Bowman wound down his window, tore his telegram envelope into tiny shreds and dropped them to the gutter: he hoped the citizens of Arles would forgive him his wanton litter-bugging. He left the car and passed into the hotel patio, meeting the Chinese couple on the way. They looked at Bowman impassively from behind their reflector glasses but Bowman did not as much as glance their way.
Le Grand Duc, stalled at the traffic lights, was, surprisingly enough, displaying no signs of irritation at all. He was absorbed in making notes in a book which, curiously, was not the one he habitually used when adding to his increasing store of gypsy folklore. Satisfied, apparently, with what he had written, he put the book away, lit a large Havana and pressed the button which controlled the dividing window. Carita looked at him enquiringly in the rear-view mirror.
âI need hardly ask you, my dear,' Le Grand Duc said, âif you have carried out my instructions.'
âTo the letter, Monsieur le Duc.'
âAnd the reply?'
âNinety minutes, with luck. Without it, two and a half hours.'
âWhere?'
âReplies in quadruplicate, Monsieur le Duc. Poste Restante, Arles, Saintes-Maries, AiguesMortes and Grau du Roi. That is satisfactory, I hope?'
âEminently.' Le Grand Duc smiled in satisfaction. âThere are times, my dear Carita, when I hardly know what I'd do without you.' The window slid silently up, the Rolls whispered away on the green light and Le Grand Duc, cigar in hand, leaned back and surveyed the world with his customary patriarchal air. Abruptly, after a rather puzzled glance through the windscreen of the car, he bent forward all of two inches, an action which, in Le Grand Duc, indicated an extraordinarily high degree of interest. He pressed the dividing window button.
âThere's a parking space behind that blue Citroën. Pull in there.'
The Rolls slowed to a stop and the Duke performed the almost unheard-of feat of opening the door and getting out all by himself. He strolled leisurely forward, halted and looked at the pieces of yellow telegram paper lying in the gutter, then at the Chinese who was slowly straightening with some of the pieces in his hand.
âYou seem to have lost something,' Le Grand Duc said courteously. âCan I be of help?'
âYou are too kind.' The man's English was immaculate, Oxbridge at its most flawless. âIt is nothing. My wife has just lost one of her earrings. But it is not here.'
âI am sorry to hear it.' Le Grand Duc carried on, sauntered through the patio entrance, passed by the seated wife of the Chinese and nodded fractionally in gracious acknowledgement of her presence. She was, Le Grand Duc noted, unmistakably Eurasian and quite beautiful. Not blonde, of course, but beautiful. She was also wearing two earrings. Le Grand Duc paced with measured stride across the patio and joined Lila, who was just seating herself at a table. Le Grand Duc regarded her gravely.
âYou are unhappy, my dear.'
âNo, no.'
âOh, yes, you are. I have an infallible instinct for such things. For some extraordinary reason you have some reservations about me. Me! Me, if I may say so, the Duc de Croytor!' He took her hand. âPhone your father, my friend the Count Delafont, and phone him now. He will reassure you, you've my word for that. Me! The Duc de Croytor!'
âPlease, Charles. Please.'
âThat's better. Prepare to leave at once. A matter of urgency. The gypsies are leaving â at least the ones we're interested in are leaving â and where they go we must follow.' Lila made to rise but he put out a restraining hand. â“Urgency” is a relative term. In about, say, an hour's time â we must have a quick snack before departing for the inhospitable wastes of the Camargue.'
