'Nonsense,' he said. 'You can work all this evening. Besides, you ought to have a look at one of the real mountains up here. I can show you a glacier and some very fine avalanche slopes. Your fat friend is only taking pictures of the ordinary ski runs. You ought to take a look at the real mountains. There's good film stuff up there.'
'Really,' I said, 'I must work.'
He shrugged his shoulders. 'My God, you take life seriously. What does a day more or less matter? You should have been born in Ireland. Life would have been more fun for you.' He swung back to the piano and began thumping out one of Elgar's more solid pieces, looking at me over his shoulder with a twinkle in his eyes. He quickly changed into a gay Irish air. 'If you change your mind,' he said, 'I'll be leaving about ten.'
The others were drifting in now, attracted by the music and the smell of bacon and eggs frying. Conscious of a growing audience, Mayne switched to Verdi and began to play seriously again. Only Joe was not interested. He looked tired and liverish. 'Does he have to make a damned row so early in the morning?' he grumbled in my ear. 'Like talking at breakfast — can't stand it.' His face looked grey in the hard sunlight and the pouches under his eyes were very marked.
The mail came up, after breakfast, on the first sleigh. With it was a cable from Engles. It read: Why Mayne Keramikos unmentioned previously. Full information urgent. Engles.
A few minutes later Mayne came over to me. He had his ski boots on and was carrying a small haversack. 'What about changing your mind, Blair?' he said. 'We needn't make it a long day. Suppose we're back by three, would that be all right for you? It's not much fun going for a ski run by one's self.'
I hesitated. I did want to get some writing done. On the other hand, I couldn't bear the thought of being cooped up in the hut all day. And Engles wanted information about Mayne. It would be a good opportunity to find out about the man. 'All right,' I said, 'I'll be ready in about ten minutes.'
'Good!' he said. 'I'll have Aldo get your skis ready. No need to worry about food. We'll get it at the hotel at Carbonin.' His eagerness was infectious. Any one less like a man who had once led a gang of deserters I could not imagine. And suddenly I did not believe a word Keramikos had said. It was too fantastic. The Greek had just been trying to divert my attention from himself.
As I came down in my ski suit and boots, Joe raised his eyebrows. He did not say anything, but bent over the camera he was loading. 'Care to lend me that small camera of yours, Joe?' I asked.
He looked up. 'No,' he said. 'I wouldn't trust that camera to any one. Why? Think you can get some shots that I can't? Where are you off to?'