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Hello all who come by!
Hello all who come by!
It's time for the #AprilWEP challenge. During this time of Covid-19 and the challenges it brings, many of us are finding strength, more than ever, in our writing.
My flash came to me when I woke one morning a few weeks' ago, no doubt brought on by the constant inundation of Covid-19 news stories from around the world.
I hope you enjoy my story, which when I analyse it, is a love letter to Santorini in the Greek Islands where I spent a wonderful day a couple of years ago. Like my hero, not long enough.
EVIE’S IDEA
It was Evie’s idea to holiday on the Greek Islands, to spend
a day on Santorini, the insanely beautiful jewel set in the Aegean Sea.
It was Evie’s idea to walk every square mile of that island,
to explore every cave where in World War 11 she told me the locals hid from the
German invaders, spending days and nights huddled together, existing on raw
onions and grass, all that stood between them and mass starvation.
That was until the Germans discovered the caves and the
onions. There was nothing left for the island inhabitants.
They suffered.
They starved.
They died.
As we walked through the streets of Oia along the ridge overlooking the waterfront, Evie regaled me with history of the Greek Islands I never
knew, history she’d kept to herself. ‘To prolong life, the islanders bartered
everything they owned, everything they couldn’t eat. Their possessions were few.
Just old bowls and utensils belonging to their parents and their parents before
them, all the way back to antiquity. They didn’t know these relics would one
day be considered valuable. All that was valuable at the time was their lives
and the lives of their children.'
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Hustling along the beautifully tiled streets of Oia, Evie
grew increasingly irritated by the crowds. They pushed their way along the
ridge, stopping to take in the breathtaking view over the sea, cameras snapping
the whitewashed buildings tottering down the cliffside.
Up and down one set of narrow concrete stairs after the
other.
Then Evie grabbed my arm. She spied the vase. An antique
vase. Perched on its pedestal. In the window of the smallest shop I’d ever
seen.
‘Look.’ She pointed to the whitewashed walls, the bright
blue painted door, the red checked curtains framing the windows. ‘Isn’t it
darling?’
Evie thought everything was darling, except the hot mess of
tourists pushing and shoving, anxious to cram everything into this
island-hopping experience, anxious not to miss the ship which left in two short
hours. When they looked down the hill to Fira, the capital, their cruise ship
loomed like a threat.
‘Evie, let’s keep moving. There’s still a lot to discover.’
She stood gazing in the window, mesmerized. ‘I must have it,’ she said, clambering down two steep steps
into the tiny hole-in-the-wall-dusty-with-desperation shop.
The vase didn’t look as good at close range as it had from
the window. Its main features were covered in years of dust and grime. How long
had it been sitting there, waiting? Evie’s lineage was Greek and by the rapt
look on her face as she traced the delicate lines of the vase, I saw that she
was transported back in time to the stories from her mother’s childhood during
the German occupation, how they’d survived on a diet of onions and grass.
The old Greek shopkeeper approached, his eyes rheumy, his
hair tousled and falling past his shoulders, his front teeth missing as he
beamed at us.
I insisted on checking the base to see if it said made in
China, but no, it seemed genuine, something we could take along to the Antique
Roadshow next time it came to Yorkshire.
‘There are very few of these old vases left,’ the old guy
said, lighting up a filthy-smelling cigar and blowing smoke at the vase. ‘This one
I found myself in a cave high up in the hills near the caldera. Someone had
buried it aeons ago. Must have been their treasure. You are the first to show
an interest. Perhaps it was meant for you.’
We made it down the chairlift to the boat, bathed in the
glorious marmalade sunset over the Aegean Sea.
Evie clutched her vase to her chest as we stood on the deck,
watching the twinkling lights of Santorini disappear. Her eyes were alight with
the fervour one feels when given a peek into the past.
‘We must come back soon,’ she whispered, tears running down
her cheeks.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Home again
I checked in on Evie every evening. We’d share a glass of
ouzo and toast to our next trip. Both being alone, we loved to travel together.
‘I must go back to Santorini,’ she said, a week after we arrived home. ‘I want to spend
days, not hours, exploring. I want to know more about my ancestors. When I listened
to mother’s stories, I was detached. Now I’m invested.’
As we planned our next travel adventure, she nodded at the
vase in pride of place on her mantlepiece.
The vase. Evie was completely obsessed.
