Authors: Hammond; Innes
âThat's simple,' I said. âA girl as attractive as Iris Sunderby, if you'd got her alone in your hacienda â¦'
âYe mean ye'd be willin' to try and kill off her friends just to keep her to yerself?' He shook his head. âThat man is as cold-blooded as a snake. No, there has to be some deeper reason. And to suddenly decide he'll come with us â¦' He was looking at me, a hard, interrogative stare. âWhat is it about that ship? He knows where it is. He's willin' to pilot us there. Why? What's he know about it that we don't? And when we find it, what then?'
I shook my head, my attention half on the road. There were quite a few people about, women as well as men, nearly all Indians, some of them on mules. Donkeys, too, and because it was hot, with only the faintest breeze, many of the men had their wide-brimmed hats pushed to the backs of their heads, held there by the leather thongs that were really chin straps. Occasionally a garishly painted truck passed us, raising a cloud of dust, and away to the west, hanging over us and clearly visible now that the clouds had lifted, the coastal range of the cordilleras towered pale and trembling in the heat. I think what attracted me most about the country round was its Englishness, meadows deep in grass and wild flowers, and willows wherever there was water.
It wasn't truly English, of course. It had a different feel to it, a different look, a different smell. And there was Iris Sunderby's recumbent body sprawled in the back. Nevertheless, the countryside reminded me of East Anglia, the willows in particular making me realise how far I was from home.
At Cajabamba we joined a slightly better road, and soon afterwards we turned west and headed up into the mountains through Huamachuco, climbing all the way. I don't know how high the pass was, but even with the sun casting long, black shadows, there was none of the fearsomeness of the journey we had made only that morning. No storm mist shrouding the slopes, no rain, no lightning stabbing, no thunder rumbling, the clouds all swept away as though by magic, the sky blue, the mountains looking quite serene now, almost kindly in the late afternoon light.
Inevitably the road worsened as we neared the pass, the surface rutted by trucks and still awash with water spilling down steep gullies. An abandoned truck, its snout rammed into the steep bank of a cut, caused me a moment's panic. Ward was asleep. I was climbing in low gear, my eyes searching the vehicle and the bank behind it for any sign of movement.
âIt's all right.' He must have sensed my hesitation, his ears alert for any change in the note of the engine. âAh didn't tell him which route we were takin'. That truck has been there at least three days.'
âHow do you know?'
âUse yer eyes. The road's dry under the chassis.'
He was asleep again before I had edged the Toyota round it. Shortly after that we came over the top of the pass and started down towards the coast. The sun was setting and there were moments when I, too, felt like âstout Cortés' and thought I could see the Pacific. Perhaps here, from the vantage point of the Andes, I would see the green flash as the upper rim of the sun slid below the ocean horizon to leave a prismatic glimpse of the spectrum's final colour.
Twice I ran perilously close to the edge, my eyes dazzled and eyelids drooping. I was beginning to feel sleepy and I began to sing, softly, to myself. I was singing âAll things bright and beautiful â¦' I don't know why. I just felt that way. And then a voice from the back said, âWhere the hell am I?'
âWe're taking you down to the Pacific for a bathe,' I told her.
âLike hell you are! Where's Ãngel?' She was leaning forward.
I was on a tricky bend, the road falling away sharply and badly in need of a grader. I couldn't turn my head, but I could smell her, feel her breath on the back of my neck.
âStop the car!' Her voice was shrill. âI said stop the car. Turn round and take me back.' And then, when I said nothing and kept on driving, she said, âIf you don't stop, I'll jump out.'
I braked a little harder then and turned to look at her. Her face was still very pale, the skin shining with sweat, but the eyes were almost normal now, the pupils no longer dilated. I could see them quite clearly, the blue formed of all sorts of colours, like sapphires picked out in the sun's last rays.
âWhere are you taking me?' She started to wrestle with the nearside door, but Ward had locked it and in the end she gave up, lying back again and muttering something about remembering now.
