Authors: Sara Craven
veiled remarks to open recriminations,
both of them becoming angrier and less
accessible to reason with every moment
that passed, with Rachel sitting in
between them, a helpless spectator,
trying to resist the urge to press her
hands over her ears and shut out the
cruel hurtful things they were hurling at
each other.
'You'll be a pauper, boy, d'you hear me?
A pauper!' Sir Giles had crashed his fist
down on the table making the silver and
glasses jump. 'What can you expect but
some minor post in a beggarly university
department—spending your vacations
taking elderly maiden ladies on fossil-
hunting expeditions. What kind of life is
that for a Crichton?'
'My God, you make me sick!' Mark had
jumped to his feet, his face crimson with
temper. 'You and your preconceived
ideas of everyone outside your narrow
bigoted experience! Why, you don't even
know the kind of salary a top class
geologist can command from an oil
industry these days.'
'Top class—you?' Sir Giles had laughed
sneeringly. 'It takes years, boy, to get to
the top in any profession, and you didn't
even get an Honours degree. You'll be
back here in a year, moaning that you
can't manage on your salary, begging me
for a hand-out. Well, wait and see what
answer you get!'
Mark was white where he had been red
before. He leaned across the table,
staring his grandfather in the face. His
voice was very even and distinct as he
said, 'If and when I ever do come back,
I'll be rich. I'll have so much bloody
money that I'll make you eat every word
you've said. And I shan't come back until
I've got it.'
He'd walked out of the room, and Rachel
had gone after him, but it had been no
use. He'd looked at her almost as if he
didn't see her, and her pleadings had
been to no avail.
In the end she'd said, 'Mark, he's an old
man. You can't do this to him. You can't
—just walk out like this.'
His remote look deepened. 'Does age
give you the right to ride roughshod over
everyone? We've had it all our lives,
Rachie, ever since Mother and Father
died, and I've had enough of it. He's had
pre-ordained slots for both of us, and I'm
not going to humour him any longer. He
seems to think the only wealth in the
world is to be found in the City of
London. Well, I'm going to teach him that
he's wrong.' His hand came up and
touched her cheek. 'I'll be back one day,
Rachie. Don't worry about me.'
It had been a week later that Grandfather
had suffered his first minor attack, and
Rachel, panicking and sending for Mark,
had discovered that he was nowhere to
be found. He had given up his flat and
apparently vanished into thin air. She
did the rounds of his closest friends, but
none of them knew, or professed not to
know, where he had gone. And she'd
waited, endlessly, for the phone call, the
letter, the message of reassurance which
did not come.
And now, six months later, Sir Giles had
suffered yet another attack, and this time
he was really ill. Every bone in the
proud old face seemed suddenly
prominent beneath the transparency of
his skin, and Rachel felt a sudden
dryness invade her mouth as she looked
at him. Was he— could he be dying?
Uncle Andrew had never suggested a
nursing home before, especially a high-
powered one like the Mordaunt Clinic.
She sank her teeth into the softness of her
lower lip and waited for the sick man to
speak again.
He moved restlessly at last and opened
his eyes again, blinking a little as if even
the muted light in the room hurt them.
He said hoarsely, 'I was going to fetch
him, Rachel. It's all in the desk
downstairs—my
air
ticket,
hotel
reservation in Bogota—everything. I'd
planned to leave next week as soon as
the inoculations took effect. You'll have
to go instead.'
For a dazed moment she thought her ears
had deceived her—or that she was going
mad.
Then she saw his eyes fixed on her with
almost painful intensity, and heard him
repeat, 'You'll have to go, Rachel. It's
the only way. Bring the boy home to me
— before it's too late.'
Andrew Kingston said angrily, 'It's the
most ridiculous thing I've ever heard of.
You can't seriously mean that you're
going?'
Rachel said wearily, 'What choice do I
have? You've told me yourself how ill
he is—that another attack could occur at
any time and be fatal. He wants to see
Mark before he dies. It's understandable.
He's his heir, after all.'
Dr Kingston moved his shoulders
sceptically. They were in his private
office at the Mordaunt Clinic, a tray of
freshly made coffee on the desk between
them. Sir Giles had been brought there
by ambulance only half an hour before
and was now in an intensive care unit.
Rachel had been in to wish him
goodnight, but he had been under heavy
sedation and had not recognised her.
He said, 'My dear child ' and paused,
apparently lost for words.
She smiled rather wearily. 'He has it all
arranged. He even has an appointment
tomorrow for all the various jabs—
yellow fever, cholera—you name it. I'm
supposed to keep the appointment in his
place. The bookings are made, and my
passport is in order. I don't need a visa
as I don't expect to stay more than ninety
days. It—couldn't be better.'
Dr Kingston's frown intensified. 'My
dear, it couldn't be worse. What can
Giles be thinking of? A beautiful young
woman like you—alone in South
America of all places!'
