Authors: Sara Craven
desolation.
With a little shiver she reached out for
her clothes, telling herself that it was
only the fact that she was clad in nothing
but a damp towel which was making her
feel chilled to the very bone.
Rachel was not sorry to leave the army
post the following day. The dinner had
proved to be something of an ordeal,
with some of the younger officers
present exchanging furtive looks and
smiles as she entered. The muttered
name 'Arnaldez' from one of them soon
provided her with an explanation for the
air of rather knowing familiarity with
which they greeted her. Carlos was
presumably
in
the
guardroom,
entertaining everyone with his version of
her relationship with Vitas.
But their attitude soon changed to one of
somewhat dazed respect when Vitas
announced their forthcoming marriage
and Pablo Lopez rose to propose their
healths.
It disturbed Rachel to be given this
evidence of how much female chastity
was prized, and how a woman who
departed from the code ordained for her
might be treated. She didn't know
whether to feel grateful or resentful over
the difference that Vitas' announcement
had made to them, although she
suspected that her treatment at the post
might have been very different if she had
not been about to become Senora de
Mendoza.
Vitas had accepted the good wishes
which had been offered with courtesy,
but his manner to Rachel was still
distant, and she thought unhappily that
she was being punished for the harsh
things she had said to him at Diablo.
But if his manner at the dinner was cool,
it became positively icy when he
discovered that she had decided to
travel to his home in the ambulance with
Mark, rather than fly ahead with him in
the waiting helicopter.
For a moment she thought he was going
to argue with her, even order her to
travel with him, but instead he turned
away, telling her expressionlessly that
she must act as she thought best.
As it was, the journey turned out to be a
disaster, Mark was in some pain, and a
thoroughly
pettish
mood,
and
he
grumbled
continuously,
apparently
blaming Vitas exclusively for the fact
that he had broken his leg, and ignoring
the fact that he could easily have been
killed.
Rachel's patience ran out long before the
journey was over, and she told him
roundly that he should think himself
lucky.
'I can't see how you make that out,' Mark
said crossly. 'Dragging us into his feuds.
Didn't he realise how dangerous it was?'
'He hardly had to drag you into anything,'
Rachel pointed out. 'You were there in
the thick of it, thanks to your stupid
quarrel with Grandfather—and your
greed.'
Mark looked sulky. 'To think that hoard
of emeralds was there all the time, and I
never knew,' he muttered.
'You and a million others,' she said. 'I'm
glad Vitas did what he did. They're
buried for ever now, and no one will
ever be tempted.'
'Well, I think he's mad,' Mark said
rebelliously. 'No one destroys a fortune
like that.'
'Those jewels carried the seeds of their
own
destruction
with
them,'
she
protested. 'They were unlucky. Didn't
Miguel Arviles tell you that...'
'Miguel's
an
old
woman,'
Mark
complained. 'I wouldn't have minded
risking a bit of bad luck to get my hands
on a few of those stones. You're not
going to tell me that the high and mighty
Mendoza family haven't been quietly
milking them over the centuries.'
'I'm not going to tell you anything.'
Rachel's tone was weary. 'You probably
wouldn't believe me if I did. And I think
you've had all the bad luck you can take,'
she added, giving his cumbersome
plaster a significant look.
Mark relapsed into a sullen silence, and
Rachel found she was regretting the
impulse which had decided her to travel
with him. He obviously had no need of
her company.
In spite of the stuffy atmosphere in the
ambulance, and the persistent jolting, she
managed to doze off, and woke to find
that they were slowing down. She
roused herself, smoothing back her
dishevelled hair and running her palms,
slightly damp with apprehension, down
her denim-clad thighs.
The first person she saw as she
descended from the ambulance was
Vitas, a stranger in a lightweight formal
suit. He stepped forward, and put his
lips briefly on her cheek.
'Welcome to your home, Raquel,' he said
quietly. 'My mother is waiting to greet
you.'
She took the arm he extended to her and
feeling rather foolish walked towards
the arched front door and the line of
waiting servants. She wished she could
have made her first entrance in
something a little more impressive than
jeans and a shirt. Something in wild silk,
she thought wistfully, and perhaps even a
picture hat.
The fleeting glimpse she had been
vouchsafed of the exterior of the house
had pleased her. Built in two storeys, it
seemed to reflect the elegance of a
bygone era. The red tiles of the roof had
a mellow glow in the late afternoon sun,
and archways gave brief views of
courtyards with flowers and fountains,
and a vivid splash of turquoise which
might have been a swimming pool.
Inside, the elegance continued, with
exquisitely tiled floors and a gracious
staircase with a wrought iron balustrade
curving up to the upper storey.
'My mother has her own suite on the first
floor,' Vitas said abruptly. 'I have
ordered that your brother be taken
straight to his room. It has been a long
and tiring journey for him.'
