Read The Adventurers Online

Authors: Robbins Harold

The Adventurers (77 page)

"No comment." Then she quickly turned her face away so that the reporter could not see the tears suddenly rushing to her eyes.

Dax and Sue Ann had been married that morning in Scotland.

"It's dark in here."

"I find it restful."

"And it stinks. You've been smoking those damn cigarettes again." El Presidente crossed the room and, pulling back the drapes, opened the windows. The warm sweet air came rushing in. He stood there for a moment breathing deeply, then turned to face her. "I don't understand what you get from them."

Amparo was sitting in a chair, half turned toward the window. Slowly she stubbed the cigarette out in an ash tray. "They relax me," she said quietly. "Sometimes things get to be too much for me. When I can't face myself or anyone else they bring me peace. They slow everything down so that I can see things more clearly and sort them out."

"They are a narcotic. They are worse even than whiskey."

"Not worse, not better," she said. "Different."

He came over to her chair and stood looking down at her. "I found out where the arms are coming from."

Amparo didn't look up. Her voice was without curiosity. "From where?"

"The American in Monte Carlo."

"But I thought they were Communist made."

"They are," el Presidente answered, "the American is the agent. It is he who ships them, he who sells them all over the world. The same guns have turned up in Cuba and also in Santo Domingo."

"Oh."

"He must be made to stop." "How will you do that?" Amparo asked without any real concern. "There will only be others to take his place."

"We will have to deal with the others, too. Meanwhile we gain time to prepare."

"Prepare?" For the first time some expression came into Amparo's face. "Prepare for what—disaster?"

Her father didn't answer.

Amparo began to laugh quietly.

"What are you laughing at?"

"You," she answered, her voice reflective. "Cuba and Santo Domingo. Batista, Trujillo, and now you. You men with your cocks and guns and power. Can't you see that your time is drawing to a close? That you're already extinct, like the dinosaur?" Amparo closed her eyes wearily. "Why must you all try so hard to outlive your time? Why don't you all just go away quietly?"

"And who will take our places?"

Amparo didn't answer. Her eyes were still shut.

"The Communists. And what guarantees are there that things will be any better under them? None. Probably a lot worse."

Amparo opened her eyes but she did not look at him. "Perhaps the Communists must come before the people can think and do for themselves, as the night must grow darker before the day."

"If they come the night might never end."

Amparo's eyes seemed suddenly luminous. "Even at the two poles, where the nights seem to take forever, the day comes. The world has survived many things. It will survive the Communists exactly as it will survive you."

"I am thinking of sending Dax to negotiate with the American," her father said suddenly.

For the first time real curiosity came into her face. "How will you explain that to the people," she asked, "after what has already been told them?"

"The people?" El Presidente laughed. "It will be easy. The people believe what I tell them. I can be very magnanimous. For the many good services Dax has rendered our country, I shall order them to forgive him his one mistake."

"And you think Dax will be eager to do as you ask?"

"Dax is his father's son," her father said quietly, "and in a different way also mine. He has been my son ever since

I gave him over into Fat Cat's care and sent Mm to the mountains."

"And if he refuses?" Amparo's voice took on a peculiarly distant quality. "There is nothing you can do. He is now beyond your reach."

"He will not refuse," el Presidente answered steadily. "As his father did not refuse me even after my soldiers had killed his wife and daughter. It was for Corteguay that the father joined with me, and it will be for Corteguay that Dax will return."

"You are sure? Despite the fact that he may have made another life for himself in the two years he has been away?"

"You know he is married, then?"

"Yes," Amparo said, reaching for another cigarette. "I heard it on the American radio."

El Presidente stared at her for a moment, then nodded. "I am sure," he said. "Marriage will make no difference to Dax. He has been married before. One woman has never been more important to him than another."

"Why have you taken the trouble to tell me this?"

"You are my daughter," he said, smiling at her. "And having once been his wife, I thought you should be the first to know that he has been returned to my good graces."

When he looked back at her from the doorway Amparo was holding a match to a cigarette. Already its strange heavy aroma was again beginning to fill the room.

