Authors: M. M. Kaye
Gussie was discussing cookery with Lorraine, while Larry Dowling was lying on his stomach on the sand and putting records on the gramophone, and Amalfi and Eduardo had strolled away along the beach in the wake of Lash and Tyson. It would be quite easy.
Dany stood up, brushing off sand, and went across to murmur in her mother's ear, and Lorraine said vaguely: âYes, of course. But why not just behind a rock, darling? There are lots about.'
Dany withdrew, flushed and indignant, and once out of range of the dying firelight began to walk quickly, hurrying without running, until at last she reached the rocks that bounded one end of the
Kivulimi
beach, where she paused briefly to look back. But she could no longer see the glow of the drift-wood fire or any of her fellow picnickers, and the only thing that moved in the moonlit world were the ghostly little crabs, the lazy, lapping tide, a soft breeze and the lateen sail of an idling dhow.
Once on the far side of the rocks the
Kivulimi
beach lay before her, quiet and deserted, and Dany ran across the white, open sand and up the short rock path to the door in the garden wall.
The heavy wooden door with its flaking paint and iron nail heads creaked as it opened, and the sound was suddenly daunting. Dany stood still under the stone archway, listening intently, but she could hear nothing more than the soft breathing of a little breeze that whispered among the leaves of the garden and rustled the palm fronds.
There were no lights on in the house, but the white-washed walls and the window-panes caught and reflected the moonlight so that it gave the impression of being brightly lit and awake and watchful. An impression so strong that for a moment Dany found herself wondering if it was still looking seaward, as it had in a past century, for the sails of ships â merchant ships, pirate ships, whaling ships, ships from Oman and the dhows of the slave traders.
Then I'll go sailing far, off to Zanzibar â¦
Dany caught her breath in a small sob, and looking resolutely away, turned to follow a path between the orange trees, skirting the pool and keeping parallel to the wall until she reached the flight of steps that led up to the guest-house.
The top of the wall was bright with moonlight, but the steps were in black shadow, and Dany was half-way up them when she heard the gate creak again.
She froze where she stood; listening with every nerve strained and alert for the soft crunch of crushed shell and coral that would tell her that she had been followed. But it did not come, and as the gentle breeze lifted the fringe on her forehead she remembered that she had left the gate open, and the breeze would have swung it on its hinges. And turning again she ran up the remaining steps, careless of noise and only aware of the necessity for speed.
The guest-house too was in darkness, and Dany turned the handle of the door, and pushing it open, felt for the switch.
The light seemed startlingly garish after the cool white night outside, and she turned it off again; realizing that she did not need it, for it was not here that she meant to search. She did not even glance about the room, but went straight to the window and looked out and up.
The bougainvillaea swung down from the roof edge in a mass of blossom whose colour had been almost lost in the moonlight, and it was not going to be nearly as easy as she had thought to stand on the narrow window-ledge and reach up.
The wall itself was built up on a little rocky cliff, and there was a drop of at least thirty feet from the window-ledge on to more rocks. Looking down on them Dany felt a cold qualm of vertigo, but it was too late to draw back, and she might not get a chance like this again.
She set her teeth, and having climbed cautiously on to the narrow ledge, holding desperately to the wooden frame, found that the worst part was turning round to face the wall. But once that was accomplished the worst was over, and with her back to the horrifying drop below her she found that she could look up into the mass of creeper above her with comparative ease.
She reached up and felt among the leaves, but could find nothing; and then her wrist touched a round edge of stone. There was a gutter some distance above the window; a narrow curve of stone, choked with dust and dead leaves and jutting out a few inches from the wall in the shadow of the overhanging creeper.
Dany found that she could just reach into it, and probing with shrinking fingers, fearful of snakes or spiders, she touched something that was not a dead leaf. And knew with a dreadful, sinking despair that she had been right. It was Lash who had taken the letter.
She drew it out from its hiding place and looked at it in the moonlight. A man's white linen handkerchief wrapped neatly about something that could only be a small folded piece of paper.
She felt a little sick and oddly light-headed, and for a moment she swayed against the wall, pressing her cheek against the rough stone, and afraid of falling. Her left hand, gripping the window-pane, felt cramped and numb, and she knew that she must make the effort to get down and back into the room while she had the power to do so. She could not stand here, silhouetted against the lamp light, where anyone passing on the beach below could look up and see her.
She bent her head and her knees, and sliding her left hand down the frame, stepped down on to the low window-seat.
And it was only then, looking down at her scarlet linen sandals on the gaily coloured cretonne cover of the window-seat, that she remembered that she had turned out the light only a few minutes ago. But it was on now.
Dany stood quite still: unable to move or breathe. Unable even to lift her head.
Then someone had seen her leave, and had followed her. Someone had come up the steps and into the guest-house; but standing on the window-ledge with the rustling of the creeper in her ears she had not heard them. And in the shock of finding the thing that Lash had hidden she had not even noticed that the light had been switched on, or known that someone was standing in the doorway, watching her â¦
She lifted her head very slowly and stiffly, as though fear had frozen her muscles, and looked into the cold eyes that were watching her from across the room.
âThere now! I
knew
you'd lead me to it if I gave you the chance,' said Nigel Ponting in a self-congratulatory tone. âReally,
too
simple.'
He tripped across the room and held out a thin, elegant hand. A hand as curved and predatory as the claw of a bird of prey.
âThat's a good girl.'
