„ ^s&BoonCtes^ ^
Celine Conway
The Flower of the Morning grew only on the Malayan island of Numeh, and someone had to...
125 downloads
1971 Views
909KB Size
Report
This content was uploaded by our users and we assume good faith they have the permission to share this book. If you own the copyright to this book and it is wrongfully on our website, we offer a simple DMCA procedure to remove your content from our site. Start by pressing the button below!
Report copyright / DMCA form
„ ^s&BoonCtes^ ^
Celine Conway
The Flower of the Morning grew only on the Malayan island of Numeh, and someone had told Katie that she resembled it. Untouched, the flower was magnificent, but if the petals were bruised the flower wilted. Was Katie like that ? She herself did not think so—but that was before she had met, and tried to defy, the arrogant overlord of the island, Simon Forbes.
UNITED KINGDOM 35p. netAll prices are subject to AUSTRALIA $1 00*'hange without prior notice NEW ZEALAND $1^00* Re(:omm6nded buc not °b"8«°ry
ISBN 0 263 71786 0
%/^ ^AHADI ^N, ^Mien, UB^
A chance to read and collect some of the best-loved novels from Mills & Boon - the world's largest publisher of romantic fiction. Every month, four titles by favourite Mills & Boon authors will be re-published in the Classics series. A list of other titles in the Classics series can be found at the end of this book.
CeIineConway
FLOWER OF THE MORNING
MILLS & BOON LIMITED LONDON - TORONTO
!
CHAPTER I
he beach at Mondulu you could make a discovery ever Katie found weird and beautiful shells, sea flowers and , crammed with green and gold fish, odd-looking bone ;hed white by sea and sun, branches of pink and white , scarlet seaweeds and a few semi-precious stones. She d wear canvas shorts and an old white sleeveless blous thin scarf about her almost straight honey-blonde hai paddle in and out of the sea to keep cool in the glaring line. Had she been given to introspection she would ha id often and reminded herself that she was happier than iy time in her life, which had so far lasted nineteen yea two months. iring the three days since her arrival at Mondulu with la she had constantly felt that this was the life, if one 1 afford iti At least, it would be a marvellous way of ; for a month or two. After that, one would have to buy t and cultivate a cabbage patch and a flair for fishing, i 10 other reason than that one's funds had disappeared one had to have shelter and food. While the money 1, though, it was not unpleasant to stay at the only hote ie island and spend the days exploring. A pity Lorina couldn't share the joys, but then Lorina had never cared ||nuch for poking around in old clothes and swimming till she |was blissfully exhausted; her specialities were fine tweeds &nd beautiful shoulders in an evening gown. I This interlude couldn't last for long, of course; as soon as Jlorina felt quite fit they would have to find the Forbes man |and come to grips with him. Lorina would handle him; she Icould handle any male. And then the two of them would Iretum to England and buy the guest farm; and Numeh tisland would recede into its fascinating haze of heat and |ocean. ^ The South China Sea. Katie said the magic words aloud ^ 5
6
that fourth morning, as she waded in the ripples and gingerly turned over a pale green crab with her toe. Such a long, long way from Morbay in Sussex, where she had lived with Lorina since leaving school. It was more than six weeks since they had sailed in a second-rate ship from Tilbury, and Katie felt, rather guiltily, that she should not have enjoyed it so much while Lorina lay feeling so ill in her cabin. Still, she had done all she could for her, and it had seemed a pity not to revel in the strange and exhilarating sights, the unbelievable smells, the views and the warmth and the heady realisation that they were travelling East, beyond Singapore and Macassar. She sloshed along idly at the edge of the sea. Looking up the beach she could see the hotel, a long white building backed by tall palms; and then, as she moved on, there were only palms, with a white sandy road curving through them parallel with the beaoh. This was where she had found some of the loveliest shells and a few flowering plants among the stones. And there was the long iron handle of something which wouldn't shift from its pebble-locked bed. She pulled and felt it bend slightly, then delved to attempt once more to loosen the rocky stones which gripped the object. She was so engrossed that she was unaware of the figure approaching till a rope-soled sandal trod cavemously into the sand, quite close to her. Katie looked up, expecting the plump white-haired Uncle Jake, who belonged to the hotel and was full of island lore. But this was someone she hadn't met 'before, a passably handsome man in light, sea-stained slacks which were rolled up at the bottoms, and a white shirt with a navy blue scarf at the neck. Katie gave him a bright blue glance and looked beyond him to where an outboard motor-boat had been pulled up the beach. "Hallo," she said uncertainly, and rose to her feet. He was tall and very brown, black-haired and dark-eyed. Had he worn earrings and his smile been vicious instead of mocking he would have looked like a pirate. He looked at her speculatively, looked down at the thing she had been trying to shift. "Want it, particularly?"
