She looked up from her book.
‘Where’ve you been? You look pleased with yourself.’
I flopped down on a chair beside her.
‘Just for a walk down the beach. I’m really thirsty. Do you think we could order some drinks?’
‘Did you see anyone?’
‘Anyone? Like who?’ I ignored Mum’s expression and got up and went over to the kitchen.
I poked my head around the door but Stavros wasn’t in there. ‘Do you think Stavros’d mind if I helped myself from the fridge and paid him back later?’
Mum wasn’t listening. She was looking over at Ben, who was standing at the top of the steps, silhouetted against the low evening sun.
‘Someone trying to do me out of a job?’ he asked.
‘Hello,’ said Mum.
‘We thought you must’ve left.’
(How could she? She’d made it so obvious we’d been talking about him. I could have killed her.)
‘I had a few things to do in town. Then soon as I got back, the wind was absolutely perfect…’
‘For windsurfing? So it was you we’ve been watching, out in the bay with the pink and blue sail…’
‘Yeah. Must’ve been.’
‘Please, do you think I could have a drink?’ I interrupted Mum before she could give him a total rundown of every single movement we’d seen him make.
‘What can I get you?’
I thought I’d impress him with my Greek. ‘Portocalada?’
‘Coming up.’
‘And I’d love a cold white wine,’ said Mum.
‘Oh, and could we have some of those yummy onion rings as well?’
‘Onion rings?’
‘You know the ones Stavros does, all hot and crispy with a slice of lemon?’
He grinned. ‘Those aren’t onion rings.’
‘What are they then?’
‘Kalamari.’
‘Kala – what?’
‘Squid.’
‘Squid? Oh that is so disgusting!’
‘No it’s not.’
‘It is. Yukk – to think that I ate squid!’
Mum and Ben cracked up. Don’t you just hate that, when you’ve made a real fool of yourself and other people laugh at you – kind of indulgently? They both seemed to think it was a great joke.
‘So what are you doing here? Working in a place like this?’ asked Mum, when Ben returned with the drinks.
‘The money’s not much, but I took the job because Stavros said I could use the boards for free in the afternoon.’
‘You’re pretty keen, aren’t you?’
‘On windsurfing? Yeah, I’d do anything, if it meant that I could sail.’
I wished Mum wouldn’t go on like this. Why does she always have to talk to boys – to show so much interest. It was so un-cool. I pretended not to be listening and looked out to sea.
‘You weren’t very friendly,’ commented Mum when we returned to our room.
‘Well, you were. Far too friendly,’ I retorted.
‘He seems a nice boy.’
‘He’s all right, I suppose.’
She looked at me assessingly. ‘All right. Enough said. Let’s eat down at the harbour tonight. I wouldn’t want to cramp your style.’
‘What d’you mean – cramp my style?’
‘I’m obviously being a real embarrassment to you.’
‘I don’t know what you’re talking about. Do you want to shower first or shall I?’
I woke early next morning and lay in bed savouring the deliciousness of a totally relaxed body. I was on holiday and I could enjoy the luxury of being able to drift in and out of sleep. The bed might be hard, but wasn’t a hard bed meant to be good for your back? And during the night, the pillow and I had come to some kind of mutual agreement. If I made a big dent in it, it was even vaguely comfortable. But more importantly – Ben was somewhere out there, maybe on the terrace right now – just the other side of that door.
The very thought of him had me wide awake. I leaned over and reached for my watch. It was only seven. But I simply couldn’t lie in bed any longer. What a waste of the day. I climbed out of bed and peered between the shutters. And what a day! Everything looked fresh and newborn in the pale early sunlight.
I slipped on my clothes and left Mum asleep. I’d go down to the beach, have a swim maybe before breakfast.
Ben wasn’t on the terrace. And he wasn’t in the kitchen. I couldn’t see him in the vineyard. And when I got down to the beach, he wasn’t there either.
I slipped off my sneakers and paddled along the edge of the water. The sea felt pretty cold this early in the morning. I’m not absolutely wild about swimming, anyway. I mean I can swim all right – a good few lengths of a standard swimming pool. But I loathe all the business of inching my way into cold water. And I’m not too keen on going underwater either – I hate the way it goes up your nose and into your ears. And then, in the sea, you’re never quite sure of what you might meet. All those kalamari maybe – trying to get their own back with their slimy tentacles twining round my legs. I shuddered. A swim really wasn’t a good idea at all. It would be a much better idea to have a walk.
I retraced my way back up the steps and started wandering along the track that led from the taverna through the olive grove. If it happened to be the track I’d seen Ben running down the other morning – so what? That had absolutely nothing to do with it.
The bay was so quiet. The dredger hadn’t started up yet and you could hear for miles. The donkey braying a slow cascade of sad eeyores. Chickens somewhere with a cock crowing triumphantly from time to time. The sea very faint and distant beneath it all. And through everything and everywhere the constant, steady, rhythmic chanting of the crickets.
Then alongside this sound I heard a distant approaching thud, thud, thud… of sneakers on the dusty track. I heard him long before he came into sight. I considered turning back, but he’d rounded the bend before I had a chance.
He slowed to a trot and drew level with me.
‘Hi. You’re up early.’
‘Mmm. Seemed such a waste of time. You know – staying in bed.’
‘Here look. Hold this a moment?’
He handed me a parcel. I could feel the bread inside through the paper. It was still hot.
He brushed the hair out of his eyes with the back of his hand and leant down to tie a shoelace. He was quite sweaty actually from running, you could see a damp mark on the back of his T-shirt. It showed the shape of his shoulders, the muscle on him. And it gave off a faint and delicious whiff of warm male into the air.
‘Fresh bread! Smells good, I’m starving,’ I said and broke off a bit of crust and