The Golden Step (11 page)

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Authors: Christopher Somerville

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I was not happy for myself. I started down that slope a middle-aged man of forty-nine in good spirits. I reached the bottom two hours later a tremulous old pantaloon, shaking in every limb. ‘Technique' – that was the word that really stung.

I was more than glad to limp along the road into Kastamonitsa and melt into a chair in a wayside kafenion. A fierce little coffee and several glasses of water brought back balance and perspective. I found I was even able to raise a smile at myself. After a restorative hour we moved along, a four-mile trudge on a good asphalted road, and entered the town of Kastelli singing and munching green almonds that we'd pulled from the roadside trees. We'd agreed to meet again a week from now in the village of Ano Asites. Pantelis, troubled about my solo capabilities, would make himself available to see me safely over Psiloritis and down the other side. Though foreseeing further bouts of humiliation by comparison, I was pleased to think he was going to come with me.

In Kastelli Pantelis handed over his knapsack for me to put on the evening bus to Iraklion, shook my hand politely, and … yes,
ran
off there himself. After watching him sprint away down the street, I spread out the map and measured his route. Twenty-five extra miles at the double: taking the piss, or what? But that – I reasoned, settling down behind a cold beer and a plate of chips – that was your Cretan aegagros-style mountaineer for you. Humbling company, this brotherhood of lean men who watch their calories, exercise rigorously, take part in marathons, scorn cigarettes, drink sparingly or not at all, warm down instead of chilling out after a punishing day in the hills, and go to the stadium to train as many nights a week as their wives or girlfriends (if they have them) are prepared to put up with. Ho hum. That's why Pantelis strips off like an olive-skinned god, and I strip off like a milk jelly.

‘Thou hast set my feet in a large room,' sang the Psalmist, turning his back for once on the broken potsherds and the coals of fire. ‘Blessed be the name of the Lord: for he hath showed me his marvellous kindness in a strong city.'

Kastelli (‘the Castle') was a sleepy little agricultural town sunk among vineyards and olive groves in the rolling country south of Iraklion. Farmers went buzzing through the streets by day on their
mikani
, motorised tricycle pickups that farted out toxic plumes of two-stroke pollution. The men of Kastelli came in at night to the kafenia round the main square for noisy sessions of backgammon and cards. Old women wrapped to the eyes in black hobbled through the streets, carrying on their backs their own bulk in green stuff harvested from their gardens outside the town. Goats bleated behind ancient wooden house doors in the narrow side lanes. It was just the place to recuperate by lazing a day away.

In the morning, delighting in soft shoes and a light day-pack, I hired Michalis the taxi-driver – black rumpled suit, wraparound shades, Ronald Colman moustache – to take me out to a hilltop a couple of miles away, where I had been told the ruins of the Dorian city-state of Lyttos lay. I had got well into the
Odyssey
by now, and had an idea of Lyttos in its pomp as a large and powerful place. Homer asserted that Idomineos, grandson of Minos and King of Crete, had managed to fill 80 black ships with men of Lyttos to go to the siege of Troy. Lyttos was a prosperous city, controlling a strip of the island which stretched from the north to the south coast and contained the fertile plain of Lasithi – a vital source of supply. Certainly the city-state was at war with Knossos from the 4th century
BC
onwards, and it had its claws out for other neighbours, too. This aggression rebounded on Lyttos during the war of 221–219
BC
when, after launching an attack on Ierapytna (present-day Ierapetra), the men of the city returned home to find that warriors from Knossos had descended on Lyttos in their absence, wiped the place off the map, and decamped with all the women and children. Utterly devastated, the Lyttos men could not even bring themselves to enter the ruins of their city.

Lyttos was rebuilt. The city-state is known to have resisted the Romans on their invasion of the island in 67
BC
, and it seems to have prospered for a good six or seven hundred years more. Today, poking around the overgrown hilltop, I found few signs of that vanished city. Two churches stood there, one dedicated to St George and the other to the Holy Cross, their walls partly constructed with stones from ancient Lyttos carrying fragments of inscription and beautifully carved acanthus leaves. Between the churches the hilltop was a riot of spring flowers – poppies, mallows, marguerites, vetches, treacle mustard in a spatter of scarlet, yellow, gold and white. Through screens of flowers and mats of hanging greenery, patches of coarsely squared blocks and rubble showed where the great defensive wall of Lyttos had once run. I sat on the stump of a Dorian column, basking in the sunshine and looking out east to the grey wall of Dhikti. With my binoculars I could distinguish the line of the dirt road from Lasithi petering out in its terminal rock face, and the slope down which Pantelis and I had come. How very easy it looked from here and now.

