Fun In The Sun chapter 7
By greecegal
- 316 reads
Nick sat at the bar in The Wheelhouse and sighed, flipping the beer mat in front of him for the umpteenth time. Ruth dived across the bar and swiped the beer mat off him.
"What on earth is wrong with you Nick? You've been driving me to distraction all morning!"
"I'm bored," he sighed again.
"Good God, you've only been back one day! I thought you were going to get yourself a bike? Why don't you go out for a volta or something?" she suggested.
"Can't," he sulked, "not picking the bike up until later this afternoon."
Ruth rolled her eyes. "Well, what about meeting someone for lunch then?"
"Everyone's working," he said, reaching for the beer mat in Ruth's hand. She held it away from him.
"What about Sal? She's not working today," Ruth pointed out.
He hesitated. "She was supposed to meet me for breakfast but she never turned up. No big deal."
Ruth frowned. "I'm sure there was a good reason why Nick, she wouldn't have done it on purpose. You know Sal; she's probably just overslept."
"Yeah well like I said, no big deal," he repeated.
"Hmm." Ruth looked at him dubiously. "So, did you two have fun last night?"
"Yeah, it was alright," he replied with little enthusiasm.
"Where did you go?"
He shrugged. "Just to Mardi Gras."
"Anywhere else?" she grinned.
"Nope," he said, finishing his coffee and cringing at the taste of the lukewarm liquid.
Ruth crossed her arms on the bar and leant closer to him. "You two were spotted Nick. You know what this town is like; a late night swim never goes unnoticed."
Nick looked a bit uneasy for a moment. "Well, it was hot. I'm not used to this heat."
Ruth didn't look convinced. "You'd better be careful Nick; if Jen hears that kind of gossip, you'll be in trouble."
"She knows that Sal and me are just friends...and besides, we were both fully clothed at the time," he stressed. Ruth watched him for a moment as he traced the handle of his coffee mug absentmindedly.
"When is Jen coming back then?" she asked.
"End of the week," he replied, keeping his eyes on the coffee mug.
"So, you two got back together then?"
He nodded.
"Do you think you'll stay together for the whole summer?" She was pushing him and perhaps interfering a little too much, but she couldn't help herself.
"You never know," he said, looking up at her with a smile that went far from reaching his eyes.
"Do you want to stay with her?" she asked, noticing his expression. He sighed, a little frustrated with all the questions, most of which he didn't know how to answer.
"You know what's funny?" he began bitterly. "The crazy woman keeps coming back to me!"
"You sound surprised," she observed.
"Well, we haven't exactly been getting on; I kind of expected her to give up before now," he said, handing her the mug and indicating for her to pour him another coffee. She took the mug but showed no signs of moving away at that moment.
"And what about you Nick? You sound as if you're just staying with her because she keeps coming back to you."
"Well, not exactly. You know Ruth, I just want to make a success of something," he confided. "I seem to have messed up everything else in my life, so I thought I'd try and make this thing work for once. And she seems to want it to work too...I guess. She must do or she wouldn't keep fixing things between us."
"So, may I ask why you have to keep fixing things?"
"I don't know," he sighed. "She wants to do her things, and I want to do mine. But I try to show an interest in her friends... and I even went to meet her parents! Sometimes though I'd just like it to be the two of us. I thought that we'd have more time to spend together when we went back to England. I mean, before that it was always work that came between us here. Okay, I get it that she's dedicated to her job and all, that's a good thing right? It's just that her job here seems to take over, and then any free time she has she's trying to catch up with the rest of the reps. So in all of that, when do we get time to spend together? Maybe I'm just being selfish and unrealistic," he concluded.
Ruth looked surprised at the rush of words that had come out of Nick's mouth. He wasn't one for talking about his feelings at all. Everything with Nick appeared to be casual. He'd talk about the football or his bike, he'd ask about who'd been in the bar that day and he'd tell jokes or tease the female workers; but beyond that, he kept his feelings to himself. He had briefly mentioned to Ruth that his father was ill before returning to the UK last November, but then he'd added that they never saw each other anyway and that neither of them was bothered about that. Ruth had read between the lines nonetheless, but anyone who didn't know Nick would say that he was quite shallow. Ruth knew different.
"You know what I think?" Ruth came out with suddenly. "I think that you're really just a big softie underneath," she said, briefly stroking his cheek with the back of her hand, "and what you really want is just someone to share your life with, to share the ups and downs with you...to grow old with you, sit by the fire with you and bring you cups of tea when you're too doddery to manage it yourself," she teased.
He pulled a face. "Are you kidding? That will never happen. More likely I'd need someone to lift me onto my bike and hop on the back before we go cruising off into the sunset."
"Ha! Got you! See, you're just an old romantic at heart!" she exclaimed. He tutted but smiled.
