Penny asked me the other day, ‘What’s happened to Roger?’
Roger, you may remember, is a young rock lizard living under our sofa, except now, he’s not. At least, I don’t think so. He appeared on the day we were first able to leave the front window and door open, when the weather had turned a little warmer, so I assume he wandered in, with his little rucksack on his back, and found a lovely collection of warm dust to snuggle into beneath the sofa where the vacuum cleaner can’t reach and where we rarely dare to venture. He spent a few days gathering mosquitoes about the room, inspecting behind my old trunk, behind the TV, and even exploring the kitchen. Now and then, he’d waddle across the carpet towards us, look up and around, and decide against conversation before waddling back to his home. His temporary home, because we haven’t seen him for about a week now. He’s either under the sofa sitting on eggs, or whatever they do, or has waddled four-footedly back outside into the, now, even warmer climate.

Wherever he had gone, I hope his stay hasn’t put us foul of these new temporary-letting rules, which I’ve heard about but, I am reassured, do not concern us. Electrical certificates, the number of days per year you’re legally allowed to Airbnb for (and who knows how many illegal days the personal touch leads to thereafter), and other restrictions intended to help long-term renters and first-time buyers alike. Anyone trying to find a sensibly priced long let on the island these days faces a lot of uncertainty, an uphill battle, and a greedy rent, from what I have heard. But at least Roger won’t have that to worry about as he finds a nearby rock to call home. We often see his clan from the balcony. There was one that used to compete in parkour events (solo) along the parapet of the house below, and another, larger, who used to guard the rocks covering our cat’s burial cist on the wasteland next door.

They are not the only wildlife we get to see. The swallows are back right now, as are some other migrating birds. We’ve had a pair of collared doves here for so many years they must be different pairs, but who can tell? There’s the little owl that sits on another nearby house and uses our balcony rail to watch from. Bats occasionally do a fly past as nothing more than quick, dark shadows against the night, and we’ve had a chicken raise her chicks in the inaccessible ruined garden beside the wasteland. Then, of course, there are the cats. Skulking, as they do, sleeping everywhere and anywhere, ditto digging for relief. Most of the time, though, they are hunting for something else and pass by wailing for a shag like teenage tourists in Ibiza.

As for insects and the like, yes, we have had to humanely remove Symi spiders to someone else’s property under the cover of darkness. (Only kidding, Louise.) The cockroaches (all called either Nigel or Donald) are more pesterous than lost tourists, but thankfully, less common, and they react less violently when sprayed with Teza or Raid. All manner of cute little flying things inhabit the courtyard. Although we have to dispense with the blackfly, we don’t mind the beetles, crickets or other well-known musical combos who play there, but the Ottoman viper was soon ejected. Don’t get me started on the flies. Inside the house, we have taken precautions against mosquitoes by rejuvenating the plug-in thing and keeping the hatch to the broken and now stagnant sterna closed against whatever is living down there. More roaches, probably; Linus, William, his son, James, et al.
But there we are, and here I am about to launch into chapter 18 of the next first draft, which means, it’s now time for me to bug off.
By the way, these are older, random photos because I just accidentally deleted my blog photos file, and am having to download them again from OneDrive, which will take days because that thing is so slow to do as it is told.




















