Authors: Sara Craven
damned!'
She supposed he thought he'd been very
clever, waiting until she was out of the
way in her room to do his vanishing
trick. It was his way of saying 'No'
without further argument.
She bit her lip until she tasted blood.
Well, to hell with him! He might be the
best, but he couldn't be the only guide in
Asuncion. She wouldn't let this one
setback defeat her, and if Vitas de
Mendoza was going to feature so
prominently in her dreams on such short
acquaintance, she told herself defiantly
that she was glad to see the back of him.
She turned on her heel, and went out into
the evening sunshine. The market
appeared to be still going strong, and a
group of musicians had even started up
in one corner of the square, attracting a
small but laughing crowd.
She began to wander round the stalls. As
well as the handwoven blankets and
ruanas,
there were also piles of the
round-crowned hats the Indians seemed
to wear. She would need a hat herself
for the trip ahead, she supposed vaguely,
but something with a wider brim and
shallower crown than those on offer
here. There were fruit and vegetable
stalls too, where flies swarmed busily,
and Rachel averted her gaze with a faint
shudder. There was little point in feeling
squeamish, she told herself firmly.
Conditions would be even more
primitive on the way to Diablo.
She was hungry too. Presumably the
hotel served meals, but Senor Ramirez
had said nothing about their times, which
further underlined the fact that he was
not expecting her to stay. She could
smell cooking somewhere, or was it just
her optimistic imagination? A few
moments later she had her answer. One
corner of the market seemed entirely
given over to a gigantic open-air kitchen.
Open fires had been kindled and great
cooking pots of meat and Vegetables
suspended over them, while nearby
chickens turned slowly on spits.
It all looked appallingly unhygienic, and
it smelt mouthwatering. Rachel could
resist no longer. She continued her stroll
nibbling at a chicken leg. ,Every second
person she met seemed to be doing the
same, and surely they couldn't all be
going to die of salmonella poisoning, she
comforted herself.
She had paused by a stall selling
ponchos and was examining a beauty in
a wild zigzag pattern of grey and black
and red, when a voice behind her said
urgently, 'Senorita!'
She turned and saw a small man dressed
in a tight-fitting white suit. He had a
sallow face and a drooping black
moustache, and he was mopping
furiously at his forehead with a violently
coloured handkerchief.
He said, 'The
senorita
needs a guide,
yes? I am a good guide. I will take the
senorita
anywhere she wishes to go.'
Rachel stared at him in bewilderment.
For an answer to a prayer, he was not
particularly prepossessing, she thought.
He was plump and rather shiny and a
greater contrast to Vitas de Mendoza
could not be visualised.
She said slowly, 'I do need a guide, yes,
but how did you know?'
The man made an awkward gesture. 'The
Senor Ramirez at the hotel,
senorita.
He
said so and ...'
'Oh, I see,' said Rachel, although
actually she didn't. She seemed to have
done the disapproving Senor Ramirez an
injustice. Or perhaps he just wanted to
get her off the premises, she thought
cheerfully. 'I want to go to a place called
Diablo,' she went on, watching him
closely through her lashes for signs of
dismay and censure. But there were
none.
He merely said,
'Si, senorita.
As the
senorita
wishes. And when does she
desire to set out?'
'I'd hoped tomorrow,' she said, frankly
taken aback.
He nodded. 'I will arrange everything.
The
senorita
can ride a horse?'
'Yes,' she said. 'But I thought I could
probably hire a Land Rover and...'
He interrupted, shaking his head. 'A
Land Rover no good,
senorita.
The
tracks are bad, and sometimes there are
no tracks. Horses are better. I, Carlos
Arnaldez, tell you this.'
'Very well, Carlos.' She wasn't going to
argue with him. He knew the terrain
better than she did. She was glad she had
included some denim jeans in the
luggage she had brought with her. And
she had seen some soft leather boots on
a stall which would be ideal for riding.
She was well pleased when she returned
to the hotel an hour later, her new boots
tucked
under
her
arm.
Carlos'
appearance might not be in his favour,
but she had to admit that he was
efficient. He had taken her to one of the
local store-cum-cafes, where they had
agreed on his fee for the trip, and also
how much he was to spend on the hire of
the horses and other equipment. She had
been a little suspicious at the mention of
money, wondering if he thought she was
naive enough to simply hand over a
handful of
pesos
and watch him vanish
with it, never to be seen again. But he
had no such intention, it seemed. He
would buy everything necessary, he
assured her, and obtain receipts for his
purchases, and the
senorita
could
reimburse him before they set off, if that
was satisfactory.
Then he had drunk her health and to the
success of the trip in
aguardiente,
while
Rachel had responded more decorously
in Coca-Cola.