7
; "Well, no. I just wondered what it was." ; "I'll show you," he said. ; He got down and methodically prised stones away from ithe base of the handle with his pocket-knife. Katie saw the bound black edge to which the handle was riveted, and then, latter he had gouged away more stones, she saw the brown | hands dig down and lift an old pan which had once been | patterned with holes. I' "Know what it is?" he asked. ;;. "A warmer of some kind?" | "That's right. It preceded the copper warming pan by I. about a hundred years. Relic of a shipwreck." | "It must have been solid, to last so long. May I have it?" | "Sure. What else do you collect?" ; Katie wondered if he were using his normal tones, whether the always sounded slightly superior and amused. | "Maybe I don't collect anything," she said. I "I'm sure you do. The pockets of your shorts are bulging, ; but you're a bit too old for bull's-eyes and marbles. What ; have you got - shells and pebbles?" I. "A few," she admitted, a little crossly. "Did you come here from Singapore?" i "Yes." It was partly true. !• "At school there?" ' "Certainly not. I'm nineteen!" ' "Really? I'd have put you at fifteen, but then I don't know much about teenagers. Horrible word, isn't it?" ; "I loathe it." She nodded past him. "Is that your boat?" ! "Yes. I've been spending a few days with a friend on , another island. What do you do in Singapore?" : The truth had to come out. "I'm from England. We're here on ... well, you might call it business." "We?" "I travelled out with ... a sort of cousin. She's been unwell, but she's almost over it now. In a day or two we'll set ' about what we came for, and if we're successful we shall be going home almost at once." He had lodged the warming pot on a rock, and now he
8
stood back, with his hands in the pockets of his slacks, appraising her carelessly. "What sort of business could you have on Numeh Island?" "You wouldn't be interested," she said vaguely. Then something occurred to her. "Unless you know Simon Forbes?" He teetered on the rope-soled sandals. "Yes, I know the chap. Everyone knows 'him. His great-grandfather took over Numeh Island and was proclaimed its governor. The old man started plantations and a shipping service, and his son carried on, after him. The present Forbes is doing likewise." "Isn't he a bit of a horror?" He considered this. "Do you mean in appearance?" "His appearance doesn't matter, but it's bound to be revolting even if he's good-looking, because he's such a stubborn character." Katie lifted a determined little chin. "The man actually believes he's my guardian." "Good lord, does he?" He thought this over. "And you've never seen him?" "Not in person. I did keep a tiny snapshot of him. He looked as if he might be nice, and for a long time - till I left school - he was my favourite pin-up. I was at boarding school, you see, and we used to stick pictures on me inside of the door of the bedside locker. He got a bit faded and dog-eared, so when I put away childish things I tore him up. ' I actually thought I was done with him completely." "And you're not?" She shook her head, and the ends of the scarf danced on her shoulder. "He can't dictate to me in any way, but he holds the purse-strings. My father was a planter on Numeh; my mother died when I was very young and I more or less grew up in boarding schools. After my father died, Mr. Forbes sent money every three months and everything went smoothly till I was eighteen. We - Lorina and I - had always thought I'd have the capital amount transferred into my name at that age, and we'd planned what to do with it. But Mr. Forbes wrote that he'd decided to make use of a clause in my father's will, and retain the capital till I'm twenty-one. We sent him letters, but the beast wouldn't budge. In fact, in