And for me, Rachel thought, but knew if
she uttered the thought he would
probably say it was her own fault and
that she could have travelled in comfort
with him, instead of riding, cramped and
jolted over endless miles of dusty roads.
She accompanied him up the stairs and
along a wide gallery to an impressive
pair of carved doors at its end. He lifted
his hand to tap at one of them and
glanced down into her tense face.
'Relax, Raquel,' he advised. 'My mother
will be delighted with you. You are the
answer to her prayers.'
The woman who rose to meet them as
they entered was of medium height, but
her dignity and presence made her seem
taller. She wore a plain black dress, in
impeccable taste and a sunburst brooch
blazed on her shoulder. Rachel found
herself gathered into a scented embrace
and held warmly.
'Bless you, my child!' There were tears
in the Senora's eyes as she stood back.
'And bless you, Vitas, for bringing her to
me. She is as lovely as an angel. What
an exquisite bride she will make, and
how happy I shall be to dress her. It is
so long since Juanita was married.'
'At least two years,' he supplied drily. 'If
you wish to talk to Raquel about clothes,
then I will leave you and make sure that
her brother is comfortable and has all
that he needs.'
Rachel felt unutterably self-conscious as
the doors closed behind him, and she
was left alone with the Senora.
'Come and sit down, my child.' The
Senora waved her towards a sofa set in
front of the wide window. 'I shall not
detain you long. You will wish to go to
your room and bathe and rest before
dinner. Vitas is having your luggage sent
here from Asuncion, but I have chosen a
few things that were Juanita's for you to
use in the meantime. If you decide on a
dress for this evening, my maid will
carry out any small alterations that are
necessary.' She smiled at Rachel. 'Later
of course you will choose your own
maid, but at first several girls from the
estate will wait on you in turn so that
you can get to know them and decide
which will suit you best.'
She picked up a piece of embroidery and
began to work on it.
'I have also arranged for my dressmaker
to come here the day after tomorrow,
when you are rested, with patterns and
samples of material for your wedding
dress.'
Rachel swallowed. 'So soon?'
The Senora's eyes rested on her with a
faintly quizzical expression. She said
gently, 'Dear child, from what my
impetuous son has told me, it seems to
me that your marriage should take place
without delay.'
Rachel felt herself blush to the roots of
her hair, the few remaining shreds of her
poise scattered.
'He has told you everything?' she asked
in a low voice.
'He has always told me everything.' The
Senora paused in her stitching. 'This has
distressed you? Do you perhaps expect
me to be shocked—to hold you in
contempt because you gave yourself
outside the sacrament? Surely you cannot
think so. That night you spent with my
son might well have been his last on
earth. Do you think I could despise the
girl who held back the darkness for
him?'
Rachel felt tears prick at her eyelids.
She said, 'I—I didn't know what to
expect.' After Mark's hostility, she
supposed she had anticipated the worst.
'You are tired,' the Senora said
soothingly. 'And you have suffered a
terrible ordeal at the hands of that evil
one, Rodriguez.' She crossed herself.
'May God have mercy upon his soul. I
will ring and have Josita take you to
your room,'
Josita turned out to be an elderly woman
with a gaunt face, but when she smiled
she was transformed, and she smiled a
great deal as she watched Rachel take
her first awed look round the bedroom
she had been taken to.
The bed itself was enchantment enough
—four carved posts and a mass of crisp
white frills cascading down to the
carpet. The sunlight coming into the
room was diffused through the palest of
silk drapes, and each window was
flanked by floor-length curtains in heavy
brocade, looped back by matching
cords.
The
carpet
and
walls
complemented each other in pale orchid
pink.
After
Maria's
attentions,
Rachel
submitted resignedly to being helped out
of her jeans and shirt and wrapped in a
swansdown-trimmed
peignoir
while
Josita showed her the dresses the Senora
had mentioned. It was obvious the maid
favoured the first one she displayed for
Rachel, a classic white chiffon, with
billowing diaphanous sleeves, and she
was disappointed when Rachel shook
her head, biting her lip slightly. Under
the circumstances, she thought wryly,
there was no way in which she was
going to present herself downstairs clad
in virginal white under Vitas' cynical
gaze.
Eventually she chose a dark blue model
covered in small white polka dots,
essentially Spanish in design, with an
off-the-shoulder
bodice
and
wide
flounced skirt. The length was right, but
her waist was more slender than that of
the absent Juanita, and Josita bore the
dress away to make the necessary
adjustments.
Rachel lay on the bed and tried to relax.
The Senora's welcome had done much to
warm the coldness deep inside her, but
she knew that it was the reassurance of
Vitas' arms around her that she really
needed.
His coolness frightened her. Even his
mockery would be preferable, she