âOur little skipper more herself, is she?' The way he said it I knew he meant to goad her. She flared up on the instant, turning on him and almost yelling, âYou bought a boat, that doesn't mean you bought me. Now tell our pest control officer here to turn round and drive back to the hacienda.'
âWhy?' Ward's face was suddenly contorted with anger. âWhy the hell dae ye want to go back there? Are ye in love with him? He fills ye up with coke, uses ye like a whore ⦠And he's yer own blood.'
âHow dare you!' Her face was flushed and angry. âHe's not my brother.'
âAll right, yer half-brother then.' And he added, turning the knife in the wound, âChrist almighty! Ye're a Catholic and you have an incestuous relationship â¦'
âI do not. I do not.' She banged her fists on the back of his seat.
âOkay, but what are ye goin' to say to the priest next time you go to confession, eh? How are you going to explain that ye're playing around â¦'
âHe is not my brother,' she repeated. âAnd I do not commit incest.' And then she went over to the attack again. âCan't you understand, you great big stupid
asqueroso
, was close to getting it out of him, the information I need to prove my husband is not imagining things. And I would have got it, if you hadn't come blundering in.'
âBalls! Ye'd never have got it out of him in a million years. Ye're besotted with the bastard. That's the real reason ye're holed up here in the mountains â¦'
âOh, for Christ's sake, stop your play-acting.' And she added, maliciously, âAll right. He's a beautiful hunk of male virility, something you'll never be, and I enjoy playing around with him, as you so delicately put it.'
That was when I scraped the fender on a protruding lump of rock. It's not often you find yourself an enforced eavesdropper on two people screwing each other up with murder in their hearts. And when he said, âYe start playin' around with the bugger on board
Isvik
â¦' I slammed on the brakes, stopping with a jerk that almost threw her on the floor.
âShut up!' I shouted. âBoth of you. The road's difficult enough without you yelling at each other, and I'm tired.'
An abrupt silence followed my outburst. I think they had both been so wrapped up in themselves they had quite forgotten my existence.
âWe're all tired,' Ward said at length.
âYes, but you're not driving.'
âWant me to take over?'
âHow far to the coast?' I asked.
âNo idea.'
âI'll drive till the sun sets,' I said. âI want to see it drop into the Pacific.' I let the clutch in, jerking the vehicle into motion again, my driving suddenly vicious. I think I was scared again. I had every right to be if there was going to be this sort of hostility between the two of them all the way down into the ice. And Gómez? There was Gómez, a catalyst for disaster.
My mind went back to the scene in that bedroom and the sliding doors to the paved patio. I seemed to remember statuary and flowers â hibiscus or something flaming red, roses maybe, in great urns â and there were doubtless other bedrooms leading off it with similar softly sliding glass doors. I should have questioned her then. Still mazed with whatever the drug was she had taken, I might have got the truth out of her. Was he her brother, or wasn't he? She said not. She'd been very positive about that, not just here in the car, but she had said it to me in the bedroom while I was packing her things and she was still in a mentally uninhibited state. And if he wasn't her brother, what were his real origins? And was she in love with him? Well, not in love perhaps, but besotted. I remembered the charm of the man, that almost blatant virility. And Ward had said it was all fixed, he would join us on
Isvik
and navigate us to within sledging distance of the trapped vessel.
And then, suddenly, there was the Pacific, and the sun, a great crimson ball, like the tuning indicator on a giant music centre, dipping its lower rim on to the hazed line of the horizon. I stopped right there, where I had an uninterrupted view, and watched the rim of it flatten out, spreading fire along the ocean's edge.
It didn't take long. It just sank slowly and steadily below the ocean's horizon, and suddenly it was gone. No green flash, nothing, and the sky above fading from blue through green to the beginning of Stygian darkness. Suddenly a star showed.
