Authors: Sara Craven
The man nearest to her said quite
jovially, 'Would I not do instead,
senorita? Dios,
Vitas, you have all the
luck— with the cards and with the
women!'
She looked past him to the man with the
eye-patch and saw his lips twist, as if
this was one piece of luck he would
have preferred to do without. He made
no attempt to alter his languid pose,
merely leaning back further in his chair
and staring at her with a frank, almost
sensual appraisal which she found
offensive in the extreme.
That hotel-keeper, she thought furiously,
must be off his head if he imagined she
was going to go off into the wide blue
yonder with a man who looked as if his
career had spanned the gamut of crimes
from armed robbery to rape!
Almost as if he could divine her
thoughts, he smiled, a lingering, insolent
smile displaying even, startlingly white
teeth, and she realised with a sickening
jolt that a man who could exude such a
potent sexual attraction, apparently at
will, would never need to resort to rape.
He stood up then, head and shoulders
taller than any other man in the room, as
she could see at a glance, lean and
graceful like the jaguars who stalked in
the undergrowth. A great silver buckle
ornamenting the belt which was slung
low on his hips, a silver medallion
nestling among the dark hairs on his
chest—they were the only touches of
colour about him—and she remembered
her joking resolution to come face to
face with the devil himself if need be,
and a little involuntary shiver ran
through her.
His smile widened and she realised he
had gauged her reaction and was amused
by it. She forced herself to stand her
ground as he approached unhurriedly
round the table and came to stand in
front of her.
'I am Vitas de Mendoza,
senorita.
What
do you want with me?'
She was sorely tempted to say it had all
been a mistake and beat a hasty retreat.
But at the same time, she knew this
would accomplish nothing except to
make her look a complete fool in front of
these men, and that was the last thing she
wanted. Her brain worked feverishly,
and words rose to her lips.
'I wish to buy your services,
senor.'
Which wasn't in the least what she'd
intended to say, and she saw the dark
brows lift mockingly in response.
He said lazily, 'You flatter me, of
course,
querida,
but I regret that I am not
for sale.'
One or two of his companions laughed,
but it was uneasy laughter. Rachel
noticed it almost without noticing it,
because her face was burning with swift
embarrassment at having been betrayed
into saying something so ambiguous.
'You don't understand.' In spite of her
confusion, she lifted her chin and looked
steadily at him. 'I need a guide— a
reliable
one.
You
have
been
recommended.' She was aware of it
again—that intangible sense of unease in
the room after she had spoken. She said,
'You are a guide, aren't you? The hotel-
keeper said...'
'You've been talking to Ramirez?' He
broke across her rather stumbling words.
'Well, he's right. I do know this region
better than most men, and my advice to
you is go back to Bogota and join one of
the organised tours. This is no place for
a woman.'
He turned away in dismissal.
'No, wait.' Almost before she knew what
she was doing, she put out a hand and
tugged at the sleeve of his shirt. He
stopped and looked down at her hand,
and there was a kind of hauteur in his
expression. Her fingers looked very
white and slender against the dark
material, the nails smoothly rounded and
painted with her usual pale pink polish.
She relinquished the silky material
hurriedly, the heat rising in her body as
if she had inadvertently touched his skin.
She thought, 'How dare he look like that!
He may have a more educated accent
than his friends, but he's only a guide,
after all. He's for hire. He has to work
for his living.'
Something of what she was thinking
showed in her tone as she said, 'Perhaps
we could discuss this in private. I'm able
to pay for your time, if that's what's
concerning you.'
'It is not.' His face was expressionless,
but she had the oddest feeling he was
secretly amused. 'You are a stubborn
lady,
querida,
and a reckless one, I
think. You should not offer to pay until
you know the price you might be asked.'
'This would obviously have to be part of
the discussion,' Rachel said. 'Please talk
to me about it at least.' She heard the
almost pleading note in her voice with a
sense of shock. That wasn't what she had
intended at all.
'You imagine your powers of persuasion
will be more effective when we are
alone?' he asked, and laughed as the
colour rose in her face.
'Muy bien,
chica,
we will talk if you think it will
make any difference, but later.'
'We should talk now. This is important,'
she said in a low voice.
'To you perhaps,' he drawled. 'But at the
moment, nothing is more important to me
than my game which you have
interrupted—and I have a winning hand.
I will talk to you later.'
His hand came up, and his lean fingers
stroked her cheek in the merest flick of a
caress.
Rachel heard herself gasp, as startled as
if he had struck her. Or kissed her.
She whirled round and out of the room,
slamming the door behind her for
emphasis, hearing the echo of laughter
follow her.