"But you know," she continued, "maybe Jen isn't the 'jump on the bike and cruise into the sunset' type. And I don't think that she's going to change; she's too set in her ways. She has her life all nicely organized: house, job, social network, and I get the feeling that she's comfortable with that. But she can't make you happy with that, anymore than you can make her happy with what you want."
Nick's eyes hovered on Ruth's until someone from the other end of the bar called out for another drink. Ruth looked reluctant to move for a moment.
"Pass me that newspaper over there will you on your way back?" Nick said, reverting to his usual casual self.
Ruth smiled, realising that perhaps she had said enough. "Sure, and I'll bring you that coffee too."
Ruth placed a pile of newspapers and another coffee in front of Nick and went back down the bar to talk to the customers there. He searched through the papers but found that he had read most of them already as none of them were new, so he settled for reading the Athens News which printed a lot of its articles in English.
He turned the pages with little hope of finding anything interesting to read; that was until a small article in the left hand side of one page caught his eye. He chuckled to himself as he read it, but afterwards he found nothing else of interest, so he placed the paper down on the bar and picked up his mug to take a sip of coffee. As boredom began to set in once more however, he found his eyes returning to the newspaper on the bar in front of him. Searching through the pages again, he found the article and read it for a second time. He contemplated the article for a while as the seed of an idea began to grow in his head, after which he finally jumped off his bar stool, grabbed the newspaper and moved over to the PC in the corner of the room.
He was still engrossed in the website that he'd found when Sal burst into the bar half an hour later.
"I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry Nick. Will you ever forgive me?" she exclaimed, collapsing into a chair not far from him. He moved his head briefly to look at her and then turned his attention back to the screen.
"Nick, I'm really sorry. My alarm didn't go off, or I forgot to set it, I'm not sure which... but I slept in," she grimaced.
"Don't worry," he shrugged, keeping his eyes on the screen.
She frowned. "You're angry with me," she observed. "And you have every right to be...I mean, there I was last night going on about never letting you down and now I've kind of done it," she finished slowly as she realised the truth in her words. "But it was only a mistake," she said forcefully, "I'd never really let you down on something big Nick. And you know I didn't do it on purpose; you do know that I didn't do it on purpose don't you?"
"Sure."
"Nick," she said, touching his arm and urging him to look at her. "I had such a good time last night. I haven't had so much fun in ages and I loved the time we spent together. You had fun too didn't you?" she asked hesitantly.
"Yeah, it was good to catch up with everyone," he replied, matter of factly.
It was good to catch up with him. Why was he being like that? They got on so well last night, but now he hated her!
"Nick," she began again.
He interrupted her abruptly. "Sal, sorry but I'm busy with something here." She watched him for a while and then slipped off her chair and slowly made her way to the bar.
He sat with his hands poised over the keyboard, having completely lost track of what he was going to type in. Turning his head slightly, he glanced out of the corner of his eyes to the bar where she was standing. Ruth hadn't noticed her, and most of the people were sitting at the far end, and yet she simply stood at the bar on her own with her eyes lowered. He suddenly felt a sense of remorse and left the computer to join her.
"Hey!" he said, jumping up behind her, "want to know something really exciting?"
She moved away from him to lean forward over the bar so he went around her and leant backwards against the side to see her face. She turned her head away suddenly and called over to Ruth, however, he could have sworn that he saw tears in her eyes before she moved.
"Sal, what's wrong?" he said, moving to the other side of her to look at her face again. "I have a hangover, I'm going to splash my face with water," she said, abruptly brushing him to one side and heading down the bar.
It was only minutes later when he found himself following her. He stopped when he came to the open door of the ladies room and saw her leaning over the washbasin with her head down. She jumped when he nudged the door open further to get a closer look at her and she ran her hands quickly over her face. Moving into the room, he took hold of her by both arms and she looked up at him in surprise.
"Are you crying?" he asked bluntly.
"Don't be stupid!" she said, turning back to the sink and proceeding to splash water onto her face. "I told you, I'm just hungover." He wasn't sure that she was telling him the truth; she seemed to be avoiding him a lot. He pulled a paper towel out of the dispenser and handed it to her with a smile.
"You know what'll cure your hangover?" A glass of orange juice to get the vitamins and sugar back into you, and a couple of aspirin. Ruth's got some; they'll be waiting for you on the bar when you come out," he said, putting a hand in her hair and reaching forward to kiss her on the cheek before leaving the room. She watched him go and her face slowly lit up with a smile.
***********
Sal swigged the second aspirin down with a gulp of orange juice and rested her head on the bar.
"Hey! No time for that," Nick said, digging her in the ribs and making her sit bolt upright on her stool. "You can't still be tired surely!"
She nodded guiltily.
"Oh, so you'll be too tired to hear about the adventure I had planned for us then."
