“‘I write this, knowing that I will soon be dead, but I do not wish to die without recording the act of evil that I have witnessed. I write this in sadness and in hatred, and that hatred is for my own flesh and blood.
“‘Christo, you have committed an offence that can never be forgiven. You have tried to kill your own brother by sabotaging the outboard motor on the boat you stole. I know that you had help from Stephano in your evil plan, but he is weak and does whatever you tell him. The outrage was your idea and you must bear the full responsibility of it.
“‘Spiro told me what happened. He is here with me now. Spiro, who is so clever at his studies, has shown me how to write this so that you will never find it.
“‘When I die, which as I said will not be long away, I will die hating you, Christo, more than ever father hated son. You have brought shame on our family and you will carry my curse upon you till the end of your life. Your death will be violent and terrifying – you will feel the fear you tried to inflict on your brother. You tried to kill by fire one whom you should have respected above all others, and so by fire you will yourself die. The day may come soon, or it may be many years away, but the fire will catch you eventually. That is a father’s curse, a curse spoken in the name of St Spiridon. And though you try to hide behind a new name, my dying curse will still find you out to destroy you, Christo.” And it’s signed ‘Spiro Karaskakis’.”
Mrs Pargeter was about to speak, but a terrible sound froze the words on her lips.
It was just recognisably human, a voice that screamed in pain like a trapped animal.
∨ Mrs Pargeter’s Package ∧
Thirty-Six
Larry Lambeth shot across the room towards the source of the sound. Mrs Pargeter was a little behind him and stood in the doorway to the kitchen, looking at the sight illuminated by his narrow torch-beam.
Theodosia was crouched like a cornered animal on the rough pallet which served her as a bed. Her scream had subsided to a feral whimpering, and her usually impassive face was ravaged by tears.
Larry Lambeth snapped some questions at her in Greek, which reinforced the strength of her sobbing.
“Be gentle with her,” murmured Mrs Pargeter, as she moved across the room towards the terrified woman. She sat on the pallet and put a plump arm round the quivering shoulders.
Theodosia’s first instinct was to flinch as if to break away, but Mrs Pargeter’s stroking hands and soothing but uncomprehended words gradually brought calm. The pace of the sobbing slowed, and the woman’s head sank down on to her comforter’s shoulder. Mrs Pargeter could feel the warm dampness of tears through the thin cotton of her dress.
“She’s a witness of what we done,” said Larry Lambeth twitchily. “She’ll tell Stephano and Georgio and that lot.”
“She can’t tell them. She can’t speak.”
“She has ways of communication.”
As if taking his words as a cue, Theodosia suddenly let out a different sound. A strange, unearthly sound, that seemed to come from deep within her, torn painfully from her frame.
It took a moment before Mrs Pargeter realised that the woman was speaking.
The voice was rasping and rusty, but with an incongruously innocent lightness. Through its strangeness, it was the voice of a child, the child Theodosia had been the last time she had spoken, before experiencing the shock which had struck her dumb for thirty years.
“What is she saying?” whispered Mrs Pargeter urgently.
“She says that she heard me read her father’s curse. It frightens her very much.”
More strange sounds were dragged from Theodosia’s body.
Larry Lambeth interpreted. “She did not know that Christo had deliberately sabotaged the boat. She saw the fire. It was terrible.”
Theodosia mouthed hopelessly, once again robbed of speech by this recollection. Mrs Pargeter felt sure it must have been the sight of her brother apparently going up in flames that had traumatised her all those years before.
But the woman regained control and once again the uneven, unaccustomed speech began.
“She hates her brother now she knows the truth. She adds her curse to her father’s curse. She hopes he will die.”
Too late, thought Mrs Pargeter. That merciful tumour on the brain of Christo Karaskakis – or Chris Dover – had saved him from the literal fulfilment of old Spiro’s curse. But who knew what flames of conscience had scorched him at the moment of his death?
Or, though she didn’t really believe in hell, she could recognise that the idea of Chris Dover roasting there for all eternity would neatly tie up all the ends of his story.
A new urgency came into Theodosia’s voice.
“She says they’ve got the girl.”
“Girl?” Mrs Pargeter echoed. “Conchita?”
Yes, of course. At the time she had seen nothing odd in Conchita’s non-appearance at Spiro’s Greek party, putting it down to some tiff between the girl and Yianni. But now the absence took on more sinister colouring. And that had been late evening. Conchita could have been missing for up to seven hours.
Larry Lambeth’s translation confirmed her worst fears. “The dark-haired English girl, she says.”
“Who’s got her?”
He urgently relayed the question to Theodosia.
“The tourist woman – that must be Ginnie – the tourist woman arranged to meet her on the headland, but Stephano and Georgio were waiting there, and they took the girl.”
“Oh no!” Mrs Pargeter could not forget the reference to Stephano in old Spiro’s deposition. Stephano had aided and abetted Christo in the earlier crime. Christo was dead, but Sergeant Karaskakis was still very much alive and very dangerous. “Where have they taken her?”
The translation came back quickly. “There’s an old fisherman’s hut on the headland. They’ve got her in there.”
Mrs Pargeter grabbed Larry Lambeth’s hand. “Come on! We must get there – quickly! There have already been too many deaths in Agios Nikitas!”
∨ Mrs Pargeter’s Package ∧
Thirty-Seven
The headland referred to was one of the scrub-covered arms that encircled the bay of Agios Nikitas. It was a steep-sided spine of rock, the end of which thousands of years before had dropped away into the sea to form cliffs. There were a couple of paths across the ridge which led to tiny bays otherwise accessible only by boat, but they were little used. The thorny undergrowth was inimical to travellers in the tourist uniform of shorts and T-shirts, and the gradient unappealing in the daytime sun.
Heat raised no problems for Mrs Pargeter and Larry Lambeth, but the steep climb and the sharp thorns did. They were both scratched and breathless by the time they approached the dilapidated hut. The darkness was diluted by a thin sliver of moon and their eyes had quickly accommodated to the conditions.
“I’ll go first,” Larry murmured.
There had been a path to the door in the days when fishermen used the building regularly, but this now showed only as an indentation in the surrounding scrub, which muscled up close, threatening to engulf the hut. No light showed through the broken glass of the windows, and the only sound was the incessant restlessness of the sea.
Larry moved cautiously forward to the door, found the handle and pushed it inward with a sudden movement. He paused, but, the silence remaining unbroken, moved forward and was lost in the darkness of the interior.
There were two sounds. A soft thud. A harder thud.
Then silence reasserted itself.
Whatever dangers lay inside the hut, Mrs Pargeter had come too far to shirk them. It was no time for pussyfooting. Her dead friend’s daughter was in danger.
Coolly, Mrs Pargeter pushed through the encroaching brushwood and in through the open door. As she did so, she announced in a clear voice, “Good morning. I am Mrs Pargeter and I am coming in to see what’s happening.”