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Authors: Virginia Duigan

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He was standing in the far corner, quite still, his back to her. She saw his hair tangled with splodges of paint. As she took a few steps into the room, treading gingerly across bare gritty floorboards and weaving a path through squashed paint tubes, jam jars full of brushes, clothes, newspapers, scummy paper plates, she saw that he was at work on a drawing. It looked half-finished, but she could make out a tousled female figure, nude and spread-eagled across a bed.

'Is that by any chance me?' she'd said. It came out more belligerently than she intended.

His hand stopped on the paper. 'Of course it is. Can't you
see
, now? Do you need glasses? Or do I need to get your permission?'

'It would be nice to be asked.'

'That's too bad then, because I never ask.' He hadn't turned round.

'Mischa,'she said,'I've come to get you.'

'But you are leaving me.'

'Only for three weeks.'

'And then you are coming back?'

'Of course.'

'Back to me?'

He hadn't moved. She felt a sensation of vertigo, as if she were teetering on the rickety verandah rail outside his window.

'Yes.'

'If I come now, Gigi,' he said,'there is a condition I want to make. Do you agree to it?'

'Well, I don't know what it is yet.'

'We will go in together.' It was a statement, not a question. He still hadn't moved or looked at her.

She took a deep, steadying breath in an effort to find her balance.'All right.I agree.We will go in together.'

He clasped my hand tightly as we came into the gallery.Verity looked up. She registered, I saw her eyes.Then she whisked him straight back out of the door to the lunch meeting.When she went past my desk she shot me a look.

I had to leave at 4 to pick up C. from the airport. I had to lock up first because they still hadn't come back. I drove to the airport in a manic state, radio at full blast, smoking, very nearly smashed into a turning tram in St Kilda Rd. C. didn't notice a thing, but told me off for smoking.

I'm writing this sitting on the sand on the Isle of Pines. C. has gone out in a boat fishing for a few hours, thank the Lord. It's day 3 of the 'holiday', the first chance I've had to be alone. 18 more to go, an eternity. My life is in the worst sodding mess it's ever been or ever could be in, & I'm sitting in this ravishing tropical paradise with waving palm trees & pristine white sand that's like the softest, silkiest clay.

It's all lost on me. I might as well be locked up in a dungeon, living on bread & water.

The page was creased and smudged. A few grains of sand were stuck in the spine. Small greasy blotches punctuated the writing. Suntan oil.

What would an objective person make of this? To Greer, looking down the long lens of retrospection, the remarkable thing was the selective nature of the writing. What was not on the page was as important as what was included, and in some ways more telling. And quite apart from the back story, what was left out was the other side of her life. The flip side of her interior life, one might call it. The young diarist's omissions were, on any objective reckoning,breathtaking.

An objective reader was, of course, a detached person in full possession of the facts. Until this time only one person came close to fitting this description: the writer herself. But she was personally involved.And now there was a detective abroad, nosing and prying. Who might be hell-bent on putting back in what had been left out.

Unlike the hot-headed young diarist, the biographer had a balanced narrative to construct. He was unlikely to be wilfully or self-servingly selective. His bias should be neutral and dispassionate, which made it diametrically opposed to hers. Was there any reason why Antony Corbino should view Mischa and herself benignly? Any reason why he would give them, and more particularly her, the benefit of the doubt?

Greer thought: I'm the only one who is thinking like this. Mischa is obviously
and inexplicably not. He seems oblivious. He seems almost wilfully blind. And
yet there must be, and there are, because I know about them, assumptions that
were made and people he hurt. Certain things in his past that he can't help
but regret. Or rather, she amended, things that he might well feel guilty about,
if he ever stopped to think about them. Once something was done it was past,
gone, out of his head. If it could not be changed he wasted no time regretting
it. She envied that.

A voice in her head added: but nothing he has done, or left undone, is of this order. That's what an objective biographer would surely think, were he to uncover it. It may be Mischa's biography, as Rollo says, but it is my problem.

At last she'd wandered into Mischa's studio and said something. 'He's going to
be observing us all the time. And judging. I can't bear the thought of it.'

Mischa was playing a cassette of Charles Trenet, one of a dusty collection that had rattled round in the glove box of the car for ages, before they acquired a new car and a CD stacker. He must have salvaged it and brought it into the studio.

He was intent on mixing three shades of blue with a palette knife. 'What are you talking about?' He didn't look up.

'You know.The biographer.Antony.'

'So? Aggie sees us all the time.Roly,Guy.The dogs see us.Who cares about Mr Antony bloody Corbino? We don't know him and he doesn't know us.'