 

CHAPTER 20

 

"Oh, Christ! Stop it! You're hurting me!" Sue Ann's voice was thin with pain, her hands suddenly beating on his back. She pushed him away and rolled over on her side, fighting for breath. The mattress lifted as Dax shifted his weight away from her.

Sue Ann heard the scratch of a match as he lit a cigarette. Gratefully she took it from his fingers and dragged deeply on it. The pain in her loins subsided as she heard Dax light another for himself. She turned her head to look at him.

He was seated on the edge of the bed, his lean, muscled, dark body scarcely moving, watching her with his inscrutable black eyes. "Better?"

"Much better, thank you." She lifted her head, resting her chin on one crooked elbow. "That never happened to me before. I've gone completely dry."

There was a flash of Dax's white teeth in the dimness of the room. "Maybe you've never been on a honeymoon before," he said, a faint note of humor in his voice.

"I've never spent four days in bed without ever leaving the room, if that's what you mean."

"Complaining already. The honeymoon is over."

Dax got up from the bed and went to the window and pulled back the drapes. The sunlight came tumbling into the room, and then he threw open the windows to let the cold Scottish sea air come rushing in. "It's a beautiful day outside."

Sue Ann dove under the covers. "Close the window before I freeze to death!"

Dax pulled the window shut and stood smiling down at her. Just her eyes and her white-blond hair were visible; the rest of her from the nose down was covered.

"What kind of man are you?"

He didn't answer.

"Has there ever been another like you?"

"There must have been," he replied, smiling slowly. "Adam began a long time ago."

"I don't believe it. I'm sorry, Dax," she said, apologizing suddenly.

"For what?"

"For pushing you away. I didn't want you to stop but I couldn't take it any more. The pain was too much."

"It's my fault. I wasn't thinking."

"I know," she answered in a low voice, "that's what's so wonderful about it. You don't, you just do."

Sue Ann watched as Dax left the window and crossed the room naked to the dresser. He picked up his wristwatch and looked at it silently.

"What time is it?"

A faint hint of laughter came into Dax's dark eyes. "I forgot to wind it. I wonder why?"

A soft look came into Sue Ann's face and she reached out and touched him gently. "Do you remember in Boston when I used to come to your room?"

Dax nodded.

"Did you ever think that someday we'd be married?"

He shook his head. "Never."

"I did," she said, "once or twice. I wondered what it would be like being married to you."

"Now you know."

 

"Yes." Sue Ann pressed her lips lightly to his. "Now I know, and I wonder why I wasted all those years."

Dax put his hand down and stroked her hair gently. "We all waste years in one way or another."

Sue Ann turned her head slightly so that she could see his face. "Are you happy with me?"

"Yes, for the first time in my life I know exactly what's expected of me."

She half kissed, half bit him, then abruptly slid away. "Oh, yeah? Well, you can slow down, boy. I'm grabbing a hot shower."

He caught her in the shower stall just as the water came on. He lifted her up in his arms and held her against the wall. The bar of soap fell from her open hand. "Really?" he asked, his eyes laughing at her. "You're wet now, what excuse have you got?"

He let her slide gently down the wall onto him. "Oh, God! Be careful, you'll slip on the soap!" Then she felt him inside her and she closed her eyes, suddenly clinging to him frantically. "That's it! That's it. That's it!" she gasped in shuddering ecstasy.

Later, when they were lying on the bed again, quietly smoking, she turned to him. "I think I'll open the house in Palm Beach next month."

"O.K."

"It will be lovely there this time of the year. Winter in Europe never appealed to me."

Dax got out of bed and crossed the room.

"Where are you going?"

"I'm thirsty." He went into the other room and came back and stood drinking a glass of water.

Sue Ann watched him for a moment. "Besides, I bet my family is dying to see what you're like." She began to laugh. "My sweet Southern proper cousins will go out of their minds. Wait until they see how you fill out a pair of swimming shorts. They'll cream right in their cotton-pickin' pants."

The telephone began to ring as Dax put down the glass of water. "Who could that be?" Sue Ann asked. "Did you give anyone our number?"

