It was well into the afternoon when
they reached the deserted village, a settlement of huts within
a broken-down sapling fence, where the foliage was much trampled,
as if a number of people had passed this way.
Eve was cautioned to remain among
the trees while the Major, shotgun at the ready, went into the
compound and made a search of the huts, most of them having been
destroyed by fire so that only the palmwood supports remained.
It was at a bend of the clearing
that one of the huts stood in dilapidated isolation, with its
dark mud-constructed walls and roof thatching still intact. When
Wade returned to where Eve was waiting he briskly informed her
that the village was quite benighted, as if everyone had fled
away from a sudden attack, which had probably taken place at least
a month ago.
"One of the huts is in fair
condition, so we're going to rest there," he said, shooting
his cuff and taking a look at his watch. "We've walked far
enough and it will soon grow dark."
"We're lost, aren't we?"
she said carefully. She didn't want to sound as if she were blaming
him, not when most of the fault weighed on her conscience. "It's
all right, I'm not going to have hysterics, but I would prefer
to be told the truth."
"Hopelessly lost," he
confessed. "These jungle trails are all so much alike without
a map or a compass, and we probably branched off unaware some
miles back. [78-79] It's a good thing the village is deserted--you
can't always be sure if the people are rebel sympathisers, and
it would appear from the state of this settlement that the people
were burned out and chased off into the bush."
"They weren't killed?"
she asked, looking about her and seeing the thickening of the
shadows, and hearing the rising crescendo of bird calls and the
thrashing sound of monkeys moving high in the trees. A parakeet
squawked and her nerves crawled.
Wade shook his head. "They
may have been driven off by mercenaries, but there's no sign of
any kind of slaughter. They may have even burned the huts themselves
and gone off in search of a safer location. Anyway, we'll take
a chance and sleep beneath a roof tonight. Come along, Eve, let's
try and make ourselves comfortable."
"C'est la vie,"
she smiled shakily, and followed him across the compound on sore
and aching feet. How she would have loved to plunge her poor
feet into a bowl of water into which a handful of seaweedy salts
had been scattered, but instead she had to stand on them in the
doorway of a smelly hut while Wade directed his torch around the
curving walls. She had to force herself not to cry out when something
scuttled across the floor and a heavy army boot crushed the thing
to atoms.
"I-I think I'd prefer to sleep
in the open," she said. "This place isn't exactly cosy,
is it?"
"The trouble is, Eve, I think
it's going to rain. I felt a few spots as we crossed the compound
and when it rains out here it means business and we'd be soaked
to the skin in a matter of minutes. Better to rest here for the
night."
"So long as we can have some
light." Eve shivered and [79-80] peered into the dark corners
of the hut, her nostrils tensing at the smell of smoke, dried
mud and rotting leaves that pervaded the place. Wade had dumped
his knapsack on the floor and was investigating various objects
which had been left behind in the evacuation of the village .
. . some abandoned spears with lethal-looking tips, a gourd which
emitted a liquid sound when shaken, a wicker fishing-basket with
a keen, glinting look in his eyes.
"It could be that we aren't
far from a running stream," he remarked. "If so, Eve,
we may get ourselves some fish for breakfast."
"That will be nice," she
smiled at the prospect of running water rather than the food.
She watched as he took the stopper out of the gourd and put the
open top to his nostrils, taking a deep sniff at the contents.
"Honey-beer--intoxicating as
the very devil!"
"Are you going to drink it?"
she asked.
"Not on your life, lady. I
don't fancy a day-long hangover. A long cool Lion beer is more
my mark."
"Thank goodness for that!"
The prospect of camping in this mud hut was bad enough, but Eve
had momentarily quailed at the image of a drunken soldier sharing
it with her.
He shot her a quizzical look.
"Getting
drunk isn't one of my vices," he reassured her. "I
like to gamble now and again, and love nothing better than a keen
day at the races, but I've never seen much sense in getting a
thick head, and a beery pot-belly."
She smiled and ran her eyes down
the lean length of him--formidable, and packed with the strength
and will to survive against very long odds. They were lost [80-81]
in the jungle, but for tonight he'd make the most of this ramshackle
dwelling of thatch and hardened mud, its roof woven from big leaves
matted over bamboo lathes. Wade's aura certainly wasn't tranquil,
but to Eve's eyes he was a bulwark between her and all those hazards
that took on a nightmare quality as the darkness crept over the
surrounding jungle. He was so sure and capable, and she took
hope from the very look of him, especially when he emptied the
gourd of beer into the tall shaggy grass outside the hut and remarked
that if they were lucky enough to be close to a stream, the gourd
could be used for water.