Idling back into Kastelli late in the afternoon I passed between olive groves scented with wood smoke. Under the recently pruned trees glowed lines of bonfires where the trimmings were burning. A man stopped me to touch and admire my stick with the by now familiar ‘Poli orea! Very beautiful!' A flood of delight, one of those throat-catching, unfathomable surges of bliss that visit at rare moments, poured through me as I sniffed the olive smoke on the darkening road.

The olive fires

A football thumps the wall; young footsteps

skelter down the lane; the old man bleats,

‘Yanni, Yanni.' His grandson scoots to other

mischief. If he had his way, those brats

would learn some manners. Drained by the long day's drift,

he sighs, yawns, marooned in easy weather;

prowls to the door, flicks his beads, unwilling

idler in calms, circling on boredom's raft.

All day a tang has hung about the town,

seeping downwind from bonfires lit to burn

dry olive prunings. Nosing the lobby air,

sterile and stale, the hotel owner's father

scents bitter sweat and woodsmoke from the bar

where old men in stained work clothes drink together.

In a restaurant in town that night an enormously fat cook slugged on a bottle of Coke and puffed a fag as he prepared my (delicious) pizza. The place was all but empty, something I was grateful for when the cook switched on the TV to reveal a chaos of shattered buildings and screaming ambulances. NATO planes had hit the office of the main Serbian television station in Belgrade. Fourteen dead, many maimed, said the reporter through tight lips.

I sat late at a table in the hotel lobby, talking olive farming with the owner and his father, very pleased to discover that I had mustered enough Greek by now to keep my end up and maintain the threads of a conversation in my head. The older man – neat, tall, upright, his thick hair smoothed back – spoke courteously with the slow, carefully enunciated phrases of an educated man. I had seen him during the day prowling the lobby between desk and door, back and forth, back and forth, swinging his worry beads, occasionally sighing, fastidiously covering his yawns of boredom with a well-manicured hand. Such refined elderly men suffer excruciatingly from ennui in modern-day Crete, cut off from the cameraderie of their village contemporaries, the ordinary chaps who drink together and still get their hands dirty in orchard and field.

By eleven o'clock next morning, 23 April, I was sitting in a cell in Angarathou monastery, drinking raki with Archimandrite Stephanos Marankakis. Already that day I had seen a nasty road accident (an old man knocked over by a boy racer in Kastelli), and had eaten an on-the-hoof breakfast of sweet bread and new cheese pressed on me by church-going crowds celebrating St George's Day. I had covered the best part of 10 miles, too, blundering through gardens and following dead-end tracks on the bad advice of lying waymarks, being reminded all over again of the frustrations and farcicalities of European Hiking Route E4. But now, chatting with the vigorous old monk in a mixture of my minimal Greek, his two words of English and a tiny mutual store of German, our creaky talk helped along with sips of raki and nibbles of sweets and nuts, all was well.

Well now, how old do you think I am, eh? 21? Ha, ha, flatterer! Come on, have a guess. 65? No, more than that. 70? Certainly not! I'm 88, I am. Look, here's a photo of me during the war with my friends. Which one d'you think is me? That one, the handsome boy with the slim figure? How did you guess, eh? Ha, ha! Come along, have another drop of this raki, it won't hurt you. Walking? Excellent – raki will make you strong, make you into a proper
palikare
, like I used to be. Not now, alas. You beg to differ? Think I'm not quite ready for the scrap-heap yet? I agree with you! Life in the old dog yet, eh? That's right! Ha, ha, ha!

Dear old man with his white-rimmed eyes, his healthy ego and sense of himself, full of glee and gaiety. I left him waving at the door of his cell, calling out blessings and brushing cake crumbs from his long white beard. It didn't take more than half an hour to get myself thoroughly lost once more.