his letter he said he might even extend the limit to my twentyfifth birthday!" He laughed, and his dark eyes gleamed. "So you came in person to shake him? Think you'll succeed?" "We have to. There's something we both want terribly and we need the money to get it." She looked at him, candidly. "Have you any influence here on Nurneh?" "A bit. I've lived here for some time." "What's your name?" "Verney." She held out a pale gold hand. "I'm Katie Howarfh. How do you do, Mr. Veraey." "It's a pleasure to know you. Miss Howarth." "Don't laugh at me, please. This is a serious matter for Lorina and me. Our whole future, in fact. Will you come in on our side?" "I'll have to meet your cousin before I can promise that," he said cautiously. "You see, I'm inclined to think you're rather young to know what you're after. You might be far better off with an allowance for the next few years." "But you don't understand," she said impulsively. "Lorina and I have been living at a guest farm in Sussex - working there. The owner died more than a year ago and his wife wants to sell out. I know that Mr. Forbes has been paying me only the interest on whatever my father left, and working it out at six per cent . . ." "You're as keen on money as the rest of them, aren't you?" She gestured impatiently. "We didn't come ten thousand miles without even a statistic to back us up. Lorina thinks that the money Mr. Forbes holds for me would be a little more than half of what the guest farm will cost. We'll take out a mortgage for the rest." "I doubt if you'll get your guardian to change his mind." "He only thinks he's my guardian. I'm going to prove to him that I'm capable of taking care of my own affairs!" He looked lazily at her clear oval face, at the healthy dark blue of her eyes and at the sweetly curving mouth. "How will you do it?" 9
"I'm not an idiot - not by any means." "I believe you, but you've a tough job ahead." She lifted her shoulders, a little despondently. "You're the first person I've told about it. I was simply trying it out, to get your reaction, and I'm afraid it's just what I expected. You're a stranger. Why should you bother about helping someone like me?" "I'm afraid no one can help you with Simon Forbes. You'll have to do it all yourselves - you and your cousin." Abstractedly, he consulted his watch. "I was going up to the hotel for a drink, but it's getting late, and I'm expected home for lunch. Maybe we'll run into each other again." Katie said arflessly, "When I need someone to unearth another pot I'll page Mr. Verney. You're a bit of a disappointment in other directions." He smiled, showing white teeth; but his eyes were old and knowledgeable, though he couldn't be more than thirty-one or two. "There's a flower that grows profusely in Numeh; you won't see it anywhere else in the islands. It has pale green velvet leaves and masses of tiny pink and gold flowers that form cushions. It has a native name which means 'Flower of the Morning.' Untouched, it's magnificent, but it bruises very easily." "Are you warning me against something?" she asked cheerfully. "Frankly, I don't think it would do much good. I've never met anyone so obviously destined for a hot time, one way or another." Before she could make a startled retort he was moving towards his boat, and adding, "If I were you I'd accept Simon Forbes as guardian of your purse, and come back in about five or six years' time. By then, you'll be quite something; if you didn't get what you wanted from Simon you'd get it from someone else." Katie took a couple of long. Uneven paces to reach his side. "Are you advising me to accept defeat before I've even tried?" He looked at her, as if surprised that she had caught up with him. "There again, I don't think it would do much 10
^ood. Whatever I say, you'll have a go at it." "Don't you wish me luck?" "I certainly do," he said mildly. "You're going to need it. He shoved Ac boat into the water, stepped into it and used an oar. His farewell was a casual flick of the wrist as he pulled in the oar and span the motor. Within seconds he was a hundred yards out and heading along the coast. Watching him, Katie felt an unfamiliar little knot of anger in her chest. But perhaps, she thought as she turned back towards the hotel, it was more frustration than anger. He was a man, with a man's viewpoint on her mission. He was rather too handsome, anyway, to be of much help. Possibly women were almost superfluous in his world. In any case, she couldn't bother with Mr. Veraey. She picked up her pot and carried it up the beach and into the lanai of the hotel. Old Uncle Jake sat there, exceedingly large in the small wicker chair and beaming from every inch of his ruddy countenance. He had built the hotel forty years ago, when he had mistakenly imagined a town growing up round it; now he sat back while his favourite niece and her husband ran the place to his satisfaction. Katie had heard his tales but had never questioned him. Now, smiling at him, she decided to ask him what he knew about the Verney man. The old man chuckled and heaved himself into a more easy