Authors: Sara Craven
fierce currents and little fish that can eat
a horse and rider before a man can utter
a last prayer, and leave only the bones.
And there is
el tigre
who kills, and many
snakes. Also
bandidos
and other evil
men,' she added, crossing herself.
'Perhaps it is all so, but there are those
who say the reason why the Flame of
Diablo stays hidden is that it is guarded
by the old gods who were worshipped
before the
conquistadores
came to this
place, and that all who seek the Flame
are accursed.'
In spite of herself, Rachel felt a long
cold shiver run the length of her spine. It
was all very well to tell herself robustly
that only the very credulous would
believe such a tale, but here in this alien
land, in the very shadow of the pagan
mountains, it was difficult to dismiss
Isabel's recital as nonsense.
'And you think Mark has gone to this
dreadful place?' she asked, steadying her
voice.
Isabel's eyes met hers frankly. 'I did not,
because Miguel talks much to your
brother, telling him of the dangers. But
now you come and tell us that he has not
returned to Gran Bretana, and I worry,
because he told Miguel that was what he
planned to do. I think perhaps he only
told Miguel this to put his mind at ease,
so that he would not blame himself for
having told him the legend. There are
many such stories, you understand. I
think Miguel did not believe Marcos
would take him seriously.'
'Mark's a geologist,' Rachel said,
passing her tongue over her dry lips. 'I
suppose he might think that if this mine
existed he had as good a chance as any
of finding it.' Or of dying, her mind ran
crazily on. Of being drowned in a river,
or eaten by piranha fish, or shot by
bandits, or even swept off a mountain
ledge by a giant condor. Hadn't she read
somewhere that they sometimes attacked
unwary travellers?
Isabel's cold little hand crept into hers.
Her great dark eyes looked enormous
suddenly, too large for her pinched face.
'What will you do,
senorita?'
'I don't know,' Rachel said rather
helplessly. 'After all, we have no real
proof that that's where Mark has gone,
although it does seem more than likely.'
'If and when I ever do come back, I'll be
rich. I'll have so much bloody money, I'll
make you eat every word you've said.
And I shan't come back until I've got it.'
The words seemed to sting and burn in
her brain. Through Miguel Arviles,
Mark now knew of the possible
existence of an emerald mine which
could fulfil his wild promise. Also
through Miguel he could know of a way
to get any gems that he found out of the
country. Generations ago there had been
a wild streak in the Crichtons. Perhaps
this streak had been reborn in Mark,
blinding him to all aspects of the
perilous game he was playing but its
high stakes.
Rachel smiled reassuringly into Isabel's
anxious eyes.
'I expect I shall go back to England
myself,' she said untruthfully. 'After all,
we may be making mountains out of
molehills.'
'Que quiere decir eso?'
Isabel's brow
wrinkled. 'What is this molehill?'
'It doesn't matter,' Rachel assured her. 'I
—I'll inform the authorities here that
Mark—seems to be missing, so that they
can keep an eye open for him, but there
isn't much more I can do.'
'No,' Isabel agreed, but so despondently
that Rachel was tempted to throw
caution to the winds and tell her that she
intended to set out for Diablo herself the
following day. But she restrained
herself. Isabel might fear her father's
wrath, but Rachel felt sure that would
not prevent her telling Senor Arviles
about her plans if she got wind of them,
and he, Rachel did not doubt, would take
steps to prevent her from doing anything
so foolhardy.
She soothed her conscience by telling
herself she did not want to cause the
Arviles family any more anxiety on her
behalf. But she knew in her heart that
this .was not altogether true. Perhaps it
was not only in Mark that the forgotten
wild streak had surfaced.
I'm going to Diablo, she told herself,
even if it means coming face to face with
the devil himself.
CHAPTER TWO
The bus rounded the bend with a lurch
that almost had Rachel flying out of her
seat. She controlled the startled cry
which had risen to her lips, and settled
herself
more
firmly.
The
other
passengers seemed used to coping with
the bus's vagaries, she noticed. Across
the aisle, an Indian woman continued to
feed her baby in the shelter of her
ruana,
her coppery face impassive. Rachel had
seen as she boarded the bus that a small
gaudy statue of the Virgin was secured
just above the driver's seat, and there
was a general tendency as the rickety
vehicle rocked round a particularly
hairpin bend, or swayed dangerously
near the lip of some ravine, for the
passengers and the driver to cross
themselves devoutly.
Rachel could sympathise with this
evidence of devotion, but she couldn't
help wishing at the same time that the
driver would keep both hands on the
wheel.
