Authors: Hammond Innes
It came again, high up the valley side from under the cliffs, and suddenly I knew what it was. âPetra,' I said. âIt's Petra, and she's found her.'
We climbed back up the hillside, retracing our steps. âHere,' she called, standing suddenly upright beside a patch of scrub. âIt's Soo. She's had a fall.'
I could hear her then, moaning with pain. Her body was lying twisted in a heap in the middle of a low clump of bushes, Petra bending down to her again, cradling her head as we reached the spot. âI think she must have followed the path right up to the cave entrance, then lost her balance when they pushed past her.'
âAnything broken?' My torch showed her face badly bruised and shining with sweat. Her breath came in great gasps and she was moaning all the time.
âI've moved her limbs. They seem all right. But internally â¦'
âIt's the baby then. If she's going to have it now â¦' I
turned on Lloyd Jones. âWhy the bloody hell didn't you stay with her, man? If she loses the child â¦'
Petra silenced me, gripping my arm, as Soo murmured quite coherently, âIt's not â Gareth's â fault. I asked him â¦' Her voice trailed away, her right hand moving to her swollen belly, a bubble of saliva at her mouth as she cried out with pain. Then she passed out.
âWe've got to get her to hospital.' Petra's voice was sharp. âAs soon as possible.'
Soo only screamed once as we carried her down the slope to the car. I think she was unconscious most of the time. And she didn't cry out all the time I was driving back to Mahon. I drove like a maniac, Petra said afterwards, my face set and anger taking hold. Anger at Lloyd Jones for being the cause of her leaving the car and climbing the path to the cave alone, above all, anger at those two bastards who had brushed her from their path as they rushed down the hillside to drive off in that hire car.
I took her straight to the Residencia Sanitaria, which is just up from the Port Mahon Hotel. This is the emergency hospital, and the night Petra and I spent there is not one either of us is ever likely to forget. Fortunately they did have a bed available in the maternity ward. Two women were in labour at the time and the place was something of a mad house. There were nurses rushing about, a nun in attendance, no sign of a doctor. They got Soo to bed and I left Petra with her and phoned the
Guardia Civil
.
It was while I was telling them what had happened that Petra came down to say Soo was in labour. âThey've found a doctor. A very young man. I think he's scared. He's already lost one baby tonight. That's what one of the nurses told me.'
The time was 03.17, the words coming in a breathless rush. âI'll go back now ⦠No, don't come with me. There's nothing you can do. I'll let you know as soon as it comes.'
âIt's not due for more than a month.' I remember I said that, standing there, helpless.
âWhat's it matter when it's due? She's having it now. I just hope to God â¦' She turned abruptly, not finishing the sentence, and hurried back up the stairs.
I remember getting rid of Gareth Lloyd Jones and then I was going over it all for the benefit of a young sergeant of the
Guardia
. Since it had happened in the country, not in Mahon, it was their responsibility. He made some notes, then offered his sympathies and said he would make a report. Perhaps it was a matter for the
Aduana
. At my insistence he agreed to inform Inspector Molina of the national police. I knew him slightly and I thought it might be something the plain-clothes boys should know about.
After the sergeant was gone I was alone there in that cold little reception area. Sometimes I paced up and down. Nobody came and time passed slowly. Dawn began to break in the street outside. Then suddenly Petra was there, her face very pale under the freckles, her eyes dark-edged with weariness and worry. âShe's all right,' she said slowly. âI mean she's come through it. She's conscious.' The words seemed dragged out of her. âThe doctor thinks it's just that she's badly bruised inside. She'll be okay. That's what he hopes â when she's had some rest.'
âAnd the child?' I asked.
âFor God's sake, Mike, what did you expect? She must have fallen right on top of it. It was a breech, didn't you know that from the scan? Round the wrong way, the poor little thing's head was right against the wall of the stomach. It hadn't a chance.'
âWhat was it, a boy or a girl?'
âA boy.'