position. "Yes, young lady, I know a lot about him. The Forbes family has already become a legend here, and Simon is increasing their prestige. He lives over at Kohti - has just built a new house that needs seeing to be believed. The old house was on mansion lines - old-fashioned and crumbling. The new one is built to catch every breath of air. Cement piles one room thick, and therefore very long, and french windows all over the place. Just one storey and well shaded by palms. If you're interested, you can see one end of it from the coast road." "I'm more interested in the man than in the house." He gave a short, full-throated laugh. "You're not the only wench! But Simon Forbes is choosy. He'll marry, of course, because the islanders expect it of him, but he's a most diffi11
cult man to please." ^"1 don'^t mean anything like that! He'd be a ghastly man Uncle Jake Dorfling tried to straighten his spherical body and take a good look at her. "What other reason would a girl have for wanting to know more about Mr. Forbes? Ill agree that a woman who married him would have an uneasy time ... but how do you know it? Have you seen him at all since you came here?" "No. No, I haven't." Katie was beginning to regret having mentioned the Forbes man's name. "He seems to be important here and I was curious, that's all." "He has something to do with this business of yours?" the old man asked shrewdly. When she had nodded, he said "If I were you I'd let Miss Carew take care of it. She is nearer his age. "That would be best, I think," she answered him quickly and with a smile she walked into the faded gaiety of the litfle lounge and along the corridor which led to the terraced block ot bedrooms. From habit, Katie tapped on the bedroom door before entering. She set her rusted iron pot on a newspaper in a comer of the room, and smiled across at Lorina, who was seated near the open window are'Sling'?00'8 awfu1' but r11 hide it somewhere- How Lorina smiled very sweetly. The waves of titian hair had been softly brushed back from her white forehead, and today she had taken the trouble to darken her thick lashes and eyelids. She wore a tan linen dress which enhanced the green of her eyes. She looked frail and beautiful, made Katie appear long-legged and boyish. - "Ym fine," she said. "You've been so patient, Katie" Oh, fudge. I've been having a marvellous time." Again he hesitated on the verge of mentioning the acquaintance she had made on the beach, and veered away from it "When are you going to bathe?" "Not for a day or two." A pause. "Darling, we can't wait 12
any longer. I think I'd better write a note to Mr. Forbes right away." "Oh, dear. The more I hear about him the more sure 1 am that we shouldn't have come. He sounds almost sinister." Lorina's glance sharpened. "Have you been talking to someone about him?" Oddly, Katie found herself evading the truth. I mentioned him just now to the old man. Uncle Jake. He says Simon Forbes is a difficult man." "We know that already, from the letters he sent you in England." Lorina ran a meditative shell-pink fingernail over the grass arm of her chair. "Katie, has anyone mentioned anything about your name? On an island like Numeh the name Howarth should easily be remembered." "Yes, it should - yet no one has said anything. My father died nearly five years ago, but old Uncle Jake would remember him. You'd think he would have asked me if I were a connection - but he hasn't. I wonder if . . ." "No, leave it now. I don't want these hotel people to know why we're here - not unless we're successful, anyway." Katie gazed at her in astonishment. "I haven't heard you sound defeatist before!" "I'm not licked, but so much depends on the sort of man this Simon Forbes turns out to be. And perhaps I'm still a bit depressed from feeling so seedy. Katie," the green eyes were softer than Katie had ever seen them, "this means so much to me that I'm getting cold feet a little. You'll have to help all you possibly can." "Of course I will," exclaimed Katie warmly. "Just tell me what you want me to do." Lorina smiled gently. "I'm sure I can leave it to your instinct. We're so happy together that we can't help but do the right thing for each other. You do want the guest farm • as much as I do, don't you? "I just want to be absolutely sure, now that we've reached the vital moment. I used to be able to manage men rather well, but ... I suppose it's through feeling low that I'm a wee bit uncertain." 13
