Authors: Dan Smith
The boat rocked in the water, but neither woman showed any sign of worry. They allowed themselves to sway with the motion, as if they had done it all before.
âZico,' Sister Beckett smiled. âI'm so glad you agreed to take us.'
She was much shorter than she had looked either on the
Estrella
or in the clipping I had in my pocket. The top of her head reached no higher than my chest and, close as we were in the small boat, she had to crane her neck to look me in the eye.
She was not a woman who was concerned with appearances. She had a mess of grey hair that looked as if it had never found any particular style. Her glasses were thick, her pale blue eyes magnified behind them, giving her a constant stare. Thin lips, lined with the wrinkles of a woman in her late fifties who had
spent little time pampering herself or caring for outward things. She was wearing loose trousers, beige and unremarkable, a shapeless T-shirt which fell to her waist and had a FUNAI slogan across the front in green lettering. The official agency for protecting Indian interests and culture, the FUNAI shirt was the only thing that gave any clue as to who or what she was.
âYou did the right thing, helping that man out of the water,' she said.
âFor your sake, I hope so.'
âWhy for my sake?'
âBecause you're coming on board with him.'
She narrowed her eyes. âWhat did he do that was so wrong?'
âYou don't want to know.'
âI doubt you could say anything that would surprise me.' Sister Beckett studied me from behind those thick glasses and I could see a slight squint on one side, as if her right eye wasn't quite looking at me. âI'm Dolores,' she said, extending a small hand.
âDolores,' I repeated the name, telling myself to think of her only as âDolores'. Nothing else. She was
nobody
else. I wasn't supposed to know who she was.
I glanced down at her hand, extending my own more from habit than from wanting to shake hers. She had a loose grip, her hand not quite fitting into mine, so only our fingers came together. She leaned forward, offering her cheek for me to kiss. I made a show of unwilling participation.
âAnd her?' I asked, still holding her hand but watching the other woman. Young, hair the same colour as Daniella's but cut short. She was almost as tall as I was, her long legs in olive coloured trousers, the kind with pockets low on the thigh. A T-shirt like Sister Beckett's. She was the same woman who was in the background in the photo in my pocket. I hadn't recognised her immediately, but now I was sure. I was also certain that there was more to her than met the eye. She was security.
Sister Beckett
did
have protection; and not just the holy kind.
âKássia,' she said. âMy travelling companion.'
âIs she armed?'
Sister Beckett made a strange sound, as if clearing her throat, or perhaps it was a noise of amusement, I couldn't tell for sure. She smiled her honeyed smile. âZico, we are armed only with our words and our smiles.'
âWell,' I said. âI reckon you might need more than that where
you're
going.'
43
Trying to find some inner peace with my frustration at having the nun on board, I had waved farewell to Santiago and Matt and steered the
Deus
away from them.
Dolores, on the other hand, had gone straight to Leonardo.
She spent a few minutes with him in quiet conversation, checking him over and speaking with subdued concern. All the time she was with him, she had cast glances in my direction. Then she had introduced herself and her companion to Daniella. I half expected Daniella to be pleased to have them there â it would make a change from old men and
pistoleiros â
but she said no more than a few words to them before coming to rejoin me behind the wheel.
The river was hazardous here, and I kept my eyes on the water so we didn't end up as Santiago had done, but I glanced back at Dolores from time to time, ensuring that she wasn't involving herself too much with Leonardo. I had seen his false look of subjugation, and I had seen the gleam that lay behind it. I knew how to read a man like that, but Dolores would see only what Leonardo wanted her to see.
Beneath us, the
Deus
kept moving, her engine beating hard, thrumming in the loneliness of our location. To my left, the white sands of the shallows gave way to a narrow beach that may never have felt the tread of a man's foot. Two or three
jacaré
lay like driftwood, their mouths open to the day, and I glanced over to see Leonardo watching them.
Beyond the beach, a wall of dried mud had baked hard in the sun, and beyond that, a line of vegetation hid anything else from
view. A toucan, bright-orange-billed, black-tipped and white-chested, moved amongst the branches searching for berries.
