Authors: Sara Craven
been a silent warning.
She glanced at Vitas and saw, puzzled,
that he had dismounted and was kneeling
at the cliff-edge, looking down. After a
while, he took a pair of field-glasses
from his saddle-pack, adjusted them
with care and took a longer more
lingering survey of the solitude below.
Rachel wanted to ask him why he was
taking all these precautions when the
place was so obviously deserted, but on
the edge of speech she hesitated, sensing
somehow that this was a place for
whispers.
It really was very quiet, she thought, and
as the hair lifted slightly on the back of
her neck, she wondered, 'Too quiet?' On
their way here, the air had been filled
with forest noises—the chatter of
parakeets and chirping of other birds, the
hum
of
insects—even,
once,
the
unnerving shrieks of a howler monkey—
but here there was nothing but a silence
which seemed to press down upon her.
She bit her lip, accusing herself of being
over-imaginative. She took out a
handkerchief and blotted the beads of
sweat which had gathered on her
forehead and upper lip. There was water
down in the ravine. She could see the
glint of it through the trees, and she
could see the falls which served it too—
a great dark sheet of water plunging
noiselessly down the sheer face of the
rock.
Noiselessly. Mentally, she gave herself
a little shake. She was getting paranoid
about this!
The shadows of the ravine with its
tangle of deep undergrowth looked
coolly inviting. She wanted to take off
her boots and dabble her toes in the
stream, let its freshness pour over her
wrists.
She looked sideways at Vitas. What
were they waiting for? She wanted to
ask him, but the words seemed to stick in
her throat. Since the previous night and
his final biting comment to her in the
darkness, he had barely uttered a word
to her, and anything he had said had been
curt and to the point.
She tried to tell herself that she should
be glad, that it was what she had
planned, what she had wanted, but the
assurances rang falsely in her ears.
He got to his feet and came over to her.
His face was hard and unyielding, his
mouth set in grim lines as he looked at
her.
'You will stay here,' he said. 'I am going
to look around.'
'But why can't I came too?' she
protested. 'It's still baking up here, and
there's shade down in the ravine. I
would rather ...'
'Your preferences are of. no account,' he
said harshly. 'You will obey me by
staying here, or I swear I will make you
sorry.'
'But how long will you be?' In spite of
herself she heard her voice tremble.
'As long as it takes.' His expression was
completely inimical, and she knew she
dared not press him further.
She watched him re-mount and swing his
horse towards the clustering trees, and a
sense of panic overwhelmed her. She
wanted to cry out to him not to leave her,
but she knew if she did any such thing,
she would only make a fool of herself.
When his tall dark figure had finally
disappeared, she busied herself tethering
her patient horse in the shade. Then she
found herself a convenient tree with
spreading branches and sank down at its
foot, leaning her back gratefully against
its gnarled trunk, and fanning herself
gently with her hat.
Whatever her personal unhappiness, it
had to take second place, to a more
pressing problem. Mark was clearly not
here, if, in fact, he had ever managed to
find his way to this desolate piece of
wilderness. Rachel doubted whether she
would ever have found it herself without
Vitas' guidance. He seemed to know
every inch of this wild place like the
back of his hand.
She sighed and rested her chin on her
folded hands. It seemed as if this whole
desperate journey had been for nothing,
and she was as far from discovering her
brother's whereabouts as ever. In fact the
sum total of her discoveries since she
had come to Colombia had been about
herself, she thought achingly, and none of
them were likely to bring her happiness.
She closed her eyes. But that was not
what she had to think about. She had to
plan—to decide what her next move in
tracing Mark must be. She supposed the
sensible thing would be to return to
Bogota and ask the friendly Arviles
family if they had heard anything from
him. She would get in touch with Dr
Kingston as well, in case by some
miracle he had returned to England of
his own accord.
That was where she must concentrate her
thoughts, her energies—in finding Mark,
not sighing after a man whose attitude
had shown her plainly that his brief
passion for her had burned itself out in
disgust and contempt.
When she opened her eyes again it was
almost dark, and she was cramped and
uncomfortable huddled under her tree.
I've been dozing, she thought in sudden
panic, getting rather unsteadily to her
feet, but for how long? And where is
Vitas?
She strained her ears for even the
vaguest sound of his return, but the eerie
silence seemed to mock her. She
shivered a little, clasping her arms
across her body. After the suffocating
heat of the day, the night came as an
almost chilling contrast. She looked at
her watch and saw to her vexation that it
had stopped. In all the emotional turmoil
of the previous night, she had forgotten
to wind it.
