âI must get out! I must get out!' Tina, the dark crop-haired young gypsy girl stared through the caravan window at the confessional tent, then swung round to face the other three gypsy women. Her eyes were red and swollen, her face very pale. âI must walk! I must breathe the air! I â I can't stand it here any more.'
Marie le Hobenaut, her mother and Sara looked at one another. None of them looked very much happier than Tina. Their faces were still as sad and bitter as they had been when Bowman had watched them during the night, defeat and despair still hung as heavily in the air.
âYou will be careful, Tina?' Marie's mother said axiously. âYour father â you must think of your father.'
âIt's all right, Mother,' Marie said. âTina knows. She knows now.' She nodded to the dark girl who hurried throught the doorway, and went on softly: âShe was so very much in love with Alexandre. You know.'
âI know,' her mother said heavily. âIt's a pity that Alexandre hadn't been more in love with her.'
Tina passed through the rear portion of the caravan. Seated on the steps there was a gypsy in his late thirties. Unlike most gypsies, Pierre Lacabro was squat to the point of deformity and extremely broad, and also unlike most gypsies who, in their aquiline fashion, are as aristocratically handsome as any people in Europe, he had a very broad, brutalized face with a thin cruel mouth, porcine eyes and a scar, which had obviously never been stitched, running from right eyebrow to right chin. He was, clearly, an extremely powerful person. He looked up as Tina approached and gave her a broken-toothed grin.
âAnd where are
you
going, my pretty maid?' He had a deep, rasping, gravelly and wholly unpleasant voice.
âFor a walk.' She made no attempt to keep the revulsion from her face. âI need air.'
âWe have guards posted â and Maca and Masaine are on the watch. You know that?'
âDo you think I'd run away?'
He grinned again. âYou're too frightened to run away.'
With a momentary flash of spirit she said: âI'm not frightened of Pierre Lacabro.'
âAnd why on earth should you be?' He lifted his hands, palms upwards. âBeautiful girls like you â why, I'm like a father to them.'
Tina shuddered and walked down the caravan steps.
Czerda's explanation to Simon Searl had not gone down well at all. Searl was at no pains to conceal his contempt and displeasure: Czerda had gone very much on the defensive.
âAnd what about me?' he demanded.
âI'm
the person who has suffered, not you, not Gaiuse Strome. I tell you, he destroyed everything in my caravan â and stole my eighty thousand francs.'
âWhich you hadn't even earned yet. That was Gaiuse Strome's money, Czerda. He'll want it back: if he doesn't get it he'll have your life in place of it.'
âIn God's name, Bowman's vanished! I don't know â '
âYou will find him and then you will use this on him.' Searl reached into the folds of his robe and brought out a pistol with a screwed-on silencer. âIf you fail, I suggest you save us trouble and just use it on yourself.'
Czerda looked at him for a long moment. âWho
is
this Gaiuse Strome?'
âI do not know.'
âWe were friends once, Simon Searl â '
âBefore God, I have never met him. His instructions come either by letter or telephone and even then through an intermediary.'
âThen do you know who this man is?' Czerda took Searl's arm and almost dragged him to the flap of the tent, a corner of which he eased back. Plainly in view was Le Grand Duc who had obviously replenished his glass. He was gazing directly at them and the expression on his face was very thoughtful. Czerda hastily lowered the flap. âWell?'
âThat man I have seen before,' Searl said. âA wealthy nobleman, I believe.'
âA wealthy nobleman by the name of Gaiuse Strome?'
âI do not know. I do not wish to know.'
âThis is the third time I have seen this man on the pilgrimage. It is also the third year I have been working for Gaiuse Strome. He asked questions last night. This morning he was down looking at the damage that had been done to our caravan. And now he's staring at us. I think â '
âKeep your thinking for Bowman,' Searl advised. âThat apart, keep your own counsel. Our patron wishes to remain anonymous. He does not care to have his privacy invaded. You understand?'
Czerda nodded reluctantly, thrust the silenced pistol inside his shirt and left. As he did, Le Grand Duc peered thoughtfully at him over the rim of his glass.
âGood God!' he said mildly. âShriven already.'
Lila said politely: âI beg your pardon, Charles.'
âNothing, my dear, nothing.' He shifted his gaze and caught sight of Tina who was wandering disconsolately and apparently aimlessly across the grass. âMy word, there's a remarkably fine-looking filly. Downcast, perhaps, yes, definitely downcast.
But beautiful.'
Lila said: âCharles, I'm beginning to think that you're a connoisseur of pretty girls.'
âThe aristocracy always have been. Carita, my dear, Arles and with all speed. I feel faint.'
âCharles!' Lila was instant concern. âAre you unwell? The sun? If we put the hood up â '
âI'm hungry,' Le Grand Duc said simply.
Tina watched the whispering departure of the Rolls then looked casually around her. Lacabro had disappeared from the steps of the green-andwhite caravan. Of Maca and Masaine there was no sign. Quite fortuitously, as it seemed, she found herself outside the entrance to the black confessional tent. Not daring to look round to make a final check to see whether she was under observation, she pushed the flap to one side and went in. She took a couple of hesitating steps towards the booth.
âFather! Father!' Her voice was a tremulous whisper. âI must talk to you.'
