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I shook my head. ‘I’m all right,’ I said. ‘What about the others? Where are they?’

‘I couldn’t find them.’ Her eyes were frantic with worry. ‘I went all through the monastery — they weren’t there. What do you think has happened to them?’ And then in a rush. ‘We must find them. The lava’s almost reached the monastery. I called and called, but they didn’t answer. Do you think—’ She didn’t finish. She didn’t want to put her thought into words.

‘Where is the monastery?’ I asked her.

‘Through this building.’ She nodded to the house next to the trattoria. I turned the mule and slid off at the door. The smell of the trattoria made me realise how parched I was. ‘Just a minute,’ I said and dived inside. There were bottles behind the counter. I reached over and took one, knocking the top off against the counter edge. The wine was warm and rather sharp. But it cleared the grit from my throat. I passed the bottle to Hilda. ‘You look as though you could do with some.’

‘We haven’t time to—’

‘Drink it,’ I said. She did as I told her. When she’d finished I threw the bottle away. ‘Now, let’s get to the monastery.’

She led me through the open doorway of the next house. Broken wooden stairs climbed to the floor above. ‘I was at the top of this house when I thought I heard you call,’ she said. We passed the foot of the stairs and along a stone-flagged passage. There was a clatter of hooves behind us. ‘What’s that?’ She turned, her eyes wide and startled. I realised then how near to breaking she was.

‘It’s only George.’

‘Oh — the mule. Why do you call him George?’

We were out of the house now and crossing a dusty patch of garden. Why had the name George come automatically to my mind? My mascot, of course. ‘George was the name of my mascot,’ I said. It had been a little shaggy horse Alice had given me. It had gone all through the Battle of Britain and then flown all over prance and Germany. Some bloody Itye had pinched it just before that last flight.

We were in the next row of houses now. ‘Funny the way he follows us through the house.’ She was talking to keep control of herself.

‘George is used to houses,’ I said. ‘He’s lived all his life in a house, in the same room as the family.’

We were out in the street now, and there was the piazza with the cart leaning drunkenly on its broken wheel. In the instant of recognition I glanced to the left. The lava had moved a long way down the street since I’d last seen it. The twenty-foot wall of black, heat-ridden cinder was not a dozen yards from the main archway of the monastery. I stood there, staring at it, realising that in half an hour the face of it would be about where I was standing and the monastery of St. Francis would have disappeared. ‘Hurry! Please. We must hurry.’

I caught her arm as she turned impatiently towards the main archway. ‘Steady,’ I said. ‘We must decide what we’re going to do. You say you’ve searched the monastery?’

‘Yes.’

‘Every room?”

‘I do not know. I cannot be quite sure. You see it is very confusing inside.’

I hesitated. ‘Did you go round the outside of the buildings?’

She shook her head. ‘Why should I? I was searching—’

‘Most of the rooms will have windows, or at least gratings. They will have hung something out to attract attention.’

She stared at me, her face suddenly lighting up with hope. ‘Oh, why did I not think of that for myself. Quick. There is a way through to the back by the entrance they went in.’

I limped after her, the mule following at my heels. But the clip-clop of his hooves ceased just before we reached the archway. I looked back. He was standing in the middle of the road, his ears laid back, sniffing at the smoking cinder-heap of the lava. ‘You stay there, George,’ I said. ‘We’ll be back later.’

Hilda was running across the courtyard as I passed under the arch of the entrance. The stone square of the courtyard was beautifully cool after the heat of the lava-blocked streets. I glanced up at the windows. They were sightless eyes staring down at me unwinking. No sign of a scarf or handkerchief or anything to show that the others were in any of those rooms.

I entered the monastery buildings. It was almost dark inside and full of the damp coolness of stone. I felt suddenly fresh and full of vigour. Hilda called to me. I crossed a big refectory room with high windows and a long table laid for breakfast. Then I was in a wide stone passage and the walls were echoing the limp of my leg. Hilda was calling to me to hurry and a moment later I passed through a heavy, iron-studded door into the monastery grounds. There was a small flower garden and then vineyards flanked with orange-laden trees. I joined Hilda who was staring up at the monastery.

Parts of the building were very old, especially the section away to our left where a great rounded tower was falling into ruins. The building had been added to at various periods and though it was all constructed of tuftstone it presented a scattered, haphazard appearance which was enhanced by the fact that the stone varied in colour according to the extent to which it was worn. There was a chapel with some fine stained glass and a line of outhouses ran out in a long arm. Smoke still curled up from one of the chimneys here and even in the sulphurous atmosphere I could detect a smell of burnt bread. Evidently the eruption had started whilst they were in the middle of baking.

‘ I bet Hacket has the full guide-book history of the place,’ I said. I had to say something to cover my disappointment, for the windows were all as blank as those in the courtyard. ‘Better try the side nearest the lava.’ I was just turning away when Hilda caught my arm.

‘What is that?’ She was pointing towards the great rounded tower. There were no windows in this ruined keep, only narrow slits. And from the topmost slit something hung limp. In that unnatural twilight it was impossible to see what it was. It looked like a piece of old rag.

‘Did you have a look at that tower when you searched the monastery buildings?’ I asked her.

She shook her head. ‘No. I did not find it.”

I pushed my way through some azaleas, skirted a sewage pond and reached the base of the tower by a footpath that ran through coarse grass. There was a. garbage heap there and the flies buzzed and crawled amongst broken bottles, rotting casks and all the refuse thrown out by the monks. Looking up I could just see that the piece of rag was clean and new and bright blue. I remembered then that Racket had been wearing a blue silk shirt. I cupped my hands round my mouth and called up, ‘Max! Max! Zina! Racket!’ I called all their names. But when I stood listening, all I could hear was the sifting, spilling sound of the lava, punctuated by the rumbling crash of falling buildings.

‘Can you hear anything?’

Hilda shook her head.

I called again. In the silence that followed my shouts I could hear the lava move nearer. I glanced back across the huge, buzzing pile of the rubbish heap to the brown line of the outhouses. Reared up above them was the advancing wall of the lava.

Hilda suddenly gripped my arm. ‘Look!’ She was pointing upwards to the slit. The piece of cloth was moving. It waved gently to and fro and then suddenly seemed to take on life as though the end of it were being violently shaken. Sleeves fell out towards us. ‘It is Hacket’s shirt,’ I cried. Then cupping my hands I shouted up, ‘How do we get to you?’