Authors: Sara Craven
moved automatically to pull her torn
shirt
across
her
breasts.
Carlos'
clutching hands had ripped the delicate
lace of her bra clean in half, and most of
the buttons of her shirt were torn off and
missing, so all she could do was drag
the material clumsily into place. When
she looked up she saw that Vitas de
Mendoza had been watching her
fumbling actions, a small grim smile
playing about his mouth.
Carlos was speaking again, his voice
rising to an angry shout. When he had
finished, Vitas turned to Rachel again.
'My friend here is very angry. He says
only a madwoman would expect him to
take her to Diablo for the wretched fee
you agreed upon. That you must have
known you would be expected to pay—
in other ways.'
'It's a lie,' she said desperately. 'I paid
him what he asked. Oh God, I wish I'd
never started this—never come here!'
'That,'
Vitas
de
Mendoza
said
crushingly, 'is perhaps the first piece of
common sense I have heard from your
lips.' The gun he was holding moved and
lifted. Carlos scrambled to his feet
staring at the gleaming barrel which was
pointing straight at him, bleating
something in a high, trembling voice, the
beads of sweat standing out on his
suddenly sallow face.
Rachel said breathlessly, 'What—what
are you going to do?'
He did not look at her, he was staring at
Carlos with that same grim smile. He
said, 'You are not the first woman,
querida,
to suffer at the hands of friend
Carlos. Perhaps I would do the world a
favour if I made sure you were the last.'
'But you can't!' Rachel's voice was sharp
with horror and disbelief.
'But I can,' he said quite gently. 'I have
the means'—the gun moved slightly
—'and the will to do it.'
'But I won't let you!' Rachel scrambled
up on to her knees. 'It would be cold-
blooded murder, and you know it. No
country on earth would let you get away
with such a thing. And nothing happened
—you know that.'
'Yes, I know that,' he said. 'But if I had
been half an hour later—what then?
Carlos likes to play rough, you know,
nor would that have been the end of it.
You are nowhere near Diablo. My guess
is that Carlos .intended to take you to
meet some friends of his at the
Venezuelan border, and that would have
been the last anyone heard of you—
unless you have friends who make a
habit of patronising the
casas de putas
in Caracas or Buenos Aires.'
A deep shudder ran through her body.
She'd heard of such things happening, of
course, but had always privately written
them off as old wives' tales. It had never
occurred to her even remotely that such a
fate could be hers.
'In spite of that,' she said in a low voice,
'you can't kill him.'
He gave her a long, hard look, then
gestured the cringing Carlos to his feet.
'You are a fortunate man,
amigo.
The
senorita
gives you your life. I would not
have been so generous. Now on your
way. But first—the belt from your
trousers, if you please.' As Carlos
hesitated, he went on mercilessly.
'Modesty is not a virtue I would have
associated with you, little man. Not long
ago you were only too eager to remove
your trousers in front of the
senorita
.' He
snapped his fingers. 'Your belt, and don't
keep me waiting any longer.'
As Carlos struggled to obey him,
muttering
what
appeared
to
be
blasphemies under his breath, Vitas
continued, 'As you are no doubt aware,
there is a small settlement a few miles
downstream. A brisk walk in the night
air will cool your ardour. And don't let
me see your ugly face round Asuncion
again.'
He gestured with the gun and Carlos
went off at a stumbling run, clutching
with both hands at the loosened
waistband of his pants as he did so. For
a little while, the sounds of his
lumbering, cursing progress floated back
to them, then gradually these died away
into the distance and the night was still
again.
Rachel's tense body suddenly relaxed,
and as it did so she knew she was going
to be sick. With a little groan she thrust
herself out of the firelight and retched
violently in the shadows. When the
paroxysm was past, she lay very still
where she was, trembling from head to
foot with reaction. She was dimly aware
that Vitas de Mendoza was kneeling
beside her.
'Please leave me alone,' she pleaded in a
suffocated voice. Being sick was bad
enough without having this man of all
men to witness her weakness.
'Don't be a fool,' he said almost wearily.
'Drink some of this.'
He passed her a slim silver flask.
Another gift from a past
enamorador
?
she wondered, as she removed the
stopper and put the flask to her lips.
Something resembling liquid flame
coursed down her throat and she thrust
the flask away, gasping for breath, but
the
trembling
seemed
to
stop
miraculously, almost at once.
She sat up, reaching for the protective
covering of the blanket, and said in a
stiff little voice, 'Thank you very much.'
'Por Dios!'
He sounded faintly amused.
'What an effort that must have cost you!
Come and sit by the fire and get warm.
At least Carlos attended to the
necessities of life before he tried to rape
you.'
Rachel sat and watched as he added
more wood to the flames and refilled the
coffee pot. She uttered a faint protest as
he began to ladle sugar into the black
steaming brew before handing it to her,
but he ignored her.
