Read Dangerous Waters Online

Authors: Rosalind Brett

Dangerous Waters (12 page)


Various reasons. Tin mines would become derelict and the workers move elsewhere. Communications were nonexistent, so that half the country hardly knew the other half existed. Then there

s always the fight with the forest

that

s unceasing. Among the rubber trees we keep the earth bare as far as possible. It

s not difficult, so long as you have enough workers. You

ll have to
...”

He stopped speaking, but not pointedly. She wondered if he had been going to say she must come out and see the estate but checked himself. Well, it was the orthodox thing to do—invite anyone who might be interested to look over a rubber plantation. Only Pete didn

t want her there; and if she were honest with herself, she would admit that she didn

t want to see the estate ... or his house ... or meet his friends. Particularly, she didn

t want to meet his girl friends.

As though his speech had never halted he was saying,

Our company owns five rubber districts, and each is divided into eight sections. We have section supervisors, a manager and an assistant manager.


Are all of you white?


No. My assistant is a Dutchman from Indonesia, but
the
section supervisors are a mixed bag, most of them with Malay blood. There are rubber smallholdings in the district, too, but their yield is very low. Our average yield over the past five years has been just under two thousand five hundred pounds per acre.


But you

ve been there seven years?

He nodded.

Doesn

t seem that long, though.
I’m
getting long in the tooth without even realizing it.

The smile with which he spoke showed very clearly that he didn

t believe it for a moment. Why should he, when his mirror reflected a lean, strong face, thick dark hair and powerful shoulders? Today he wasn

t paddling very strongly, but he looked big and vital as he moved his arms and glanced across the heaped luggage at Terry.

Presently they climbed out among the coconut palms and ate biscuits and a tube of cheese which Mrs. Lunn had given them. They walked among the trees, and Terry picked up a
coconut and hugged it. Pete laughed and took the great smooth nut, tested its weight.


It

s outsize. Want to keep it?


Will it be in the way?


Of course not. Shall we knock off the husk?


I

d like to keep it just as it is, for now. It

s beautiful.


It

s just a coconut, honey. Millions more up there.


For me, it

s the first complete in its cover that I

ve handled.

She looked back towards the river, said in a whisper,

Do you realize something? This is the first time we

ve been out of sight of water since Vinan!

He smiled.

I was thinking the same thing, a minute ago. And I remembered that everything was left ready for an airstrip to be constructed out at the rubber estate. Next time I go on leave I

ll get a lift to and from the coast on the company

s plane.


So
...
whatever happens, you

ll never do this trip along the river again?


I might, for the fun of it.

Her nerves deliciously tense, she queried,

All alone?


Maybe. But I

ll see you around. You

re part of the river now.

She kicked gently at the long grass.

You can be awfully di
s
arming when you like, Pete.


At the moment I like,

he said, and put a companionable arm across her shoulder.

They strolled for more than half an hour, wandered back to the canoe and got moving again. Thunder rolled along the river, there was a quick torrent of rain which made Terry dive under the sheet of plastic, but it could only have been the edge of a storm. The sun shone again, brassily drooping west. There were trees sprouting pastel-tinted fungoids, a few thin dark people in sarongs and coolie hats working among the growth. They cut the wild tobacco
weed, Pete said; they smoked incessantly because it cost them nothing.

Now there were often groups of workers on the banks, a
n
d every two or three miles there would be a stretch of bamboo h
o
uses on piles, or houseboats floating precariously on bamboo rafts. There were boats much larger than the canoe, masted prahus drawn up on to narrow beaches or pushing lazily through the water with a load of banana leaves for thatching. Terry saw a woman weaving a new wall to her house, a whole flock of parakeets transferring from one tree to another, shrieking because a tree viper had attacked them. Then the light was gone and occasional fires were the chief sign of life.

It was just after eight when they reached a much larger settlement than any they had seen during the day. There were the usual houses above the water, but behind them stretched a fair-sized kampong. And sloping down and well beyond the water

s edge was a jetty where children sat and swung their legs, eagerly watching the arrival of the white tuan and the white mem.


We

re there,

said Pete.

This is Tembin.

There was a little quiver in Terry

s voice.

We can actually go straight to Penghu by road?