"Nothing ever throws you off
balance, does it, Major?"
"You think not?" His
eyes quizzed her in the deepening dusk light. "Just as well
to go on thinking it, lady. I wouldn't want to disillusion
you."
"It isn't fair to harbour too
many illusions about people," she said.
"A wise remark which you probably
culled from a Shaw play, for he was quite a cynical old guy in
his way."
"It isn't cynicism, it's sense."
Eve tilted her chin. "I can't imagine that you harbour
any illusions about--women."
"You'd be surprised,
honey."
Her skin warmed at the way he almost
purred that word. It would have been wiser to discontinue the
conversation, but she couldn't fight the curiosity which he aroused
in her . . . in that side of him that wasn't all soldier.
"Even you, Major?"
"Even I, so try not to shatter
my illusions."
[81-82] "They must be very
fragile?"
"Spun-glass." He had
unstrapped his knapsack and taken from it the waterproof pouch
in which he kept his matches and candles. He lit one and held
it so the shadows played over his face, giving him a rather devilish
look. "I wonder if in normal circumstances we'd talk like
this, eh? Right now you'd probably be getting ready for a date
at the Ritz Grill or the White House restaurant, slipping your
slim legs into sheer hose, worried about what to wear instead
of looking like a weary, worn doll I've pushed to the very edge
of exhaustion. Yet you stand up to me, don't you, lady? You
back-answer me, instead of scratching my eyes out for getting
you lost in this neck of the woods. Where did you learn to be
so gritty?"
"I-I went to a good finishing
school," she said, being flippant because it didn't do to
let anything he said get too embedded in her emotions.
"It could have been Sandhurst
from the way you're taking all this," he quipped. "They'd
have presented you with a jewelled Sword of Honour. I think you
get it from your father, eh?"
She nodded. "I very much hope
so--as your son probably gets his drive from you."
"Aren't we being nice to each
other?" he mocked. "D'you reckon this was the local
courting hut?"
"I-I hope not." She backed
away from him, and immediately he broke into a gruff laugh.
"Ease up, little one. I'm
just damn glad that you aren't a dumb bunny, for amusing as they
are, it would be hell right now to be stuck with a gal like
that."
"I thought men liked the dumb
and compliant type of female?"
[82-83] "It's a myth, Eve.
Men like common sense, especially in a tight spot. That's how
Mr. Churchill won his war--the women held on and didn't panic,
even when the roof caved in and they went on knitting socks under
the kitchen table. Quite a people, the Cockneys."
"They're your people, aren't
they?" she said.
"On my mother's side. She
worked a vegetable barrow on the sunny side of the Chapel Street
market in Islington. Tall, vital brunette, with plenty of nerve
and lots of friendly chat. Went and married a nogood Irishman
with too much charm, who ran out on her and left her with me to
bring up. She did okay, until she caught a bad chill one winter
day and never recovered from it. I was nine years old and placed
in a State home, which is not to be confused with a stately one,
and needless to say when the time came I took to the army like
a stray duck taking to a millpond. It's all I've ever known--for
a good long time, anyway."
"What about--I mean, there's
your wife." It dismayed Eve that she always seemed to trip
over her tongue whenever she mentioned his wife.
"Sure, but married quarters
aren't bad," he drawled. "Soldiers move around a lot,
especially ambitious ones who want stripes, and then crowns on
the shoulder."
"Did she never mind your way
of life?" Eve asked tentatively.
"Mind?" There was a crystal
hardness to his voice. "When a woman marries a serving man
she had to accept his way of life--it's as simple as that."
It sounded uncompromising and far
from tender, and Eve say the adamant set to his jaw as he went
across the hut and affixed the candle to one of the fire stones,
so that the flame was out of the draught of the doorway.
[83-84] "Let's get ourselves
settled," he said curtly. "I'd better get some water
boiled for our tea before the rain comes down. You lay out the
blanket and take a look at those few cans of food we've got left.
I believe one of them has pork and ham in it, and we might as
well make a fuss of ourselves--I meant to have got you to Tanga,
damn careless fool that I am!"
"No, you can't take all the
blame, Wade." Eve caught at his arm before she could prevent
herself and there in the flickering shadows cast by the candle
they looked at each other . . . she could feel the tension biting
into him, and a dark groove had fixed itself between his eyebrows.