I had to admit it was beautiful with its classic lines, its
black silhouette figures, its scrolls.
Then Evie took sick.
We’d congratulated ourselves on making it home before Covid-19
hit, but it appeared we hadn’t.
Evie tested positive.
I tested negative.
The hospitals struggled to contain the outbreak.
Evie demanded she isolate at home.
I was no nurse, so I hired one. I did everything I could. But
Evie was over seventy. In the high-risk category.
Her descent was swift.
Hospital. Intensive care. Respirator. It killed me to watch
her through the glass, gasping for breath as pneumonia took over her lungs.
Dressed in my hazmat suit, mask and gloves, I was allowed a
minute to say goodbye.
Her bony hand reached for mine. ‘Son,’ she said, ‘Come
close. Listen.’
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
After the outbreak was over, I sipped ouzo on my tiny terrace
in the cave-house AirBNB in Oia, anticipating the sunset, talking to the antique
vase in the center of the glass table.
‘Evie. Mother. I’m back. I brought you to your favorite place.
We didn’t have much time that day. Now you have eternity.’
At sunset, as the golden-orange-pink tipped sun dipped into
the Aegean Sea, I made my way down the rocky slope to the rocky shore, my arms
covered in red welts from the riotous red bougainvillea growing wild, snatching
at me each step I took. I reached the beach made up of black, red and white lava
pebbles.
I uncapped the lid of the precious antique vase. ‘Goodbye
Mother.’ Her ashes caught the wind.
It was Evie’s idea.
Her final resting place would be the Aegean Sea.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
WORDS: 1,010
If you haven't yet participated in WEP writing challenges, or you've backslidden, we warmly invite you to participate in two months' time for our June challenge:
I'm writing this over the Easter weekend, eagerly anticipating Andrea Bocelli's Easter Sunday concert on youtube. Here he sings a favorite of mine. Very apt during this time of Covid-19.
Enjoy my post? Please hit my buttons!
57 comments:
Just beautiful, Denise! So many threads throughout - and so much heart! I'm glad her son brought Evie back to her roots :)
Lovely story. I know it's a very different feel, but the captivation with the Greek islands and disdain for tourists reminded me very much of Shirley Valentine.
Very heartfelt post. Enjoyed the flow of the story. Be well and stay safe.
Oh Denise.
It is too early in the day for my eyes to leak. They are though. Thank you, and huge thanks to Evie's boy who brought her home.
Wow, not at all what I expected but so fitting. I know how Evie feels with the crowds. Makes it hard to enjoy the moment with too many folks. Especially those more interested in a selfie than the beauty before them. :)
I love it when the moment you wake the story is there. Great job! Beautiful story!
Thanks Renee. It's wonderful when you wake and a story is fully formed. I hardly changed a thing from my longhand version.
Glad your eyes leaked, Sue. Mine did too writing this.
Thanks Mason.
Shirley Valentine, LOL. Bring her on!
Thanks Jemi. Glad you liked it.
Hi Denise - brilliant ... and I could see Santorini and feel the heat, the crowds ... yes, what a lovely tie up - evocative ... so difficult to know re ashes and what to do ... but a great modern tale, with an 'antique' twist ... and good to know Covid19 does end. Loved the story and take - Greece is just amazing ... take care - Hilary
Hi,
Beautiful! You have me drawn in until the end. I liked how you brought in the Covid 19. I also love the connection between the vase, the memories Evie had from her mother and Evie's own death. The emotional ending gave me a joyous feeling. Evie rested in peace.
Shalom aleichem,
Pat G
Hi Denise, I enjoyed reading your post. Well-written and heartfelt, the story unfolds in an unexpected way with genuine emotion. I have always wanted the Greek islands. I think Evie had a fine idea. Thanks for sharing your story!
Mesmerising. I have enjoyed the whole journey. The beauty of Oia, Aegean Sea, crowded Santorini Streets.
Sanhita Mukherjee.
Your scenes are always so descriptive. I have asthma and diabetes, both of which put me in a high-risk category for COVID. I'm not particularly worried about contracting it, because my son and I live out in the boonies in a town of 154 people. One day I assume my son will have an urnful of my ashes, but he won't have to go to Greece to scatter them. He can just bring it back to this podunk little town and step out on the prairie. This is the only place I've ever felt at home, so it suits.
