Authors: Sara Craven
encircling undergrowth to see where the
noise was coming from. Carlos had
turned and he shouted something back to
her over his shoulder—the first words
he had uttered in several hours, she
thought. She couldn't catch the exact drift
of what he had said, but she lifted a hand
in response and saw him urge his horse
forward, apparently satisfied. Perhaps
he was telling her there was shelter just
ahead, she thought longingly. A drink
and a wash, above all, and then she
might even feel able to face another
helping of tinned stew and rice pudding.
Or perhaps they might be offered
something a little more appetising by the
people at the
finca,
she told herself
hopefully, digging her heels into her
horse's side.
The trees thinned, and her spirits rose
mercurially. Her horse's rather ambling
gait quickened too as if he was also
aware that it was nearing the end of the
day and rest awaited them.
It all made the disappointment so much
more acute when she emerged from the
trees and found that they were on the
bank of a river, its waters a dingy brown
and moving sluggishly but in little eddies
which suggested deep and hidden
currents. And that was all—no shelter,
no
cabana,
not so much as a
tumbledown shack. Rachel looked
around her and saw that Carlos had
already dismounted, and was taking the
saddle from his horse.
She rode slowly towards him. 'What is
this place?' she demanded.
Carlos shrugged rather evasively. 'Is just
a
place,
senorita,'
he
returned,
obviously trying to sound reassuring. 'It
get dark soon, so we stay here.'
'Here?' Rachel was frankly horrified and
made no attempt to disguise her feelings.
'But you said there would be forestry
service places—and
fincas.
There's
nothing here at all!'
Carlos' round face was suddenly less
good-humoured. 'There are such places,
but it will take too long to reach them.
We need to build a fire—it will be dark
soon. Tonight we stay in the tent I have
brought.'
'A tent?' Rachel echoed helplessly.
Nothing had been said by either of them
about a tent. And it certainly couldn't be
a large one if Carlos had brought it on
the packs his own horse was carrying.
An odd feeling of distaste swept over
her as she visualised the prospect of
having to share any kind of tent, large or
small, with Carlos in the middle of this
wilderness.
She moistened her lips. 'Nevertheless, I
think I'd prefer to press on,' she said
levelly. 'I find this sort of country a little
wild for camping out in.'
Carlos gave her a sullen look. 'That is
too bad,
senorita.
It is far to the nearest
finca.
We should not reach it before
morning.'
Rachel felt her heart sink, but her
training came to her rescue and she
managed to maintain her cool facade. It
suddenly seemed important not to let
Carlos know her inward alarm. Besides,
her imagination was playing tricks with
her again, she assured herself. It was this
place—the approach of night and the
darkness of the encircling forest. The
sinister swirl of the brown water. It was
—getting to her. Carlos was just an
inoffensive
little
man
who
had-
miscalculated, that was all. Probably she
should have made it clear to him back in
Asuncion that any form of camping was
out as far as she was concerned. If their
departure hadn't been so hurried at her
insistence, she could have paid more
attention to their actual means of travel,
got it all sorted out to her satisfaction
before they ever set out, but she had
allowed her impatience to find Mark to
get the better of her.
As if he sensed her inner hesitation,
Carlos said eagerly, 'This is a good
place,
senorita.
Better we stay here. I
make a fire.' His smile was ingratiating.
'You may have the tent,
senorita.'
Rachel bit her lip. He seemed to have
assessed with fair accuracy the root of
her uncertainty, and succeeded in making
her feel foolish. She gave a slight shrug
and slid out of the saddle.
Carlos was as good as his word. It was
only a tiny tent and soon erected, and
before long he had a fire going too, and a
can of water coming to the boil on it.
The sun had almost vanished by now,
leaving a resplendent sky to mark its
passing, and a definite chill in the air.
Rachel was glad of the blanket Carlos
passed her, and she held it round her
shoulders as she sipped at her mug of
black coffee. The sticks crackling on the
fire and the little darting flames had an
oddly soporific effect, she discovered as
her eyelids began to droop. She had to
make herself wake up, remind herself
that the least she could do was lend a
hand with the preparation of the supper,
such as it was. That she needed too to
find out from Carlos exactly where they
were and how much this direct but
lonely route could be expected to cut off
their journey to Diablo. If only she
wasn't so desperately tired! She just
wasn't used to spending so long in the
open
air.
Hot-house
flower,
she
ridiculed herself.
She wished there was someone with
whom she could share her day's
experiences—her sense of awe. as she'd
looked up at the high peaks of the
cordillera,
capped with snow and
wreathed in cloud, the glory of this
spectacular sunset, even her fears and
apprehensions along the forest trail. She
could build those into quite an amusing
story in the re-telling, she decided, but it
would all be wasted on Carlos. She
grinned to herself imagining his blank,
uncomprehending smile as she poured
out her heart to him.
