see where the Mendip corporal had pissed on the rear wheel of that lorry, thought Fred. So there were two stripes gone for a Burton.
‘Well … that was Mr Levin!’ murmured Audley, to no one in particular. ‘We just don’t seem to hit it off … I had a much better relationship with my old troop sar-major in the Wesdragons. But, of course, Mr Levin was a peace-time soldier before the war … and my old sar-major ran our local garage at Steeple Horley.’ He shook his head sadly, as though in another world. ‘But he’s dead, of course … and now he’s really dead.’ He stared at Fred suddenly. ‘Funny to think of that—isn’t it? Becoming really dead?’
The question caught Fred by surprise. ‘What d’you mean?’
‘He means … now that your war is nearly finished, then the dead can become properly dead,’ snapped Kyriakos harshly. ‘And the survivors can become properly alive at last.’
Fred was shocked by the Greek’s intensity. ‘Our … war?’
Kyriakos nodded at Audley. ‘Your war is almost finished—no Germans here—not in Greece any more. And now, if the truce holds … if you are both lucky, then your war is finished. So you will go home—’ He switched to Fred ‘—to your merchant banking—’ Back to Audley again ‘—and you to … Cambridge, was it? Girls in punts, and the odd lecture?’ He showed his teeth in a wolfish grin. ‘I was up at Cambridge in ’39. My father called me home in October—we thought it was just your war.‘ The grin became unnaturally fixed. ’We thought the Balkan Mercantile Bank and the Aegean Mutual Trust stood to make a lot of money out of you British, one way or another. And now my father is dead, and my two brothers are dead … But my war is not finished—perhaps it is only just beginning. So that makes a difference—yes?‘
‘Yes.’ Audley nodded stupidly, like a ventriloquist’s dummy. ‘You’ve b-b-b … bloody got it: they’re not d-d- dead yet, quite? Because you can still join them—right?’ He stopped nodding. ‘You’re the first one I’ve met who knows what I’m talking about—would you believe that?’ Fred felt anger stir, beyond shock and unreality and incomprehension, as they both blocked him out with their private joke, which was no joke at all. But pride refused to let him show how he felt: they each understood too well what the other was saying for him to admit that he didn’t measure up to their insight, whatever it was they shared. So he couldn’t say anything.
The Balkan Mutual Trust?‘ Audley found another joke. ’I w-wouldn’t have thought that there was m-much m-mutual … trust … anywhere in the b-b-bloody Balkans?‘
Kyriakos raised his chin arrogantly. ‘ Aegean Mutual Trust— Balkan Mercantile Bank, Mr Audley,— sar!’ He grinned at Audley, under the arrogance. ‘How about letting us both return-to-our-duties, eh? Like … you could talk a jeep out of your adjutant, to take us to Itea, maybe?’ He carefully didn’t look at Fred. ‘How about that, then?’
Audley looked at Fred, nevertheless. ‘You know each other because your families are both in merchant banking—? The Fattorini Brothers—the Mutually Trusting Balkans? But how did you both end up … back there, on the path—“lurking”, was it?’
Kyriakos tossed his head. ‘As you said—“Fattorini” isn’t a common name in the British Army.’ He gave Fred a quick glance. ‘I was with the Canadians last year, and we were stalled on this river, over which your engineers were throwing this Bailey bridge. And I heard someone shout for “Captain Fattorini” … and my family’s bank has acted for the Fattorini bank in Greece ever since the First World War.’
Fred nodded. ‘That’s right—ever since his father met my uncle—Uncle Luke—in Salonika, in the Military Hospital, in 1918. They were two young bankers in adjoining beds, each with Bulgarian bullets in them. So they exchanged addresses.’
‘And then they
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