Authors: Sara Craven
that the city lay at over eight thousand
feet above sea level.
She'd intended to do some background
reading before setting out, but the days
had slipped past with increasing
acceleration, and the day of her
departure was upon her almost before
she knew it. Apart from packing, and
spending an uncomfortable day reacting
from her injections, she'd visited her
grandfather daily.
On her last visit, she'd received
the
cheering news that he seemed to be out
of immediate danger, and wasn't
altogether surprised as she entered his
room to hear that he'd undergone a
change of heart about her trip.
Sir Giles was all set to make plans to
visit Colombia himself as soon as he
was back on his feet again, and it
required a stern visit from Andrew
Kingston, spelling out to him precisely
how long that might take, to reconcile
him to the fact that Rachel was going in
his place.
Instead he contented himself with
uttering dire warnings about the kinds of
attitude that Rachel might encounter on
her trip.
'They're an old-fashioned society out
there still.' He fixed Rachel with a glare.
'None of your Women's Lib nonsense.
Women have their place and they keep to
it.'
'Haven't I always?' Rachel asked with a
trace of bitter humour in her voice.
Sir Giles' glance was still fierce, but
there was a tinge of discomfort in it.
'You're a good child,' he admitted almost
unwillingly. 'But you're a good-looking
one too, and you'll be mixing with men
with the blood of the
conquistadores
in
their veins. Have you thought about that?'
Rachel lifted an arched eyebrow. 'I
always
thought
they
were
more
interested in gold than in personal
conquests,' she said. 'And I'm perfectly
able to take care of myself, you know.
I've been working in the theatre—
remember?— and they call me the Ice
Maiden.'
'Lot of damned nonsense,' Sir Giles
rumbled. 'And written by that fellow
who was supposed to be keen on you.
What happened? Did you quarrel?'
Rachel was silent for a moment. One
could not tell one's devoted and old-
fashioned grandfather the truth— that
Leigh's article had been prompted by
nothing more than sexual pique, because
he'd suddenly discovered he was not as
irresistible as he'd always thought.
She'd liked Leigh, and frankly enjoyed
the kudos of being seen with one of Fleet
Street's youngest and most attractive
show
business
columnists.
And
eventually, inevitably there had started
to be more to it than that. He'd become
more than attractive. He'd begun .to be
necessary to her. Afterwards when she
could think about it clearly and
rationally, she could see what he had
done—how clever he had been. He'd
always known she wouldn't be a
pushover like most of his girl-friends, so
he'd played the game her way, making
his approach a gentle, almost insidious
one, even making her believe, God help
her, that he was falling in love with her.
She had even invited him down to
Abbots Field for the weekend, although
it had not been a great success, as she
was the first to admit. Leigh's elegant
boutique-bought clothes and slightly
raffish charm had seemed out of place
against the quiet gracious lines of the old
house, and although Sir Giles had
behaved
with
perfect
correctness,
Rachel knew all the same that he was not
impressed with Leigh. It had been a
disappointment, but not, she had told
herself optimistically, an insurmountable
one. Grandfather and Leigh had to be
given a chance to come to terms,
occupying as they did, two very different
worlds.
But there had been no opportunity for
that. The following weekend Leigh had
invited her to go away with him, to meet
his family, he'd said. She'd accepted
gladly, but then the doubts had begun.
His manner had changed subtly, for one
thing, and then for someone travelling
home for the weekend he didn't seem
altogether sure of the route. And when
they arrived at the secluded cottage, and
found ft deserted, she knew, and
dismissed all Leigh's too-fluent excuses
about mistaken dates. The cottage wasn't
his home. He'd simply hired it for the
weekend. He'd admitted as much
eventually, amused at her dismay, but
clearly confident of his ability to win her
over and persuade her to stay there with
him as his mistress.
'But I don't want it to be like this,' she'd
cried at last. 'It's dirty—it's sordid—and
if you loved me, you wouldn't want it
like this either.'
The memory of his laughter still had the
power to make her cringe as if
something slimy had left a trail across
her skin. That, and the things he had said
to her which had killed any feelings
she'd had for him—the first sweet
stirrings of desire that he'd roused in her
—stone dead.
The Ice Maiden article had appeared
two weeks later under his byline. It was
skilful, even humorous, but Rachel
recognised as she'd been meant to do the
sting in .the tail, and knew that, at a time
when female sexuality was being
exploited in the theatre, she was being
written of as shallow, naive and frigid.
Everyone knew of her relationship with
Leigh, and would assume that he knew
what he was talking about.
Only his spite had misfired. A role in a
television play that she'd not expected to
get was suddenly offered to her, and for
the first time in her career she was
almost overwhelmed with work. Her
agent, who had groaned over the Ice
Maiden article, was surprised and
delighted, and her success had helped in
some way to relieve the ache Leigh's
treachery had caused her.
