for oil. The name I have given, Karvounari, implies that it was a settlement of charcoal burners. I have tried to envisage what might have happened if, instead of emigrating to Australia and prospering, the people had stayed and got progressively poorer and more desperate.
My thanks to Coaster 2 for permission to continue his short story
Christmas conversation.
I admire his work, and feel it an honour to close some of the ends of a beautifully crafted, open-ended story. His story was set in Canada. It will be apparent that I know less than nothing about Canadian culture and speech. Sorry about that.
My thanks to Chilleywilley and Creative talent for editorial help.
Are you sure she wants rescuing?
In early April in the Southern Peloponnese, the sun rises a few minutes after six a.m., but in our location, tucked in the western foothills of the Tagetus mountain chain, the sun did not clear the hills above us until well after ten o'clock.
By six there was a faint pink blush visible in the sky to the east of us, tinting the tops of the mountains. It was time to move.
Sheila and I drained our coffee cups and strolled casually out of our room in the small apartment building.
At sunrise we were sitting in cover, under a wide, low fig tree, showing the tiny, hard "male" figs which would later drop and be replaced in the autumn by the luscious ripe fruit.
Our attention was focussed up the mountain side to the tiny village of Karvounari, high above us.
There seemed to be about ten or a dozen houses, in one row overhanging the valley, a shorter, gapped row above them, and, higher up, three isolated houses, apparently in ruins, with blank, open window embrasures, sagging roof-trees and patches of semi-cylindrical tiles missing from the roofs.
All the windows looking down into the valley were shuttered with faded blue louvered shutters, and the doors of the animal shelters that comprised the basement floors of the houses, were closed up tight.
At a quarter past seven we heard a motorcycle being kicked into life, and the muffled pop-pop of the little 50 cc engine. Chained-up dogs howled at the disturbance as the two young men I recognised from photographs; black bearded and ponytailed, in work boots and overalls, rode precariously down the precipitous dirt track over the bridge across the river and on into the sprawling small town on the side of the valley, half a mile from where we were concealed.
Overhead a buzzard soared on the thermals. her wide, long wings held in a shallow v shape to spill some of the updraft of the westerly wind rising up the mountain slope. Soon she would be laying her eggs, and she needed to seek out a succulent rat, or better still a hare to help her build her fat reserves for the hungry times ahead when she had ravenous nestlings to feed.
An hour later we watched two older men walk down the same track carrying large hoes, heading down towards the river where a strip of cultivated land on either bank could be kept watered from the river so that potatoes, beans, aubergines, onions, cucumbers, tomatoes and peppers could be grown in the Spring and Summer months.
Their task for that day was to clear the water channels through which the life-giving water could travel to water the rows of vegetables that were so essential to life. Then the ground would be ploughed, or dug, and planted.
We could see them working steadily, smoking the inevitable roll-up cigarettes as they raked the narrow channels clear of silt. From time to time one of them raised his hoe to shoulder height and brought it down with a crack upon the hard, parched earth.
Up in the tiny village we could catch a couple of glimpses of elderly women in the ubiquitous black, with black headscarves tight around their withered faces. No children had come down the path to school, no young women came down the track to visit the shops or workshops of Panagia Despina, the small town where we were staying.
We watched for another hour in which nothing happened more remarkable than a hobbled milking goat moving haltingly across the steep slope, browsing on the sweet young wild fennel plants amongst the grass, lush from the winter rains, that would so soon be parched and brown in the sparse, sun-scorched soil.
We had seen enough for one morning. Sheila and I got up, stretched and made our way through the trees, back to the kafeneio for coffee.
*****
We were sharing a room, as we had insisted upon doing from early childhood whenever we could spend any time together. I was brought up in Winnipeg by my Canadian father, Sheila in West Bridgford, Nottingham by her English mother. We were sister and brother, and until I met and married Leni Sheila was the only person I loved in the whole world.
Our parents split up, acrimoniously, when Sheila was seven and I was four. My father, Pat Melrose returned to his native Canada with Kirsty, his new lover, taking me, willy-nilly, in his baggage. Our mother, Sue stayed in England, moving back close to her mother and sisters and resuming her maiden name of Salter. We children were heartbroken at being separated, unable to come to terms with what was happening.
Happily for our sanity, as a part of the divorce settlement, our parents had agreed that alternative summers, Sheila would come to me in Canada, or I would go to her in England; and on alternate Christmases we would travel the other way. We children came under pretty heavy pressure from our parents to let this arrangement drop, but we knew that if we insisted hard enough we would get our time together.
We insisted, using all the scant tools of tears and sulks that we had to deploy. We had our summers and Christmases together right up until the time that I left school for University. By then we understood that our insistence had cost both our parents dear, not in money - our father could easily afford it - but by keeping the raw wounds of a failed, doomed marriage open for fifteen long years.
*****
Six months after we got married, Eleni had disappeared so abruptly and unaccountably the previous Autumn, I had walked around blindly in a state of bleak despair until Christmas. Then a chance meeting turned my thoughts around. (see
Christmas Conversation
by Coaster 2). Afterwards I felt strangely comforted, and over the next day or two I found I was developing an intense curiosity about what had broken up our marriage, and if the wounds in my heart could be healed.
Among the little that I knew, I was aware that the uncle and aunt she had been living with when we met, had left Winnipeg as suddenly and abruptly as she had. Maybe that could be a starting point.
I was astounded, numbed with shock, when, one evening, when I returned from work, she broke our marriage wide apart with her demand for immediate divorce. Half an hour later she was gone. Once she left that evening, she didn't return to the flat, even to collect her belongings.
Without, apparently, stopping even to initiate divorce proceedings, she was gone from the apartment and out of my life. Since then I had heard nothing from her or whatever attorney she might have contacted. Her credit and debit cards had had not been used, and her bank accounts showed no new transactions, other than the deposit of a final month's salary.
Naturally I went first to her office and asked if they had a forwarding address. The personnel lady explained that, far from having a forwarding address, they had no idea why she had suddenly stopped going in to work without a word.
They had called her cell phone a dozen times over the next few days, and even phoned her aunt's house, which was still her registered address. Then they had parcelled up her personal belongings and deposited the balance of salary outstanding into her bank account.
The personnel officer was relieved when I offered to take Leni's personal effects away, and she handed me a cardboard box and a shopping bag. That evening I examined everything obsessively, as if a box of tissues or a tube of throat lozenges might carry some clue. Not a glimmer.
So I did what I do when I need help. I called my sister.
"Sheila. Hi, it's Kirk. Got time to talk?"
"Kirk, lovey, good to hear from you at last. You've been so out of it for the last couple of months, that I'd decided that I am coming out to sort you out as soon as I can get free for a week or so. So sorry about Leni...It must be heartbreaking for you."
"It's been rough, but I'm finally trying to shake myself out of it. What I'm doing now is trying to find out what happened. Why did she just break up with me and go off so suddenly. I'd 'a sworn that she was really happy with me."
"So what now lovey? Are you coming to me, or shall I come to you?"
"I'd love to see you, and we must get together soon, but I wonder if you can pull some strings with your ex-service pals? I really need to see if I can find Leni and her aunt and uncle. I don't know about them, but I really don't think she's in Canada. Can you scratch around and see if you can find out something?"
"Course I can ducks. Give me what you know."
"Her aunt and uncle are Jimmy and Poppy Georgopoulos. I suppose his Greek name would be Dimitri, and hers would be Kalliopi Georgopoulou. They lived at 114, Ellice Avenue, Sargent Park in Winnipeg. They moved out on or around the 11th. October; the same time as Eleni. Eleni was still registered at that address at work, so that's your best chance of finding her."