Read Death in the Andamans Online
Authors: M. M. Kaye
âCautious chap, Nick,' commented Charles: âBang goes Ruby's tête-à -tête!'
Copper laughed and unaccountably felt her heart grow several degrees lighter. She would not have admitted even to herself quite how apprehensive she was becoming of Mrs Stock's determined and mature attractions. The eight yachtsmen packed themselves into the lorry and departed, while the remainder of the party set about collecting rugs and picnic-baskets in a leisurely manner. They would take less time to return by road than those who were sailing back across the bay, and since the majority of them intended to catch the six-thirty ferry from Aberdeen to Ross they could allow themselves another half hour on Harriet.
The conversation turned naturally to Home â for this was Christmas Eve and the acute nostalgia of the Exile for familiar scenes and the years that have been and will return no more, seized achingly on the little group under the frangipani trees. Memories of other Christmases. Of holly and mistletoe, mince pies and carol singers. Even Copper was conscious of a brief pang of homesickness, and for a fleeting moment Nick, Valerie and Charles, the green islands and the enchanted sea grew dim and unreal, and she was a child again, climbing on to a nursery chair to hang gay, glass balls on a Christmas tree â¦
She shook herself as though to be rid of the memory, and having helped to stow the last of the rugs in the cars, strolled to the far edge of the lawn where the breeze which had strengthened at the approach of sunset blew her ash-blond hair into a tangled halo about her head. Below and to her left on the quiet sea off North Bay a tiny white sailing-boat was moving sluggishly towards Ross. It was too far out to be one belonging to the Mount Harriet party, and Copper imagined it must be Valerie's father returning from a peaceful and private afternoon's sailing. She watched it idly for a few moments, and then as her eyes strayed beyond it, stiffened suddenly to alarmed attention.
They heard her calling from the far side of the pepper trees, but the breeze took the words away, blurring them to unintelligible sounds. âWhat do you suppose she wants?' inquired Valerie: âCharles darling, do have a good look round and see that we haven't left anything.'
Copper reappeared suddenly, running across the lawn, and said breathlessly: âCome and look at this!' She dragged Valerie at a run to the far side of the garden, the others following more slowly: âLook!' said Copper, still agitated. They looked in silence; gazing in the direction of her pointing finger to where H.M.S.
Sapphire,
no longer at her moorings, steamed slowly out of the harbour, her bows set to the open sea. âThey've gone!' said Copper blankly.
âNo, he hasn't,' said Valerie, correctly translating the thought: âThere hasn't been nearly time for the dinghies to do more than get clear of Hopetown jetty. That is, if they've even started yet, which I doubt â what with Ruby insisting on helping to get the sail up!'
Copper's strained attitude relaxed and she laughed a little unsteadily as Charles said: âLet's ask Dan,' and turned about to hail Dan Harcourt, who was strolling towards them across the lawn. âCome and take a last, lingering look at your departing home, Doc. Were you by any chance aware that your mess-mates were proposing to light out and leave you marooned?'
Dan Harcourt glanced along Valerie's pointing finger and his jaw dropped. âGreat Scott! Why â what on earth
____
?'
âWe don't know,' said Copper. âDon't you know anything about it either?'
âNo. There must be something up: someone staging a riot in some insalubrious coastal spot, and the Navy ordered to show the flag for moral effect.'
He grinned suddenly and largely: âI say, what a bit of luck for me getting left behind! Sickening for all the other poor types having to spend Christmas striking warlike attitudes. I bet they're cursing! Nick will have missed it too: pretty lucky for both of
____
' The sentence broke off in a little shiver that made his teeth chatter.
Copper swung round sharply and he laughed and said: âSorry. Goose walked over my grave. Hadn't we better get going if we're going to catch the ferry?'
They piled into the three cars and left Mount Harriet behind them. And at no point during the drive down the steep hill road did one of them think to look back to where, behind them, that ominous belt of tawny darkness grew and broadened with uncanny swiftness, blotting out the brightness of the quiet evening sky.