I kept to the right side of the river, where the water was dark and deep, where we were closer to the twisted, forbidding trees that wound their way around each other, standing in unity, uninviting and dense. From time to time, somewhere in the forest, a screaming
piha
announced itself to the afternoon.
âHow long before we get there?'
I turned to see Dolores standing beside us. She wasn't looking at me directly, but staring at the trees as they crept past.
âIf the river stays like this, we should be there by sundown,' I said, wiping my brow. âOtherwise ... I suppose we'll get there when we get there.'
âIt's inconvenient.'
âIt's the best we can do. It's a slow boat, butâ'
âThat's not what I meant,' she said. âI mean us being here. It's inconvenient for you.'
I shrugged.
âI'd like to thank you for helping us.'
I lifted a hand and let it drop, in a brief acknowledgement of her thanks.
âDo you have any water?' she asked after a moment in which we both kept our eyes ahead, as if afraid to look at each other.
âI'll get some for you.' Daniella pushed up from the seat and I couldn't tell if she was eager to offer help or if she just wanted an excuse to escape an uncomfortable situation.
âA fresh bandage, too?' Dolores asked. âFor Leonardo.'
Daniella gave me a questioning look so I nodded and she headed down to the supplies.
When Daniella was gone, Dolores came closer, and I thought she was going to sit down beside me. âShe's pretty. Is she your girlfriend?'
âWhat difference does it make?' It was no business of hers. I didn't want to talk to her. I didn't want to be her friend or find anything to respect in her. If I were to kill this woman, I wanted
it to be without care and without regret. I wanted to find a reason to hate her, not a reason to like her.
âIt doesn't make
any
difference,' she said. âI was just making conversation.'
âI don't have much use for conversation.'
âWhat else is there on a boat like this?' She sat down beside me, and the shadow that cloaked me recoiled. It clung to me and whispered in my ear.
You're going to kill her.
Dolores smelled of cheap soap and body odour. âDoes he have to be tied like that?' she asked, and I caught a hint of something on her breath. Peppermint. She had been eating mints. âIt's cruel. I don't like to see any man treated like that, no matter what he's done.'
âEveryone can be saved?' The words of Father Tomás came to mind and that brought an image of Sofia.
âI think so,' Dolores said.
âWhat if he's a murderer?' I asked.
âIs that what Leonardo is?'
I sighed and wished Daniella would hurry up with the water. Maybe Dolores would be shocked if I told her what Leonardo had done yesterday. Maybe she would be glad he was tied up if she knew the violence of which he was capable. But if I told her, I would have to reveal my part in it. I would have to tell her how I helped to cover it up, and if I didn't, then I was sure that Leonardo would.
âIs
he a murderer?' she asked again.
âIt doesn't matter what he is or who he is,' I told her. âHe's staying right there.'
âI'll take responsibility for him,' she said. âRelease him and I'll make sure he does no harm.'
I laughed. âYou think you could control a man like him? Have you ever metâ'
âI have met many men,' she said, âof many different types. Men like you, Zico, and men with far harder hearts. Some who behave as if they have no heart at
all.
I've been in places and met people
even a man like you wouldn't believe, and not one of those people has ever raised a hand to me. Not one.'
âThen you've been lucky,' I told her.
âPlease. Release him.'
âNo.'
âAt least give him his clothes.'
âHe's safer as he is.'
âLet him have his dignity, if nothing else. Let him have his clothes, Zico.'
âThat man deserves no dignity,' I snapped. âIf you had been on this boat as long as I have, you'd know that. Stop pestering me and let me get on with taking you, and
him
, to Mina dos Santos. When you get there, and you're off this boat, you can give him all the dignity you like.'
She didn't even flinch. Her face remained calm, her voice measured as if she were talking to a child. âZico, it's inhuman to'
âWater,' said Daniella, holding out a clear plastic bottle. The label had long since gone and the contents were nothing more than boiled water that had been left to cool. It wouldn't be cold, but it would quench her thirst.