"I disobeyed an order of yours, Major, and that's why we're
in this predicament. I bet I'd be in the glasshouse if this were
our barracks."
He smiled briefly. "Female
discipline bears no relation to the masculine sort. I can't expect
you to think and react like a recruit being trained for the
regiment--you're far too female for that."
"All the same, I bet you'd
like to give me a good hard shake."
"Sure," he agreed, "until
your milk teeth rattle. But what a good thing for you I've had
a kid of my own and know how mettlesome the young can be--you'd
like him, Eve. He's a good-looking young pup--takes after my
mother for his looks."
"Oh, I'd have said--"
She broke off almost shudderingly, seeing beneath the dark stubble,
the sun-lined skin, the erosion of his own youth, a face that
made her heart give a jolt. She felt as if she had just saved
herself on the edge of a precipice, and she moved back carefully
away from the precipitous edge and bent over his knapsack, taking
a deep breath of recovery as she took [84-85] out the army blanket
and began to unwind it.
Eve was glad when he went outside
and began to gather wood for a fire. Oh Lord, how easy for someone
inexperienced to suddenly feel the potent, overpowering charm
of a man so much older, who had seen and done things she could
only guess at. He had killed, made love, known what it was like
to have a child of his own placed in his arms. Eve saw the need
to fight against the attraction he had for her, but how was she
going to manage it, thrown together as they had been, in the primitive
heart of the African jungle?
She flattened the blanket out carefully
on the floor she wished she could have swept and scrubbed. There
were webs up there in the bamboo lathes of the ceiling, and she
knew there were things crawling about in the dark corners of the
hut. With resolution, she shut her mind to them and set about
laying out biscuits on the plates and opening the tin of pork
and ham. It smelled good and she felt her stomach react hungrily,
but until Wade brought in the tea she left the meat in the tin
and fitted the lid back on, just in case a fly or a crawly came
to investigate that delicious aroma.
She went ahead to the knapsack,
for in her exploration she had come upon Wade's shaving-mirror
and was curious to see how she looked after a day of scrambling
about in the jungle. A scarecrow, that was the only word that
adequately described her appearance. Dark red hair tangled, a
scratch on her forehead where a branch had whipped at her, eyes
enormous and filled with a hundred uncertain questions. As for
her clothes--they were just about fit for the rag-bag! Oh well,
it couldn't be helped, but she had to make her hair a bit tidier
before sitting down to supper.
[85-86] Untying her plaid bundle,
she found the comb, a good tortoiseshell one, thank goodness,
and began to tug it vigorously through the sweat-knotted tangles
. . . the days of luxury shampoos in a Bond Street salon seemed
a thousand moons ago. There she had sat, an idle, smartly clad,
bored young debuntante, glancing through a magazine and swinging
a well-shod foot . . . undreaming that one dusky night she would
find herself sharing a primitive mud hut with a black-haired mercenary
twenty years her senior, who wouldn't hesitate to put a bullet
through her head if they were fallen upon by bloodthirsty rebels.
Eve stared into her bundle and her
fingers closed on the expensive crystal atomiser she had been
unable to resist, through Wade had told her not to lumber herself
with anything that wasn't necessary. But then Major O'Mara most
definitely wasn't a woman!
With a tiny smile she squeezed the
atomiser and felt the perfume cool and fragant against her skin
. . . mmmm, that was lovely, irresistible, a breath of civilization
in the midst of the untamed. Feeling a little tidier, she went
outside the hut to see how Wade was coping. The kettle was bubbling
away on the homemade hob, but Wade was nowhere in sight and Eve
felt a clutch of alarm, her own hand pressing itself to her
throat.
What an idiot she was! No one would
carry Wade off without one hell of a struggle, so he had probably
gone scouting for more wood, and was checking to see that it was
safe to camp here for the night. The rain was coming down a little
harder now, hitting against the hot fire stones and making them
sizzle. The rain was welcome against Eve's skin, and way up there
[86-87] in the density of the sky she could see unbelievable groupings
of stars. When the rain increased they would be blotted out,
but for the moment she could enjoy their beauty . . . she tensed
as she caught the sound of someone moving in the bush that crowded
to the back of the hut.
"Wade?"
No deep voice answered her, and
Eve felt a prickling of her scalp, a sensation of fear like cold
bony fingers creeping down her spine. She also smelled an aroma
that blotted out the Tabu perfume she had sprayed on herself
. . . it was a powerful smell of an alley where cats had freely
roamed. It wafted towards Eve and she felt herself gagging, she
prepared to flee into the hut . . .
