Authors: Sara Craven
other parts of the ecology can be damaged, as you know. So I have
made sure that all the new seedlings I have planted over the past
eighteen months are well scattered.'
'But won't that mean, eventually, that collecting the rubber will take
more time?' Charlie had wrinkled her nose.
'Yes,' he'd said. 'But time is something we have in abundance in the
rain forest.'
Well, Charlie thought, staring into the darkness, that might be true
for him, but not for her. She couldn't wait to get out of here, and
back to reality. All she had to do was find a way.
One idea that presented itself was to persuade him to take her with
him to the rubber plantation and the collective processing plant, and
that was why she'd tried to evince an intelligent interest in what he'd
been telling her.
And it was quite fascinating, she was forced to admit, although he
undoubtedly had an uphill struggle on his hands. It was also
gratifying that he seemed to possess such sympathy and concern for
the environment. He was clearly a more complex personality than
she'd first imagined, and would not be too easy to forget.
Determinedly she wrenched her mind back to her plan. She would
have to get him to trust her sufficiently to allow her to come and go
relatively unsupervised. And that would be a problem because
Riago da Santana was no one's fool. He wouldn't be convinced by a
sudden pretence of submission.
But she still had her money, after all, intact in her bag, and once
she'd established herself as a regular visitor to the plantation maybe
it would be possible to bribe one of the
caboclos
to take her to
safety.
It all sounded desperately tentative, she acknowledged unhappily,
but she had to grab at any passing straw.
The next morning was dry but humid. Mosquito weather, Charlie
thought as she took her malaria protection tablets.
To her surprise, Riago was at the table in the
sala de jantar
when
she entered. The small, melancholy man standing talking to him she
recognised as one of her abductors.
'Planning another kidnap?' she asked as she sat down, reaching for
the coffee-pot.
'I regret your humour is lost on Pedrinho,' he said bitingly. 'And the
situation we speak about is no laughing matter either. Some of the
caboclos
have reported seeing
garimpeiros
in the locality.'
'What are they?'
'Prospectors looking for gold and precious stones.'
'Aren't people allowed to seek their fortune along the Amazon any
more? I thought it was everyone's dream to find El Dorado.'
'A lot of these men are criminals, seeking to smuggle their finds out
of Brazil. They have faked passports from Bolivia and Colombia,
and are usually armed and violent. If they are operating in our area
the
caboclos
are right to be afraid.'
'Oh.' Charlie sipped some coffee reflectively. Now seemed hardly an
opportune time to request a guided tour of the plantation, she
decided with irritation. She would have to be patient a little longer.
'So what do you do about these people?' she asked at last. 'Organise
a man-hunt?'
'No,' he said. 'Any more than I would deliberately kick a sleeping
snake. We organise patrols—let them know they have been seen,
and so warn them to come no nearer. Living as they do, off the
jungle, with no proper food or medical attention, many of them do
not survive. Sometimes the forest sends them crazy. Often they kill
each other.'
'That's awful.' Charlie grimaced. 'Can't anything be done?'
'How simple you make it sound,' he said softly. 'You come from a
small, law-abiding island, and you think you can impose your
limitations on the rain forest—the Green Hell, as they call it here.
Do you imagine you can police hell as you would your own home
town?'
'If you look on it as hell then why do you live here?'
He shrugged. 'There are worse places. And I have a job to do.'
He was still holding something back and she knew it, but decided
not to press the point. Whatever secrets his life might hold were no
concern of hers. She didn't want to become interested—involved.
That was too risky. At the moment she was merely intrigued, she
told herself staunchly, but unless she was careful that could develop
into a disastrous attraction.
Riago rose from the table with a brief word of apology, and left the
room, Pedrinho following in his wake. They'd both certainly looked
grim, Charlie mused as she tackled her breakfast. These
garimpeiros
must be a genuine menace.
When she'd finished her meal she hung around irresolutely for a few
minutes, wondering where to go and what she was expected to do.
She couldn't face another day wandering from room to room like a
lost soul.
Reluctantly she went in search of Riago. She found him in his
office, and checked in the doorway, startled, when she saw he was
loading a gun, something she'd only witnessed up to then on films
and television. But watching it happen in real life had none of the
drama or glamour of a screenplay, she realised breathlessly. It was
threatening and sinister.
Riago looked round, half smiling as he registered her presence in the
doorway, but his expression changed when he saw her face.
'Is something wrong?'
'You're not actually going to use that?'
His brows rose in faint hauteur. 'Yes, if I need to. You disapprove?'
'Well, of course I do.' Her hands twisted together. 'I hate any kind of
violence.'
'You think you are alone in that?' Riago shook his head. 'But there
are situations when ideals will no longer serve—and realism must
prevail.' He slid the gun into a holster on his hip. 'Believe me,
Carlotta, I will defend myself and what belongs to me. No one takes
what I do not want to give.'
'You sound as if we were under siege.'
'Sometimes I feel as if we are.' His voice was suddenly weary.
'Every day there is the eternal battle with the environment here to
guard my plantation against insects and blight—to protect my
workers against disease and death. There are predators everywhere,
and the worst are the human kind.' He paused. 'But I'm sure you did
not seek me out just to discuss the evil of violence.'
