Authors: Sara Craven
because her legs felt like jelly.
'But he was staying with you,' she
persisted.
'Si.
He was with Miguel. He likes to
bring friends here to stay.'
'Perhaps Miguel would know exactly
where he was,' Rachel said half to
herself. 'Could—could I have a word
with him?'
Isabel's eyes widened. 'He is not here,
senorita.
He has gone to Cartagena to
stay with the family of his
novia.'
The
senora
broke in, clearly intrigued
by the exchange between the two girls
and wanting to know its subject. While
Isabel explained to her mother, Rachel
sat her head whirling. She didn't know
what to do next. She supposed she ought
to try and make contact with the
Mordaunt Clinic to see if Mark had
turned tip there. She pressed a hand
against her throbbing head, willing
herself to think straight. Perhaps there
was some way she could enquire if
Mark had left the country. She would
have to arrange to see Senor Arviles. He
was a lawyer, after all. He would be
able to advise her.
She looked up, and that was a mistake
because the room swam around her, and
she could see Senora Arviles rising, her
face full of concern.
'Ay de mil'
Isabel was at her side. 'What
is the matter, senorita?'
Rachel said through dry lips, 'I'm afraid
I'm going to be sick.'
The next few hours in retrospect were
like a nightmare. She knew that
somehow they had got her out of the
salon
and upstairs to a bedroom. Then
someone was there called Dolores,
helping to remove the cream suit with
warm capable hands, holding a basin
while Rachel vomited until her stomach
was sore and bathing her forehead with
a cool damp cloth in between spasms.
Rachel wanted to tell her that she was
grateful, but she was too dizzy and too
weak, and every attempt to raise her
head from the pillow seemed to bring on
another attack of nausea. She wasn't
even aware that at last she had drifted
into ah exhausted sleep.
When she opened her eyes, the room
was dark except for one heavily shaded
lamp in the corner. She stirred and
stretched cautiously, but her body
seemed to respond normally to the
action, and she risked sitting up. As she
did so, the door opened cautiously and
Isabel's head came round it.
'Ah, you are awake,' she exclaimed.
'That is good. Do you feel better now?
Well enough to speak to my father?'
Rachel nodded, thankful that there was
no return of that appalling dizziness as
she did so. 'I'm sorry to have put you to
so much trouble,' she said contritely.
'What trouble?' Isabel shrugged. 'It is the
altitude which makes one suffer in this
way. Many
turistas
are afflicted when
they first arrive here, but one soon
becomes acclimatised.'
She produced a large silk shawl which
she proceeded to drape carefully round
Rachel's bare shoulders, then sending
her a flashing smile she went back to the
door and admitted her father.
Senor Arviles was a dapper man of
medium height with an intelligent,
humorous face. He bowed slightly over
Rachel's hand, then drew up a chair and
sat down beside her bed. Rachel was
amused to see that Isabel remained in the
room, presumably to act as a youthful
chaperone.
After an exchange of civilities, he came
swiftly to the point.
'I am grieved that we Can give you no
news of your brother,
senorita.
But we
all understood that, he was to return
home to England. Has he not done so?'
Rachel shook her head. 'Apparently not.
And I need to contact him urgently,
senor.'
'So Isabel has told me. A family illness,
is it not?' Senor Arviles gave her a
sympathetic look. 'Believe me, I would
help if it were possible, but your brother
merely stayed with us for a short while,
then went on his way. His visit was
shorter than we would have liked,' he
added courteously, 'because he knew
Miguel was to go to Cartagena.'
'I see.' Rachel paused. 'He didn't give the
impression that he intended to stay in
Colombia, maybe?'
'No,
senorita.''
Senor Arviles shook his
head. 'While he stayed with us, Miguel
and he made tours, and paid visits to
places of interest. There would be little
left for him to see, I think.'
'No,' Rachel said desolately. 'I suppose
he must have— moved on somewhere.'
She would have to go home and confess
failure, she thought unhappily, and what
would that do to Grandfather's already
precarious health? She could only be
glad that it was she who had had the
wasted journey to the other side of the
world, and not Sir Giles.
Senor Arviles'
eyes
studied
her
downbent head attentively.
He said, 'In the meantime,
senorita,
you
will spend a few days with us? We are
happy to welcome the sister of Marcos
to our house.'
'Oh, but I couldn't.' Rachel shook her
head.
'I've
caused
quite
enough
disruption already. Besides ...' She
broke
off,
stricken,
suddenly
remembering. 'My God, I had a taxi
waiting and...'
Senor Arviles laughed. 'It was paid off a
long time ago,
senorita
, and the driver
told us the name of your hotel so that we
could contact them also. They might
have become anxious if one so young
and lovely had gone out into Bogota and
not returned.'
Rachel returned his smile rather wanly.
'That's hardly likely.'
'You think not?' Senor Arviles shrugged.