âThank you.' She stood and took the bottle, holding it in both hands and smiling at Daniella before turning to me again. âThink about it, Zico. Think about what I said.'
âI don't need to.' I watched her go back to Kássia, but she didn't sit down. She spoke to her companion as she unscrewed the top of the bottle, then she went to Leonardo and lifted it to his lips. He drank, the water dribbling from either side of his mouth, and as he tipped his head back, his eyes moved in my direction.
âI was thinking about before,' Daniella said, sitting beside me. âAbout when he was in the water and you were pointing your rifle at him.'
âUh-huh.' I shook my head at the foolishness of the nun and returned my concentration to the river.
âI thought you were going to shoot him.'
I glanced down at the flesh of Daniella's thighs on the seat beside me. There were faint bruises there among the smudges of
dirt and soot. A few tiny hairs beginning to show on her smooth skin.
âI wanted you to do it. Right at that moment, I wanted you to kill him for shooting those men and for making me so afraid and for ...' She shrugged. âIs that wrong?'
âNo.'
âI wanted you to
kill
him, Zico.'
âNo you didn't. It crossed your mind to want it but you didn't really want it. That's why you stopped me.'
âShe stopped you. Dolores.'
âNo. It was you.
You
stopped me. Later, too, when I had the knife at his throat.'
âI feel dirty for wanting him dead. For seeing those other men like that, all that blood.'
âIt'll pass. Give it some more time.'
Daniella nodded and glanced back at Dolores. âShe thinks you should untie him.'
âThat's because she thinks she can control him.'
âControl him? Why? Who does she think she is?'
âGod knows,' I said.
âYou have to admit, though, she's got something about her.'
âMaybe.'
âI mean, she seems nice, but strong. The way she looks at you ...' She was still watching Dolores, seeing how she offered the water to Leonardo like he was a condemned man. âIt's like she's someone. Does that make sense? The way she treats people, it's as if she's someone
important.'
She paused. âYou know anything about her? Who she is?'
âDolores,' I replied. âThat's all I know. She said her name is Dolores.'
For a while, Daniella took the wheel and I dozed beside her. I allowed my eyes to close and I let my mind drift into a numbness, knowing that Daniella was competent to do what she needed to, and that Leonardo was safely bound.
There were no dreams for me. Just the overwhelming heat
beneath the canopy, snatches of images and conversations, and then, somewhere in a place of darkness, splashed with patches of almost blinding brightness, I heard the rolling drums of thunder. I forced my eyes open and rubbed them awake with rough fingertips.
âMore rain?' Daniella asked.
âHow long have I been asleep?'
âHalf an hour.'
I shook my head and stood, going to the gunwale to look out at the sky. There was a light cover of grey clouds, but they blackened over the forest a few kilometres south. Perhaps Santiago had been right about the
acauã
sitting in the skeletal hand of the tree. Maybe it had seen the bad weather approaching.
âSomething the matter, Zico?' Dolores called.
The heat didn't seem to affect her much. There were no sweat patches on her shirt, no perspiration on her forehead. For some reason that annoyed me, but it was no reason to kill her.
âThe rain,' I said. âIf it gets too hard we'll have to stop.'
She nodded once, but continued to watch me with those intense, pale blue eyes. Again, I couldn't help feel that she was reading my thoughts, or seeing the shadow that cloaked me. It was as if she knew who I was; that she had seen my dark intent. Beside her, Kássia watched too, but her scrutiny was different. Her look was one of loyalty to Dolores and warning to me.
It was clear that when the time came for me to take Dolores's life, I would also have to take Kássia's.
Breaking eye contact, I moved past them, going to the store for a bottle of water. There were two empties on the deck as if they'd helped themselves while I'd been sleeping and I cursed my tiredness. I couldn't afford for them to hijack the
Deus
with sincerity and good intent in the way that Leonardo had hijacked it with murder and mania.