Yes, but I

ve been thinking about it. It may take time to arrange for transport and at best it

s an hour

s run. Also it might be better for you to turn up in Penghu in daylight—say mid-morning. I

m sure we could stay here tonight.

Terry found herself snatching at the suggestion.

Perhaps you

re right. It would be awfully late and perhaps unsettling. I ... I don

t mind staying.


I

ll fix it,

he said, and then shouted teasingly to the children who were leaning perilously over the water, competing for the privilege of catching the rope he would throw.

In the hot smoky darkness, Terry closed her eyes and thanked heaven for the temporary reprieve.

 

CHAPTER
FOUR

AT Tembin there was a rest-house s
i
milar to the one at Vinan, except that it contained only an iron table and two chairs. The hospitable Malays were willing, however, to turn the hut into a bedroom, and without prompting they brought half a dozen straw mattresses and made two beds of three mattresses each. If Pete hadn

t stopped them they might have built the beds six feet high. They provided blankets, stringy towels, bowls of steaming rice and meat, and brought tumblers formed from sections of bamboo with
one end sealed from which to drink the kava wine that was part of the service.

With the doorway unscreened, Pete and Terry sat and ate, smoked cigarettes and watched the narrow beach become deserted. The sounds of human beings had died away when Pete squashed out his cigarette and said,


I

ve been putting this off because I don

t want to spoil the day, but I

m afraid we

ll have to have a talk. It

s probably our last chance of being quiet and alone.

Terry nodded and unconsciously pushed her feet rather hard against the floor, to brace herself. Watching the smoke as it curled from her cigarette, she said,

There

s not really very much to discuss, is there? You have just to destroy that certificate. You said you

d do it as we left Vinan territory.


That was before I

d given it any thought. I

m still certain it

s worthless, but just to set your mind completely at rest, I

m going to consult a solicitor friend of mine in Penghu. I

ll get him over to my house for dinner, and I

ll destroy the thing in front of him; you can depend on his silence. You needn

t worry about it at all.


I won

t. I

m sure you

ll get rid of it as soon as you can.

He leaned back in the protesting grass chair.

Now, the next thing. What did you plan to tell your sister about the trip here from Vinan?

She drew in a dry lip.

Well, I ... I

d rather not lie. She and I have always been truthful with each other.


I imagined that.

He paused.

Seems to me you may as well be quite open about it. You were stranded at Vinan, I was coming up the river and offered to bring you. At night-time we stopped at villages and with the Lunns. You only have to imply that it was monotonous and I was a bore, to complete the picture.

She flickered a glance at him.

I won

t say much at all, and luckily my sister will be full of her wedding. You don

t know the construction company staff, do you?


I

ve met a couple of fellows casually, that

s all. They haven

t been here very long, and being a bunch of newcomers they stick together. Why?


I was wondering what you would say if Vic spoke to you.


Your prospective brother-in-law?

He smiled a little tightly.

I

ll say you were a good child, no trouble at all. And leave it there.

He would do it convincingly, too; she was sure of that. She wished her throat had not suddenly become so painful.

Is there anything else?

He studied her for a moment.

You

ve said you

ll stay while your sister needs you. Any idea how long that

s likely to be?


Not till I

ve seen her.

She felt a little drawn and sad, as she added,

I

ll leave as soon as I can, of course.

He was cool and level-toned.

We may not meet often, but if there

s anything I can do for you at any time while you

re here you can contact me quite easily. If there

s no car available, just get a trishaw boy to bring you out to the plantation, or to carry a letter. If it

s nothing urgent, you can ask the little man at the post office to drop a letter into my mail box there.


Thank you. It

s not very likely that
you

ll
want to get in touch with
me
.”


If I did, I

d probably come to Mrs. Winchester

s house.

She shook her head quickly.

No, don

t do that. I really feel that when we part tomorrow morning it should be pretty well for good. I don

t know why.


I could give a guess at it,

he said drily.

You

ve been at a disadvantage with me a few times, and you want to forget it.


Perhaps that

s it.

It was as good a reason as any she might herself fabricate. There was a silence before she said quietly,

We don

t seem to have much to talk over, after all. Everything is perfectly clear, isn

t it?


Seems so.


It

s been a ... a lovely day, Pete.


Not bad at all.


I want to thank you for
...
everything.


Do you?

he said non-committally.

