Chalky white structures plastered the horizon as the Jones family reached the city of Pyrgos. Less than an hour switching from the E55 to motorway 9 was enough to tire the family out and so they paid the taxi driver and made their way towards the hotel they had booked. Hotel Anagennisis stood above them as the three of them wandered inside. Colour. Every wall was plastered with a different colour, there was bright blue, peach, pink, orange – literally all things bright. Warm sensations shot through the family as a sea of relief swept over them. They had done it. They were here. Years of saving had led to this moment, their very first holiday as a proper family. All three of them.
“Χαίρετε!” a voice from another room shouted through, welcoming but abrupt. Glancing puzzled towards one another, Mr and Mrs Jones reach down to get the Greek-English dictionaries they had so wisely brought along with them.
“I think she said hello...” Mr Jones said slowly, eyeing up the dictionary as he scrolled through it. “How did she say it again?”
“Chair-et-ay I think… I'm not too sure… I could be wrong...” Mrs Jones was less sure of her husband's Greek knowledge, but went with it anyway.
Turning, she noted Lucas was in the corner of the room with his dinosaur toy – Mr Roar. He was often known to hide away in corners when her and her husband became unsettled, almost like he could sense it in the air, and Mr Roar was the one thing he would take with him to calm him down. The doctors said it was to do with some psychological attachment theory that was present in a lot of two year old children, sometimes up until the age of eight, so the couple let Lucas and Mr Roar be.
The woman popped her head round the corner and started spiralling off in some Greek conversation before stopping to question the puzzled faces.
“Um.. Sorry… We… We're English… We no understand you...” Using actions and over-exagerative hand motions, Mr Jones tried to portray his message to the Greek woman. Turning to him almost instantly with a look of complete understanding she began speaking
“Of course, sorry I should not have assumed you was Greek, how was your journey? Have you booked room with us? How long will you be staying with us? You like breakfast? Lunch? Dinner? It is all available, just let me know in advance so I can get enough groceries for the day.” She handed them their room key and got them to sign a contract agreement before sending them on their way.
The family wanted to stay within the realms of their room for the night, to rest after the long journey, flight and drive. The couple put Lucas to bed first, as his eyes stretched wide before swiftly closing, trying to stay awake, but swarmed with the ever closing tiredness that was slowly consuming him. Summoning him into a silent dream, a collection of the events and fantasies of the day. Mr and Mrs Jones then went to snuggle down on their bed, watching TV as they drifted into a montage of memories.
The first event that the couple had planned for the following day, was a trip to the archaeological museum: Αρχαιολογικό Μουσείο Ολυμπίας. Despite having no knowledge on how to pronounce the name, the family rushed to get ready and tried to communicate with the taxi driver where they wanted to go. Gestures and slurring of words didn't seem to give him any indication of their destination and so after attempting to show what a museum was with their hands for a good fifteen minutes, they resorted to writing it down, and the driver knew exactly where they were going. That was struggle one over with. Struggle two, however, was the exchange in euros upon arrival, how much did they owe the driver? What did “δεκαπέντε ευρώ ογδόντα” mean? The couple sifted through the notes they had in their wallet and handed the driver a €10 note, but he frowned. Not enough. Giving him a €10 and two €5 notes, they quickly left the taxi, not willing to go through that embarrassment again just to get their change.
Lucas reluctantly left the taxi, holding back tears as they got closer and closer to the museum, and further and further from the enclosed space of the taxi. Mrs Jones picked Lucas up and tried giving him a cuddle, noticing that he wasn't his cheery self, tears beginning to roll down his smooth cheek.
“Lucas, honey, what's up hey? What's up? Shhhh it's okay,” she rocked him gently, trying to sooth his emotional distress.
“Mummy… Mr Roar...” Through tears, his voice was barely audible.
“Yes, yes, we will get him, he's probably in the bag… Mike honey, could you grab Mr Roar for Lucas please? He should be in the bag.”
Mr Jones rummaged through the bag, rummaged again, and again. He slowly took everything out of the bag, replacing it all in perfect order when he reached his conclusion.
“He's not in the bag.”
Mrs Jones face dropped.
“What? How can he not be in the bag, he was in the bag. I put him there this morning, have you looked properly?”
“Honey, he's not here.”
The dinosaur toy had gone. Lucas' tool of comfort had gone. The panic they felt was what kept them from going into the museum. They needed to resolve the issue before they could have a good day out, because Lucas would not be willing to do anything without the toy. Racking their brains for some idea of what it was they needed to do, they finally came to a conclusion of what they could do.
“Lucas,” Mrs Jones started.
“We are going to go into the museum, and if you behave like the good boy we know you are, we will get you a little souvenir from the shop at the end, and I'm sure they will have another Mr Roar, but you have to be good, okay?”
Putting on a half-hearted grin, Lucas made his way towards the museum, a hand on each parent as the museum loomed above them. A white temple of the ancient gods, holding any evidence of life before us, glowing in the sunlight.
Stories within the museum were the same sort of things that we all knew: Perseus killing Medusa, Achilles and his heel, Hades love and need for Persephone and Zeus's way of getting the ladies. But one story stood out. It was a small stand towards the edge of the museum, small and lacking in information. The child who once lived among the three Fates: Perdita. The lost one. An orphaned child who took refuge among the Fates, and caused them to make mistakes that really were fatal. Little is known about her though, as all of the documents and stories about her have been lost. Or destroyed. Mrs Jones pointed her out to her husband, and he started reading the few documents there were of Perdita, noting also that some of the facts didn't all match up.
As the evening drew closer, the crowds surrounding the family began to disperse. Closing time was arriving and so with Lucas swinging on their arms, they wandered hand in hand, towards the little gift shop at the end. Jumping down each step to maximise fun for Lucas was what caused Mrs Jones to fall. Misjudging the distance between the two steps, she caught the edge and was whisked away, tumbling down each step. Bump. Thud. By the time she had reached the bottom step, an ambulance had already arrived and Mr Jones, letting go of Lucas' hand, ran to her rescue. Lucas wasn't far behind and without quite understanding the serious nature of her injury he approached her.
“Mummy, Lucas kiss is better.” He began leaning over to kiss the bleeding patch planted upon her head before Mr Jones intervened.
“Lucas, no! You could hurt her even more!” he was maybe too firm for the little boy, who began to tear up.
Mrs Jones was loaded up into the ambulance and Mr Jones followed, lifting Lucas in first – making sure he made the step. He turned to Mrs Jones and grasped her hand, staring intently towards her closed eyes, hoping that even just his touch would release her from the state she was in. He stared too intently.
As the ambulance doors slid shut he glanced outside once more, to the beautiful city of Pyrgos, one which they would be unlikely to return to, and in the corner of his eye he saw Lucas' dinosaur toy. Being held by a man, a man wearing black clothes. And there was Lucas. No longer in the ambulance. The doors of the ambulance shut tight and despite Mr Jones' best attempts to stop the ambulance, no one understood what he was saying. No one knew his child was out there. No one knew.