‘You look fit enough to me. You’ll be fine, you’ll see. As for the grappa, ask Gianluca to tell you about the grappa his granddad used to make. I’ve seen the results. It’s scary stuff.’
***
They set off shortly after nine. While they were waiting around, Sarah had the opportunity to chat to all the participants and was delighted to hear everybody sounding positive about the hotel and the trip so far. She was also delighted to hear from Jo that Glynis had been checked and was carrying her phone. Sarah gave them both a grin. A few people were apprehensive about what awaited them, but she was able to allay their fears by telling them that their route that day was going to be dead flat.
‘From the map, the highest point we reach is seven metres.’ She grinned and pointed to a fine palm tree in the hotel grounds. ‘That tree over there’s higher than that.’
The route that day, from a logistical point of view, was complicated. The plan was to cycle all the way round the Venice lagoon and they would need to take no fewer than three ferries to help them complete the circular ride. Although it was possible to take bikes on two of the ferries, the third was only for pedestrians so Sarah had had to book a boat specially for their group. She was fervently hoping it would arrive as planned and be big enough, otherwise they were likely to find themselves marooned on a long, thin island for the night.
They set off along a busy main road, but soon turned off onto quieter country roads, riding only a few metres from the waters of the lagoon. Big, tall Lars got a better view than anybody else, but even little Terri must have managed to glimpse the vast extent of water, dotted with little islands, most little more than swampy islets, some with clumps of cypress trees. There were numerous elegant white ibis and occasional statuesque grey herons in the shallows, accompanied by a variety of ducks and geese. From time to time they caught sight of boats, mostly flat-bottomed punts being sculled along, gondola-style. It was a really beautiful, and a very easy, ride.
After a while, they emerged onto the coast road, riding alongside a vast, sandy beach facing south, punctuated by wooden groynes to protect the precious sand from being washed away. Already now, in mid June, there were quite a few tourists to be seen, and the beach was a hive of activity as the owners of the never-ending succession of private bathing establishments set out their sunbeds and umbrellas ready for the onslaught that would start in less than a week, when the school holidays began. Sarah was glad they would be well away from the seaside by then.
It was just as they were setting off again after their coffee break, so as to catch their first ferry, due to leave at half past twelve, that Sarah heard a voice from behind her.
‘Sarah.’
She immediately recognised Miles’s voice. She braked and fell back alongside him. The bright-yellow bike the rental company had supplied for him was unmistakable.
‘Hi, Miles. How’s it going?’
‘Fine, but I think your saddle might be a tad high. I can see you rolling from side to side, and the received wisdom is that your bottom should be fairly immobile. Otherwise you’ll get saddle sores.’
‘Well, thanks, Miles.’ She took a good look at his face, surprised, but somehow not displeased, that he had been looking at her, and gave him a little smile, but it wasn’t returned. ‘You may well be right. This is my own saddle. I brought it from home and Gianluca fitted it for me this morning. I thought it felt a bit strange. I think I’ll fiddle with it next time we stop.’ She decided, seeing as the two of them were together without anybody to overhear their conversation, that she would do as he had asked last night. ‘Aren’t you forgetting something?’
He looked across and caught her eye, but she saw comprehension dawn on his face before she had to remind him. ‘Ah yes, the obligatory smile. How’s this?’ His sunglasses prevented her from seeing his eyes, but the rest of his face definitely split into an altogether convincing smile and, as it did so, she found herself smiling back.
‘That’s the way, Miles. I know I said you’d smile if you were happy, but maybe the opposite applies. The more you smile, the happier you’ll become.’
His smile didn’t waver, but she sensed the strain he was experiencing in keeping up the appearance of happiness. ‘That would be amazing. Yes – you keep bullying me, Sarah, and maybe it’ll work.’
The smile was still on his face so she risked something a bit more personal. ‘The other thing they say is that talking is good. If you ever want to talk, I’m a good listener.’
This time he didn’t reply.
Soon they reached their first ferry and pushed their bikes on board, stacking them against the sides of the open car deck. From the upper deck, they got their first really good view of the city of Venice itself as it hove into view on their right, a packed mass of tall palazzi with all manner of spires and domes reaching up through the roofs into the hazy blue sky.
Sarah was leaning against the rail, chatting to some of the others and watching as the outline of the city came ever closer, when she felt a touch on her arm. It was Paul.
‘Not a bad view, eh, Sarah?’
She nodded. ‘You can say that again.’ The sun was reflecting on the tiny wavelets that sparkled cheerfully across the water of the lagoon. Paul also looked cheerful this morning and, for a moment, Sarah remembered the previous night and wondered about asking him if there was some sort of antipathy between him and his brother, but thought better of it. The only thing worse than getting involved in a family feud was when that family happened to be her employers.
The ferry took them to the Lido and by the time they stopped for a late lunch break they had already racked up almost sixty kilometres and the mood of the group was buoyant. Sarah hoped this would still be the case when the terrain started getting hilly in a few days’ time.
The café restaurant alongside the road that ran round the edge of the lagoon had tables outside in the shade of an awning. As they sat down, directly in front of them across the water was Venice, now revealed in all its majesty. Hefty wooden posts, arranged in tripods, marked the channel through the shallow waters of the lagoon towards the city, which was now clearly visible in the middle of the broad expanse of water. From where they were sitting, the city was a complex pink and white mass of buildings with, rising from their midst, the pointed red and white tower of St Mark’s Basilica. Everywhere they looked there were boats, ranging from what looked like a huge cruise liner, to the utilitarian green and white vaporetti – the water buses – to numerous smaller craft, with what might have been a handful of gondolas in the far distance at the entrance to the Grand Canal. As views went, this one was something very special.
Some of the riders chose to have a full meal with wine, but most people, including Sarah, just opted for a sandwich and a soft drink, followed by a coffee, deciding that two big Italian meals a day might be excessive. She had just sat down when Paul came along. ‘All right if I join you?’
‘Of course, help yourself.’
He pulled out a chair and sat down at right angles to her, side on to the water. They chatted a bit as they both relaxed and admired the view. He took off his sunglasses and gloves and ran his fingers through his hair. He had nice hair, Sarah had to give him that. It had evidently been freshly cut in preparation for the bike ride, and, even after a hot day crammed into a helmet, it sprang back into place obediently. Sarah envied him that. Her hair inevitably looked bedraggled when she removed her helmet. Although they had been riding along on the flat, the temperature had climbed steadily and all of them were sweating. She hoped it would cool down a bit by the time they reached the hills in three days’ time.
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