"Only Fat Cat. I'll answer it." He picked up the receiver. "Hello?"

"It's Fat Cat," he whispered, covering the mouthpiece with his hand.

Sue Ann lit another cigarette and listened to his rapid Spanish without understanding a word. Idly she wondered how many languages he spoke. Mentally she ticked them off. Spanish, English, French, Italian, German. Suddenly she was very impressed. She had never been able to get past high-school French.

Dax put down the telephone and came over to the bed. "Our consulate in Paris has received an important letter for me from el Presidente."

"Will they send it on to you?"

Dax shook his head. "They are under instructions to deliver it to me personally. Would you mind very much if we went over there to get it?"

"Of course not. I was thinking about picking up some new clothes. After all, how would it look if I came home without a trousseau?"

"Pretty bad."

"When do you want to leave?"

 

"If we hurry we can make the late plane from Prestwick to London."

"The honeymoon is over."

Dax laughed.

She had a sudden idea. "Maybe it isn't. They say a drive through France is very romantic. We could pick up your Ferrari and the letter in Paris."

Dax shook his head. "I'm afraid not. Jeremy Hadley's kid brother Kevin and a friend just borrowed it to drive to Italy. They had a couple of girls with them."

Sue Ann had started to get out of bed but she stopped. "Girls?" she asked in a puzzled voice. "That's a big joke."

"What's so funny about that? Boys will do it, you know."

"I know, but not that kind of boy." Then Sue Ann noticed the peculiar look on his face. "Didn't you know?"

Dax shook his head silently.

"The kid's a swingin' fag."

Dax watched her go into the bathroom and close the door. A moment later he heard the shower running and he glanced at the telephone indecisively, then picked up a cigarette. It was too late to call Madame Blanchette. She must have thought him a stupid fool for not warning her.

Jeremy should have told him; no wonder he had been so concerned about publicity. Dax drew on his cigarette thoughtfully. Sue Ann had to be wrong, he thought suddenly. They had been in Europe all summer and Madame Blanchette hadn't said a word. Everything had to be all right or she would have found a way to let him know.

 

CHAPTER 21

 

"I'm sorry, but I don't see what I can do."

Dax looked at the cherubic little man with blue eyes. He seemed more the small store merchant than the man who had taken over when Sir Peter Vorilov died. He looked at the two bodyguards lounging silently but alertly against the wall. Then he turned and looked out the window.

Barry Baxter had taken over everything. Vorilov's old house high on the hill looking down over Monaco, the city, the port, even the sea. He turned back to the American.

"I, too, am sorry, Mr. Baxter. Many men will continue to die needlessly."

"I'm not responsible for that. I'm a businessman. I operate on a cash-and-carry basis. What is done with my merchandise is not my concern."

"I will inform el Presidente of our discussions," Dax said and got to his feet.

Baxter also rose. "You understand my position? If I were to begin selecting my customers I'd be taking sides. I can't afford to do that."

Dax turned to leave, and Baxter came around the desk and walked him toward the door. "Please inform his excellency that we have a complete line of counter-insurgency armament highly suitable for use in guerrilla warfare. And all in first-class condition."

Dax nodded silently. As if by an invisible signal the door opened. Two additional bodyguards stood just outside. Dax turned to the American. "Good day, Mr. Baxter," he said formally. He did not offer his hand.

"Good day, Mr. Xenos. If there is any other way I can be of help to you, please don't hesitate to call on me."

The door closed behind him and Dax walked thoughtfully through the spacious entrance hall to the front door. They could obviously expect no cooperation from Baxter. He had thought that from the very beginning. The shipments of arms would have to be stopped in some other way, perhaps before they got into the country. And that was the problem. It could not be coming in by small boats. The quantity was too great. Somehow the bandoleros must have found another way.

Dax went out into the driveway and his chauffeur opened the car door respectfully. He looked up at the sky. It had suddenly clouded over with heavy dark clouds racing up the coast from Italy. He squinted at them critically. There would be heavy rain tonight. It was like that on the Riviera in late September.

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