Neroli, 20th August 2002
The sun had just passed its highest point, and the gently sloping hills of the vineyard were washed with the golden summer’s light. Row upon row of the parallel wooden posts vanished to the edge of the field, onto which the vines, resplendent with their fat grapes, were expertly fastened. At the top of the vineyard stood the small Mantuan outhouses that belonged to
Viticcio. In front, a few old wooden tables stood, deliberately misaligned to add to the rustic charm, and all were unoccupied apart from one at the very back, shaded somewhat from the searing sunlight by the portico of the main building. Gaius Purcell sat by the table, chair slightly askew so he could better view the approach of the hillside, and admire the small town of Neroli that lay below like a child’s model and the harbour beyond, glistening like a sheet of tanzanite.
Upon the table lay a leather-backed notebook of the highest-quality parchment, open, with some sentences scrawled in pencil. An empty plate lay beside it, having formerly born a selection of Prosciutto di Parma and Pecorino cheese. A fine crystal cut wineglass of Austrian manufacture stood by his hand, and contained barely a mouthful of the vineyard’s star 1992 Chianti Classico Reserva. It’s empty dark green bottle stood proudly across the far side of the table.
Gaius himself, bedecked in a new cream linen suit over a crisp white cotton shirt, sat proudly, one leg crossed over the other and smoking his black russian cigarette. The waitress, a woman in her early forties with her chestnut hair affixed accurately behind her noble head, drifted professionally to his side. “Can I get you anything else, signore?” she asked with great politeness.
He declined her offer with a smile, and he paid with a generous gratuity.
It was the third week of his self imposed exile from Britain, and he was already a different person. Groomed and active; he ate almost constantly, attempting to fill in the hollows that Azkaban had made upon his body. But he nourished himself not only physically; he consumed the splendour of Italy and all the riches that it offered, travelling nearly daily; swimming and bathing in its culture; a culture he had feared was purloined from him permanently. This second chance at living as a free man, this unexpected moratorium; he would devour it with as much fervour as he could muster.
And now, the long, slow reacquaintance with all he had once left behind for good. So many loose threads, so many strange, twisted and abandoned causes; routes in an overgrown forest to be once more hacked clear; to be reawakened. He had written to
@Genevieve Grosvenor the previous week, a simple request to see her at her own convenience, suggesting the simple, elegant vineyard of Neroli where they could be left in peace; a place where two elegant English expatriates going for a stroll on a balmy summer’s afternoon would raise absolutely no special attention whatsoever.
He watched her approach from a path between the vines; even at a distance her immaculate posture betraying her. She was taller, more womanly than the last time he had set eyes upon her; having discarded her adolescence with relish. He allowed her to run to him, taking her within his arms quickly and allowing this strange, surreal moment to wash over him as he held her; the first of many reunifications.
Carefully, as if she could break if manhandled, as if she was not truly real, he held her at arms length, examining the girl carefully with a crooked smile. “Time has been exceptionally kind to you, Genevieve,” he commented softly and admiringly. She was beautiful, as always. As if he had expected anything else.
“Come,” and he collected his belongings with one hand, the other arm held aside for Genevieve. “Let us first take a walk, like good friends without the threat of captivity are apt to do.” and Gaius gave her a wink before talking her, arm-in-arm, down through the overgrown vines in the refulgent afternoon sun.