The question was when Vitas had
ordered her to wait there for him,
exactly how long had he intended her to
wait? He surely didn't intend that she
should spend the entire night alone on
the clifftop. If people had mined at
Diablo, she reasoned, then they must
have constructed some kind of shelter
for themselves, probably further up the
ravine. And if she stayed here much
longer weighing up the pros and cons, it
would be too dark to make her way
down there. As it was, it would not be
easy.
She collected her flask of water and the
parcel of food which Maria had pressed
upon her and began to descend slowly
and with infinite care towards the
glimmer of water.
She was breathless and shaking by the
time she reached the bottom. The descent
had been more perilous than she had
realised, and in daylight she would
probably not have undertaken it at all
without help. She stood still for a
moment, steadying herself, then she
began to make her way carefully along
the ravine, using the stream to guide her.
If by some remote chance there was
anyone around, they would have heard
her coming by now, she thought,
stumbling slightly. It was unnerving to
think that there might be unseen eyes
charting her progress in the gloom, but if
there was someone there surely he
would have given some sign of his
presence by now.
In a way, she thought, as the silence
seemed to wrap her round, she would
have preferred the Wild West mining
camp, clip joints and all.
She was so intent on keeping her balance
that she hardly noticed the white wall
until it loomed out of the darkness in
front of her. She stopped dead and stared
up at it. What in the world? she thought.
It wasn't a very high wall, and its
crumbling lines were interrupted by a
gate surmounted by a small cupola
shape. A bell tower, she asked herself
dazedly, in this wilderness? To summon
whom—and to what?
The gate was hanging off its hinges, its
timbers warped and rotting. She edged
round it and found herself in what had
once been a courtyard. Stones had been
laid to pave it, but now weeds and
plants were beginning to grow in the
cracks between, forcing the stones out of
their civilised alignment in a mute
warning of the power of the wilderness.
A long low white building bordered
three sides of the courtyard, the gate
wall providing the fourth side of the
square. There was something familiar
about the shape, and about the arched
walkway which separated the building
itself from the courtyard, and Rachel
thought, 'Of course— it's a cloister.'
Even in what little remained of the light,
she could see it was a dilapidated
cloister. The order which had built it
must have left long ago, she thought,
viewing the gaping holes in the tiled
roof, and the arches which had
collapsed, leaving heaps of shattered
masonry to mark their passing.
She had a sudden urge to retreat, to
leave this sad place to the ghosts of
whatever
priests—brothers—nuns—
haunted it. But she told herself she was
being ridiculous. She needed shelter for
the night, and this was shelter, of a sort.
She made herself walk forward, her
boots
sounding
noisily
over
the
flagstones. Just ahead of her, a small
night creature scuttled away in alarm, its
body a faint blur in the shadows.
Rachel paused, her heart bumping.
'Thank you and goodnight,' she said
aloud. The sound of her own voice
unaccountably lifted her spirits, making
her realise just how much the prolonged
silence had been getting on her nerves.
Not that she minded things being
peaceful—on the contrary. But there was
something unnatural about this quietness
as though everything that moved and
lived was holding its breath in
anticipation of some disaster.
She called out clearly, 'Hello—is
anyone there?' And like an answering
echo, she thought she heard a muffled
groan somewhere close by.
She swallowed. 'Vitas?' she queried. 'Is
that you?'
Could he have been injured, in a fall
from his horse, maybe, and have been
lying there all this time waiting for her to
come and find him? He seemed an expert
horseman, but mishaps could happen to
the best of them. #
She began to make her way in the
direction she thought the sound had come
from, stepping into the full shadow of the
cloister. She glanced up at the arch a
little doubtfully, wondering whether it
too was nearing the point of collapse,
but it seemed sturdy enough. There
seemed to be a number of little rooms
opening off the cloister, with gratings set
in their doors—rather like a Small jail.
She supposed this was where the
brothers had their cells, where they slept
and meditated. She stood on tiptoe and
peeped through one grating and her
action was greeted with a sudden,
startled beating of wings—from a bird,
she thought— or even a bat, and stepped
back quickly.
It was then she heard the muffled groan
again, and she knew without doubt that it
came from the next cell along. She
moved towards it, her palms suddenly
clammy, and peered through the grating.
The small room seemed full of lumber,
but there was a rough bed against one
wall, and she could see a shape lying on
it covered by a blanket, a shape that
moved slightly and was unmistakably
human. She pushed at the door and it
swung open with a creak.
She said, 'Is something wrong? Can I
help you?' And as she moved towards
the bed, the figure stirred and the
covering blanket fell away slightly
revealing a tousled blond head. Rachel
knew one minute's overpowering relief
that it wasn't Vitas, and then her heart
nearly stopped as she gazed down at the