"I'm sure it is. You'll soon be right again. We can't let the Forbes man think we're frightened of him!" "No, that would be fatal, but we must go carefully. Let me do most of the talking, will you? And it might be better if I were alone with him; an audience always cramps my style. I'd better write the note this afternoon and send it by messenger." "Do you mean you'll go and see him alone?" Katie asked hopefully. "I can't do that; after all, it's your money. But I must have a session alone with him some time. I'm doing this for you you realise that? Your father said you could have the money when you were eighteen, and I have to convince the man that you're capable of managing it, with my help." "You can do it. I'm sure!" "I'll try, darling." Lorina lifted a candid green gaze. "Just one little reminder. At the guest farm we got along splendidly as cousins; let's go on that way, shall we?" "Of course. You're far too young to, be my aunt, anyway. Thirty is no age at all." "Make it twenty-seven, there's a sweet. You don't know how infuriating it was to have a niece while I was still at' school! Your mother was nine years older than I and she married at nineteen." "Nineteen," mused Katie. "She must have grown up young I'm afraid I'm a bit backward where those things are concerned. I don't want to marry for years and years, but I'd love you to get married, Lorina." "If we get the guest farm, perhaps I will." Katie laughed. "Is there a secret understanding between you and Charles Kain?" "'You don't like him, do you?" ; "I shall, if he makes you happy. You're so good-looking its amazing you haven't married before." A shadow fell across Lorina's pale face. because we're approaching the climax of our trip. I want to be sure you understand and trust me before we storm the fortress!" "We've talked this thing through and through, and 1m quite sure we're doing the right thing. We've spent everything we had on this venture, and it's darned well going to succeed. What will you put in the note to the ogre?" "Very little. I'll just mention that we've arrived and would like to see him at his convenience. Then we'll sit back and wait." The reply to Lorina's note was brought next morning, by a blithe young cyclist. The writing was heavily masculine, the words few. Dear Miss Carew, I will give myself the pleasure ot making the acquaintance of yourself and Miss Katherine Howarth at six this evening. Perhaps you will meet me for cocktails in the hotel lounge. Sincerely, Simon Forbes. Well, the day had come, and Katie felt her resolve becoming firm, her spirits soaring. "I'm glad we haven't got to go to his house," she said. "Here in the hotel we're almost on our own ground." But Lorina was guarded. "This is to be the preliminary skirmish. I never thought about the man's writing in England, but now it has an ominous look - too self-assured. And the brevity isn't promising, either. He could have expressed surprise or pleasure, even without meaning it. But apparently Mr. Forbes is imperturbable and not given to glossing anything that's in the least unpleasant. I don't think we'd better say too much this evening - just weigh him up and do our deciding later, when he's gone." Katie had a swim before lunch, and during the afternoon she watched some islanders plaiting coco fibre into'-mats for their houses. Mondulu was that kind of place: primitive, unhurried, with one bamboo store that seemed to be open day and night, and a thrice weekly market just above the beach. She had tea with Uncle Jake Dorfling under a tree in . the paved lanai, and went indoors at five-thirty, to find that 15
Lorina had already had her bath and was dressing. | "I was about to send for you," Lorina said. "Do a good | job of make-up, won't you? And brush your hair well back." 1 She smiled a little sharply. "Our chief liability is your look 1 of youth, so we must hide it." | Katie was ready at five minutes to six, and at exactly the J hour, Lorina, tall and demure in navy silk with a white foam • at the throat, her red hair impeccably dressed and a modest | topaz dress ring on her right hand, nodded towards the door. | "Come along, honey. Into battle!" • i There were not more than half a dozen people in the \ lounge, all men. Four of them were guests whom Katie knew j by sight; the other two were seated at a table near the window, talking and smoking in a strange half-light from outdoors. One of them turned his head, and Katie's