In low tones she said,

You

re making it rather hard for me to tell you how grateful I am for all you

re done.


Maybe I don

t want to know.

He lit another cigarette, left the packet close to her on the rough wood table so that she could do the same when she had finished the one she
was smoking, and leaned back.

You

ll soon forget these few days.


And you?


I

ll be busy—plenty to do during the next month or so.

A pause, before he added with a hint of malice,

You

ll be seeing Roger Payn tomorrow. Does the thought make your heart beat faster?


I shall be glad to meet him again,

she said evenly,

just
as
you

ll be glad to meet your Astrid. One has to go on living.

He nodded negligently.

And making love. It

s all part of the pattern. You

d better get some sleep now.

She felt stifled.

Can

t we take a walk?


A short one, if you like, but it

s going to rain.

The thunder had been rolling along the river for some time, but it was only then that Terry became aware of it. As they came out into the inky darkness she winced from a flash of lightning. So far, the few showers she had experienced in this country had been torrential but not spectacular. Tonight, though, the noise and lightning had come first, and bouncing and zigzagging among the trees they threatened, every second, to start an earthquake or a conflagration. The rain, when it came, dropped in single large lumps for just long enough to allow them to dash ba
ck
to the hut. Then came the emptying of the heavens, with tumultuous thunder and tongues of lightning of matching intensity.

Terry lay back on one of the beds and
cl
osed her eyes, while sweat ran over her temples and made her body as wet as if she had just stepped from a bath. Her fists
cl
enched against the noise, her teeth tight, she willed the storm to cease. When at last she opened her eyes, she saw Pete outlined in the doorway, watching what must be for him a familiar tropical scene. The candle had gone out, but he loomed there, a blade outline against thrashing trees and a sky which was rent by red and violet flames. The very sight of him, exposed to such shattering elements, unnerved her. She flung herself over and face downwards, lay there suffocating till, eventually, the thunder rolled away and the rain became a mere downpour.

There was no sound above that battering of rain upon the banana-leaf roof, and without the fireworks the storm became bearable. Terry turned to her side and looked across the
small
hut towards the other bed, where Pete lay on his back with his arms characteristically under his head. His eyes were wide open; she could see that.
W
hat was he thinking about? Tomorrow, when he would again take up his familiar way of life at the rubber estate? Of his work
...
and friends? Was he thinking of the fair woman who had begged him to bring her a Siamese cat? He had three gifts for her
...

Terry

s head ached, the air grew cool and made her shiver. She slept, and awoke some time later to find herself covered by a blanket. It was still raining, and Pete still lay on the other bed, though his head was turned away from her so that she couldn

t tell if he slept. It was the longest night of her life.

The dawn was wet and white. The rain had stopped, but trees dripped and parakeets angrily fluffed their wings, impatient for the drying sun. The village woke sluggishly, Pete disappeared, and Terry got up and washed at the tin basin.

The light had become pearly with struggling sunshine when Pete returned. He brought cooked fish and some coffee, and Terry looked at him with tired eyes. He was brown and cleanly shaven, wore a fresh shirt and clean shorts.

In businesslike tones, as he placed the breakfast on the table, he said,

We shan

t be able to leave very early—the road will be too muddy and we can

t risk getting stack. Still, if we can get away before noon, you

ll arrive in time for lunch.


How are we travelling?


Rather better than I expected. There

s a coconut plantation owned by a rich old Malay just outside the village. He has a Landrover and has promised to lend it to us, with a driver. If it were my own I

d start out now, and run through bush if we met a lake on the road. Can

t do that with someone else

s bus.


Driving on a road of any kind will be quite civilized, won

t it? Didn

t you say it was an hour

s run?


It

s only twenty miles, but the road is narrow and twisted and you can

t go fast. Come on, eat up.


I

m not hungry.

He looked at her, shoved a browned fish on to a wooden plate for himself and sat down. A little roughly, he said,

You look white and scared. Snap out of it.


I

m sorry. I

ve a headache—the storm, I suppose.

He rose.

I

ll get you some aspirin. Eat a bit of that meal bread before you swallow them. It

s tough, but it

ll help to ward off nausea.

He placed a couple of tablets on the table, poured some coffee into a mug and sweetened it with condensed milk.

I guess you

ve had about as much of this kind of living as you can take.

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