She had not told him the purpose of her
journey. Let him think she was just a
foolhardy tourist, she thought. There
would be plenty of time for the truth
once they were on their way, and she
knew she could trust him.
The reception desk was deserted again
when she entered the hotel, and although
she banged on the counter and called, no
one came.
'The perfect host,' she muttered, ducking
under the counter flap to retrieve her key
from the board at the back.
It was amazing how dark it had become
so quickly, she thought as she made her
way upstairs. Outside in the square
lamps had been lit beside the stalls, and
the sound of music drifted faintly on the
evening air, the clear tones of a
flauta
predominating. The sky looked like
velvet, and in the space around the band
people had begun to dance. Rachel had
stood and watched them for a few
minutes, but she had found it suddenly-
disturbing to be alone and an alien in
this crowd, where everyone seemed to
be with someone else.
Also, her blonde hair and white skin
were once again attracting attention, and
she was reminded perforce of the
warnings she had received at the hotel in
Bogota
about
pickpockets
who
concentrated on unwary
turistas.
She unlocked her bedroom door and
went in, closing the door behind her.
She knew immediately that there was
something wrong, and the hairs rose on
the nape of her neck. There was
someone else in the room—the stealth of
a movement in the darkness, a faint smell
of cigar smoke. Her hands tightened
around the boors she carried. They
weren't much of a weapon against an
intruder, but they were all she had, and if
she screamed there was no guarantee
that anyone would hear her.
She heard the movement again, and
following it another sound—the creak of
a bed-spring.
Dear God, was she the one at fault? Had
she blundered by mistake in the dark
passage into someone else's room? If so,
she could only hope they were asleep
and she could leave before her mistake
was
discovered.
She
remembered
Ramirez' remarks about unescorted
women. Would anyone believe she had
made a genuine error?
Her hand reached behind her, fumbling
for the door handle, and then a voice
spoke mockingly out of the darkness,
freezing her into the immobility of
disbelief.
'Are you going to stand there in the dark
all night,
querida?'
There was a click as the bedside lamp
was switched on, and Rachel found
herself staring at Vitas de Mendoza.
CHAPTER THREE
He was lying outstretched on her bed,
very much at his ease, the half-smoked
cigar she had smelt smouldering in the
ash-tray beside him. Rachel demanded,
'What the hell do you think you're doing
in here?'
He tutted. 'Such language,
chica
! What
happened to the cool lady I met
downstairs?'
She flung the door open and held it
wide. 'Get out!'
'Your countrymen say, don't they, that it's
a woman's privilege to change her mind.
But do you have to be quite so contrary?
A little while ago you couldn't wait to
talk to me alone. Now that we are alone
and I am prepared to talk, you want to be
rid of me.' A smile twisted the corner of
his mouth. 'Now that is hardly friendly.'
'How did you get in here anyway?' she
demanded. 'I locked my door.'
'Ramirez has a pass-key—naturally.'
'Oh,
naturally,'
she
echoed
with
elaborate sarcasm. 'And naturally he
saw nothing strange in loaning it to you
so that you could get into one of his
guests' bedrooms.'
His
grin
widened.
'Under
the
circumstances,
chica,
nothing strange at
all.'
Rachel felt an angry flush rising in her
face. Normally, she could hold her own
in any interchange of repartee. She could
flirt, and she could counter the more
pointed
sexual
teasing
that
was
sometimes levelled at her, but there was
something about this man which seemed
to paralyse her thought processes and
allowed him to get under her guard.
Hot words trembled on her lips, but she
bit them back. Not yet, she thought,
because she had seen a way in which she
could get her own back. If he thought he
could treat her completely casually, then
he was making a grave mistake. He
probably thought she was so desperate
to obtain his services as a guide that she
would stand for anything. Well, he was
going to find out just how wrong he was
— but not yet. It might be fun to string
him along for a little while—flatter his
ego, build him up slowly for the big
letdown when she calmly informed him
that she wouldn't go to the end of the
street with him.
She said, 'Perhaps I owe you an apology,
senor
.' And perhaps I don't, she added
silently. 'It was just that I was —thrown
by finding someone in my room. I know
you said you'd talk to me later, but I
wasn't expecting it to be quite as—late.'
She spread out her hands and gave a
slight laugh, and was pleased to see a
look of faint surprise cross his dark
features.
And this isn't the only surprise you're
going to get, she assured him under her
breath. Not by a long chalk!
'That disturbs you?' He reached for his
cigar.
'Why should it?' she lied calmly. She
fetched the chair from the dressing table
and sat down at a safe distance from the
bed.
He
acknowledged
her
considered
placing of the chair with a mocking
inclination of his head.
'Which answers my question,' he
murmured. 'And yet,
querida,
you have
nothing to fear. I told you downstairs that
I was not for sale. Well, I don't buy
either—or take by force.'
'How good of you to be so reassuring,'