Dangerous Waters (25 page)

Read Dangerous Waters Online

Authors: Rosalind Brett

he draped the stole over her arm, slanted him a daggerlike glance as she took a pace towards the door.

I

m thinking of other people—how the thing will look to them, if they get to know. They

ll never believe that the permit and passport were
...”


Give over,

he said roughly.

How would you have had me react to Bretherton

s news—go all chivalrous and take you to a minister to make it all bright and shiny? Do you think I could live with a woman I

d married in such a way? I may be tough, but I

m not that insensitive!


You

re taking too much for granted,

she said swiftly.

I wouldn

t want you, either! I just thought you might have tried to be a little gentle about it
.


Well, I can

t be gentle,

he said abruptly.

In this last hour the whole damn thing has come to mean too much. I want your promise that you won

t go spilling it all over Mrs. Winchester, or anyone else.


I shan

t want to talk about it.


See you stick to that. If there

s anything to discuss, I

m the one who has to listen—no one else.


Oh, for heaven

s sake! I

m going.

He looked angry and exasperated, but did not stop her. He followed her outside and opened the car door. She slipped into her seat and was thankful that he got behind the wheel and started the engine without speaking. The moon had gone, and they ran out into a night that was pitch dark except where the car beams threw their rays.

Terry sat looking small and pale and discouraged. Pete

s stillness behind the wheel had the taut power of a coiled steel spring. He ended the silence in clipped accents.


Since we arrived in Penghu you seem to have lost your sense of humor. It

s going to be a long wait, and it won

t help if you use yourself up right at the start. One fact we both have to accept; the situation exists, and we can only set about altering it in as private a way as possible.

She looked out at the black shapes of the rubber trees.

You must hate the idea of waiting as much as I do.


I do hate it, but I can

t do anything about it. The law has to take its sluggish course.


Will you
...
tell Miss Harmsen?

He replied coolly and decisively.

I shall tell no one.

His savage distaste for the whole affair, she supposed, sprang from his feeling for the Swedish woman. Whatever happened, he

d make sure that that relationship was not tainted in any way.

They arrived at the square, where hardly a light showed, and he pulled in outside the Winchesters

house. Before he could reach her door she had got out and was standing at the foot of the steps.

He said curtly,

Take something to put you to sleep—let

s hope things won

t look so grim in the morning. I

ll come over some time tomorrow.


I

d rather you didn

t. There

s no need to keep a tab on me. You helped me a great deal once, so I shan

t let you down now.

A warning glitter in his eyes, he began,

Look here, Teresa
...”

But Terry had had enough.

Good night,

she said.

In sudden fury, as she made to move up the steps, he reached out and grasped her wrist. She stopped, stared at him with dilated eyes while her hand drew into a tight fist and wrenched itself free.


Don

t do that,

she said in a craced whisper.

Don

t ever touch me!

For a throbbing moment it looked as though he might do something more drastic than merely touch her wrist. Then he twisted away, and in a couple of strides was back in the car. He took it away from the square at speed.

Terry went indoors, crossed the dimly-lit lounge and tiptoed to her bedroom. Just as she closed the door she heard Roger in the passage, hoping for a tete-a-tete before bed. She didn

t answer his whispered call, hardly heard it. She was thinking, hysterically, that in Vinan she was married to Pete Sternham. Married ... to Pete!

 

CHAPTER
SEVEN

IT is an accepted fact that one becomes resigned even during the most shattering periods in one

s life. That was what Terry told herself many times in the course of the next few days, but somehow the knowledge was neither comforting nor reassuring. No one could have convinced her that she would become accustomed to the fact that some sort of legal bond existed between herself and Pete Sternham. Each night she went to bed mentally exhausted, and each morning she awoke to a state of disaster. Had the man been someone else there might even have been a touch of humor in the situation. But the man was Pete, who had become hard and enigmatic and watchful.

Being Pete, he was able to drop in at the Winchesters

each day without rousing the smallest suspicion. In fact, after that first call he was there more or less at Mr. Winchester

s invitation. To each other they became Bill and Pete; there was talk about the constructional problems in spanning the rivers and the small ravine, about the quicker transport of rubber, about labor troubles and health projects. In his own clever fashion Pete had twisted the situation to make it appear as if he and Bill Winchester had numerous common interests, and they never parted without one of them saying, in effect,

I

ll find out about it, old chap, and let you know.

Thus ensuring another meeting in the near future.

Gradually Terry

s tension slackened a little, and she was able to greet Pete casually when he appeared. He made no attempt to speak privately with her, nor did he take much interest in Roger. Outwardly it appeared that he found the older couple more congenial than the younger. Perhaps he really did.