Barely had the last car passed through the gates and rounded the first bend of the jungle road when the new-found silence of the deserted house was again disturbed. This time by the bell in the small telephone box in the corner of the verandah by the dining-room door. The phone rang shrilly, its urgent metallic cry echoing eerily through the silent house.
It rang for perhaps five minutes, and then ceased. And silence flowed back and closed over Mount Harriet like a quiet cloud.
âIt's getting very dark,' said Copper. âAre we going to miss the ferry?'
Valerie leant forward and peered at the dashboard clock. âNo, we're all right. We've got nearly half an hour yet and it shouldn't take us more than twenty minutes from here.'
âUm,'
said Copper dubiously. âI've never yet been on a picnic with you and Charles when we haven't missed the ferry.'
Charles said:
âPessimist!'
but applied his foot with more force to the accelerator and took the next bend at fifty.
âWhy is everything such a queer yellow colour?' persisted Copper restlessly. âYou ought to switch on the headlights, Charles. You'll run off the road in a minute â it squiggles so.'
âLook, who's driving this car?' demanded Charles. âYou or me?'
Copper apologized hastily and leant out to look back at the sky between the double wall of trees behind them. They heard her catch her breath in a harsh gasp, and Dan Harcourt, who was returning with them in place of John Shilto, leant out in turn and whistled expressively. âGreat Caesar's Ghost
____
! Here, step on it, Charles, or inside another five minutes we're going to be overhauled by the father and mother of a storm!'
Above and ahead of them the sky was still clear and serene, but behind them it had turned to a leaden pall of darkness against which the tangled mass of the jungle and the tall tops of coconut palms stood black and motionless, and not a leaf stirred. Even the ferns and orchids and the long, delicate festoons of creeper that swung down from every overhanging branch hung so still that they appeared to be rigid, and the rattling swiftness of the ancient car seemed the only sound in all the breathless, waiting islands.
Charles tilted the driving-mirror so as to give himself a view of the lowering sky behind him, and said: â
Crippen!
We're going to be lucky if we beat this! Hold on to your hats, and we'll see if we can knock sixty out of this galloping bedstead.'
He switched on the headlights as they bucketed out of a side-turning and swung left with a screech of tortured tyres into a long, straight stretch of road lined with shadowy coconut palms. But the storm was overhauling them with relentless swiftness, and by now more than half the sky was darkened by it and the far hills had been blotted out. â
Hurry,
Charles!' implored Valerie.
âIt's no good telling me to hurry,' retorted Charles with something of a snap: âAddress your admonitions to this blasted mousetrap! â she's bursting her stays as it is, and even if we could by some miracle kick another five miles an hour out of her, she'd fall to pieces in the process!'
âThis
would
happen on Christmas Eve!' mourned Valerie. âCharles, do you think the others will hold the ferry for us? We were the last to leave and we've got the worst car, so the Dobbies and George and Amabel and Co. are bound to have arrived by now.'
Charles said: âYou forget they've got to decant Hurridge and Ted Norton first. We'll probably be at the jetty as soon as they are.
Listen!â¦
What's that?'
For some minutes past they had been vaguely aware of a curious humming sound that was barely audible above the noise of the car. But now, suddenly, it deepened until it sounded like the croon of wind through telegraph wires, and grew steadily in volume until the whole island seemed to vibrate to it as the fabric of a church will tremble to the low tones of an organ.
Charles shouted: âHold everything â here she comes!' And even as he spoke, the storm was upon them.
It hit the breathless immobility of the evening with the impact of a sixteen-inch shell. Shattering the brooding stillness into a thousand tortured fragments as the wind leapt upon the island; shaking it, savaging it, tearing it as though it were a terrier with a rat: bending the tall trunks of the coconut palms as though they had been saplings, and lashing them to and fro in a wild confusion.