She could understand now why the hotel
clerk had stared at her in horror when
she had enquired about buses, and
strongly advised her to hire a car
instead. Apart from her concern about
the cost, she had not been keen to accept
his advice. From what little she had seen
of the drivers in Bogota, most of them
seemed to regard a car as a symbol of
their
machismo
and behave accordingly,
Rachel possessed a driving licence, but
she doubted her ability to compete, and
now that she had seen the standard of the
road up to Asuncion, she was glad she
had not tried. She tried to imagine
meeting one of these buses on one of
those bends, and shuddered inwardly.
The window she was sitting beside was
covered in dust, but she couldn't really
be sorry. At least she was being saved
those stomach-turning glimpses of some
of the valleys they had passed—a sheer
rocky drop down to a wrinkled snake of
a river. And snakes were another feature
of the journey that she did not want to
contemplate.
This whole trip was madness. She knew
that now. What the hell did she think she
was doing charging up a mountainside in
company with a religious maniac
masquerading as a bus driver, several
crates of chickens and a goat?
She had seen the look of horrified
disbelief come into the hotel clerk's eyes
when she had asked him which was the
nearest town to Diablo, and the most
direct means of getting there. He had
done his level best to dissuade her,
protesting that such places were not for
the
senorita.
Then he had tried to
persuade her to hire a car, but had made
the basic mistake of pointing out that at
least then she would be under the
protection of the driver. Something in the
way he had said this had needled Rachel
unbearably.
She had said clearly and coldly, 'I can
look after myself, thank you,
senor.'
It had been a briefly satisfying moment,
but he still thought she was mad. She had
seen it in his face as he turned away to
deal with another guest. And now she
tended to agree with him. She had never
sat on a more uncomfortable seat, and
she doubted whether the bus itself had
any springs. If she survived the journey,
it would probably be as a hopeless
cripple, she decided, as the base of her
spine took another hammering.
It had been easier than she expected to
persuade the Arviles family that she
intended
to
return
to
England
immediately, in pursuit of the errant
Mark. Isabel had been disappointed that
she would not even spend a couple of
days with them, and Rachel regretted the
necessity of deceiving the girl. But she
wondered secretly if the
Senor
and the
Senora
might not have been quietly
relieved at her departure, or could they
genuinely have wanted yet another
English visitor upsetting the smooth
tenor of their life? Certainly she could
not have faulted their hospitality.
She had tied a coloured handkerchief
over her shoulder-length honey-coloured
hair, and donned an enormous pair of
sunglasses, but even so she knew that her
fair hair and skin were attracting more
attention than she desired from the
mainly
mestizo
and Indian passengers,
and she guessed that few tourists must
travel
by
this
route—particularly
blonde, female English tourists.
She wondered if Mark had taken the
same frankly death-defying route before
her, and had tried to put a few halting
questions to the driver before they had
set off, but he had stared at her
uncomprehendingly, so she had given it
up as a bad job.
The bus seemed to be descending again,
and slowly as well. Peering down the
bus, Rachel could detect a huddle of
buildings ahead of them, and guessed
they had reached Asuncion.
At first it seemed to bear a depressing
resemblance to other small settlements
they had passed along the way, with
groups of tumbledown shacks lining a
small rutted highway, but with a
triumphant blast of its horn the bus
wound along the road, avoiding groups
of children and animals apparently
attracted from the shack doorways to
watch its passing, and turned into a large
square. Here some attempt at least had
been made to paint and generally
refurbish the buildings and there was a
small market in progress. Presumably
this was the final destination of the
chickens and .the goat, Rachel decided,
watching their descent from the bus
without a sense of overwhelming regret.
They had not been the quietest or the
sweetest-smelling
of
travelling
companions.
As she alighted in her turn, she found the
bus had stopped outside a building
which seemed to be Asuncion's sole
hotel. She glanced up at its peeling
facade rather doubtfully. It wouldn't
have been her first choice as to
overnight stop, but beggars could not be
choosers, and besides, there was 'an
outside chance that Mark might have
stayed there.
The reception desk was deserted when
she got there. Rachel set down her small
suitcase and looked around, then rapped
impatiently on the desk with her
knuckles. Almost as if her action had
been a secret signal, a roar of masculine
laughter broke out quite close at hand.
Rachel jumped, then relaxed, moving her
aching shoulders experimentally.
'I wish I could share the joke,' she
muttered crossly.
Just then a door down the passage from
the desk opened, and a man emerged. He
paused before closing the door behind
him and tossed a clearly jovial remark in
Spanish over his shoulder, which was
greeted with yet another burst of
laughter. Then he spotted Rachel
standing at the desk and his face changed
in a moment, becoming both -surprised
and solemn.
'Senorita?'
His tone as he approached
was civil, but Rachel felt she was being
very thoroughly assessed, and that there
was a strong element of disapproval in
his assessment.
She produced her phrase book, and