heart jumped right up into her throat and choked her breath. The i Vemey man! | She looked quickly at Lorina, saw only coolness and poise i and a smile. And then the man had got up, and so had his | companion, who seemed to be older and mid-brown, thickset I and rather rugged-looking. The men approached, and dazedly .; Katie registered their white dinner jackets and immaculate ; grooming. The taller might have been the Verney man's arrogant twin! He spoke first. "Miss Carew ... and Miss Howarth?" Just as if he'd never before seen Katie. "May I present Dr. Dan Willis. Dan and I are dining together, and I thought it might be a good thing for you to meet him over a drink. I understand that you. Miss Carew, have been unwell." "Yes, but I'm better now." Lorina gave him the soft, hesitant treatment. "Are you Mr. Forbes?" Without flickering an eyelid in Katie's direction, he answered. "I didn't introduce myself, did I? Simon Vemey Forbes. Shall we sit down?" By the time Katie found herself seated with the pleasantlooking doctor on one side and the master of deception on the other, she had begun to accept the situation. But not to like the man, or to trust him. He sat there, black-haired and 16
dark-eyed, looking for all the world as if he spent his time giving orders from behind a formidable desk, and yet you felt he gave them considerately and without prejudice. A dangerous man to deal with, she knew instinctively, because he could be many things without caring about his effect on people. The waiter stood obsequiously at his elbow. "The order, tuan?" "Martinis?" Simon Forbes asked them, "or would you prefer the local cocktail?" Each made a decision, the order was given. Simon offered cigarettes and lit them, sat back with an aloof smile. "I've written to you both a good many times, but it never occurred to me that I'd ever see you here on Numeh. Are you taking a cruise?" "Combining business with pleasure," Lorina replied, smiling a little. "We had a rather hard winter and I felt both Katie and I needed some sunshine. It's several years since I had a real holiday, and Katie had never even crossed the Channel - so we decided on a long break at tourist rates, Unfortunately," she ended deprecatingly, "tourist travel on a second-class ship isn't always as cosy as it sounds in the advertisements. The food was poor and I'm not a good sailor." "Then it was very brave of you to come so far." "It's easy to be brave for the things one wants - particularly if one wants them for a loved one. Katie enjoyed the voyage - didn't you, darling?" "I'd have liked it more if you could have shared it all." Dr. Willis put in, in quiet, smiling tones, "You must stay on Numeh for a while. Miss Carew, and make up for any unpleasantness you met on the way here. I'd be very happy to drive you both round the island. And we might arrange a moonlight picnic for you - don't you think so, Simon?" "I don't see why not. Miss Carew and Miss Howarth will dine with me at Kohti, of course." Lorina's green eyes opened a little wider, but didn't quite 17
meet his. "How very kind you are - both of you. We're very grateful." "Why should you be?" Simon asked coolly. "Since you came here to see me, the least I can do is to offer you hospitality." "Oh, yes." Dr. Dan Willis appeared to be the peacemaking type. "Simon acts guardian to Miss Howarth, I believe. I haven't lived here very long, so I'm not familiar with the details." With difficulty, Katie kept silent; determinedly she looked at the drink she had just tasted. Simon Forbes drank half his whisky before replying. "It's merely a matter between a London lawyer and myself," he said. "If I were Miss Howarth's guardian I wouldn't have permitted this trip to Numeh till she came of age." "In most things," said Katie before she could stop herself, "I came of age a year ago. I've never been irresponsible or extravagant, and the fact of having lived first in an ordinary boarding school and then in a sort of finishing school has made me independent." "So independent that you chose your career without assistance from anyone else?" This was perilous ground, and Katie knew it, without intercepting a warning glance from Lorina. "Yes," she said firmly. "If you hadn't forced me to spend eighteen months on that final course I'd have been almost trained by now." "Trained in what?" he asked, as if it were really a matter of interest. "Hotel-keeping?" "Possibly." "Do you know why I insisted on that extra year or so of ; school?" "Of course," inserted Lorina gently. "Katie had no parents to guide her and you felt she shouldn't be thrown on the world till she was old enough to handle the sort of things that crop up in a young woman's life. You wanted her well equipped, and considering you aren't a married man it was a v/onderful thought. I've always been so relieved that you were in charge while. Katie was under eighteen." « 18