Wonderful; sad and uplifting simultaneously. I could almost see that island, the sunny steep streets, the flowers, and the vase. It fits that Evie's son brought her ashes back to that island she liked so much.
Now that was really powerful and so bittersweet.
What a lovely and relevant story, sad and yet sweet too. Way to go with staying current and bringing a sense of hope to this whole situation. I like the connection to past, present, and future in this story. Nicely done.
This story is both beautiful and sad, and the ending was perfection. I'm sure this pandemic will be inspiring many more stories from all over the world for a long time to come.
Thanks Laura. I loved writing it.
Thanks Toi. I'm glad you liked its sadness and sweetness.
Glad you think that Alex.
Thanks Olga. Glad it was vivid in your mind.
I'm glad you feel so at home in your home. I'm all for traveling over the world every chance I get. Sadly my wings are clipped for the moment, so I'll enjoy trawling through my past experiences.
Keep well and safe!
Thank you Sanhita. I'm glad you were with me on my journey.
Just letting you know people cannot comment on your post which is a shame as everyone wants to give their reaction.
Thanks Karuna for reading my story which I enjoyed writing so much. I'm glad you like it!
I'm glad you got the joy at the end Pat. It could have been morbid, but not what I wanted. I wanted Evie's joie de vivre to shine through to the end.
Yes, I hope there'll be much joy when Covid-19 ends. I'm not sure what the world will look like then.
A beautiful story. Sad and lovely at the same time.
Thanks Rebecca.
What a lovely, but heart rending tale. The virus is sure to bring many stories. Stay safe and take care Denise!
I'm not there this time but I will be back in June.
Sonia (https://soniadogra.com)
Missing you this round Sonia. Looking forward to seeing you in June.
Certainly a time-relevant story. I imagine there will be too many non-fiction versions like this soon, sadly. It's well-written and vivid. I like how you made me feel like I was there, going to the shop.
A lovely story, a beautiful and poignant ending.
Beautifully written Denise with all the wisdom and details of a well-travelled soul. Priceless multiple compound adjective “ the holeinthewalldusty desperate shop”, ha,ha. Very poignant denouement. Congratulations and thank you for sharing.
Thanks Susan. I was Evie in so many ways.
Thanks Sally
Yes, fiction is easier to take atm.
Your story was so full of feeling that I was swept along with the emotion, wishing you didn't have to make Evie die, wishing she could take that trip she wanted to. Skilfully written, very creative, the juxtaposition of the happy holiday feeling and the beauty of Santorini with the reality of this frightening virus.
Yes Kalpanaa it’s always unfortunate when our characters die. She was an early death. How many have died in real life from this virus?
Denise, this is such a beautiful and moving piece. The story about the locals hiding from German invaders is fascinating. This line, in particular, struck a chord with me: "They didn’t know these relics would one day be considered valuable. All that was valuable at the time was their lives and the lives of their children." It got me thinking about how much we obsess about material wealth, but when it comes down to it, our possessions are worth nothing compared to our relationships and memories.
I didn't suspect that Evie was the speaker's mother. That was a great twist. The ending was so bittersweet and poignant. Great job.
Oh Denise, you made me cry! What a beautiful, poignant and contemporary story. Relationships of people, place and time all braided together. Loved the phrase 'marmalade sunset'. Evocative!
A lovely, and descriptive tale. Well done, Denise.
You were five hours early, Denise so my apologies for being five days late with my praises. Interesting facts woven into a beautiful piece - but tragic as too real. With a moving ending - a fitting end. I didn't know everything about Santorini in WWW2 - I know more about the Battle of Crete. But the place will always be special for me, exploring the ancient ruins and the volcano - and your pictures rekindle memories.
So lovely, and so right for Santorini. Uplifting and sad, all at the same time. Brava.
Thanks Jemima.
Glad you liked it Christopher.
The history is horrifying but fascinating. Glad you liked it.
Thanks Donna.
Thanks for getting it Anstice.
Very touching and very timely! You've used your remembrance of a beautiful place to create more beauty in the form of words. Thank you for the Santorini visit and the poignant moment at the end of your tale.
You're welcome Lee.
A beautiful story even if tinged by tragedy. I like the idea that Evie has come full circle and is now at one with her ancestors.
This made my heart turn inside out. I'm so glad he was able to be with her at the end and to carry out her last wish.
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