"Adventure?" Her eyes widened with curiosity.
"Yes. But you'd be too tired for that," he repeated.
She grabbed his arm and looked up at him beseechingly. "Tell me about the adventure Nick, please."
"Well...if you can stay awake for long enough."
She nodded enthusiastically.
"Okay. We're going to enter a competition...well, sort of a competition anyway...or something like a quest."
Sal looked across at Ruth then who had overheard the tail end of the conversation and was approaching them with interest.
"Wow! A quest. That sounds like a real adventure!" Sal said, half with excitement and half wondering if Nick was pulling her leg.
"You don't believe me do you? Well, let me explain more," he said, settling on a bar stool and motioning for Ruth to move closer. "What do any of you two know about the Minotaur?"
Sal looked perplexed but Ruth stepped up to reply.
"He was a beast in Greek mythology wasn't he? Half man, half bull," she replied with a self-satisfied smile.
"That's right. Well done Ruth. And what is the connection between Crete and the Minotaur?" he challenged.
She thought for a moment and then her face broke out into a smile. "I've got it! The Palace of Knossos in Heraklion. Isn't that supposed to be where the Minotaur's Maze was?"
"Right first time." He looked impressed. "Know anything more about the myth?"
Ruth shook her head.
"I admit, I never listened to a thing in history lessons," Sal laughed.
"Well, you'd better listen carefully now because it just might help us with our quest."
Both Ruth and Sal looked fascinated.
"It all began in ancient Crete when king Minos was fighting for control of the island with his brothers. He turned to the gods for guidance and asked Poseidon..."
"Greek god of the sea!" Sal shouted out proudly.
"Yes, well done Sal... anyway, he asked Poseidon to send him a sign that he was the right person to rule and the god sent him a white bull."
Sal pulled a face. "I wouldn't have been very impressed with a white bull. I mean, if he was a god and all that, then he should have sent him an army of a trillion Hercules type men to smash the opposition to smithereens!"
"Well, he didn't Sal. And it seems that King Minos was very impressed with the bull because he was supposed to sacrifice it in the name of Poseidon but he kept it instead."
"Oops, not a good idea to go upsetting the gods. Don't tell me, he ended up with a lightening bolt in his back," Ruth chuckled.
Nick sighed. "Are you going to let me finish this story or not?"
"Sorry," Ruth said sheepishly.
"Anyway, you were right, Poseidon wasn't very pleased with Minos and so he made the King's wife fall madly in love with the bull."
Sal frowned. "Weird."
"Pasifae, that was her name, ordered the architect who later designed the Minotaur's Maze to make her a wooden cow..."
"Hmm, I don't like the sound of this," Ruth declared.
"Yeah... so, she climbs into the cow and...well, gets randy with the bull," he finished quickly.
"Eeeww!" both Sal and Ruth cringed.
"Anyway, the result of that was the half bull, half man beast called the Minotaur. When it grew up it became wild and ferocious and so that is why the king asked the architect Daedalos to build the labyrinth, or maze, to contain it in. Now the next part of the story has a few different versions, but basically, the Athenians killed king Minos's son and so Crete went to war with Athens and won. Minos then demanded that the Athenians sent seven youths and seven maidens every nine years to be the Minotaur's lunch, so to speak. Well eventually the Athenians got fed up with sending all their youths and maidens to be eaten by the Minotaur, and so they sent the hero Theseus to kill it instead. Luckily for Theseus, when he got there, the king's daughter Ariadne fell in love with him..."
Ahh," Sal sighed.
Nick laughed at her. "...she gave him a ball of thread which he tied to one end of the labyrinth so that he didn't get lost and he could find his way back. As you can guess, he killed the Minotaur and rescued all the other Athenians along the way."
"Hurray for Theseus!" Sal cheered.
"Great story Nick, but what has all this got to do with your 'quest?'" Ruth asked.
"Well, some historic evidence suggests that Theseus killed the Minotaur with a sword, however, historians now believe different," he explained.
"Hold on a minute," Ruth interjected, "you're talking as if this really happened. I for one have never seen any half men, half bull beasts anywhere on the island since I've been here!"
Sal chuckled. "I don't know, have you seen some of the men that go into Mardis Gras on a Saturday night?"
Nick rolled his eyes. "Of course it's not true but, the Greeks now want definite proof that the Palace Of Knossos was in fact the place where the myth originated from. At present, they have found no actual evidence in the palace itself to substantiate the claims, however they did find a huge fresco depicting a massive bull and there was also other evidence found with bull images on it. This fresco shows a man grasping onto the horns of the bull and leaping over it, either as some kind of bullfighting activity or as a religious ritual. Many people think that the bull in this picture is an image of the Minotaur, although it doesn't have the upper body of a man. In all, it seems as though the people of the palace actually did take part in bull wrestling and that this myth perhaps sprung up from one incident when a bull got loose, rampaging the palace and triggering off an appeal for its slaughter. One man captured and killed it and bingo, before they knew it the gossip had spread and everyone was told that Mr Joe Blogs, who nobody had ever heard of before, was the famous hero from legend and that he'd killed a ferocious beast which was half man, half bull."
