Authors: Sara Craven
began to laboriously recite a request for
a room, but he waved the book aside.
'I speak a little English. You are an
inglesa, senorita?'
'Yes, I am.' Relieved that she did not
have to converse with him in her non-
existent Spanish, Rachel smiled. 'I'm
trying to trace another
inglese, senor
—a
man. My brother,' she added hastily for
some reason she probably could not
have defined.
'He has been to Asuncion, this brother?'
The man watched her impassively.
Rachel sighed. 'I'm not sure. I think so.'
He hesitated, then he reached for the
hotel register and swung it round so that
she could see it.
'Look for yourself,
senorita.
No
inglese
has been here apart from yourself.'
Rachel scanned swiftly down the list of
names. It had occurred to her that Mark
might have travelled under an assumed
name, but she knew he would not have
bothered to disguise his handwriting and
none of the scrawls in the register bore
the least resemblance to his signature.
She
felt
almost
sick
with
disappointment.
'Turistas
do not come here,
senorita,'
the man said almost placidly. He was
turning away, when she halted him.
'Then can I book a room for the night?'
she asked, braving his look of
astonishment. 'And a guide. I would like
to hire a guide if that is possible.'
'Senorita,'
the man said very slowly, 'I
must tell you that I do not have
unescorted women staying at my hotel.'
She felt a slow tide of colour run up to
the roots of her hair. She had never felt
so helpless in her life.
She said, trying to keep her voice calm
and pleasant, 'Then as this is the only'
hotel in this benighted town, I'm afraid
you will have to make an exception for
once. Unless you can provide me with a
guide immediately, of course.'
His look of astonishment deepened. 'And
where do you wish this guide to take
you,
senorita
? Always supposing that
such a person could be found.'
She said baldly, 'I want to go to Diablo.'
If she'd suddenly produced a hand
grenade and drawn the pin, she couldn't
have hoped to make a greater sensation.
His jaw dropped, and he almost took a
step backwards, she would have sworn
to it.
He said flatly,
'Es imposible.
Where is
your family,
senorita
? Who are your
friends that they let you contemplate such
madness?'
Rachel frowned. All sense of reality
seemed to be slipping away from her,
but that again could be attributed to the
strangeness of the altitude. On the other
hand it meant that she had to act the part
she had set herself, and it was somehow
easier to act than to believe in what she
was doing. Deep down inside her she
was afraid, but on the surface she was
ice cool and in command of the situation.
She said, .'It's good of you to be so
concerned,
senor,
but quite unnecessary.
I can look after myself. 'I'm neither a
child nor a fool, and I don't need you to
judge my actions.'
Not a long speech, she thought
detachedly, but an effective one, she
hoped. In a situation like this, she
needed to make every word count.
She glanced at the hotel-keeper, noting
with satisfaction that he did not seem
quite so sure of himself as he had been.
There was an air of uncertainty about
him, and he eyed her as if she was
something new in his experience. She
wanted to giggle, but that would be fatal,
so she deepened her expression of calm
assurance.
'There must be someone around here,'
she said crisply.
'Someone who knows this region well.
And you don't have to feel responsible
for anything. Just introduce me to him,
and I'll do the rest.'
The man gave her a long look, then
shrugged deeply and fatalistically.
He said slowly, 'There is such a one—
Vitas de Mendoza—but whether he will
agree to take you to Diablo is another
matter.'
'That's
my
problem,'
she
said
confidently, almost gaily. She had talked
round this definitely hostile little man.
She could talk round the world. 'When
can I meet him?'
He hesitated. 'Later,
senorita.
I will
speak to him of your request. At the
moment he is engaged.'
She saw him give a half-glance over his
shoulder at that door down the passage,
and remembered the sound of men's
voices and laughter.
'I'd prefer to see him right away. The
matter is urgent. I'm not just a casual
sightseer, I'm looking for my brother.'
'And you think the brother has gone to
Diablo.' He shook his head. 'That is not
good,
senorita,
but it gives me an idea.
Tomorrow or the next day there will be
an army patrol arriving here. If you
speak to Captain Lopez he will look for
your brother.'
Rachel was silent for a moment. It was a
tempting
prospect
to
resign
the
responsibility for finding Mark to the
army, but at the back of her mind she
was remembering what Isabel had told
her about the illegal trafficking in
emeralds. Supposing when this Captain
Lopez found Mark, he actually had
emeralds in his possession? She
swallowed. It didn't really bear thinking
about. She had no idea of the sort of
sentences attempts to smuggle emeralds
might carry, but she imagined they would
be heavy, and that Colombian prisons
would be a bad scene too. Besides, if
Mark were arrested, it would be the
death of her grandfather.