'But that's the whole point. He'll be spying on us, Mischa.'

'Rubbish. What is there to spy on? Have you been living a secret life from me all these years, Mrs Smith?'

Well, in a sense I have, she thought. Doesn't everyone?

We can't see into each other's heads.Why was it so hard,so impossible to say, of course I don't mean the present. I mean spying on the past. Not yours – ours, Mischa. And mine. Why can't you understand that?

She sat in an armchair and listened to Trenet singing 'La Mer'. She had always found it an emotional song.

'This tape's terrible, Mischa, I don't know how you can bear to listen to it.The words are so distorted.'

He grunted,'I don't need the words. It's the atmosphere I want.'

She understood what he was saying. She watched him as, slowly and with intense concentration, he drew his brush across the canvas in a long arching line, like a violinist drawing his bow.

She tried to shut out the scratchy words and concentrate instead on the nostalgic
line of the music, but it seemed to her suffused with an almost unbearable
melancholy. Mischa's brush reached the end of the line and he swept it skywards,
flinging out his arms in a triumphant arc. He held the pose, his eyes on her,
willing her, but she would not smile.

5

The path from Mischa's studio skirted the laundry at the back of the house. The laundry door stood open, and Greer was pounced on. Several oily stains on the best white tablecloth had been removed successfully, and Agnieszka brimmed with a glee she wished to impart.

There was no view from the laundry's single small, high window. Helping to fold the newly pristine cloth, Greer missed her chance to spot a compact blue Fiat as it traversed the valley in her direction. It was a rental car driven with unusual circumspection by a young man who now and then took his eyes off the road and checked the map on the empty seat next to him. This was no ordinary map, but a coloured photocopy of a print, decorated in antic style with sketches of gross peasants climbing olive trees, toiling in a vineyard and tilting at wild boar.

The original had been made over thirty years earlier by Rollo, soon after he
and Guy completed their bold purchase of the hilltop hamlet with its collection
of abandoned buildings. Copies of the print were regularly faxed to first-time
visitors, and later very often framed to be hung as mementoes in studies and
sitting rooms around the world. Rollo and Guy liked to tell their guests they
lived in such a backwater that the instructions for locating them had not altered
a jot in three decades.

The driver passed an acute-angled turn to the right, on a bend in the road and
concealed by two massive cypress trees, immediately realised his mistake and
executed a smart U-turn. He repositioned the map on the steering wheel with
one hand and headed inwards along a bumpy road that wound through an unruly
scrub of turkey oak and strawberry trees, hawthorn bushes and ilex, the glossy
evergreen oak.

Ignoring two rutted laneways off to the right and a narrow intersection, he proceeded steeply upwards until, at precisely 2.3 kilometres from the turn-off, a second pair of sinuous cypresses flanked a well-used gravel track to the left. He was in among the vineyards now, the vines still bare and skeletal, marked by the proprietorial symbol he recognised: the
leccio
, acorn, fruit of the ilex tree. Another kilometre further and, just as the map depicted, a white gate and the sign:
Castello di Monte Leccio.

The driver unlatched the gate and drove in, pausing again to shut it behind him.The track meandered across the slope of the hill through more vineyards, these ones slightly more advanced and coming into bud, and then an extensive olive grove. There were signs of activity, men with trucks and a bonfire.A short distance ahead,at the crest of the rise, he saw clearly the first of the group of buildings that comprised the hamlet.

He drove through a second gate, propped wide open, and followed the track around to a large gravelled area bordered with showy rows of purple iris.A two-storey stone house faced him, with a low wing extending out to the right.An iron roof was attached to this wall,with three cars parked in its shade.A fourth car and another truck stood in the open. He pulled up next to the truck, switched off the engine and opened the driver's door. But instead of getting out he removed a small dictaphone from the back pocket of his jeans and at once began speaking into it.

'April fourteen. First impressions. I reach the Castello at 5.15 pm. It's a two-hour
drive from Pisa, quite hidden away until you get there, invisible from the
road except for occasional glimpses of the watchtower from about 5 miles back.
(NB Check with Mischa: the cypresses guarding the entrance gate are the ones
in the
Guardians
picture in Tate Modern?) I can see the three handsome stone houses and an artistically
ruined tower – which must be Mischa's studio – all well separated from each other and grouped around a wide central courtyard.
A parking lot at one side and a number of outbuildings, well maintained, including
a barn-like structure attached to the right-hand house, which could be the
winery.'

He climbed out of the car and continued to speak while walking forwards.

