Cristina would never concede that she had been cowed by all that had befallen her, the dogged determination to live on through many hardships something that Romanian women were renowned for.
And yet nothing could have prepared her for moments of an aching, even crushing, loneliness that had begun to grip her as the months passed following Josif's death. She had not known of such emptiness since the death of her third one soon after his birth. It marked the end of bearing any more children.
Living in a well-tended, but isolated, farmstead had only increased her fears for the future, made ever more acute as one son, and then an only daughter, reached the conclusion that they would move into a town nearby, and there pursue a new and very different life that their friends had persuaded them to discover.
So it was that, with Andrei and Emanuela gone for long spells, Cristina came to rely more and more on her youngest 'boy,' Ilie. He had been an adopted child, first placed in her and Josif's care and then, after things were settled, brought into the family home and their lives as an unmistakable bond developed between them.
Until then, Ilie had found it difficult to adapt. He had his wayward and rebellious ways that had helped him survive the tough life in the children's home where he had been abandoned by his birth parents. But, as he grew up, he became ever more dutiful for a strong lad, some twenty-five years old now, with his luxurious black hair not cropped short as it had once been in his military service days, his weathered features robust and mostly unshaven, his eyes shiningly clear, his willingness to step into Josif's shoes and take on the tasks of shepherd and handler of their two dogs, a blessΓ©d relief. The sheep were dutifully tended through the seasons, and the luscious red apples were harvested in good time and taken to market by them both, just as she had done with Josif.
They had spoken of converting two outhouses into dwellings for holidaymakers, Ilie clearing them out and he was already turning his hand to laying new floors and mending walls; skimming them with a rough render, limewashing them, and also fixing the windows along with their protective shutters.
He did so much for her that Cristina felt the bond between them draw ever tighter, that an altogether different sense of companionship was developing between them and that she had a need of.
'You're such a comfort to me,' she would tell him, and on a moment's lingering touch of her hand to his cheek, as they shared supper. It was confirmation of the unshakeable bond that she had formed with him, her touch the only sign of her relief that she had not been entirely abandoned and forced to sell her home. To do that would be to forsake all the memories that it continued to arouse in her. She did not want to be in any other place and prayed that Ilie would remain true to that hope in her.
Ilie had his adoptive father's sturdy build but none of his habits. He had even been persuaded into wearing some of Josif's clothes, the sight of them on this young man, when there was a feast day celebration, was a heartbreaking reminder of her lost husband. She had been younger, but a full life had been lived with him. Now, at fifty years of age, she felt emptier times stretching out before her, along with the fear of future days that she sought to push away. The most intrusive of such thoughts was that Ilie would grow tired of living on the farm with her for company, or when he did not travel into town and find a woman whose services he paid for.
Yes, the hours of the day could be filled, along with thoughts of Ilie being close by and working so diligently. They became a distraction from her situation as a widow. A subtle change had gradually overtaken their relationship; one that living together in that isolated and homely farmhouse had slowly wrought upon them and that no one should learn of.
For it soon became clear to Cristina, that her fondness for Ilie now bordered on reckless over-familiarity when she bestowed a lingering touch, or kiss to his cheek; these becoming a silent expression of what was at work in her. She was becoming possessed by a forbidden infatuation that many would consider sinful and depraved, unseemly, even if there was no blood tie. She had always been overly protective of him, perhaps too demonstrative in her affections, even possessive as Josif's health faded and she became increasingly dependent on Ilie to keep the farm working, which he did uncomplainingly.
They even made some extra money and 'treats' would be purchased, Ilie persuading her to spend some of the money on herself.
'It will make you feel better, I'm sure,' he would say with a smile.
'I'll do it to please you,' she would answer, and in those few words lay a deeper truth.
Her conscience would trouble her, but who was to know of how it was between them and in whatever form it might take?
The Dumitru family had always been private, some said far too withdrawn to be good for them if tragedy struck. Well, it had done. She was too young to face life as a widow or to be a lonely soul. Cristina had gradually succumbed to her emotions, and she had decided on ways of dealing with them after that life-changing event - her loss of Josif.
β₯
Ilie kicked off his boots and pushed on the garishly painted front door, its fading red paint still stark against the flaking whitewash of the walls. He heard the clatter of cutlery, and the clink of glasses, as the table was being laid for a simple lunch of cheese, bread, and apples. It was daily fare.
'I waited for you,' Cristina smiled, casting a nervy glance his way as Ilie quickly washed his hands at the sink, the handle of the water pump creaking. 'You left early this morning...'
'It was for the best that I did so,' he answered, averting his face as she sought to kiss him in greeting. Ilie looked at her as she sat down beside him and Cristina stroked the bare skin of his strong arm, tugged on the hair upon it for an instant, and then clenched his hand. 'I'm...I'm not cross with you, but angry with myself, Mama, for letting it even happen and to sleep with you.'
Ilie quelled the instinct to use a cruder, but only too appropriate, word for what had happened and had been so ardently pursued.
'Don't be angry, there's no need. Just understand me and why I needed to be with you...to lie with you as I did.'
She had felt and then succumbed to an unquenchable heat for him. Even in the circumstances, his use of that word before he had left for his morning chores, had shocked her. Yet Cristina continued to look at him, for she had heard both disbelief and anger in his tone. She saw that again, now, in the set of his mouth and in the way that his tongue tip moistened his lips. It was behaviour that she knew only too well, but now she shivered on seeing how his tongue moved, at the memory of what he had aroused in her when she had been taken.
'You understood me and what I have been going through, Ilie. You offered comfort, that is all...a special comfort.'
'Yeah, that was all.' She heard him sigh and then saw the slump of his shoulders, and a nod of resignation before he stretched out to grab at a large chunk of crusty bread. 'I'll get something to drink for us both.'
'Not for me, in case you're wondering.' She met his appraising stare upon her and recognised that look across the space between them. She could not rid herself from feeling uncommon gratitude for what had passed between them during the night. 'I...I've put the bottle away. I had to do that, for both our sakes.'
'Good, but it's time you did that for yourself most of all.'
'It wasn't just the drink that made me do it, darling, you know that now,' she confessed and watched him for a reaction as he sat down, heavily, beside her once more.
'No, and the reasons for my behaviour are difficult to explain,' he replied tersely on looking her way, responding to a moment's touch of her lips to the side of his mouth as Cristina leaned in to kiss him.