She had to face the fact that she must find
Mark herself—with the help of Vitas de
Mendoza, and hope that he was the sort
of man who could be bribed to keep his
mouth shut if Mark had broken the law in
any way. The thought made her feel sick
with fright and despair, but it also had to
be faced.
'I haven't got time to wait for the army,'
she said. 'You don't even know yourself
when they'll be arriving, and they could
be held up. I've got to see this Mendoza
man
immediately.
There'll
be
arrangements to make, and I want to
leave as soon as possible.'
She left her small case standing by the
desk and went down the passage
towards the closed door. She wouldn't
have been at all surprised if he'd
grabbed her arm and tried to stop her as
she passed him. When she reached the
door she risked a glance back over her
shoulder, and saw that he was standing
quite still staring after her with an
almost bemused expression on his face,
and she could have laughed out loud.
All she had to do now was bemuse Vitas
de Mendoza into taking her to Diablo,
she thought as she opened the door and
stepped into the room beyond.
It was a good job that she was still
acting—making an entrance—or what
faced her when she entered the room
might have thrown her, like an
unexpected laugh at a serious moment in
a play.
The air was so thick with cigar smoke
that she could hardly see across the
room for the first moment or two, and the
acrid fumes caught at her throat. There
were six of them altogether, all men
sitting round a table covered in a green
cloth. There were bottles and glasses,
cards and a scatter of money, and she
felt bitterness rise in her throat as she
surveyed them. So this was the pressing
engagement which the hotel-keeper did
not want to disturb.
Her gaze flickered round the table. She
could read amazement on their faces,
and
the
beginnings
of
a
lewd
appreciation in some of their smiles.
And on one face—contempt. Her eyes
registered this and passed on, and almost
in spite of herself, looked back as though
she had not believed what she saw the
first time.
He was younger than his companions—
the mid-thirties at the very most—dark
as they all were, with raven black hair
springing back from a peak on his
forehead. A thin face, as fierce and
arrogant as a hawk's, its harshness
shockingly emphasised by the black
patch he wore where his left eye should
have been.
The man nearest the door pushed back
his chair and stood up, smiling
ingratiatingly at. her. 'Come in,
chica.
You want to take a hand with us?' He
spoke with a strong North America
accent. The man next to him said
something in Spanish, and a ribald roar
of laughter went round the table.
But the man with the eye-patch didn't
join in the general amusement. Rachel
found her eyes being drawn unwillingly
back to him yet. again. He was dressed
from head to foot in black, his shirt
unbuttoned
to
halfway
down
his
muscular chest. He leaned back in his
chair,
one
booted
leg
swinging
carelessly over its low wooden arm, but
it seemed to Rachel that he was about as
relaxed as a curled spring, or a snake
rearing back to strike.
Isabel's voice sounded in her brain:
'
Bandidos
and other evil men.'
The others seemed harmless enough—
lecherous, perhaps, but harmless, but the
man with the eye-patch was a very
different proposition. She could believe
that he was a bandit. She could see him
in black velvet centuries before, a
bloodstained sword in his hand as he cut
down the defenceless Indians who stood
between him and his dream of El
Dorado. She could see him on the deck
of some pirate ship, his face bleak and
saturnine under that eye-patch as his
ship's cannon raked the forts at
Cartagena and Maracaibo.
And she could see him on the other side
of this table looking at her as if she was
dirt.
'Have a drink,
chica.'
The man who had
got to his feet was leering at her, pushing
a tumbler into her hand. The spirit it
contained smelled sharp and raw, and
her nose wrinkled in distaste, but she
smiled politely as she refused. After all,
he might turn out to be this Vitas de
Mendoza, and she didn't want to offend
him.
She smiled again, but this time there was
a tinge of frost with it, setting them all at
a distance. All except the man opposite,
of course, who had already distanced
himself, and him she would just have to
ignore. She wondered what he was
doing here. The others were obviously
local
businessmen
enjoying
the
relaxation of a weekly card game. But
who was he? A professional gambler,
perhaps, if they had such things in
Colombia. Certainly he seemed to have
a larger pile of money lying in front of
him than any of the others—ill-gotten
gains, she thought, and caught at herself.
This was ridiculous. She was standing
here being fanciful and wasting precious
time.
She said quietly but making sure her
voice carried, 'I'm here to see Vitas de
Mendoza, and I'd like to speak to him
privately.'
She waited for one of the bronzed
perspiring men around the table to step
forward and identify himself, but no one
moved, and a cold sick feeling of
apprehension began to swell and grow
inside her.
She said, 'He is here, isn't he?' and her
voice shook a little because she knew
already what the answer was, and she
wished herself a million miles away.