off.
‘Leave me, Father; there are things that have to be said and I’m going to enjoy saying them.’ He grinned straight at Lysandros. ‘I never thought the day would come when I’d have a good laugh at you. You, of all men, to be taken in by a designing woman!’
‘Give up,’ Lysandros advised him gently. ‘It’s no use, Nikator.’
‘But that’s what’s so funny,’ Nikator yelped. ‘How easily you were fooled when you fancied yourself so armoured.
Even this jibe didn’t seem to affect Lysandros, who continued to regard Nikator with pity and contempt.
‘And your “heel” was that you believed in her,’ Nikator said, jabbing a finger at Petra. ‘You’re too stupid to realise that she’s been playing you for a sucker because there’s something she wanted.’
‘Hey, you!’ Estelle thumped him hard on the shoulder. ‘If you’re suggesting my daughter has to marry for money, let me tell you-’
‘Not money!’ Nikator spat. ‘Glory. Anything for a good story, eh?’
‘What the hell are you talking about?’ Lysandros demanded. ‘There’s no story.’
‘Of course there is. It’s what she lives by, her reputation, getting a new angle on things that nobody else can get. And, oh, boy, did she get it this time!’
Even then they didn’t see the danger. Lysandros sighed, shaking his head as if being patient with a tiresome infant.
‘You won’t laugh when you know what she’s been doing,’ Nikator jeered. ‘Getting onto the press, telling them your secrets, repeating what you said to her-’
‘That’s a lie!’ Petra cried.
‘Of course it’s a lie,’ Lysandros said.
The smiling confidence had vanished from his face and his voice had the deadly quiet of a man who was fighting shock, but he was still uttering the right words.
‘Be careful what you say,’ he told Nikator coldly. ‘I won’t have her slandered.’
‘Oh, you think it’s a slander, do you? Then how does the press know what you said to her at the Achilleion? How do they know you showed her Brigitta’s grave and told her how often you’d stood there and begged Brigitta’s forgiveness? Have you ever repeated that? No, I thought not. But someone has.’
‘Not me,’ Petra said, aghast. ‘I would never-you can’t believe that!’
She flung the last words at Lysandros, who turned and said quickly, ‘Of course not.’
But his manner was strained. Gone was the relaxed joy of only a few minutes ago. Only two of them knew what he had said to her at that grave.
‘It’s about time you saw this,’ Nikator said.
Nobody had noticed the bag he’d brought with him and dropped at his feet. Now he leaned down and began to pull out the contents, distributing them to the fascinated crowd.
They were newspapers, carrying the banner headline,
The book had been such a success that it had been revised for a school edition and was now being considered for a further revision. This time the angle would be more glamorous and romantic, as Ms Radnor considered Greek men today and whether they really lived up to their classical reputation. For the moment she was working on Achilles.
There followed a detailed description of the last few weeks-their first meeting at the wedding, at which
Which was exactly what he’d said, Petra thought in numb horror.
It went on and on. Somehow the people behind this had learned every private detail of their time together at the villa, and were parading it for amusement. ‘Achilles’ had been trapped, deluded, made a fool of by a woman who was always one step ahead of him. That was the message, and those who secretly feared and hated him would love every moment of it.
All around she could see people trying to smother their amusement. Homer was scowling and the older guests feared him too much to laugh aloud, but they were covering their mouths, turning their heads away. The younger ones were less cautious.
‘Even you,’ Nikator jeered at Lysandros. ‘Even you weren’t as clever as you reckoned. You thought you had it all sussed, didn’t you? But she saw through you, and oh, what a story she’s going to get out of it,
Lysandros didn’t move. He seemed to have been turned to stone.
Nikator swung his attention around to Petra.
‘Not that you’ve been so clever yourself,
Estelle gave a little shriek and Homer grabbed his son.
‘That’s enough,’ he snapped. ‘Leave here at once.’
But Nikator threw him off again. Possessed by bitter fury, he could defy even his father. He went closer to Petra, almost hissing in her face.
‘He’s a fool if he believed you, but you’re a fool if you believed him. There are a hundred women in this room right now who trusted him and discovered their mistake too late. You’re just another.’
Somehow she forced herself to speak.
‘No, Nikator, that’s not true. I know you want to believe it, but it’s not true.’
‘You’re deluded,’ he said contemptuously.
‘No, it’s you who are deluded,’ she retorted at once.
‘Have you no eyes?’
‘Yes, I have eyes, but eyes can deceive you. What matters isn’t what your eyes tell you, but what your heart tells you. And my heart says that this is the man I trust with all of me.’ She lifted her head and spoke loudly. ‘Whatever Lysandros tells me, that is the truth.’
She stepped close to him and took his hand. It was cold as ice.
‘Let’s go, my dearest,’ she said. ‘We don’t belong here.’
The crowd parted for them as they walked away together into the starry night. Now the onlookers were almost silent, but it was a terrible silence, full of horror and derision.
On and on they walked, into the dark part of the grounds. Here there were only a few stragglers and they fell away when they saw them coming, awed, or perhaps made fearful, by the sight of two faces that seemed to be looking into a different world.
At last they came to a small wooden bridge over a river and went to stand in the centre, gazing out over the water. Still he didn’t look at her, but at last he spoke in a low, almost despairing voice.
‘Thank you for what you said about always believing me.’
‘It was only what you said to me first,’ she said fervently. ‘I was glad to return it. I meant it every bit as much as you did. Nikator is lying. Yes, there was a book, years ago, but I told you about that myself, and about the reissue.’
‘And the new version?’
‘I knew they were thinking of bringing it out again, but not in detail. And it certainly isn’t going to be anything like Nikator said. Lysandros, you can’t believe all that stuff about my “working on Achilles” and pursuing you to make use of you. It isn’t true. I swear it isn’t.’
‘Of course it isn’t,’ he said quietly. ‘But-’
The silence was almost tangible, full of jagged pain.
‘But what?’ she asked, not daring to believe the suspicions rioting in her brain.
‘How did they discover what we said?’ he asked in a rasping, tortured voice. ‘That’s all I want to know.’
‘And I can’t tell you because I don’t know. It wasn’t me. Maybe someone was standing behind us at the