And the Mountains Echoed
Greece! The birthplace of democracy ⦠Ah, there you are! Well, how was it? What did you two get up to?â
âWe played at the beach,â Thalia said.
âWas it fun? Did you have fun?â
âWe had a grand time,â Thalia said.
Mamáâs eyes jumped skeptically from me to Thalia and back, but Madaline beamed and applauded silently. âGood! Now that I donât have to worry about you two getting along, Odie and I can spend some time of our own together. What do you say, Odie? We have so much catching up to do still!â
Mamá smiled gamely and reached for a head of cabbage.
â¦
From then on, Thalia and I were left to our own devices. We were to explore the island, play games at the beach, amuse ourselves the way children are expected to. Mamá would pack us a sandwich each, and we would set off together after breakfast.
Once out of sight, we often drifted apart. At the beach, I took a swim or lay on a rock with my shirt off while Thalia went off to collect shells or skip rocks on the water, which was no good because the waves were too big. We went walking along the footpaths that snaked through vineyards and barley fields, looking down at our own shadows, each preoccupied with our own thoughts. Mostly we wandered. There wasnât much in the way of a tourist industry on Tinos in those days. It was a farming island, really, people living off their cows and goats and olive trees and wheat. We would end up bored, eating lunch somewhere, quietly, in the shade of a tree or a windmill, looking between bites at the ravines, the fields of thorny bushes, the mountains, the sea.
One day, I wandered off toward town. We lived on the southwestern shore of the island, and Tinos town was only a few milesâ walk south. There was a little knickknack shop there run by a heavy-faced widower named Mr. Roussos. On any given day, you were apt to find in the window of his shop anything from a 1940s typewriter to a pair of leather work boots, or a weathervane, an old plant stand, giant wax candles, a cross, or, of course, copies of the Panagia Evangelistria icon. Or maybe even a brass gorilla. He was also an amateur photographer and had a makeshift darkroom in the back of the shop. When the pilgrims came to Tinos every August to visit the icon, Mr. Roussos sold rolls of film to them and developed their photos in his darkroom for a fee.
About a month back, I had spotted a camera in his display window, sitting on its worn rust-colored leather case. Every few days, I strolled over to the shop, stared at this camera, and imagined myself in India, the leather case hanging by the strap over my shoulder, taking photos of the paddies and tea estates I had seen in
National Geographic
. I would shoot the Inca Trail. On camelback, in some dust-choked old truck, or on foot, I would brave the heat until I stood gazing up at the Sphinx and the Pyramids, and I would shoot them too and see my photos published in magazines with glossy pages. This was what drew me to Mr. Roussosâs window that morningâthough the shop was closed for the dayâto stand outside, my forehead pressed to the glass, and daydream.
âWhat kind is it?â
I pulled back a bit, caught Thaliaâs reflection in the window. She dabbed at her left cheek with the handkerchief.
âThe camera.â
I shrugged.
âLooks like a C3 Argus,â she said.
âHow would you know?â
âItâs only the best-selling thirty-five millimeter in the world for the last thirty years,â she said a little chidingly. âNot much to look at, though. Itâs ugly. It looks like a brick. So you want to be a photographer? You know, when youâre all grown up? Your mother says you do.â
I turned around. âMamá told you that?â
âSo?â
I shrugged. I was embarrassed that Mamá had discussed this with Thalia. I wondered how sheâd said it. She could unsheathe from her arsenal a mockingly grave way of talking about things she found either portentous or frivolous. She could shrink your aspirationsbefore your very eyes.
Markos wants to walk the earth and capture it with his lens
.
Thalia sat on the sidewalk and pulled her skirt over her knees. It was a hot day, the sun biting the skin like it had teeth. Hardly anyone was out and about except for an elderly couple trudging stiffly up the street. The husbandâDemis somethingâwore a gray flat cap and a brown tweed
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