'Yes,' she said quietly at last, aroused
from her painful reverie by the
knowledge that her grandfather was
becoming restive, 'you could say that we
—quarrelled.'
Sir Giles grunted. 'Well, he's no great
loss to you, my dear. I can't say I took to
him. Strange sense of values he seems to
have.'
She nodded silently, a feeling of
desolation striking at her.
In the weeks which followed she had
lived up to the image that Leigh had
bestowed upon her, holding aloof from
all emotional attachments, pretending
that she preferred her own company,
learning to conceal the harsh facts of her
own loneliness. At least, she had tried to
console herself, she had Grandfather and
Mark to rely on. But then had come that
terrible night at Abbots Frields, and it
seemed as if Mark too had deserted her.
Rachel gave herself an impatient little
shake and sat up, studying her
surroundings. The streets the taxi was
passing through seemed to combine a
multitude
of
styles
with
glass
skyscrapers springing up next to
buildings of the old Spanish colonial
tradition, and the elaborate facades of
public buildings and churches. It could
be an intriguing place, she decided,
perched high on its Andean plateau and
it was a pity that she had not more time
at her disposal to explore. Perhaps after
she'd made contact with Mark and
persuaded him to return to England with
her, there might be a brief opportunity
then, she thought hopefully.
The scenery was changing as they left
the more commercial districts behind
and entered the purely residential area.
There was no sign here of any poverty or
decay in these gracious mansions with
their
velvet
lawns
and
fountain-
bedecked gardens. It all spoke of peace
and tranquillity and the solid comfort
that money can bring. And the Arviles
family were part of all this, she realised,
as the taxi turned into one of the smooth
curving drives.
It was a charming house, low and
rambling, a fragrant creeper burgeoning
with pale pink blossoms cascading
down to the ground beside the front door
as Rachel knocked. She had told the taxi
to wait for her. If Mark was there, she
told herself hopefully, he might pack and
come with her straight away. They could
drive to the airport and pick up the next
flight out.
When the door opened she was
confronted by a stout woman in a dark
dress covered by a white apron, who
regarded Rachel with a doubtful frown.
Relying on the Spanish phrase book she
had bought at the airport, Rachel asked if
she might speak to Senor Arviles. For a
moment she was afraid that she had not
made herself understood, for the woman
frowned a little as if puzzled, but she
held the door open for Rachel to enter.
The entrance hall was large with a
coolly tiled floor. Rachel followed the
maid to a large
salon
at the back of the
house, where it was intimated she should
wait. It was beautifully furnished and the
chairs looked comfortable as well as
luxurious, but Rachel felt too restless to
sit down and compose herself. Her
headache was worse too, and she felt an
odd dizziness.
I'm a fool, she thought. I should have
rested and had something to eat before I
came here. But the thought of food,
hungry though she was, was suddenly
and grossly unappealing, and she was
thankful when the door behind her
opened, diverting her mind from her own
physical discomfort.
A small, rather plump woman came in,
followed by a young girl. The physical
resemblance between them was too
pronounced for them to be anything but
mother and daughter, but where the girl
was dressed with a demure and
expensive simplicity, the older woman
had a stunning and moneyed elegance.
She wore black, and there was a
discreet glitter of diamonds on her hands
and at her throat, and she smiled rather
uncertainly at Rachel.
The girl stepped forward. 'You asked for
my father,' she said in heavily accented
English. 'I regret that he is not here. My
mother wishes to be of assistance, but
she speaks no English. How can we help
you,
senorita?'
'My name is Rachel Crichton.' Rachel
paused. 'I was hoping that my brother
might be here—or that you might know
where he was?'
She had to wait while the girl translated
what she had said for the
senora,
and
then Senora Arviles came forward with
both hands outstretched. Rachel only
understood about one word in ten of
what she was saying, but she knew she
was being made welcome, and she
smiled in response.
The girl came forward too, her lips
curving piquantly. 'So you are the sister
of Marcos. I am Isabel. He has
mentioned me, perhaps.'
'He hasn't mentioned anyone,' Rachel
returned rather awkwardly. 'I—we've
rather lost touch over the past month or
two, I'm afraid. That's why I'm here. Our
grandfather is very ill, and he wants to
see Mark.'
Isabel looked bewildered. She spread
her hands prettily.
'But he is not here,
senorita.
He has not
been here since three weeks. We
understood he was returning to Gran
Bretana. Is this not so?'
Rachel's heart sank within her. She had
come all this way for nothing. For all
she knew Mark might be back in England
at this moment. He might even have gone
to Abbots Field.
'You are pale,
senorita.'
Isabel urged
her to sit down, and she was glad to