'Yet you must remember,
senorita,
that
this is Colombia, not Gran Bretana. Our
history has blood in it, and some of it is
recent. You would do well to remain
here with us, I think, and allow my wife
and daughter to entertain you while I
make what enquiries I can about
Marcos.'
His tone was firm. It was the one he
would use, Rachel decided, when he
was giving a client some unpopular
advice.
'So it is decided, then.' He rose briskly
from the chair before she could utter a
further protest. 'Rest,
senorita,
and we
will make all necessary arrangements.
Presently Dolores will bring you some
soup.'
He bowed again and walked to the door.
Isabel following him, her pretty face
wearing
a
curiously
thoughtful
expression.
The soup when it came was delicious,
almost a meal in itself, thick with beans
and spiced meat, and served with
delicately flavoured corn muffins.
Recalling how ill she had been only a
short time before, Rachel was amazed
that she could eat anything, but she
finished every mouthful. When she heard
the knock on the door, she imagined it
was Dolores coming to remove her tray,
and was surprised when Isabel came in.
She exclaimed with pleased politeness
about Rachel's return to health, and sat
down in the chair that her father had
vacated, folding her hands in her lap.
Watching her, Rachel thought suddenly
that she looked troubled, and saw that
her fingers gripped each other, tight with
tension.
'There's something wrong, isn't there?'
she
said,
cutting
across
Isabel's
somewhat dutiful recital of the museums
they would visit and the sights they
would see while she remained in
Bogota.
Isabel's eyes filled with sudden tears.
'Perhaps,
senorita.
I—I do not know.'
'Well, tell me what it is,' Rachel urged.
'But first you must promise that you must
not tell my father.' Isabel's tone was
equally urgent. 'He would be so angry—
because I tell you and not him.'
'I promise I won't mention anything to
him about this conversation.' Rachel's
eyes never left the younger girl's face.
'Do you know where my brother has
gone?'
Isabel lifted her shoulders in a deep
shrug. 'Maybe— that is all I can say.
Senorita,
I must tell you something now
of which I am much ashamed.' She
paused. 'I love my brother, but
sometimes he is not kind. Sometimes,
when he has his friends, he tells me to go
away, to leave them in peace, and this
hurts me. So they go to his room and they
talk, and sometimes I go to my room
where there is an
amario
on the wall
next to Miguel's where there is also an
amario
.' She paused again. 'You know
what I am trying to say?'
'I think so,' said Rachel. 'There are
adjoining—wardrobes, perhaps, and you
can—hear what they are talking about.'
Isabel blushed unhappily
'Si,
it is so. I
am much ashamed now, but before I used
to laugh to myself because Miguel
thought he had his friends to himself, and
I could not share in the things they talked
about.'
Her eyes gleamed for a moment and
Rachel thought that the sheltered
daughter of the house had probably
found her eavesdropping on purely
masculine conversations more than
enlightening at times.
She said, 'So you listened and you heard
Mark and Miguel talking. Is that it?'
Isabel nodded. 'It was then I knew my
father would be angry because Miguel
had spoken to Marcos of forbidden
things.'
'What forbidden things?'
Isabel looked down at her lap again.
'Emeralds,' she said in a low voice.
There was a long taut silence, then she
went on. 'Our emerald mines here in
Colombia, Senorita Raquel, are the most
famous in the world. They make much
money for our country. But not all the
emeralds , that leave Columbia do so
with the will of our government, you
understand.'
There was another pause and Rachel
made
herself
say
dry-mouthed,
'Smuggling? You mean Miguel and Mark
were talking about smuggling emeralds?'
'Si, and from what Miguel is saying I
know that he has done this thing, and that
if my father ever finds out he will be
angry, because it is so much against the
law, and the law means everything to my
father. He would think that Miguel had
dishonoured him.'
Rachel said in a hollow voice, 'Do you
mean that Miguel was suggesting that
Mark should become an emerald
smuggler?'
'No, not that. He seemed to be warning
him. Many people die all the time
because of emeralds. There is much
danger. He says that he thinks your
brother is a little mad. And then Senor
Marcos says "You would not think I was
so mad if I came back with the Flame of
Diablo."'
'What is the Flame of Diablo?'
'It is a legend, Senorita Raquel, a story
that I heard when I was a child, as did
Miguel. It is said that somewhere in the
hills to the north there is a mine where
one can find emeralds worth many
millions of
pesos. But
it is also said that
no one has set eyes upon this mine since
the days of El Dorado, the Golden One
who used emeralds from the Diablo
mine to ornament himself before he
made the offering in the Sacred Lake.'
'Then Diablo is a place?' Rachel
queried.
Isabel shuddered. 'It is truly named,' she
said in a low voice, 'for it is a place of
the devil. Many people seek the Diablo
mine and the green flame which burns
there, but they do not return. My father
says the reason is simple. It is a
dangerous place. Often there are
landslides, and the rivers are deep with