Trails of jungle creeper, ripped from their airy moorings, leaves, twigs and orchids, fragments of branches and startled insects whirled across the windscreen of the car and tangled themselves about the radiator as the car rocked and bucketed onwards, keeping to the crown of the road with difficulty. Valerie could see Charles's lips forming wicked words on discovering that the windscreen-wiper was out of order, and she groped for some cotton waste and leant out, the wind whipping her hair across her eyes: The car lurched to a standstill as Charles applied the brake and dragged her back into her seat with a relentless hand. ââ! â!' yelled Charles; his words completely unintelligible against the roar of the wind. He snatched the cotton waste from her and performed the operation himself.
Valerie was aware of Copper shouting something in her ear as the car bounded forward again:
âNick!'
shouted Copper, white-faced with terror:
âThe boats! They'll be out in this!'
Dan Harcourt, who had caught a word or two above the fiendish flapping and rattling of the aged car and the whining howl of the wind, yelled back reassuringly that they'd be all right and had probably got in about a quarter of an hour ago, and â¦
Valerie turned sharply to look at him. In the reflected glow of the headlights his face betrayed nothing but confidence, but having sailed more than once with him during the past week she knew that Dan must be very well aware of the time it would take to sail from Hopetown to Ross with a fair wind. And there had been no breath of wind for half an hour before the storm ⦠They can't possibly be more than half-way by now, she thought with panic: and shrank back against her seat as the first swollen drops of rain splashed heavily against the windscreen.
Copper had never imagined such rain. It came down like a river in full spate. A heavy, opaque curtain of water that descended on them out of the inky sky with the terrifying suggestion of a tidal wave, blotting out the road before them so that they appeared to be driving into a shifting, liquid wall. The aged car leaked profusely from a dozen points, and by the time they reached the outskirts of Aberdeen bazaar its four passengers presented the damp and bedraggled appearance of survivors from a shipwreck.
There was a brief lull in the storm as they arrived at the jetty where they found four occupants of the other two carloads, the Reverend Dobbie and his wife, and Amabel and her George, grouped in an unhappy huddle in the iron-roofed shelter on the quay. The other two members of the party, Ted Norton and Deputy-Commissioner Hurridge, being resident on Aberdeen were mercifully exempt from braving the stormy strip of harbour water in an attempt to return to Ross, and though Amabel also lived on Aberdeen, she had been invited to several Christmas parties on Ross and would be putting up for a couple of nights with the Purvises.
As the Ford drew up under cover of the shed, a bearded Sikh in a dripping mackintosh cape came forward and presented a damp envelope to Charles, who ran his eye down the single sheet of paper and said: âIt's from Amabel's father. Mr Withers says we'd better not attempt to cross over to Ross unless there is a lull. He says he phoned to Harriet to try and stop the others sailing, but as it took ages to get through, he missed us, and that we'd better park ourselves on him and Mr Hurridge for the night.'
âOh
no!
Charles,' protested Valerie. âWe're giving a party tonight. We
must
get back! The worst is over â it's not blowing nearly so hard now. Do let's go,
please!
'
âWe'll put it to the vote,' decided Charles, climbing reluctantly out of the driving-seat and joining the group in the shed: âWho's for going, and who's for staying?'
After a few moments of animated discussion it was unanimously decided to risk the crossing and dispense with Mr Hurridge's hospitality. âCome on then,' urged Charles, âlet's make a dash for it. We can't get much wetter than we are already!' And plunging out of the shelter of the shed they fled along the open jetty to where the ferry heaved and shrieked at her moorings.
It needed the combined threats, orders and pleadings of the eight would-be passengers to induce the native crew to attempt the trip, for the wind still howled through the narrow straits between Aberdeen and Ross, and the driven rain, lashing downwards at an acute angle, ricocheted off the heaving waters in a sheet of steel. But since the fury of the rain had temporarily beaten the sea into comparative submission, they cast off hastily: the clumsy craft backing reluctantly away from the jetty and rolling like an elderly and drunken duck.
Copper never forgot the twenty minutes that followed. A dozen times it seemed that they must be swamped or driven back on the jagged teeth of the rocks off the jail point as the labouring ferry heeled over to the wind.
âHell!'
said Charles after the first five minutes. âWe never ought to have done this. I'd no earthly right to let you come.'