"Don't make a single
move!"
Wade's voice was so soft it was
almost a whisper, but there was a command in it which she instantly
obeyed, freezing into stillness as his tall figure advanced across
the compound, with the Breda in a firing position.
Then the rustling sound came again
and the next instant that strong ammoniac smell was gone, and
Wade was between Eve and whatever lurked in the bush.
"A female leopard on the hunt,"
he said quietly. "I'm glad you had the nerve to stand perfectly
still. Those creatures react very swiftly, and mostly out of
fear of the unknown. Your scent was probably as acute to that
cat as hers was to you."
"Thanks," Eve said shakily.
"I hope I don't smell like a back alley where all the cats
have been prowling."
He laughed in his brief way and
lowered the Breda. Then he suddenly leaned close to her and sniffed
at her hair. "That isn't cat--smells more like the perfume
counter at Woolsworths."
[87-88] "It covers up some
of the sweat," she said defensively.
"Putting on perfume in the
jungle!" he jeered. "Is it for my benefit?"
"No, it isn't! My morale needed
a boost."
"What's it called?
Seduction?"
"No!" She moved sharply
away from his taunting tallness, and went to pass him, only to
be blocked by his suddenly flung out arm.
"Scents usually have names,
don't they? Put me wise."
"It's called Tabu, if
you must know. Now let's have supper."
"Tabu, as in don't touch or
the gods will send down thunder?"
"It's raining harder and we're
both getting wet--and I'm hungry."
"Don't try anything on with
me, Eve, for this is no garden of Eden we're alone in."
He grated the words. "We're both made of human stuff, but
we've got to keep this strictly on a rescue operations level so
that there'll be no regrets on your side or mine when, and if,
you make it home to the boy-friend. Understand me?"
"I--I wasn't even thinking about you when I applied the
perfume." She was shocked by what he had said, and then she
felt her temper flare and she had to say things that would hurt
him if possible, the way he had hurt her, turning something innocent
into the act of a wanton. "As you've pointed out, Major
O'Mara, you're old enough to be my father, and I'd want my head
tested if I started throwing myself at you! Sweaty, unshaven,
with the brutal tongue of a trooper! [88-89] I should hope I
was a bit more fastidious, thank you!"
"That's more like it, girl.
You keep on hating my guts and we'll get alone just fine."
He gave her a slight push toward the hut, for the rain was whipping
at them, plastering their hair into wet jags and running in drops
down their faces.
"Don't shove me!" Her
eyes flamed into his. "Chauvinistic brute!"
"Right, if you want to get
wet, that's your lookout." He swung the kettle off the fire
and went inside with it, leaving her to stand fuming in the rain
hungry for her supper, but mortified by his assumption that she
had scented herself like a tart in order to arouse his sensual
feelings. Oh, damn and blast him, why hadn't she let him make
room for her on the plane forcibly, so that she could have flown
to Tanga with the nuns? Now she was benighted with him in the
middle of a jungle, and she had to endure the rough edge of his
tongue, and his insults.
Eve blinked the rain off her lashes
and felt her shirt clinging to her shoulders . . . letting herself
get soaked like this was ridiculous, and she marched into the
hut, where an aroma of strong tea mingled with the smell of the
pork and ham, which she had sliced and laid on the plates.
"We don't have to quarrel."
He indicated that she sit down on the blanket. "Come on,
where's your smile?"
"Seems like I've lost it,"
she rejoined, and she sat down as far away as possible from his
lounging figure.
"I hope you haven't lost your
appetite." Wade held out her plate and she accepted it with
a mutter of thanks. They settled down to eat and drink, while
[89-90] the rain hissed on the thatch roof above them, and the
trees thrashed and whined in the rising wind outside in the wet
night.
"A bit of luck finding this
rondavel," he drawled. "It wouldn't have been pleasant
having to spend the night in the rain. I have a packet of fruit
and nuts if you'd like some?"
"No, thanks." She gazed
across the hut away from him. "I've had all I want."
"Sulky females are a pain in
the neck." He lounged back on his elbow and picked biscuit
crumbs off the blanket. "I can't make you out. Surely you're
woman enough to know that this isn't exactly the place or the
time to try a bit of teasing? I might be a lot older than you,
but I'm still capable."