Searl's deep grave voice came from inside the booth: âThat's what I'm here for, my child.'
âNo, no!' Still the whisper. âYou don't understand. I have terrible things to tell you.'
âNothing is too terrible for a man of God to hear. Your secrets are safe with me, my child.'
âBut I don't
want
them to be safe with you! I want you to go to the police.'
The curtain dropped and Searl appeared. His lean ascetic face was filled with compassion and concern. He put his arm round her shoulders.
âWhatever ails you, daughter, your troubles are over. What is your name, my dear?'
âTina. Tina Daymel.'
âPut your trust in God, Tina, and tell me everything.' In the green-and-white caravan Marie, her mother and Sara sat in a gloomy silence. Now and again the mother gave a half sob and dabbed at her eyes with her handkerchief.
âWhere
is
Tina?' she said at length. âWhere can she be? She takes so long.'
âDon't worry, Madame Zigair,' Sara said reassuringly. âTina's a sensible girl. She'll do nothing silly.'
âSara's right, Mother,' Marie said. âAfter last night â '
âI know. I know I'm being foolish. But Alexandre â '
âPlease, Mother.'
Madame Zigair nodded and fell silent. Suddenly the caravan door was thrown open and Tina was thrown bodily into the room to fall heavily and face downwards on the caravan floor. Lacabro and Czerda stood framed in the entrance, the former grinning, the latter savage with a barely controlled anger. Tina lay where she had fallen, very still, clearly unconscious. Her clothes had been ripped from her back which was blood-stained and almost entirely covered with a mass of wicked-looking red and purplish weals: she had been viciously, mercilessly whipped.
âNow,' Czerda said softly. âNow will you all learn?'
The door closed. The three women stared in horror at the cruelly mutilated girl, then fell to their knees to help her.
Bowman's call to England came through quickly and he returned to his hotel within fifteen minutes of having left it. The corridor leading to his bedroom was thickly carpeted and his footfalls soundless. He was reaching for the handle of the door when he heard voices coming from inside the room. No voices, he realized, just one â Cecile's â and it came only intermittently: the tone of her voice was readily recognizable but the muffling effect of the intervening door was too great to allow him to distinguish the words. He was about to lean his ear against the woodwork when a chambermaid carrying an armful of sheets came round a corner of the corridor. Bowman walked unconcernedly on his way and a couple of minutes later walked unconcernedly back. There was only silence in the room. He knocked and went inside.
Cecile was standing by the window and she turned and smiled at him as he closed the door. Her gleaming dark hair had been combed or brushed or whatever she'd done with it and she looked more fetching than ever.
âRavishing,' he said. âHow did you manage without me? My word, if our children only look â '
âAnother thing,' she interrupted. The smile, he now noticed, lacked warmth. âThis Mr Parker business when you registered. You did show your passport, didn't you â Mr Bowman?'
âA friend lent it to me.'
âOf course. What else? Is your friend very important?'
âHow's that?'
âWhat is your
job
, Mr Bowman?'
âI've told you â '
âOf course. I'd forgotten. A professional idler.'
She sighed. âAnd now â breakfast?'
âFirst, for me, a shave. It'll spoil my complexion but I can fix that. Then breakfast.'
He took the shaving kit from his case, went into the bathroom, closed the door and set about shaving. He looked around him. She'd come in here, divested herself of all her cumbersome finery, had a very careful bath to ensure that she didn't touch the stain, dressed again, reapplied to the palms of her hands some of the stain he'd left her and all this inside fifteen minutes. Not to mention the hair brushing or combing or whatever. He didn't believe it, she had about her the fastidious look of a person who'd have used up most of that fifteen minutes just in brushing her teeth. He looked into the bath and it was indubitably still wet so she had at least turned on the tap. He picked up the crumpled bath-towel and it was as dry as the sands of the Sinai desert. She'd brushed her hair and that was all. Apart from making a phone call.
He shaved, re-applied some war-paint and took Cecile down to a table in a corner of the hotel's rather ornate and statuary-crowded patio. Despite the comparatively early hour it was already well patronized with late breakfasters and early coffeetakers. For the most part the patrons were clearly tourists, but there was a fair sprinkling of the more well-to-do Arlésiens among them, some dressed in the traditional fiesta costume of that part, some as gypsies.
As they took their seats their attention was caught and held by an enormous lime and dark green Rolls-Royce parked by the kerb: beside it stood the chauffeuse, her uniform matching the colours of the car. Cecile looked at the gleaming car in frank admiration.
âGorgeous,' she said. âAbsolutely gorgeous.'
âYes indeed,' Bowman agreed. âYou'd hardly think she could drive a great big car like that.' He ignored Cecile's old-fashioned look and leisurely surveyed the patio. âThree guesses as to the underprivileged owner.'
Cecile followed his line of sight. The third table from where they sat was occupied by Le Grand Duc and Lila. A waiter appeared with a very heavy tray which he set before Le Grand Duc who picked up and drained a beaker of orange juice almost before the waiter had time to straighten what must have been his aching back.
âI thought that fellow would never come.' Le Grand Duc was loud and testy.
âCharles.' Lila shook her head. âYou've just
had
an
enormous
breakfast.'
âAnd now I'm having another one. Pass the rolls, ma chérie.'