'You have had a bad shock,' was all he
said briefly as he put the mug into her
hand.
It was quite true, she thought as she
sipped her coffee obediently. And the
biggest shock of all was his unexpected
arrival.
'How did you know where to find us?'
she asked at last. He had been busying
himself, unsaddling his horse, but now
he was spreading a blanket for himself
on the other side of the fire.
'It wasn't difficult.' He stretched himself
out on it, tipping his hat over his eyes,
and reaching for his own steaming mug.
'I had been following you all day.'
'You'd been following us?' Her voice
rose incredulously. 'But why?'
'You of all people should not need to ask
that,
querida,'
he said lazily. 'Carlos is
well known to me, and there were many
people who saw you together in
Asuncion.'
'I see,' she said, but it wasn't true. She
didn't understand any of it. She
moistened her lips. 'He—he seemed
such a mild little man.' She shivered
again, remembering the wet lips and the
podgy destructive hands.
'A coral snake seems mild enough as it
suns itself on a ledge,' he said drily. 'But
approach it, and you will soon discover
your mistake, and it can be fatal. As it
almost was for you,
querida.
How could
you have been so reckless? Anyone you
asked would have told you the truth
about Carlos, yet you rush into the forest
with a man about whom you know less
than nothing. Are you always such a fool
about men?'
'It was a natural enough mistake,' she
said coldly. 'I needed a guide and he
approached me. I assumed your friend
Ramirez had put him on to me.'
His mouth twisted sardonically. 'Juan
may have his faults, but delivering
defenceless ewe lambs into the jaws of
el tigre
is not among them,' he drawled.
'On the contrary, he thought you were
safely in my—care.'
His slight hesitation before the final
word was not lost on her. For 'care' read
'bed', she thought furiously, the old
antagonism rising up inside her. She
might be forced to be grateful to him, but
that was all. It didn't mean she had to
like him or his macho, male chauvinist
attitude to the female sex.
'How wrong can anyone be?' she
shrugged, trying for sweet irony.
He was lighting one of his long, thin
black cigars, and the look he sent her
was equally ironic, reminding her
wordlessly and without effort of that
long moment in his arms when her body
had wanted more than just his kisses.
Rachel felt the colour rise in her face
and wriggled uncomfortably inside her
sheltering blanket. She hadn't needed that
reminder, or wanted it either. It had just
occurred to her that she might well have
been snatched from the frying pan, only
to be deposited neatly on the hottest part
of the fire. Her assailant had terrified
her, but was she really any safer with
her rescuer?
She passed her tongue round suddenly
dry lips. 'And what now?' she enquired
with a fair attempt at nonchalance.
He gave a slight shrug. 'We get some
rest, and in the morning you start on your
way back to Bogota.'
She sat bolt upright, the blanket slipping
from her shoulders.
'I am not going back to Bogota. I'm going
to Diablo. I've told you—I have to find
my brother.'
He smiled thinly. 'Fortunate brother to
have earned such devotion. But it alters
nothing,
querida.
Diablo is no place for
a woman—especially a naive, gullible
child as you have proved yourself to be.'
'I admit I was mistaken in Carlos,' she
said hotly. 'But I'm hardly likely to be
taken in a second time.'
'No?' He raised his eyebrows. 'Can you
say with any degree of accuracy where
you are at this moment? I doubt it, even
if I gave you the map from my saddle
pack. Carlos may have promised to take
you to Diablo, but he would never risk
his skin near that hell-hole. For at least
the past two hours you have been
travelling away from Diablo, and you
did not even know.'
'But you know where it is,' she said
slowly. 'You could take me there.'
'And what makes you think I would be
willing to risk my skin either?' He drew
deeply on the cigar, watching her above
the cloud of smoke he expelled.
She was taken aback. 'But you're a
guide. Can you afford to pick and choose
the work you take?'
'Sometimes I can. But I'll answer your
question with another,
querida.
Can you
afford to pay the price that I might
require for my services?'
'I don't know,' she said, her brows
puckering. It was an aspect of the
situation she had overlooked. Most of
her ready cash had vanished with the
fleeing Carlos. She would be able to
draw on fresh funds in Bogota, she had
no doubt, but if Vitas de Mendoza
insisted on payment in advance as
Carlos had done, then it would mean the
sort of delay she was anxious to avoid. 'I
—I might not be able to give you all the
money now, but on our return ...' She
broke Off seeing that he was shaking his
head. 'Oh, please, you must listen to
what I have to say! I really need to get to
Diablo as soon as possible. I—I'll pay
you whatever you ask—in time—but I
dare not haggle over money now. You'll
just have to trust me.' She paused again.
'You're laughing at me,' she accused
uncertainly.
'A little, it is true.' He contemplated the
glowing butt of his cigar, then tossed it
into the fire with an impatient gesture. 'I
said you were naive, didn't I,
querida
?
You surely did not imagine I followed
you today simply to save you from a fate