She was so lost in her own thoughts she
was hardly aware of him getting up and
coming round the fire, and when at last
she registered his short bulky presence
standing over her, she assumed vaguely
that he had come to offer her some more
coffee and held out her mug to be
refilled.
It went flying, knocked out of her hand,
the dregs splashing on to the blanket.
Dazed, she looked up and saw for the
first time the real reason for that nagging
feeling of unease which had plagued her
all day—Carlos staring down at her with
the eyes of a satyr. She tried to get to her
feet, but the folds of the blanket
hampered her, and besides, he was
pushing her back again with all the force
of his sturdy body.
His podgy hands were tearing the
blanket away, and he was kneeling
across her legs, so that she couldn't
move. His eyes were glazed and his
moist full mouth was coming closer.
Rachel screamed. She'd been taught to
scream in drama school, so why, at this
moment when she most needed it, was
the most she could manage a strangled
choking cry? She ought to reason with
him, something in her brain kept
repeating numbly. Tell him that if he
stopped this madness now, she wouldn't
report him to the authorities. That if he
let her go now, they needn't even
mention it again. But at the same time
she knew horrifyingly that it was too late
for reasoning, that no threat or promise
she could make would have any weight
with Carlos. He was panting savagely
and muttering things in his own language
that she guessed somehow were
obscenities as his hands tore at her shirt,
ripping the buttons off it, and she heard
him growl his satisfaction in his throat
as he uncovered her breasts. His mouth
was wet and greedy as he leaned over
her.
She screamed again, and this time the
sound came full-bodied and piercing
from her throat, although it was stupid to
scream when there was no one to hear
and perhaps she should have saved her
strength for this last desperate struggle.
In the meantime she had nearly deafened
her attacker. She saw Carlos draw back,
his face mottled suddenly with rage, saw
his fist clench and his arm swing back,
and found herself praying that the blow
when it came would render her
unconscious.
The explosion seemed to fill the world.
She had closed her eyes to escape from
the look on Carlos' face and the sight of
that menacing fist, but now she jerked
them open again, feeling incredibly the
weight of Carlos' body shift from hers.
She could sit up, shaking back the mass
of tangled hair which her wild
ineffectual struggles had loosened.
Carlos had rolled off her and was lying
very still, staring back over his shoulder.
His breathing was hoarse and laboured.
She followed the direction of his gaze
and caught her breath in disbelief. In the
semi-darkness, horse and rider were so
motionless that they seemed to be some
fabulous beast from a forgotten world
carved out in ebony. She saw the barrel
of the rifle the newcomer held glint as it
was lowered, and the swift supple
movement as he swung himself out of the
saddle and walked forward. But Rachel
had known at once who it was. It was
Vitas de Mendoza.
CHAPTER FOUR
'Buenas tardes,
Carlos
amigo
.' With one
booted foot, he kicked the sullen fire into
a blaze. 'Up to your old tricks yet again?'
Carlos began to speak. The words came
rushing out, harsh and strident in a long
monotonous torrent, and although Rachel
could not understand what he was
saying, some instinct told her the sense
of them, and she wanted to press her
hands over her ears and reject the
outpouring ugliness. But she couldn't
move. She couldn't speak. She felt as if
she had been literally turned into stone,
and in spite of the heat coming from the
leaping flames, she felt as cold as stone.
The hoarse words came to a stumbling
halt as Carlos paused for breath, and she
realised with an inward start that Vitas
de Mendoza was addressing her.
'My
friend
tells
me
that
you
accompanied him here with perfect
willingness,
senorita.
Is this true?'
The dancing firelight highlighted the
bronze arrogance of his face, making him
look like some stern carved image from
a time long before the
conquistadores
had set their conquering hand on
Colombia and its wealth. Only the
starkness of the black eye-patch and the
deep sensual curve of his mouth
reminded her that he was all too human.
'You are silent,
senorita,
' he remarked
after a pause. 'Don't they say in your
country that silence means consent? If I
have intruded I apologise.'
He lifted a hand to the broad-brimmed
hat he was wearing and turned as if to
go.
'No, wait!' The words seemed to burst
from the tightness of her throat. 'Don't go
—please! It—it's quite true, I did come
here with this man, but it's not what you
think— what he's told you. I've paid him
to take me to Diablo, that's all ...' Her
voice was trembling as she broke off.
What if he didn't believe her? What had
Carlos been saying to him? That she had
known all along what was going to
happen when they made camp for the
night—that she had been a willing
participant? But he'd been there—he'd
been watching them. He must know the
truth. As the realisation of precisely
what he had seen came to her, her hands