The reception desk was once more
deserted, but she heard a chink of
glasses coming from behind a half-
opened door to the right of the entrance
and went and looked round it. It was a
large room with tables and a bar, empty
now except for the man called Ramirez
who was polishing glasses behind the
bar. He looked surprised to see her and
she wondered waspishly if he'd known
exactly the sort of reception she was
going to get—had perhaps even been
listening at the door.
'Your bargain is made,
senorita
?' he
enquired, straight-faced.
'Not quite,' she said too sweetly. 'We're
going to talk later. I'm afraid that you're
going to have to let me have that room
after all.'
He gave her another long look. He was
probably wondering why she wasn't
scuttling back to Bogota, her tail
between her legs, she thought angrily.
'Senor de Mendoza said he would speak
with you later?' He sounded incredulous,
and she smiled kindly at him.
'Indeed he did, after we'd got one or two
points straightened out. He seemed to
have some strange ideas about why I
wished to hire him—and a very inflated
opinion of his own attractions,' she
added for good measure. But she knew
she was being unfair. Vitas de Mendoza
was not the sort of man to indulge in
illusions, and he could not have failed to
know by now that his dark, saturnine
good
looks
and
the
piratical
extravagance of that eye-patch would be
the realisation of a thousand women's
fantasies. She just happened to be the
thousand and first, that was all.
'He has reason,' Ramirez said calmly.
He chuckled reminiscently. 'There was
one woman—a
norteamericaria—
she
came here with her husband to see the
country. Later she returned alone, and
Vitas took her into the hills. They were
gone a long time.' He eyed Rachel. 'Her
hair was fair, like yours,
senorita,'
he
added blandly.
'I can assure you that is the only
resemblance,' she said coldly. 'Now can
I please see this room? I did not enjoy
the journey here, and I'm rather tired.'
He shrugged almost fatalistically.
'Si,
senorita.'
The room he showed her was not large,
but it was scrupulously clean, the
narrow bed gay with Indian blankets,
soft as fleece. They were selling similar
blankets on the market stalls in the
square below and Rachel promised
herself she would buy one. But that
would be later. All she wanted to do
now was lie down on that bed and try to
forget that foul bus journey. There was a
bathroom just down the corridor with a
small, rather reluctant shower, and she
stripped and washed the dust and some
of her aches away. It was bliss to come
back to her room and put on fresh
underwear from her small stock, and
lock the door and close the shutters, so
'that the noise from the square became a
muted and not intolerable hum, and then
stretch out on the bed.
Yet in spite of her bone-weariness,
sleep seemed oddly elusive. Strange
unconnected images kept coming into her
mind—trees by a river with the darkness
of a mountain rising behind them—a man
wearing black clothes riding a black
horse so that he seemed part of it like a
pagan centaur—and a fair-haired woman
who stood among the trees with her arms
outstretched, so that the man bent out of
the saddle and lifted her up into his
arms, her hair falling like a pale wound
across the darkness of his sleeve. Rachel
twisted uneasily, trying to banish the
image from her mind, but the horse came
on until it was close enough for her to
see the rider's face with a black patch
set rakishly over one eye. As she
watched, the blonde woman moved in
his arms, lifting her hands to clasp
around his neck, drawing him down to
her.
Rachel put out a hand to ward them off.
She didn't want to see this. She didn't
want to know, but her gesture seemed to
catch the rider's eye and he turned to
look at her, and so did the woman he
was holding, and Rachel saw that the
face that stared at her from beneath the
curtain of blonde hair was her own.
She cried out, and suddenly the images
had gone and she was sitting up on the
narrow bed in the now-shadowed room,
her clenched fist pressed against her
thudding heart. She could see herself in
the mirror across the room, the gleam of
her hair, and the smooth pallor of her
skin, interrupted only by the deeper
white of her flimsy lace bra and briefs.
She thought, 'So I was asleep after all.' It
was a comfort in a way to know that
what she had seen had been a nightmare
rather than a deliberate conjuration of
her imagination. And she was thankful
that she had woken when she did. She
picked up her gold wristwatch from the
side of the bed and studied it. To her
surprise, she had been asleep for over
two hours.
She slid off the bed, and put on the beige
linen trousers she had worn earlier, with
a shirt of chocolate brown silk under the
loose hip-length jacket. Her hair was
wrong, she thought, waving loosely on to
her
shoulders.
She
unearthed
a
tortoiseshell clip from her case and
swept
the
honey-coloured
waves
severely back from her face into a
French pleat, anchoring it with the clip.
It made her look older, she decided, and
more businesslike.
She swung her dark brown leather
shoulder bag over her arm, and went
downstairs. It was very quiet—too quiet,
she thought. She went to the room where
the card game had been in progress and
opened the door. It was deserted, and the
table had been cleared, the chairs put
back against the wall.
Rachel said furiously, 'Well, I'm