âVenus or Mercury? Venus, Ah think,' Ward said, and I realised he, too, had been watching the spectacle in absolute silence. âThat was the star that brought Cook into the Pacific â the transit of Venus. Tae centuries ago.' He was silent then and I had the feeling he was thinking of all that Cook had done, first in
Endeavour
, then in
Resolution
and
Discovery
, ships not much longer than
Isvik
. And he had taken them down into the Southern Ocean, not as far as we were going, but far enough to be in amongst the ice, circumnavigating the whole land mass of Antarctica in waters no man had ever sailed before.
âAh'll take over now,' Ward said.
III
RENDEZVOUS AT USHUAIA
ONE
âSo what did she say about him?'
âNothing,' I said.
âYe were in that room alone with her. She must have said somethin'.'
I shook my head.
âJesus Christ, man! Didn't ye ask her?' He was leaning forward across the table, staring at me with a sort of frustrated belligerence. âWeren't ye curious?'
âI was packing her things.'
âAh know ye were. But ye were there all the time Ah was talkin' to Gómez. Must have been quarter of an hour at least. Surely to God â¦' He stretched out his left hand and gripped my arm. âCome on, ye had the opportunity, and after that extraordinary scene in the garden ye must have been bubblin' over with curiosity.'
âShe was drugged,' I reminded him.
âAh know that.' His voice had risen, his impatience spilling into anger so that other guests were beginning to watch us. âNow just go back in yer mind to that room, tell me everythin' she said, or even how she looked in answer to your questions, that would help.'
âI didn't ask any questions,' I said. âNot the sort of questions you want answered. I asked where her suitcase was and she said, under the bed, where else? Oh, and before that, before she collapsed on to the bed, she called him a bastard. She said that several times, walking round the room.' I didn't tell him how she had caught hold of my hair again when I was reaching under the bed. I could still hear her voice, the way she had said, âYou don't approve, do you?' As though my approval mattered to her.
There was no room service and we were breakfasting in the hotel dining-room at a table looking out on to a square adorned by several yuccas and some dusty oleanders. Iris hadn't surfaced yet. She had told Ward she didn't want any breakfast.
âAnythin' else?'
I hesitated, but in the end I told him: âShe said something about how else could she get the location out of him?'
âThe location of the ship, d'ye mean?'
âI suppose so.'
âTradin' her body fur the information?' His grip on my arm had tightened, his voice, dropped to a whisper, suddenly quite menacing. âThat's what ye're implyin', isn't it? Or was it â¦?'
I shook my head, unwilling to answer him.
âAnd did he give her what she wanted?'
His persistence annoyed me. âSex or information?' I asked. âWhich do you mean?' The way I put it was intentional and I think if we hadn't been sitting in full view of some dozen of the hotel's guests he would have hit me.
âThe location,' he almost snarled.
âNo. She was suddenly flat out.'
He stared at me a moment, as though he suspected I might be hiding something from him. Then he let go of my arm. âOch well, Ah'll have to get it out of her myself.' He sat back, evidently considering how to go about it, then finished his coffee and got slowly, almost reluctantly, to his feet. âAye, Ah'd best have a wee talk with her myself.' He glanced at his watch. âOn the road at nine-fifteen, okay?'
He was just turning to leave the room when the door opened and Iris appeared. It was almost as though there were some telepathic understanding between them. Later I was to find this sort of coincidence recurring. They were after all, both of them, Sagittarians.
As she came over to our table I was amazed at the change in her. The olive colouring of her skin was back in full bloom, and though she was wearing little or no make-up, her lips, or rather her mouth, which, with her nose, was the most notable part of her features, was bright red. Her cheeks, which had been so white the previous evening, now had colour, and instead of sagging with exhaustion she radiated the extraordinary vitality that had so attracted me at our first meeting on the
Cutty Sark
. âIsn't it about time we hit the road?' She was addressing Ward, not me, and she glanced pointedly at her watch.
âAh was just comin' to call ye,' he answered gruffly.
She ignored that and asked him whether he'd booked her a seat with us on the flight south from Lima.
âAh was plannin' to drive down through Arequipa to the Chilean border.' His manner was slightly defensive. âThere are quite a few archaeological sites Ah'd like to have a look at while Ah'm here.'