He twitched the handkerchief from between her nerveless fingers and unwrapped it, disclosing a small folded square of yellowed paper which he opened and favoured with a smiling, comprehensive glance. âYes, indeed. The goods â as advertised. How very satisfactory! And now, darling, if you'll just stay right where you are
____
'
Dany shrank back and clutched at the sides of the window as he came towards her. âNigel â what are you going to do? You can't tell them! Not yet. He â there must be some explanation. He must be â be in the F.B.I., or something like that. You said so yourself! He
couldn't
be a murderer. He couldn't! Don't tell anyone. Give him a chance to explain first. Or â or to get awayâ¦'
âWhat
are
you babbling about, dear girl?' inquired Nigel. âDon't tell who what? Give who a chance to explain?'
âLash. Oh, I know he took it, and I suppose it looks bad, but it can't be. And even if it were, I don't want the police to get him, whatever he's done! Nigel, please
____
!'
Nigel stared at her for a long moment, and then burst out laughing. âMy dear girl
____
! Oh, this is
too
delicious! Do you mean to say that you still haven't got it? Well, well! don't they teach you anything at these expensive schools? Perhaps it's a pity to disillusion you. But why not? It isn't your American dreamboat whom the police would want to interview. Alas, no. It would be yours truly â Nigel P.'
â
You?
But you can't â It couldn't be
____
'
âOh, but it could. It was! I read that peculiar document of Emory Frost's (your respected step-father is not aware that I possess a duplicate key to his locked box!) and also the letters to Honeywood. Even â I blush for it â your mother's to you. It was all laughably simple. Then all I had to do was to ask for a holiday, slip off to Kenya, and get a dear friend to flip me across to Egypt where there are simply
dozens
of nasty men who will do anything to annoy the Great White Raj.'
âEgypt
____
' repeated Dany in a dazed, foolish whisper. âBut Mr Honeywood wasn't
____
'
âTch! Tch!'
said Nigel reprovingly. âYou don't really suppose I stayed there, do you? No, they merely fixed me up with the necessary papers and popped me on to the plane for Naples, where I was met by a fascinating character; quite unscrupulous and
madly
talented. He used to be top make-up man in a film company before the war â and
what
a loss to the trade! You simply wouldn't have recognized me boarding the London plane a couple of hours later. I made a ravishing Signora. Too
chic!
I wasn't
nearly
so alluring on the return journey; but perhaps just as well, as we had some
rather
impressionable Oriental potentates on board. Direct to Cairo that time: and by a different line of course â you've no idea how efficient the whole set-up is! The staff work was quite beyond praise. As slick as a Sputnik. One was
most
impressed.'
A sudden hysterical wave of relief swept over Dany, drowning all other considerations. âThen it wasn't Lash! It was you â it was you!'
Her knees buckled under her and she collapsed on to the window-seat, weak with tears and laughter.
âOf course it was,' said Nigel with a trace of impatience. âWho else would be likely to know everything that went on in this house? And the whole affair would have gone off swimmingly if only you'd done what you were told. Really,
very
tiresome of you! I had it all worked out. Honeywood knew me, and he'd have had the packet ready and handed it over like a lamb when I explained that Tyson had sent me for it because you couldn't come. But you had to change the time and go and see the old fool in the morning instead, and mess everything up. So vexing and unnecessary.'
He frowned at the recollection, and then his face cleared and he laughed. âAh well
____
! “All's well that ends well”. And now, darling, as we haven't got all night
____
'
Dany scrubbed her eyes with the back of her hand and looked up. And then, suddenly, terror was back. A crawling, icy terror that widened her eyes until they were dark pools in her white face.
She had been too stunned by shock and relief to take in more than a fraction of what Nigel had said, but now, staring up at him, she realized that he had been saying things that he would never have said unless ⦠unless â¦
Her mouth was so dry that it was an effort to speak at all, and when the words came they were only a harsh whisper:
âWhat ⦠are you going ⦠to do?'
âOnly give you one little push,' said Nigel gaily. âIt's a thirty-foot drop, and on to rocks, so it ought to do even better than that cunning little staircase trick. And Holden will be able to tell them just exactly how it happened. You were standing on the sill to reach into his private
cache
and you must have slipped and fallen. Like this
____
'
His hands caught her, forcing her back over the low sill, and then the dreadful numbness left her and she began to fight, twisting and clawing. But the ledge was low and her back was to the uncurtained window, and there was nothing to grasp at but wood and stone.
Her finger-nails scraped and broke and her screams were no more than harsh, gasping breaths: she was no match for Nigel's five-foot-nine of lean bone and muscle, and those thin white hands, that had once felt so limp, were astonishingly strong and curiously smooth â as though they were encased in silk. They gripped her shoulders, pulled her forward and then jerked her head back violently against one side of the window embrasure so that it hit the stone and stunned her.
A savage pain seemed to slice its way through her skull: coloured lights shot before her eyes, and the strength went out of her. She heard Nigel's little giggling laugh, but it seemed to come from a long way off, and to be cut off suddenly and sharply. And then the grip on her shoulders relaxed and she was falling ⦠Falling down miles of echoing darkness from the window ⦠No, not the window ⦠Down a well. An underground well. Deep and cold and black, where there was black deep water in which she would drown â¦
The water filled her eyes and nose and mouth, choking her, and something burned her throat and choked her afresh. She struck out wildly, struggling to swim and to keep her head above water, and her hand touched something and clutched at it frantically.
A voice that hurt her head abominably said: â
Hi!
â look out! Let go of my ear!' And she opened her eyes with an enormous effort and found herself looking up at Larry Dowling.
Mr Dowling, who also appeared to have been in swimming, was tenderly massaging the side of his head and holding a dripping water jug, the contents of which he had evidently poured lavishly over Dany.
She stared up at him, blinking the water out of her eyes and wondering why he was there and where she was. Nothing made any sense except that, somehow, he had saved her from drowning.
âAre you all right?' inquired Larry Dowling anxiously.
Dany attempted to give the matter her consideration, and after a moment said childishly: âI'm wet.'