'On my left is a bigger house facing the other two.This would be Rollo Sonabend's.
It's square with fine, almost Georgian proportions, tall windows below, shorter
ones above, all with dark green shutters, walls artistically clad in a spidery
climber – Virginia creeper? – still bare but a few buds. A vine-covered terrace extends the full length of
the house and a good 20 feet beyond.There's a long rustic table under the terrace,
a bunch of chairs, a small lawn and a luxuriant garden at the side, with pergolas
on all sides.'

He came closer.

'It's a longer house than I thought. It has a side building stepped down, joining it to the vestry maybe, and a small attached church which would be Sonabend's studio – yeah, next to a neat little war memorial. The whole set-up is pretty damn gorgeous. House opposite must be Svoboda's, with masses of blue wisteria coming out on the wall facing me, and scarlet geraniums and other plants in pots on the side steps and window boxes.The sun on the mottled stone walls and terracotta roofs, the crumbling tower against the blue sky, a sense of ancient stillness and isolation – your classic artists' retreat. I wouldn't mind living here, it's almost too perfect to be true.Where are they all?'

At that moment his eye was caught by a flurry from his left. A small, extremely thin woman in jeans and a pink t-shirt had emerged from the big house and was galloping towards him, shouting and energetically flapping her hands. Behind her, two black pugs waddled a few steps, barked and then sat down.

He replaced the dictaphone in his pocket. Had she not, in addition to the shouting and waving, been distinctly smiling, he might have stepped back in alarm. She closed in, and he began to decipher a series of disconnected phrases. 'Are here . . . today, no next week – computer it lost – accident – perfect!'

She almost skidded to a halt in front of him, sentences rushing on unabated. 'You like it see the rooms, and you choose which one you like?'

He began lamely to introduce himself, but she interrupted. 'Yes, yes, I know,
I know who, Antony the writer from America, but not from America this time,
from London, come to do the job on Mr Mischa.That is good! My name is Agnieszka.You
get it luggage and I take you to your house over there where you stay, and
then I tell Gigi. You know Gigi?'

'No,I just got here.We didn't meet yet.'He hoisted his canvas holdall and a hard-topped suitcase from the boot and dumped them on the gravel.

'You no meet? Oh. But Mr Mischa you know.' She reached for the computer case, but he slung it over his shoulder.

'Thanks,I'll take it.No,not even Mr Mischa.Although we have talked.'

'Oh,you talk.But you like it know everything about him, very soon, because you write nice big book all about him and everybody read!'

They both laughed. She chatted on, observing him with lively curiosity as they walked the short distance to the guest house.The building alongside the car park butted up against it. She followed his gaze.

'In old day before that was dirty old shed with machines, now new winery inside. Beautiful, very modern with all steel.Very clean.Tidy, you know, and very nice?' She made emphatic horizontal gestures with her outstretched hands. 'No messy with bits and books in piles, like in all these people houses. Big,
very
big barrels, you don't believe me, filled up with wine that Gigi make with Mr Guy, but waiting, not ready for drink yet. If you like it see, you go through office, underneath your house. Gigi can show it.'

He saw that the ground floor of the house was an office, complete with shelving, files, computer table and a classical beauty with dark waving hair, all clearly visible through the wide-open French doors. The young woman was fetching her coat and bag, saw them and emerged.Agnieszka sketched an openly reluctant and pointedly one-sided introduction.

'Mr Antony just arrive from London.'The dark-haired girl flashed an interested smile. 'I quickly show him house, then he must go straightaway to Mr Mischa.'

The girl put out her hand.'Hello,I'm Giulia.'

'Hi, Giulia.You work in the winery here?'

Agnieszka interrupted,'She do Gigi job while Gigi tell you everything you want to know about Mr Mischa.'

The girl added,'Everything you always wanted to know but were afraid to ask.'

'Hey, how come your English is so good?'

'Oh, I studied in the UK, at Bristol.'

Agnieszka, transparently irritated, had already bounded up the steps to the first floor. She called down in a loud, reproving voice,'Say goodbye, Giulia, Mr Antony must wash and unpack clothes and meet his people before it dark, he no like it waste time now.'

He winked, and was treated to a merry look.'I think she wants to protect you. Or keep you for herself.'

'Well, how very flattering. If you're around this week, maybe I could take a look at the winery?'

She was locking the office doors with two keys from a big bunch.'Sure, I'm here every day because of you. Come in, you know where to find me. Ciao.'

The heavy door to the apartment upstairs had a cumbersome latch but appeared
to be unlocked. Agnieszka threw it open and ushered him in. She tugged the
door shut behind them and shook her head.

