came from all walks of life—dockyard workers to priests, pensioners to university professors—and not one of them had ever been formally charged with a crime.
It was an injustice that had touched Lilian on a personal level. A friend of hers, the daughter of the chief justice, had spent two years under house arrest with her family before opting to board the
“You’re probably right,” conceded Max. “I’m no better than the rest of them. But maybe I’ve learned something. Maybe that’s why I’m here, why I told you.”
“Yes, you tell me, but first you make me swear my silence. I can’t stay silent.”
“You must. They’ll shut you down in a moment.”
“They can’t.”
“They told me they would. That’s what they threatened me with.”
She cast him a curious glance. “They think you care what happens to me?” She seemed almost amused by the idea.
“They’re right. I do.”
She stared down at him, her body now still, the agitation gone. He reached up, took her hand, and drew her back onto the ground beside him.
“You have to trust me. You have to let me do this my way. I need your help—a small favor—but that’s as far as your involvement goes.”
She stared off through the trees.
“What do you want me to do?” she asked eventually, without turning.
At three o’clock, when Max returned to the Information Office, an enemy air raid had yet to materialize over the island, and this had shaped itself into the hopeful speculation that the Luftwaffe had been pulled out of Sicily, summoned back to the Russian front. It had happened before, but never at this time of year, and Max remained skeptical.
At four o’clock, Elliott called from the Combined Operations Room.
“Is there anything on the table?” Max asked.
“Nothing.
“Maybe it’s Hitler’s birthday.”
“That was a couple of weeks back.”
Max laughed.
“It’s true. April twentieth. The sonofabitch just turned fifty-three. You’ve got to hand it to the guy: it takes a special gift to fuck up a planet in fifty-three years.”
“He’s had a little help.”
“True, but I doubt we’d be frying our asses in Malta if young Adolf had been hit by a streetcar on his way to school forty-odd years ago.”
Elliott was calling to confirm their dinner plans and to give Max directions.
“Elliott, I know where you live.”
He’d spent any number of enjoyable evenings on the roof terrace at Elliott’s apartment in Gzira.
“I’m talking about my country residence.”
“Your country residence?”
“You mean you don’t have one? Now grab a pen; it’s a little off the beaten track.”
This was putting it mildly. Wayside shrines, stone gateposts, and oddly shaped trees figured large in the directions.
“Shall we say seven o’clock?”
“With directions like these it might be nearer ten.”
Elliott chuckled. “Well, don’t expect to find any of the Chassagne-Montrachet left.”
The last town of any note before Elliott’s directions degenerated into obscure landmarks was Siggiewi. The road there ran through Qormi and Zebbug, bisecting the low southern plain, passing between the airfields at Luqa and Ta’ Qali. The men had had a whole day to lick their wounds from the previous day’s pasting, and Max could picture the scene: the ground crews and infantry busily filling bomb craters and repairing blast pens, one wary eye on the heavens. The early evening raid was due any moment. The unnatural silence that had hung over the island all day surely had to end soon.
It hadn’t by the time Max had reached Siggiewi. The inhabitants were milling around the main square, moving tentatively, unaccustomed to being aboveground at that hour. Max stopped at a bar near the church and begged a glass of water, not to slake his thirst so much as wash the dust from his mouth. An old man asked him hopefully if the war was over, and when he got back on his motorcycle, a gaggle of barefoot boys chased him through the narrow streets, falling away in dribs and drabs as he opened the throttle.
The rutted road south of Siggiewi wound its way toward the sea and one of the few corners of the island he had never explored. He knew the coastline to the east because that’s where the megalithic temples of Hagar Qim and Mnajdra were to be found, standing like two mini-Stonehenges atop the cliffs. Lilian had insisted he visit them, delivering a lecture on their unique place in the panoply of ancient European sites. She was biased. The professor of archaeology who had whisked her mother off to Italy was a leading expert on Hagar Qim. That’s how the couple had met, some years before the war, during one of the professor’s many visits to his precious temple.
To the west lay the Dingli Cliffs, mile upon mile of sheer limestone rock face rising two hundred feet from the water. The Dingli Cliffs were home to another kind of temple, one that celebrated the new technology, for it was