I went up to her then, feeling tired and very depressed, wanting a drink and not knowing what the hell I was going to say to her. She was lying on her back, her eyes closed, the olive skin of her face looking sallow, a deathly pallor against the tumbled black of her hair. They had cleaned
her up, of course, but her hair and skin were still damp, her features so drained that I thought for a moment she was dead.
I don't think I said anything, but she must have sensed my presence for her eyes opened. They stared straight up at me, great brown pools in a white face. Her lips moved. âI'm-sorry.' The words came faintly, then she was gone, the eyelids closing down, consciousness slipping away.
I bent and kissed her. Her skin was hot as though she were in a fever, her breathing so shallow it was hardly noticeable. Petra touched my arm, motioning me with her head to leave. The nun was hovering and a sister had arrived and was talking to her. âShe'll sleep now. They've given her an injection.' Petra led me out.
I don't remember driving home. We drank the remains of a bottle of brandy as the sun came up, both of us sitting in the office, and all I could think about was Soo's eyes staring up at me, huge brown pools of sorrow in the whiteness of her face, her hair still dank where it lay unkempt on the pillow, and her words, those sad words of apology for a miscarriage she couldn't help.
And after that I fell asleep, my head on Petra's shoulder.
When I next saw Soo she had been moved to a smaller room and her face was to the wall. I don't know whether she was asleep or not, but when it happened on both the visits I made the following day, it was clear she didn't want to talk to me. Apart from the bruising, she was in a state of shock. Even so, the doctor, as well as the nurses, said she was making quite good progress and should be home in a few days.
By then the
Guardia
had recovered the stolen hire car. It had been found abandoned in Alayor, in one of the streets winding down from the church. They had also examined the cave, but had not been disposed to take the matter very seriously. Petra had been with them and she said they considered the two men who had been flushed out by our unexpected arrival to be cave squatters, and then, when they bumped into her at the roof fall and Soo outside, they had panicked and taken the car as a handy means of making their escape.
After the police had gone she had walked round to the second cove, past the sea-level caves. There was a small cottage at the far end, its cabbage patch clinging to the side of a steep ravine. The family there knew nothing about the two men. They hadn't even known the cave had been occupied. Remembering the light Lloyd Jones had seen, she had asked them if they had noticed any vessel entering the cove during the previous two nights. There had been one, they said, and they wouldn't have seen it but for the moonlight, for the boat was all dark, not a light anywhere, and it had looked like two ships rafted together. There had been an onshore breeze, quite strong at times,
so the two vessels couldn't anchor and had left immediately. The only other boats they had seen during the past few days had been local fishing boats, mostly from Cala en Porter, which was the next cove to the west and one of the better tourist resorts with a big hotel and some plush villas.
This she told me when she came ashore the following day, hauling her inflatable out and parking it in our car park. She was on her way to Cales Coves, hoping to uncover some more of that cave drawing, and we were walking along the waterfront to where the Martires Atlante runs out past the Club Maritimo to the old fort that marks the entrance proper to Mahon harbour.
The sun was shining again, an easterly funnelling up the harbour, rattling the halyards of the yachts moored at the Club pontoon, and Petra, looking wildly attractive with her auburn hair blowing about her face, suddenly said, âThat Navy man, have you seen any more of him?' She was wearing faded denims, an orange shirt open almost to the navel, no bra and her feet were bare.
âNo, not since that night,' I told her.
âDid you know he'd been seeing Soo? He's been to the hospital several times.'
I didn't say anything, sullen in the knowledge of what she was trying to tell me. Her face was in profile, a strong face, the nose fine-boned and straight, the teeth white in a mouth that wore no lipstick. âDid Soo tell you that?'
âNo. Gareth told me.' She stopped then and turned to me. âHe's in love with her, you know that?'
I half shook my head, shrugging it off. What do you say to a statement like that? And coming from a girl you're half in love with yourself. What the hell do you say? âHow do you know he's in love with her? How the bloody hell do you know?'
Soo, of course. Soo must have confided in her. Hurt and lonely, it seemed reasonable, two young women together
in the carbolic atmosphere of a hospital ward. But no â'He told me himself.' And she added, âYou haven't seen him, have you? He hasn't tracked you down â to say he's sorry, offer his condolences, anything like that?'