Angarathou monastery lay in semi-wild gardens thick with Cretan sage and drowsy with the cluck of hens and the murmur of bees. I took the tarmac road up to Sgourokefali, where it was washing day. Cylindrical electric coppers bubbled in front gardens. Among the green waves of trees the flat rooftops of the village streamed shirts and pants like a fleet of signalling ships. Beyond here the country rolled and dipped, its billows broken by green ravines with cliff-like sides that cut north across the grain of the land to reach the coast around Iraklion. The pale earth was studded with the round green buttons of olive trees lined up in ranks, and with rows of vines, some up on trellises, others free-standing. It was good, fertile, profitable farming country, and new grant-aided dirt roads to olive groves and vineyards had proliferated and intertwined in recent years like a nest of identical but equally untrustworthy snakes. Among them E4 occasionally raised a black and yellow sign, invariably in the apex of a fork. I chose a turning at random, and found myself after an hour looking up at the flapping underwear of Sgourokefali once more.

The village men were all standing under a tree, getting drunk in honour of St George with the help of a 20-litre box of paint-stripper plonk labelled ‘The Party's Wine'. There were lots of firecracker explosions, and a none-too-friendly air about the shouts of laughter that greeted my enquiry concerning the path to Mirtia. One man took me to the top of his dirt road and pointed out the track that had just led me round in a circle. There, man, there! Like the old man back in Vori on my second day out, he just couldn't believe I could have any doubt about a route he knew all too well. I raised my hands and shrugged. Yes, but … To placate him and show willing, I set off once more down the road and turned the other way when I reached the fork. Twenty minutes later I was slinking back through the square at Sgourokefali. The drinkers under the tree sniggered and shook their heads. In the end a man not quite as far gone as the rest fetched his three-wheeler mikani, loaded me into the pick-up part and put-putted me down to the fork in the dirt road. There he indicated an obscure green track that I hadn't even spotted. Along there to Mirtia! OK!

I crossed a ravine by a slender Turkish bridge and came up through Ano Astraki into Mirtia, where I asked for directions in a kafenion full of men even drunker than the tree-huggers of Sgourokefali. I won't even try to unpick what went wrong after that, nor how I came to a standstill at last on the brink of a hundred-foot cliff; let alone dwell on the many miles of uphill backtracking that had to be faced. It is wonderful how one's feet feel fine when the going is good, but every cut and blister opens up and screams when you're feeling sorry for yourself.

Back in Mirtia, one of the kafenion merrymakers seemed to be offering me a lift. Half an hour later I was still twiddling my thumbs. Then I caught him smiling slyly round his circle of friends and making a little contemptuous gesture in my direction. Good old rustic humour at the foreign boy's expense, eh? I phoned for a taxi and had myself taken off to the next sizeable town, Archanes, where there proved to be a rent room available at not too outrageous a charge. Cold water from the hot tap, and from the cold tap too. But so what? It was a roof and four walls.

In the taverna that night there was a sudden high farce panic with much shouting, wielding of brooms and hasty mounting of chairs. ‘Zpider with poisoning,' said a fellow diner by way of explanation. I joined the chair-climbers. These alarums and excursions drove the name of Mirtia out of my mind; but later, picturing the place and the Turkish bridge I'd crossed to get to it, I recalled Mirtia's illustrious literary connection. It had been the family village of Nikos Kazantzakis, the ‘Tolstoy of Crete', certainly the island's most famous and best-selling writer, a controversial figure whose novel
The Last Temptation of Christ
attracted widespread condemnation as blasphemous. The author of two classic novels set in Crete,
Zorba the Greek
and
Freedom and Death
, was born in 1883, when the island was still battling to throw off the oppressive yoke of Turkish rule. His early experiences of that archetypal Cretan life-and-death struggle for freedom shaped Kazantzakis's whole life and art, causing him to travel the world in search of a code of individual and spiritual liberation. This lifelong journey brought him from revolutionary nationalism through sympathy with communism to an exploration of religion, and on out along more recondite philosophical shores. After his death in 1957, the Orthodox Church would not permit this atheist with strong religious impulses a burial in consecrated ground. So Kazantzakis lies buried in the ramparts of the Martinengo Bastion on Iraklion's city walls, facing Mount Iouchtas with its noble escarpment profile of Zeus. The writer's monolithic slab carries his simple statement of belief: ‘I hope for nothing; I fear nothing; I am free.'

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