The Painted Altar

By bigimp

90.5K 7.8K 845

WATTYS WINNER 2020 Two interconnected murders, 64 years apart. One woman's search for truth and identity. Rea... More

Author's Preface
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thity-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Epilogue
Taster: The Scent of Death
Taster: The Third Shadow
Taster: Kill Who You Want

Chapter Twenty-Seven

806 136 2
By bigimp

Plot reminder: Whilst on the run Vincenzo chances upon a group of Italian POWs picking potatoes in a field. It is through them that he learns of the armistice.

~~~~~

Though my ditch-hidden conversation with the two potato pickers had been necessarily brief, it had also been an informative one. Their names were Giuseppe and Rocco, I learnt, both from the province of Treviso. The quickly outlined story they recounted bore great similarities with my own. Conscripted in the summer of 1940, there had  followed a hopelessly brief basic training camp somewhere in Lazio before being sped down to Egypt. After their platoon was captured, they were shipped all the way to South Africa. Then in early '42, they were tossed all the way back up the Atlantic again. Since then, they'd been moved on three times to different camps across the south of England.

Their current camp, around ten kilometres from the potato fields they were harvesting, was number 45. About thirty or forty kilometres in a roughly south-westerly direction, they told me, was the city of Cambridge; a little further than that heading due east I'd hit the coast.

As our conversation neared its end, a brief cascade of potatoes had come tumbling over the edge of the ditch.

"Not much good without something to cook them on, I know," admitted one of the voices above - Giuseppe, I think. "Might prove useful to you, all the same."

"Good luck brother," called the other voice. "Let's hope the Americans get it over and done with quickly, then we can all go home. Holy Mary, we've all had enough of this damn war by now."

Though of course I would never know exactly how things panned out for Giuseppe and Rocco, the likelihood is they would have had to bend their backs to the British soil for at least another three years. It wasn't a simple case that on May 9th 1945, the day after the end of European hostilities, everyone waltzed on home to the warm embrace of their loved ones. The legal and logistical ramifications were complex. According to the Geneva Convention, POW status would only cease with a peace treaty, which was a different thing to a mere armistice. Although many of my compatriots would chose voluntarily to stay in Great Britain, to make a life for themselves in those rainier but more prosperous climes, there were numerous men forced against their will to keep toiling away right up until Italy's eventual formal signing of a peace treaty in the summer of 1947.

By then, Hitler's body had already been buried beneath the Berlin rubble for more than two years. That of his erstwhile pal Benito Mussolini, meanwhile - wherever it was it lay - had done so for two days longer.

The bad shuffle quickly from the stage. Only upon the good do the footlights of war awkwardly linger.

*

By the time of my brief conflab with Giuseppe and Rocco, I'd already put sufficient distance between myself and camp 106a to catch my breath a little. I could now devote my energies to formulating some kind of plan rather than pounding out further nocturnal kilometres. Supplies by this point were running dangerously low - all that remained of the little stash inside Ettore's knapsack was a tin of sardines, two pears and a third of the bar of chocolate. There were the potatoes Giuseppe and Rocco had slipped me too of course, but these would be a last resort only. Raw potatoes, I knew, carried bacteria. The last thing I could afford was to make myself sick.

It was decision time. East, towards the coast? Or else remain inland?

Like many who grow up beside the sea, the languid rhythms of the waves, their calming proximity, was something which on a spiritual level I missed deeply. As a place of work, however, the sea was much less enticing. So no, although it was likely the trawlers which set out each night from the various port towns of East Anglia were undermanned, and that given the chance I would prove myself an able hand, the prospect was not one which tempted me. The war had changed me both for better and for worse. On the one hand, I was more cynical, my soul inevitably hardened. On the other, my experiences had opened my eyes, shifted my perspective. What lay beyond the close proximity of Punto San Giacomo, beyond the walled horizons of my upbringing, was no longer a sinister mystery from which to shrivel. Instead, it was an opportunity. An adventure waiting to be experienced.

Thus it was as dusk fell I reset my bearings, kept the north star now behind my left shoulder. Found myself heading south-west, towards Cambridge. In doing so, even on some subconscious level, I took my first uncertain steps towards the world of culture and learning. Towards that lofty, longed-for realm of fine art.