To the newcomer the Camargue does indeed appear to be an inhospitable wasteland, an empty wasteland, a desolation of enormous skies and limitless horizons, a flat and arid nothingness, a land long abandoned by life and left to linger and wither and die all summer long under a pitiless sun suspended in the washed-out steel-blue dome above. But if the newcomer remains long enough, he will find that first impressions, as they almost invariably do, give a false and misleading impression. It is, it is true, a harsh land and a bleak land, but one that is neither hostile nor dead, a land that is possessed of none of the uniformly dreadful lifelessness of a tropical desert or a Siberian tundra. There is water here, and no land is dead where water is: there are large lakes and small lakes and lakes that are no lakes at all but marshes sometimes no more than fetlock deep to a horse, others deep enough to drown a house. There are colours here, the ever-changing blues and greys of the wind-rippled waters, the faded yellows of the beds of marshes that line the
étangs,
the nearblackness of smooth-crowned cypresses, the dark green of windbreak pines, the startlingly bright green of occasional lush grazing pastures, strikingly vivid against the brown and harsh aridity of the tough sparse vegetation and salt-flats hardbaked under the sun that occupy so much the larger part of the land area. And, above all, there is life here: birds in great number, very occasional small groups of black cattle and, even more rarely, white horses: there are farms, too, and ranches, but these are set so far back from roads or so wellconcealed by windbreaks that the traveller rarely sees them. But one indisputable fact about the Camargue remains, one first impression that never changes, one that wholly justifies its timeand-time again description as being an endless plain: the Camargue is as featurelessly smooth and flat as a sun-warmed summer sea.
For Cecile, as the blue Citroën moved south between Arles and Saintes-Maries, the Camargue was nothing but an increasingly featureless desolation: her spirits became correspondingly increasingly depressed. Occasionally she glanced at Bowman but found no help there: he seemed relaxed, almost cheerful, and if the consideration of the recently spilled blood he had on his hands bore heavily on him he was concealing his feelings remarkably well. Probably, Cecile thought, he had forgotten all about it: the thought had made her feel more depressed than ever. She surveyed the bleak landscape again and turned to Bowman.
âPeople
live
here?'
âThey live here, they love here, they die here. Let's hope we won't today. Die here, I mean.'
âOh, do be quiet. Where are all the cowboys I've heard of â the
gardiens
as you call them?'
âIn the pubs, I should imagine. This is fiesta day, remember â a holiday.' He smiled at her. âI wish it was for us too.'
âBut your life is one long holiday. You said so.'
âFor us, I said.'
âA pretty compliment.' She looked at him consideringly. âCan you tell me, offhand, when you last had a holiday?'
âOffhand, no.'
Cecile nodded, looked ahead again. Half a mile away, on the left-hand side of the road, was a fairly large group of buildings, some of them quite substantial.
âLife at last,' she said. âWhat's that?'
âA
mas.
A farm, more of a ranch. Also a bit of a dude ranch â living accommodation, restaurant, riding school. Mas de Lavignolle, they call it.'
âYou've been here before, then?'
âAll those holidays,' Bowman said apologetically.
âWhat else?' She turned her attention to the scene ahead again, then suddenly leaned forward. Just beyond the farm was a windbreak of pines and just beyond that again there was coming into view a scene that showed that there could, indeed, be plenty of life in the Camargue. At least a score of caravans and perhaps a hundred cars were parked haphazardly on the hard-packed earth on the right-hand side of the road. On the left, in a field which was more dust than grass, there were lines of what appeared to be brightly coloured tents. Some of the tents were no more than striped awnings with, below them, trestle tables which, dependent on what was piled on them, acted as either bars or snack-bars. Other and smaller canvas-topped stalls were selling souvenirs or clothes or candy, while still others had been converted into shooting galleries, roulette stands and other games of chance. There were several hundred people milling around among the stalls, obviously enjoying and making the most of the amenities offered. Cecile turned to Bowman as he slowed to let people cross the road.
âWhat's all this, then?'
âObvious, isn't it? A country fair. Arles isn't the only place in the Camargue â some of the people hereabouts don't even consider it as being part of the Camargue and act accordingly. Some communities prefer to provide their own diversions and amusements at fiesta time â the Mas de Lavignolle is one of them.'
âMy, my, we are well-informed, aren't we?' She looked ahead again and pointed to a large ovalshaped arena with its sides made, apparently, of mud and wattles.
âWhat's that? A corral?'