âNo.'
She nodded. âWell, that's why. You don't go looking for a man when you've fallen head-over-heels in love with his wife. At least, I wouldn't think that's how they do it in the Navy. Cuckolding a fellow, if only in thought â well, not quite the thing, eh?' She gave me that wide grin of hers and began to walk on again. âNo need to worry about it, he says his leave will soon be over.'
âWhat about Soo?' I asked. âHow does she feel?'
She gave a little shrug. âShe likes him. I don't know how much more she feels.' She glanced at me quickly, a flash of something in her eyes and smiling now, quietly to herself. âI'm not exactly in her confidence.'
I caught hold of her arm. âLet's go for a sail.'
âNo.' And she added, still with that little smile, âThat's your answer to every problem, isn't it? Let's go for a sail.'
âWhen did you see him?'
âThis morning.'
âWhere?'
âBloody Island. At the dig.' She nodded towards the grey sprawl of the hospital ruins looking quite distant now that the harbour was full of whitecaps. âHe hired a boat and came over to see me.'
âTo say goodbye?'
She shook her head.
âThen why?'
âI think because he wanted you to know. He also said he was sorry.'
âFor leaving Soo on her own that night, or for falling in love with her?'
âBoth, I imagine.'
We had stopped again and I was staring seaward, out beyond the fortress of St Felip to where the horizon lay, a
dark line in a blue sea flecked with white. So his leave would soon be up and he'd be off to Gib to take command of his ship. A Navy man, newly promoted and on his way up the service ladder. No wonder she found him attractive, feeling as she did about her father. I thought of the wretched little house, one of a line of Victorian dwellings in a back street in Southsea. It was all her father had to show for almost forty years in the Navy, his pay mostly spent on good living, and what savings he had achieved thrown away on speculative investments that had never produced the fortune they promised him. That lovely little courtyard full of music from the old record player, the mellow limestone house overlooking the sea between Sliema and St George's Bay, it had all seemed a long way away when we had last visited her parents. That was just after the loss of her first child, which I had thought might be some weakness inherited from her mother. But after that visit I was convinced that if it was an inherited weakness then it had to be from her father.
Still thinking about that, I glanced at Petra, standing Junoesque in the sunshine, the curve of a breast showing in the V of her orange shirt, the skin tawny brown with wind and salt, the patched denims filmed with the dust of the dig she was working on. No weakness there, and if she were to let up on the pill and have a child, she'd probably deliver it herself, no trouble at all, and get right on with the dig next day.
She turned her head and caught my gaze, the flicker of a smile back at the corners of her mouth. Something in her eyes made me wonder if she could read my thoughts. Were we that close already, and nothing said, just an acceptance that there were moments when the satisfaction of our needs â¦? âYou go for that sail. It'll do you good. I've got things to do.' She turned away then, a wave of the hand as she called over her shoulder, âAnd don't fall in. It's blowing quite hard out there.'
I watched her as she crossed the road and disappeared
up the stone staircase leading to the upper road where she always parked her battered little Citroen. She moved with the grace of an athlete, taking the steps at a run, her hair catching the sun like a burnished helmet of bronze. She must have known I was watching her, but she didn't look back, and when she reached the top she didn't look down or wave, though I caught the flash of that helmet of hair for a moment above the ornate balustrade.
She was right about the wind. It would have been fine if she had come with me, but single-handed the Flying Dutchman I had picked up in lieu of an unpaid bill was quite a handful, more like board-sailing than cruising. I reefed, of course, before slipping from our pontoon and sailing out of the shelter of Cala Figuera, but the wind was funnelling down the length of the harbour approaches, and not much shelter to be had in the lee of the islands. It was very wet as I beat past Villa Carlos and out as far as the big island called Lazareto, and when I went about and freed the main for the run back, we were planing on the break of the waves and every now and then that powerful little dinghy took the bit between her teeth and tried to broach-to.