She said quietly, 'He's thinking of Mark.'
There was a brief unhappy silence while
Andrew Kingston looked at her across
the desk. There had been a feature
article about her recently in one of the
Sunday papers. It had described her
jibingly as the 'Ice Maiden' of the
English stage, and perhaps that was the
impression she gave, with her cool
blonde beauty and air of rather aloof
composure. But a more discerning
writer, he thought, might have detected
the vulnerability beneath the poise which
betrayed itself in the soft curves of her
mouth, and the faint shadow which so
often lurked in her green eyes.
He said abruptly, 'But what about your
career? The play you're in—and that
panel game on television?'
She smiled. 'The play closed—and I've
finished my stint on that particular game.
My agent has other offers which I've
been considering, but there's nothing as
yet that I feel I would die rather than
miss. For all practical purposes I could
go to Colombia. I've been promising
myself a holiday, and it would get me
away from the English winter.'
'Oh, it would do that all right,' said
Doctor Kingston grimly.
Rachel leaned forward, setting down her
empty cup. 'I told him I'd go,' she said
quietly.
'What?'
'You told me not to let him get excited.
He saw that I was hesitating and he
started to get—very excited, so I had to
agree. He wants Mark home. It means
everything to him—the sorting out of this
stupid quarrel. Mark won't refuse to
come back with me when he knows what
the situation is.'
'But do you have to be the one to tell
him?' he demanded. 'This fellow—
Forsyth—who saw Mark in Bogota.
Couldn't he arrange something—have the
boy traced?'
Rachel sighed. 'But don't you see that
would mean including other people—
strangers—in
a
family
upset?
Grandfather wouldn't be able to bear
that. You're really the only person
outside the family who knows what
happened, and you're my godfather, so
that makes it—legal, I suppose. And it
isn't really so onerous, you know. The
arrangements have all been made for me.
All I have to do is fly out to Bogota next
week, trace this Arviles family and
persuade Mark to come home—that is if
he wants to see. Grandfather alive.' She
swallowed painfully. 'I doubt if I'll be in
the country more than forty-eight hours.'
Doctor
Kingston
nodded
almost
absently, his fingers playing with the cap
of his fountain pen. Then he said gently,
'My dear child, what are you trying to
prove?'
He saw the colour rise in her face. 'That
isn't fair!'
'It's the truth, Rachel, so what about it?'
She got up from her chair and went over
to the window, pulling back the curtain
and looking out into the darkness. She
said, 'Do you know, it's snowing quite
hard now.' And then with barely a
change of tone, 'Don't you see, Uncle
Andrew, he's asked me to do this for
him. It's the first time in my life that he's
ever asked me for something. He's
always been the one to give—you know
that, ever since Mother and Father died.
And he always made it clear that no
return was ever expected or wanted,
because I was a girl.'
'But he's always been proud of you. And
you're making a name for yourself in the
theatre now. That must please him.'
She smiled wryly and let the curtain fall
back into place.
'Grandfather
has
always
secretly
believed that women belong in two
places—and the theatre is neither of
them. He has always looked on my
career as a, curious aberration which
will be cured when I do the right thing
and marry, and produce a family—boys,
naturally.'
'Rachel!'
'Oh, it's true, Uncle Andrew, and we
both know it. He forgave me for my sex
a long time ago, but he's never let me
forget it either—until now—and I'm not
going to let slide an opportunity for
'Grandfather to see me as a person. I
want him—I need him to be grateful to
me, and if that sounds an unworthy
motive for going to find Mark, then I'm
sorry, but it's the only one I've got.'
She swung back towards him, her lips
smiling and her eyes luminous with
unshed tears.
She said lightly, 'I'm relying on you to
give me the necessary shots, Uncle
Andrew. I'd rather it was you than this
strange doctor that Grandfather has
found. You know what a coward I am.'
Andrew Kingston said soberly, 'That
isn't quite the word I'd have used, my
dear. But if your mind is made up, then
I'll say no more.'
Rachel leaned her aching head against
the cool glass of the cab window and
stared out at the rain-washed streets that
they were so rapidly traversing. It had
been a long and tiring journey and she
was beginning to wish that she had
obeyed her first impulse and stretched
out on the comfortable bed in her hotel
room. As it was, she had stayed only
long enough to register and leave her
luggage before enquiring at the desk if
they could provide her with Senor
Arviles' address.
The
senor
seemed to be quite as well
known as Larry Forsyth had said, for
within a matter of minutes a taxi had
been summoned by the helpful clerk, and
Rachel was on her way to the expensive
suburbs which lay to the north of Bogota
beneath the towering and slightly
oppressive peaks of the Andes.
It was much cooler than she had
anticipated,. and Rachel found she was
glad of the cream-coloured suit in fine
wool she was wearing. What little she
knew about the prevailing climate in
Latin America did not seem to apply to
Bogota, and she supposed vaguely that
this was due at least in part to the fact