"Ooh, the little liars! See what gossip can do?" Sal said, turning to Ruth.
"Still no more enlightened about this quest," Ruth sighed.
"Right, well, as I said earlier, historians now believe that Theseus, or Joe Blogs, didn't kill the Minotaur with a sword but with a double headed axe. Many images of double headed axes have been found in the palace and they apparently symbolised the king of the gods, Zeus himself. Evidence has now come to light to show that for some obscure reason the double headed axe which Theseus supposedly killed the Minotaur with, was hidden away some four thousand years ago, but still remains on the island somewhere to this very day." Ruth and Sal looked amazed. "We're going to find it!" Nick finished triumphantly.
"We are?" Sal gasped.
"Yes we are. We're going to find it because the carvings on the axe hold all the answers to the whole myth and will prove that the Minotaur's maze really is in the Palace of Knossos here on the island of Crete!"
"Wow! We'll be famous!" Sal exclaimed.
"Not only that, but we'll also get the reward money they're giving out to the people who find the axe first. The tourist board thinks that they can make a big thing out of this and that the publicity will flood the island with tourists all flocking to see the Minotaur's maze," he informed them.
"And that'll be good for me," Ruth added, "Especially when you're in here signing autographs for tourists!"
"Great, so all we need to do now is scour the entire island from top to bottom. Nick, did I happen to mention that we both have to be back for work at the weekend?"
"Well, I didn't plan on finding the axe today Sal. Big things happen with small steps," he said, waving a finger at her. "But, I just so happen to know where our first step will take us."
"Where?" Sal and Ruth asked at once.
"Matala," he announced.
"Matala?" Ruth frowned. "But that's miles away from Knossos."
"Yeah well, I figured that they'd already had a quick look around the palace for the axe before they set up this competition," he said sarcastically.
Ruth had to acknowledge his point. "Why Matala then?"
"Where is Matala?" Sal asked.
"It's in the south of the island, about seventy kilometres from Heraklion. But what interests me about Matala is that on the beach there is a series of caves carved into the cliffside, these caves were used as a Roman cemetery. Well, I was doing a bit of research on the Internet just now, and I noticed an article about the double headed axes and how when the Romans occupied the island they took many of these axes and kept them, believing that they would be a source of great strength and power. Also, since the axes were a symbol of the god Zeus, the Romans kind of thought that they would get in his good books by possessing them. Anyway, that reminded me of this Roman cemetery I've heard about in Matala. I mean the Romans were buried with these type of things, weren't they?"
"I suppose so," Ruth nodded.
"Well then, looks like we're going to Matala Sal."
"Looks like we are!" she grinned.
"I pick my new bike up in about an hour, will that give you enough time to get ready?" he asked Sal.
"Bike? We're going on your bike?" Sal looked shocked and a little uncertain.
"Sure, why not?" he replied.
"Well, I've never really been on a bike before. I mean, I've grabbed a lift across town on the back of a moped but that's about it," she said anxiously.
"You'll be fine Sal, I'll look after you. I've been riding a motorbike for years," he reassured her.
"Matala is a long way on a bike Nick, and you'll have to go across the mountains for part of the way too. It's quite remote up there," Ruth warned him.
"Well, we'll just have to go prepared then. It should take us about five hours but we can stop on the way and have a look around one of the little villages," he replied.
Sal looked at her watch. "Nick, we won't make it back here before dark if it's a five hour journey."
"I know, I thought about that, but then I figured that we could maybe stay the night in Matala and make our way back here tomorrow. It's not as if we have anything to rush back for, and Matala is supposed to be great in the evening. A lovely little place on the beach with cocktail bars and palm trees et cetera."
"Well... we could I suppose," Sal said, warming to the idea. "It would be almost like a mini holiday."
"Exactly. So are we going then Sal?" he asked expectantly.
"Let's do it!" she exclaimed jumping off her stool. "I'll have to pack some supplies for the journey though, you know drinks and snacks in case we need sustenance on the way. Oh and sun tan lotion..."
"And bring your bikini, the sea there is supposed to be great for swimming," Nick added.
"Yippee!" Sal cheered, jumping up and down with excitement and throwing herself into Nick's arms, "we're going on a quest!"
Nick laughed and looked astounded for a minute by Sal's enthusiasm. Then he closed his eyes briefly and put his head next to hers, holding her tightly and looking up to Ruth with a longing expression in his eyes. Ruth winked at him.
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