Chapter 24 wasn’t going as smoothly as I’d hoped, so I set aside the typowriter after a couple of hours, and went to do something less creative instead. I pottered. The pottering around the house led to the idea that I might take a short 20-minute walk around the village, while pottering became pondering, and as I stepped out of the gate, I realised the air smelt like 2002.
Early in 2002, we were living at a house at the very top of the village, and after the wet and cold of winter (and that winter had seen much of both) came our first spring on the island. This came with the knowledge that we had to find jobs for the summer, but the summer was not yet; there were still a couple of months to go during which I could… What? There was no work, we had a little money left for the winter, the sun was rising later each morning, and the air smelt of spring. It was the same yesterday for some reason. There was a freshness to the air mixed with the knowledge that if this wasn’t a working day, that wasn’t a bad thing. I didn’t have to type 4,000 today; I’d done 1,500, and that would have to do.
I must admit, I didn’t see as much to photograph yesterday as I would have done 24 years ago, not that we had phones with cameras or internet in those days. (I’d only just bought my first ever Nokia and was learning how to text.) But the point of the exercise was to think, not to photograph.

A sound stopped me in one of the back lanes – the one where I knew a house was repossessed by a bank many years ago, the tenants of the deceased owner evicted by them, and the house has stood empty ever since, to the point of dereliction. Such a shame for a family or anyone needing a home, and a complete waste of money for the bank who probably doesn’t even know they own the property. Somewhere along that lane, I heard an unusual dove call; not the usual quaver-crotchet-quaver (staccato) of a collared dove I can hear outside the window as I type now, but something I’d not heard before. I found the dove high on a pole and tried to capture a photo, but it was too far away. I should have recorded the sound, I suppose. I wondered if it was one of the turtle doves that have taken up residence in the village these past couple of years. Maybe.
Anyway, I wandered on, climbed up to the road and ambled down, nodding to passing acquaintances, waving to car windscreens where the sun’s reflection meant I couldn’t see who was waving at me, nor even driving, but I waved anyway, and carried on.

The oregano is in bloom along the side of the road, and, as always, I remembered too late to bring a bag and pick some. And back to the village, all quiet and just getting started.
Parents escorting children to school, the delivery guys meeting up outside the supermarket for the first of many chats before biking or walking away with boxes and water bottles for customers. Some people in and out of the bakery where, by the lively chat, you’d think the gathering was an evening cocktail party, not a first-thing bread collection. Through the square where Lefteris had been at work since at least five, and where a few early coffee drinkers had gathered to fortify themselves with a strong Eleniko before heading off to work. Across the square with a wave to Michaelis guarding his empty-for-years peripteron (there is a reason, but it’s not for now), and around the corner to home.
Where, as I had completely forgotten to consider chapter 24, I took a book to the balcony and spent half an hour being on holiday, watching any sea activity (there was still not much), and reading a biography of John Steinbeck, before returning to the pottering.

I’m still no further forward with chapter 24, and I will return to it as soon as I have posted this, posted on my other blog, answered the emails, fought of the ‘Hi, I am reaching out…’ emails trying to get me to invest in spurious, nay, fraudulent publicity scams run by the hopeless with the help of AI, and made another cup of tea. That’s my plan for the morning. What’s yours?











