The Dark Side of the Island - Jack Higgins [1]
"Everybody changes," Lomax said.
"Maybe you've got a point there, but why Kyros? I could think of better places."
"There are some people I want to look up if they're still around," Lomax said. "I'd like to see if they've changed too. Afterwards, I'll move on to Crete and Rhodes."
"On Kyros nothing changes." Papademos spat down into the water. "Ten years I've been making this trip and they still treat me as if I've got the plague."
Lomax shrugged. "Maybe they just don't like strangers."
Papademos shook his head. "They don't like anybody. You sure you've got friends there?"
"I hope so."
"So do I. If you haven't, you're in for a pretty thin time and you'll be stuck for a week until I call again."
"I'll take my chances."
Papademos knocked the ash from his pipe on the rail. "We'll be here for four hours. Why don't you have a quick look round for old times' sake and then go on to Crete with me? They'll show you a better time in Herakleion than they will here."
Lomax shook his head. "Next week I'll take you up on that offer, but not now."
"Suit yourself." Papademos shrugged and went back into the deck-house.
They were close inshore now, the great central peak of the island towering three thousand feet above them. As the little steamer rounded the curved promontory crowded with its white houses, a single-masted caicque, sails bellying in the breeze, moved out to sea. It passed so close to them that Lomax could see the great eyes painted on each side of the prow.
The man at the tiller waved carelessly and Lomax raised a hand and then the throbbing of the engines began to falter as they slowed to enter the harbour.
On the white curve of sand, brightly painted caicques were beached and fishermen sat beside them in small groups mending their nets while children chased each other in the shallows, their voices somehow muted and far away.
He went back to his cabin and started to pack. It didn't take long. When he was finished, he left the canvas grip and the portable typewriter on the bunk and went back on deck.
They were already working alongside the stone pier and as he watched the engines stopped and everything seemed curiously still in the great heat.
On the pier, three old men dozed in the sun and a young boy sat with a fishing line, a small black dog curled beside him.
As the steward emerged from the cabin carrying the canvas grip and the typewriter, Papademos came out of the deck-house. "You travel light."
"The only way," Lomax said. "What happens now? Do I just walk off the boat? Doesn't anyone want to see my papers?"
Papademos shrugged. "There's a police sergeant called Kytros who attends to all that. He'll know you're here soon enough."
By now a couple of sailors had the gangway in position. The steward went first and Lomax put on a pair of sunglasses and followed him.
As he took out his wallet to tip the man, he was aware that the three old men were all sitting up straight and looking at him curiously.
The boy who had been fishing was winding in his line. As the steward went back on board, he hurried across, the dog at his heels.
He was perhaps twelve with brown eyes in a thin, intelligent face. His jersey was too big for him and his pants had been patched many times.
He looked up at Lomax curiously for a moment and then said slowly in English, "You want a good hotel, mister? They look after American tourist real nice."
"What makes you think I'm an American?" Lomax asked him in Greek.
The dark glasses. All Americans wear dark glasses." The boy replied in the same language instinctively and his hand went to his mouth in astonishment. "Say, mister, you speak Greek as good as me. How come?"
"Never mind that," Lomax said. "What's your name?"
"Yanni," the boy told him. "Yanni Melos."
Lomax extracted a banknote from his wallet and held it up. "All right, Yanni Melos. This is for you when we reach this hotel of yours where they treat Americans so well. It had better be the best."
Yanni's teeth gleamed