"I'm sure you are," she
said coldly. "But it never entered my head to tease you--I
felt scruffy and sticky and scent's a good cover up. They used
it enough in the old days, when bathing wasn't all that
popular."
Eve still wouldn't look at him,
but she could feel his eyes upon her profile, intent and steely.
"Is it possible you're so
innocent?"
he drawled.
She scorned to answer him, tilting
her nose and giving her attention to the persistent sound of the
rain. Suddenly she shivered and without comment he arose and
placed across the doorway the rather battered leaf-woven screen
meant for that purpose. It was primitive but it served, shutting
out most of the draught that had been blowing in. The hut had
been stuffy at first, but now Eve was glad that the cold had been
blocked out.
"That better?" he asked,
starting to roll himself a cigarette, the shadows made by the
candle flickering [90-91] over his lean face and making his bones
seem harshly defined. In order to save a match he bent to the
candle flame and lit his cigarette, and Eve resented his air of
being at no one's beck and call, least of all a woman's. But
she had to accept his orders, and his sardonic reprimands . .
. even those she hadn't earned.
"The real trouble with you,"
he said, "is that you're tired and edgy and just a bit
scared."
"Not of you," she assured
him, and watching his keen enjoyment of his after-supper smoke
she wished she had accepted his offer of a few nuts and raisins.
She curled down on the blanket with her head at rest on her plaid
bundle, feeling herself go taut when Wade came and stood over
her.
"No, not of me, you've too
much spirit for that." He gestured towards the doorway and
ash fell from his cigarette. "It's all that jungle out there
and how we're going to find our way out of it. Look, I'm going
to make a suggestion that you may not care for, but I think it's
a good one. I believe we're fairly close to a stream or even
a river--now listen, every now and again you hear a tree crash
in the rain, don't you?"
She nodded and wondered why his
suggestion, when it came, wasn't going to appeal to her . . .
was it going to be so awful? Was he going to leave her here and
go off on his own to look for a way out?
"I--I know I hold you up in
these sandals," Eve was up on her knees and her eyes were
pleading with him, "but don't leave me here, please! I'd
be terrified--"
"What are you talking about?"
He leant down and took her by the chin, his eyes searching her
scared face. "Leave you here--no, you've got it all wrong,
lady. Those trees you hear falling are coming loose from the
[91-92] soil, their roots being the sort that travel along the
ground instead of under it and some of those trees are all but
hollow. If we're near a river than I'm suggesting that I build
us a boat and we continue our journey by water. We're bound to
land up--"
"A boat?"
"A canoe." He knelt down
facing her and his eyes were eager. "I have the panga
and the blade is a good sharp one, so I should have no problem
shaping out a canoe and making a paddle. It will be better on
the water than slogging through the jungle, and there's always
a food supply on hand in the shape of fish. The only problem
is that it would probably take me about a week to tackle the job,
and we'd have to stay here in the rondavel--take a chance on
it."
Eve stared at him and could feel
her heart pounding. "You're serious, aren't you?" she
said.
He nodded. "To be quite frank
with you, lady, I don't think you'd last out very much longer
in the jungle. When your repellent runs out, you'll be bitten
unmercifully, and in those sandals you're feet will soon be wrecked.
If I take the time to make us a canoe, you can ride on the water,
you can eat fish and keep up your mineral strength--fish is a
marvelous food, probably the best, even catfish, who look as ugly
as sin but make darn good cod-like steaks, baked over a fire.
Well, what do you say? Are you with me?"
"Have I a choice?"
He smiled at the edge of his mouth
and had a look of cool-eyed recklessness. "Not really, Eve.
For your own sake, you've got to fall in with my idea."
"Even though it will be risky
to stay on here?" she asked.
[92-93] "Even so."
Eve let her gaze rest on his hard,
determined jaw. She felt his vigorous strength of will . . .
his ability to survive against alarming odds. He was right about
her, a few more days like today in the jungle and she'd keel over,
a bundle of helpless misery he might just manage to carry on his
back for a while.
"All this depends on whether
we're near a river," she said. "What if we
aren't?"
"Then we have no choice but
to trek on."
"Then let's keep our fingers
crossed, Major."
He nodded and for a moment his teeth
were bared in a half-savage smile. "If they taught you prayer
at that mission, then say a prayer tonight, before you drop off
to sleep. Say a couple, one for each of us."
"Don't you ever pray?"
she asked.