*

The next day I found slumber amongst the soft bed of woodland ferns. It was late afternoon that I was brusquely awoken by the inquistive, sniff-quivering snout of a dog.

"Winston!" called a boy's voice from the path.

"Vai," I urged the dog, pushing its snout away. Go. But it kept sniffing - exuberant, frisky, obviously still young.

"Winston! Here boy!"

The voice was closer now, the child trapsing through the ferns in search. Raising my eyes as high as I dared, I glimpsed a scruffy, grubby-faced urchin of around ten years old. Spotting Winston's frantic tail above the ferns, his stride lengthened into an excited run.

"What have you found boy? A badger? A stoat?"

I considered for a moment breaking into a run - armistice or no armistice, the fact remained that I was an escapee from a British prisoner of war camp.  But no, I thought. For one thing, Winston would prove difficult to outpace. Much more importantly, I would only render myself more sinister, increase the likelihood of the boy sprinting straight home, his parents calling out for the local police from one of those strange blue boxes which at the time littered the English countryside.

Instead, I rose slowly to my feet, wrestled playfully with the dog as it lunged at me on its hind legs. "Good boy Winston. Good dog."

The boy stopped dead in his tracks. Tentative, unsure of what to make of my sudden appearance. Unshaven, uncombed, my by-now-filthy clothes hanging off me like a breeze-swirled flag around a pole - I must have made for quite a sight.

"One of my uncles had a dog when I was your age," I told him.  "White and black, like Winston." I smiled in reminiscence. "Vito was his name."

A frown furrowed the boy's brow. "Foreign, int ya?"

I raised my hands, pleading my guilt. "I'm Italian," I admitted.

The frown lingered, as if trying to recall the significance of this. The shifting ebb and flow of the war -  the battles won and lost, the changing allegiances - was difficult enough for an adult to keep pace with, let alone a ten-year-old. The boy was clearly bright though, well-informed.

"Changed sides now, ant ya?"

I gave a solemn nod. "Yes, we're on the right side now," I assured. "On the side of good."

He half-squinted his eyes at me for several moments, as if making his mind up about something. Winston had by this point made his way back to him, was sitting at his side, canine gaze similarly directed at me. Weighing things up, reflecting.

"Don't worry mister," the boy announced finally. "I won't tell nobody you was here."

There was a twitch of a smile, then gone, Winston charging off ahead in search of the source of some other irresistable smell.

The episode served as a first-hand confirmation that the tide of public opinion had now shifted in regards to we Italians. Had I been German the boy would not have been nearly so gregarious. In all likelihood, I'd have been rounded up by dusk.

Though the armistice was certainly a positive development in my own personal story - and in those of all other Italians in allied hands - there was however a much bleaker side to the new political situation. That night as the previous and for all future nights until the fall of Berlin, I found my thoughts turning inexorably to home. What manner of pitiless teutonic vengeance was being rained down on my motherland, I wondered? I imagined right at that very moment a fleet of German bombers strafing the Adriatic coast of Puglia - Bari, Brindisi, Otranto, the smaller ports and fishing towns in between. Punto San Giacomo. Yes, even that tiniest and most insignificant dot on the map which was my hometown.

I thought of my father out at sea, eyes turned landwards, the periodic white flashing booms illuminating the coast. Thought of my mother and brother and three sisters at home in the faint glow of candlelight. Thought of Ada - dear, sweet Ada - lost in the darkness of our marital home. Of Carmela Russo. Of the boys I'd gone to school with, scuffed empty tins around in the dirt with, wrestled with, swapped jibes with, watched the pretty girls walk by with. Of those countless familiar faces which had populated my childhood and adolesence. Told me off for running too fast or shouting too loud, the whole community tasked with the role of parenting, of keeping an eye out, of forcefully indicating what was wrong and what was right.

I could only raise my gaze to the stars and pray to whichever celestial ear may have been listening that all of them, every last one, would see the light of dawn.

My fears were indeed well-founded. In one of the single bloodiest wartime tragedies to afflict the Italian mainland, the port of Bari would less than three months later be subject to an intense and sustained aerial attack with the resulting loss of 2000 lives.

All of a sudden, that faint, distant drone of the Luftwaffe I could hear in the skies overhead each night had become ever more sinister.

~~~~~

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