Charlie bit her lip. 'No. I came to ask how I'm expected to occupy
myself here. You have the plantation, and Rosita and the servants
look after the house, but I have nothing to do, and it gets tedious.'
'It bores you to learn how to manage my household?'
'I didn't realise that's what I was supposed to be doing,' Charlie said
tautly. 'Quite apart from the language barrier, your household seems
to manage very well already without my intervention.'
'Rosita is a jewel,' he agreed. 'But until you have learned some
Portuguese I shall have to provide you with an interpreter. Rosita's
nephew Agenor speaks some English. I'll ask him to come up to the
fazenda.'
'That would be a start,' Charlie admitted. 'But it's still a very long
day.'
He was silent for a moment. 'I brought a crate of books when I came
here—some English ones among them,' he said at last. 'I will have
them unpacked for you.'
'Thank you,' she said. 'But I can do without
The Do-it-yourself
Guide to Latex Production.'
His lips quirked in faint amusement. 'I think you will find them
slightly more entertaining than that. Do you sew? According to my
mother, there is always mending to be done.'
'I knew this was a time warp,' she said bitterly. 'What else?'
'You could always pamper yourself a little,' he suggested silkily.
'Make yourself beautiful for my homecoming tonight.'
It was what Fay Preston would have done, she thought,
remembering grudgingly the blonde girl's high-gloss exterior and
faultlessly enamelled nails. Fay would probably have spent hours
bathing and scenting herself, ready for her lover's pleasure.
The thought sent a flare of colour into her cheeks and an edge to her
voice.
'I'm afraid that's not my style.'
'You see no need to make yourself desirable for your man?' His eyes
flicked over her in sardonic enquiry, and her flush deepened.
'Frankly, no.'
'A pity,' he said. 'But you will learn, and it will be my pleasure to
teach you.' His voice was caressing, deliberately seductive, and to
her horror Charlie felt a little stir of excitement deep within her in
response.
'Don't count on it,' she snapped, then turned on her heel and marched
away, hearing his laughter follow her.
She went into the bedroom, slamming the door behind her. She
found she was trembling, and this annoyed her even more. She
couldn't afford to let him get to her like this, or to remember what it
had been like in his arms that night.
She walked over to the
guarda-roupa
and opened the door, glaring
at the clothes that hung there as if they were to blame for
everything. From now on, she resolved, anything she wore would be
hers alone, and not some pathetic adaptation.
When Rosita had shown her round she'd seen a sewing-room with
bolts of cloth in it—cotton prints in bright, clear colours. She knew
her measurements well enough and had done a certain amount of
dressmaking in the past. She could surely make herself some basic,
simple shifts, practical but without allure.
She waited until she was sure Riago had left the house before
finding her way by trial and error to the sewing-room.
She chose a pretty yellow fabric, spread it on to the floor, and
marked out a rough pattern before picking up the scissors. She
would just have to improvise, she decided, cutting into the cloth
with gritted teeth.
She was fully absorbed in her task, when there was a tap at the door,
and Rosita peered in at her, her face astonished.
'Ai, senhorita!'
she exclaimed protestingly as she realised what
Charlie was doing.
Charlie gave her a challenging look. 'Is something the matter?'
Sighing gustily, Rosita gave her to understand that Agenor had
arrived. Carrying the roughly pinned dress over her arm, Charlie
followed her to the
sala de estar.
A large wooden crate of books stood in the middle of the floor, and
beside it was a boy of about sixteen, bashfully twisting his straw hat
in his fingers.
'Bom dia, senhorita,'
he greeted her. 'The
patrao
has sent me to
speak for you.'
'I'm very grateful, Agenor. Perhaps you'll also be able to teach me
some Portuguese.' Charlie smiled at him. 'In the meantime, can you
ask your aunt to bring me the sewing-machine?'
Rosita appeared displeased by the request. It was, Agenor relayed,
her pleasure to alter dresses for the
senhorita,
who should not
concern herself with such mundane tasks, and with such plain
material.
'I prefer my own style,' Charlie returned coolly, and Rosita, still
grumbling, reluctantly subsided.
While the sewing-machine was being brought Charlie began to go
through the books in the crate. To her surprise she found some
English classic writers, Dickens and Thomas Hardy among them, as
well as a selection of popular modern novels. And she was delighted
to come across a Wilbur Smith and a Stephen King, neither of which
she'd read.
There were some empty shelves in a cupboard at the end of the
room, and she arranged the books on these, reserving
Bleak House
for her immediate use. Agenor helped her. His English bordered on
the rudimentary, but, with a certain amount of miming and a lot of
goodwill, Charlie found they were able to communicate reasonably
well.
The sewing-machine turned out to be an old- fashioned hand-
operated model. Charlie threaded it, and began machining her
seams, chatting to Agenor while she did so.
He was clearly very much in awe of his surroundings, and of the
patrao,
whose name came often into his halting conversation.
Riago da Santana, Charlie realised, startled, was very much revered
in the locality. The processing plant which he'd built for the rubber
was very modern, Agenor said proudly, and the
patrao
also
organised the transportation and sale of the processed latex in
Manaus.
News that he had found a bride and was soon to be married had