"Me?" He ground the stub
of his cigarette into one of the empty plates. "The angels
don't listen to wicked men like me, lady." And it was as
he spoke that a resounding clap of thunder shook the hut, and
shook loose something from the overhead lathes. It fell near
Eve and ran across her legs, trailing a long thin tail. She shrieked
and cowered away, while Wade leapt in pursuit of the rodent, swinging
aside the woven screen so the palm rat was able to streak out
into the pelting rain, lit by vivid flashes of lightning that
illuminated the tall shapes of the trees.
"Oh God!" Eve flung her
hands over her face, not so much from fear of the rat but from
her own terrified reaction. She had never been one of those females
who swooned at the sight of rats, bats or mice, for she had been
brought up in the country, and the stables and attics of her guardian's
house were harbours for all sorts [93-94] of things that crept
and crawled and went bump in the night--Lake House was even supposed
to have its own ghost--but just now she had felt her nerves give
way and it had frightened her.
She couldn't stop shaking, and abruptly
Wade pulled her against him and pressed her head to his shoulder.
"I know, kid," he murmured, "you're having a rough
time for the first time in your life, but you're doing fine, believe
me. Rats aren't pretty, but they're less dangerous than the two-legged
variety of bête noire."
"I--I'm not usually so jumpy,
a--and I've seen rats before," she said raggedly. "You
must think me an awful baby."
"I think you what you are [sic],
a young girl caught up in a tricky situation you've never had
to face before." He held her and rocked her a little, and
right through her shirt Eve could feel the hard warmth of his
hand.
"I think I'd go crazy if you
weren't here with me," she said, then she jumped again as
there came another loud peal of thunder followed by the nerve-wrenching
crash as a large tree suddenly lost its grip in the mud and keeled
over . . . like a felled giant.
"Want to try a jigger of whisky?"
he asked. "I've a small flask of it and I've been saving
it for an emergency."
"But this isn't an emergency,
Major. I'm just being--childish."
"Well, I fancy a snort, and
I insist you join me." He let her go, giving her shoulder
a reassuring pat . . . being fatherly, she told herself, even
though she felt reactions to his touch that were not those of
a daughter.
"I never realised that the
jungle could be so--so fearful." She crouched there with
her arms about herself, [94-95] while incessant peals of thunder
rumbled around the hut, and a cataract of rain drummed down on
the roof. Lightning ripped like claws at their doorway and through
the chinks she saw a reddish flare as a tree or a bush was struck,
breaking into flame that was just as quickly smothered by the
downpour.
"The jungle's very much alive,
Eve." He unscrewed the flask and measured the spirit into
the tea mug. "Anything alive can cause fear, anguish and
alarm--here, drink this and let it settle your nerves."
She accepted the mug and took a
tentative sip at the whisky. It was strong and she had never
cared for the taste, but she knew it would help her get rid of
the shakes. He nodded and gave her an intent look when she handed
him the empty mug. "It's smoothing out the creases already,
eh?"
Eve nodded and watched him toss
back his own measure of whisky. His black hair looked as if it
hadn't seen a comb for days, and his unshaven jaw gave him the
look of a convict on the run. Eve suddenly laughed and couldn't
stop herself.
"That's better," he drawled.
"I can deal with the giggles, but a woman's tears are someting
else."
"You wouldn't be so amused
if you knew what I was thinking," she said.
"You're dying to tell me, so
why not indulge yourself?"
"You look a fearful roughneck,
Major O'Mara. I'm wondering what you look like when you've had
a shave."
"I may give you that pleasure
in the morning, young Eve." He replaced his flask in the
knapsack and began to brush out the blanket so they could settle
down for the night. "Tomorrow, all being well, we'll take
a look [95-96] around our zona inexplorada and see what
it has to offer."
He gnawed a moment on his lip with
his firm teeth. "Let's hope I'm right about that river--I've
got a feeling I am, for it isn't unusual to find a native settlement
within reach of one. Offer up a small prayer to Ngai,
just to be on the safe side."
He rolled the mosquito netting around
her, for suddenly she had grown very sleepy and was drowsily aware
of him leaning over her for a moment. "Sleep deep and forget
everything," he advised. "Make pretend you're in your
flounced fourposter at the family mansion."
"I'd really need a vivid imagination
for that." She smiled, the lids of her eyes weighted with
exhaustion. "I never even shared my fourposter with a replica
of Humphrey Bogart, though I thought about it after seeing
Casablanca."
The white teeth glimmered above
her in the dark face, and already half-asleep, she wasn't certain
if he brushed at the tumbled hair on her temples.