Simon's sole reaction to this was a faint narrowing of his eyes. He said pleasantly, "Then there isn't much to discuss, is there? I'm very glad to know you, of course. As a matter of fact, I'm going over to England myself in a few months, and I intended looking you up in Sussex. If you'd mentioned in a letter that you were contemplating a visit to Numeh, I could have saved you the time and the money." Lorina had never before received this kind of cold-blooded response from a man. She looked at him briefly, apparently decided there was little one could do about him with others present, and turned charmingly to Dr. Willis. "I'm not sorry I came, anyway. Tell me about these moonlight picnics. Dr. Willis. They sound exciting." Lorina refused a second drink and Katie did the same. Dr. Willis seemed reluctant to bring the half-hour's talk to an end, but Simon showed no desire to prolong the session. "I have a few friends dining at my house," he said. "They're all men, or I would have invited you to join us. Will you come for lunch tomorrow? I'll send for you." Lorina shrugged her slender shoulders. "Very well, Mr. Forbes. It will be an honour to be entertained by the White Rajah of Numeh." His smile, as he rose, was distant and mocking. "Not the Rajah - just the tuan. A car will pick you up at a quarter to one." Then, as if in afterthought, he turned to Katie: "Seeing that I have a certain responsibility towards you I'll provide you with transport during your stay. Can you drive, or do you need a chauffeur?" "I can drive, and so can Lorina. We both used a station wagon at the guest farm." "Really? Then you should be able to manage my car. Come out and try it." "We don't need anything big." "I know. I merely want to test your driving." Katie's blue eyes brightened with anger. If Lorina had not made another warning movement she might have said something disastrous. The words remained unspoken, but they were there in the compression of her wide, sensitive mouth, 19
and in the tilt of her chin. She walked from the lounge into the darkness of the lanai, felt the tall man come beside her and impersonally take her elbow as he led her towards tha sandy yard where a couple of cars were parked. He stopped beside a long, powerful Mercedes, which Katie determinedly looked at as if it were a lizzie. "Ever driven one of these?" he asked. "No." "You're not going to drive this one, either,9' he said. "I'll send over something more in your line. I got you out here because I want a word with you." "I guessed that." He leaned back against the car, spoke tolerantly. "Still fed up because I didn't tell you yesterday that I'm the bear who holds the cash?" "Did you think I'd regard it as a good joke?" "It wasn't so serious. I'm not too keen on being taken by surprise - especially by a girl just out of school - so I punished you for it. Only lighfly, though. Found any more iron pots?" Exasperatedly, she said, "I don't understand you at all. We're trying to relieve you of a nuisance, but you treat us coldly and with utmost suspicion." "You're not a nuisance - only a habit. And the fact that you've travelled so far for money is certainly suspect. If that guest farm were such an excellent proposition you'd be able to raise a loan, but I don't intend to go into that just now." He paused. "Your cousin is remarkably attractive. Why isn't she married?" Katie stared at him. "Perhaps she doesn't want to marry." "I doubt it; she tries too hard to please." He shrugged. "I'm sorry, child, but even after seeing you the answer is still the same; you'll continue to receive your allowance every quarter, and I'll go into the whole business again when you're twenty-one." "You mean you've made a snap decision, without even hearing our side of it?" she demanded, aghast. "That's most unfair!" 20