Terry wished there were hard work to do at the flat, but actually, there was very little work of any kind. A small oldish Malay woman arrived there with the curtains and cushions, and she helped to complete the arranging of the rooms. The twin beds were piled with bedclothes and covers, the kitchen cupboards packed with utensils and tinned foods, the fridge ready for use. Wedding presents were an orderly array in the living-room, and on the built-on desk Terry had placed a list of them with the names and addresses of the givers; Annette must be persuaded to write her thank-you letters as soon as she returned.

During the flat but painful couple of weeks after Annette

s wedding, Vida Winchester provided the only normal brightness in Terry

s life. In the first place, she insisted on Terry

s learning to play bridge, which can become an absorbing pastime. Then she gave a tea-party, and Terry got to know some of the gentle-eyed Malay women who were wives of local business men and planters. Mrs. Pryce turned up—she had been collected at the coast and brought to Penghu by car and plane — and Terry found a diversion in becoming reacquainted with the vivacious little woman who had been such fun on the ship. Some small social event happened every day; Vida, observant and curious but not openly inquisitive, did her best to keep Terry occupied. And Terry was grateful that the days passed so quickly. She only wished she could have responded wholeheartedly and happily, but always in the background there was a sense of nightmare.

Then, quite suddenly, Roger was summoned to Singapore. He turned up early for lunch, waving a telegram
and looking more jubilant than in the circumstances was decent.


Seems the old man has slipped a disc,

he exclaimed,

and he

s going home for an operation. Mother

s going with him, of course, and they want to see me before they leave. I

m to spend a week in Singapore with them. And, Terry, they

ve invited you as well!


But
...


How very nice,

said Vida, from her chair in the corner of the veranda.

It

s just what you need, Terry.
You

ll
love Singapore. When are you leaving, Roger?


They

re booking two plane seats for Terry and me and will send them on. We may have to wait a week or ten days, but that will be all the better, won

t it? By then Vic and Annette will be home. Terry!

His eyes gleamed and he winked.

We

ll have a marvellous time.

Of course you will,

said Vida.

But, Roger, you

re not to worry her. You

d like to—I

ve seen it in your eye a good many times—but don

t. Just go to parties and have a generally breathless time.

Roger laughed. All sorts of things come under the heading

breathless

. But I

ll take immense care of you, Terry darling. I

ve every reason to!

Like everything else that happened these days, Roger

s exuberant invitation did not quite get through to Terry; there seemed to be a thick blanket between herself and the rest of the world. She listened all through lunch while he talked of the things they would do and see, and occasionally spared a kind thought for his father

s health. Dispassionately, she decided that he was less likeable here in Penghu than he had been in England; and equally dispassionately it occurred to her that Penghu seemed to have that effect on people. Even Annette

s personality had lost warmth. It must be the enervating
cl
imate, Terry decided.

That afternoon she spent alone with Vida. They half slept on loungers till tea-time, and over tea they chatted. When she talked about her husband, Vida had a slow, half-humorous smile that was deceptive. About some things she was reticent; no one ever learned whether she regretted being childless, or whether she had minded spending most of her married life in out-of-the-way places. She had a quiet easy manner, the knack of friendliness. Terry commented upon this last, and Vida said,

Everyone has to have something. Generally it

s a talent of some kind, and I don

t happen to possess any. But I found out quite early in life that my being tolerant and cheerful made others happy. Incidentally, it made me happy as well, so I made rather a thing of it
.
Over the years, it

s become part of me.


I think it was very lucky for Annette that she came here to you.


I

m sure it was,

said Vida with a smile.

Two or three times she was on the point of cracking, but I refused to let her know that it worried me. From her point of view there was no sense in putting on a show to a poor audience, so she relaxed.


Now you

re pretending to be feline!


Not at all. I like your sister when she

s normal. People who dramatize themselves are often good company, but you do have to be careful—or rather, casual—when they

re wound up.

She pushed away a teacup and lit a cigarette.

You two aren

t much alike, you know. Annette will occasionally give her husband bad times, but you won

t be touchy and difficult when you

re married.

She paused and added thoughtfully,

During this past week or two I

ve wondered whether you and Roger suit each other. For a man he

s a rather frothy individual. You think so too, don

t you?

Terry took a cigarette for. herself, bent her head as she struck a match.

He and I went out together in England only a few times, but I found him terribly attractive. His letters were lively, and there was his background—a family chain of business in the tropics. For someone like me he was quite a heady combination—rather more than a good-looking young man under a tropic moon. I believed he had everything I admire in men.

She stopped, realized what she had said and cast a swift glance at Vida

s knowledgeable smile. Hastily she added,

I

ve disappointed him, I

m afraid. In England I hadn

t a care and we seemed to match up beautifully. Our letters to each other were full of the silliest jokes, and he

d sometimes slip in a little love-message that kept me happy for days. I do seem to have muddled everything, though.

Other books

Adrift by Steven Callahan
On Kingdom Mountain by Howard Frank Mosher
Castleview by Gene Wolfe
Fifty/Fifty and Other Stories by McFarland, Matthew W.
Mistral's Daughter by Judith Krantz