âThat,' Bowman said, âis a genuine old-fashioned bull-ring where the main attraction of the afternoon will take place.'
She made a face. âDrive on.'
He drove on. After less than fifteen minutes, at the end of a long straight stretch of dusty road, he pulled the blue Citroën off the road and got out. Cecile looked at him enquiringly.
âTwo straight miles of road,' he explained. âGypsy caravans travel at thirty miles an hour. So, four minutes' warning.'
âAnd a panic-stricken Bowman can be on his way in less than fifteen seconds?'
âLess. If I haven't finished off the champagne, longer. But enough. Come. Lunch.'
Ten miles to the north, on the same road, a long convoy of gypsy caravans were heading south, raising an immense cloud of dust in their passing. The caravans, normally far from inhibited in the brightness and diversity of their colours, seemed now, in their striking contrast to the bleakness of the landscape around them, more gay and exotic than ever.
The leading, vehicle in the convoy, the yellow breakdown truck that had been pressed into the service of hauling Czerda's caravan, was the only one that was completely dust-free. Czerda himself was driving, with Searl and El Brocador seated beside him. Czerda was looking at El Brocador with an expression on his face that came as close to admiration as his presently rather battered features were capable of expressing.
He said: âBy heavens, El Brocador, I'd rather have you by my side than a dozen incompetent unfrocked priests.'
âI am not a man of action,' Searl protested. âI never have claimed to be.'
âYou're supposed to have brains,' Czerda said contemptuously. âWhat happened to them?'
âWe musn't be too hard on Searl,' El Brocador said soothingly. âWe all know he's under great pressure, he's not, as he says, a man of action and he doesn't know Arles. I was born there, it is the back of my hand to me. I know every shop in Arles that sells gypsy costumes, fiesta costumes and
gardien
clothes. There are not so many as you might think. The men I picked to help me were all natives too. But I was the lucky one. First time, first shop â just the kind of shop Bowman would choose, a seedy old draper's in a sidestreet.'
âI hope, El Brocador, that you didn't have to use too much â ah â persuasion?' Czerda was almost arch about it and it didn't become him at all.
âIf you mean violence, no. Those aren't my methods, you know that, and besides I'm far too well known in Arles to try anything of the sort. Anyway, I didn't have to, nobody would have to. I know Madame Bouvier, everyone knows her, she'd throw her own mother in the Rhône for ten francs. I gave her fifty.' El Brocador grinned. âShe couldn't tell me enough fast enough.'
âA blue and white polka-dotted shirt, white sombrero and black embroidered waistcoat.' Czerda smiled in anticipation. âIt'll be easier than identifying a circus clown at a funeral.'
âTrue, true. But first we must catch our hare.'
âHe'll be there,' Czerda said confidently. He jerked a thumb in the direction of the following caravans. âAs long as they are here, he'll be here. We all know that by this time. You just worry about your part, El Brocador.'
âNo worry there.' El Brocador's confidence matched Czerda's own. âEveryone knows what mad Englishmen are like. Just another crazy idiot who tried to show off before the crowd. And dozens of witnesses will have seen him tear free from us in spite of all we could do to stop him.'
âThe bull will have specially sharpened horns? As we arranged?'
âI have seen to it myself.' El Brocador glanced at his watch. âCan we not make better time? You know I have an appointment in twenty minutes.'
âNever fear,' Czerda said. âWe shall be in Mas de Lavignolle in ten minutes.'
At a discreet distance behind the settling dust the lime-green Rolls swept along in its customary majestic silence. The cabriolet hood was down, with Le Grand Duc sitting regally under the shade of a parasol which Lila held over him.
âYou slept well?' she asked solicitously.
âSleep? I never sleep in the afternoons. I merely had my eyes closed. I have many things, far too many things, on my mind and I think better that way.'
âAh! I didn't understand.' The first quality one required in dealing with Le Grand Duc, she had learned, was diplomacy. She changed the subject rapidly. âWhy are we following so few caravans when we've left so many behind in Arles?'