'That Giulia, she very naughty girl, she have two good boys in love with her.' She spoke in a low, confidential tone, although they were demonstrably out of anyone's hearing. 'Each boy think they get married, but she holding them on string. She not marry either of them, I think so, and Gigi think too.'

'What does Mr Mischa think?'

'He?' She gave a dismissive trill of amusement. 'He no think anything! He very famous man. He no very interest in people, interest only in painting.'

'And in Gigi?'

She nodded impatiently. 'He need her very much and he love her, oh yes of course, but he no understand proper talking, or communicate. He no nice young modern man like you.'

Before he could ask what she meant by nice modern man, she was off on another tack, beckoning him through the sitting room.

'You have all these bags, for the clothes?'

'Just one for the clothes. The hard one's got all my research material.'

She gave him a satisfied nod.'You are very good travelling, only one bag for
the clothes, but you stay long time. Easy for the man. He take one pair shoes,
do for everything. The woman need different shoes for each thing – jacket, evening, skirt, trouser. Swimming. Jeans. It not so easy travelling
for the woman, you don't believe me.'

'Oh, I believe you all right. All those shoes. What a nightmare.'

They laughed again. 'You are lucky boy, wine men all gone and you have nice big house for yourself.This is good big sitting room, fireplace here with wood, very comfortable for listen to music, or read magazine. Bedrooms up there.'

She collected a jug of tulips the colour of fresh cream from the mantelpiece
of the living room and moved a yellow pottery vase of irises into the centre.'You
start writing your book in one room and sleeping in the other, and if you
have friend come there is still one more left over. I show you.' She darted
ahead
of him up three stairs.

Antony listened to a running commentary on the pluses and minuses of the three bedrooms. Realising that a prompt but considered response was expected, he selected the one whose two wide-open windows overlooked the valley.

'I'll take the middle-sized room with a view,' he said.

Agnieszka deposited the shiny green jug of tulips on a chest of drawers. She looked pleased.

'This one I like, good big bed, very nice, very good choice.Very warm today, you like it turn off heating?' He was about to answer, but there was no pause. 'I think better wait, it still cold in night and maybe rain again tomorrow. Now, you want it little time for unpack and shower before you like it meet Gigi?' She patted his luggage. 'You put on nice clean shirt after journey, no problem, and I wash tomorrow. Only five minutes for unpack – not many shoes.'

When he came down twenty minutes later he saw a group of men in shirtsleeves emerging from the winery, stretching and moving slowly in the slanting, late afternoon light. Agnieszka was scurrying across the courtyard towards him, carrying a stack of folded white towels.

'You have shave. Look better!' She eyed his sweatshirt in khaki cotton and olive
green chinos, and gave him an approving pat on the arm. 'Very nice trouser – no creased from packing.'

'Ah, well, you see, I did a secret touch-up.'

'You do iron yourself?'

He grinned. 'Oh, yeah. I'm a nice modern man, remember? I do the iron real good.'

Tony lay on his bed, arms folded behind his head. He was stripped to the waist, the dictaphone balanced on his pectorals.

'Eleven pm. Day One: the names made flesh. Greer slash Gigi first. I am escorted into her presence by Agnieszka, one deeply bizarre and hyper Polish housekeeper. Early to mid forties, does for all of them, which is promising. Over-familiar and decidedly chatty – also promising. Complained about the number of shoes women have to pack – Polish sense of humour? Dished some dirt on Giulia, the Botticelli siren who works in the office on the ground floor of my house, who gave me the eye. Agnieszka seemed to approve of me too. Says Giulia is two-timing a pair of beaux. File them both under: to be cultivated.

'Greer slash Gigi.Not at all what I expected.First thought was: she reminds me
a bit of Virginia Woolf. A dishevelled version thereof.That elongated, horsey
face and narrow, high-bridged nose. Not unattractive for her age, horsey as
in thoroughbred,not cart.Good bones.Blue-grey eyes.Would've been a looker.
But unexpectedly refined really. Hard to reconcile with things. But that's
mostly the case when you come face to face with people for the first time in
their middle age. They generally don't give their past away. It's not written
on the face, contrary to received wisdom.

'And she doesn't give much away at all. Greeted me politely but not warmly.Wasn't keen to be alone with me. She watched me a lot during dinner, when she thought I wasn't looking. Seemed to be studying my face.That follows – she used to do portraits. Wary, is how she was. Guarded. When she did speak to me she avoided making eye contact. Well, is that surprising or not?

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