"I'll listen," he said mildly, "but don't be too hopeful. Oh, and by the way, you don't have to wear sophisticated clothes and perfume for me. I saw you looking fifteen and smelling of the sea yesterday . . . remember?" "You're trying to jolt me, aren't you? But when I want something I'm quite tenacious, especially if the something is really my own. I suppose we ought to have guessed that you'd be this sort of person. Those letters of yours were the most unfeeling I've ever read!" "What was there to feel about? I only had to weigh my duty to you against this proposition of yours." "Any ordinary man would have been glad to have done with the whole thing as soon as he could," she insisted. "Any ordinary man," he said calmly, "would have thought quite a lot before taking you on at the age of fourteen. I was twenty-eight, then, and not a bit fond of women." "No?" She looked at him for a moment, saw a small tantalising smile on his well-cut lips, a faint glitter in the dark eyes. "What did you have against women?" "I was engaged to one of them; in appearance she was like your cousin." "What happened?" she asked curiously. "She went off and had a good time in Singapore - thought she could get away with it." "Then she wasn't in love with you?" "Love is for children like you," he said laconically. "I never have believed in it myself." Kate nodded comprehendingly. "I thought not; you were never young. That's why you're so detached about Lorina and me. You don't even like people, let alone love them." "Could be," he admitted. He looked her over in the darkness with the aloof interest of a scientist. "Now that you're here you may as well enjoy yourself. How long can you stay?" She turned away. "We haven't decided, Mr. Forbes. Shall we go in?" Katie didn't even look his way. Back at the hotel, she crossed the lounge to where Lorina and Dr. Willis were 21
standing, smiled at them both brightly. "Did you pass the test?" asked Lorina. "She's a little impulsive," said Simon smoothly, "but we don't have traffic jams on Numeh. I'm afraid we must leave you now. Ready, Dan?" He bowed, charmingly; Dr. Willis looked as if he would prefer to stay, but said goodbye. The two men went out into the scented darkness and Lorina turned towards the dining room. "Did you have trouble with him?" she asked quietly. Somehow, Katie felt a little raw and unwilling to plunge into a discussion. "No trouble. He's just like granite, that's all." "Yes, I'm afraid he is. How can a man get that way in a place like this?" Katie shrugged. "I wish we'd stayed at home." Lorina gave her most affectionate little laugh. "Oh, come, Katie. We haven't even started on the man yet. I think well have an ally in Dr. Willis." Katie was reflecting that one could-have a hundred allies and still be weaponless against the imperturbable Simon Forbes. "Let's forget the horrid man," she said. "I'm hungry." For a while, that evening, she did forget Simon. The dinner, of fish salad, roast pork, many vegetables, and heaps of fruit, was excellently prepared and served, and after it a guitarist sang and played just outside the lounge windows. Lorina seemed abstracted, and before ten o'clock she said she felt tired enough to sleep. So Katie took a stroll alone in the warm, whispering night. She looked at palms against the sky, at the seductive sea, where a few small boat lamps bobbed, at the white face of the Mondulu Hotel. She wandered along the lane beside the hotel, caught a sweet elusive perfume and bent to examine the flower it came from. There were clusters of them; pink ' and gold, she thought, though the hotel lights turned them yellow and streaky. The blossoms lay over a cushion of their own soft velvet leaves. Flower of the Morning. She straightened, remembering the man on the beach 22
There must be some way of persuading him. Lorina would find it and they would both depart happily for England. But as she hesitated beside the long smooth trunk of a palm and listened to the murmuring waves and the strange distant music of another guitar, Katie had the disturbing conviction that even if they got what they had come for, she and Lorina wouldn't be entirely happy when they left the island. Already some of the magic was at work.
23
CHAPTER II KATIE awoke very early the following morning. Her first waking thought was an uneasy one with Lorina as the focal point. Ever since Lorina had first come to visit her at school, not long after her father's death, Katie had regarded her more as a cousin than as a young aunt, and she had been very willing to forget their true relationship when she had joined Lorina at the guest farm where she was book-keeper and receptionist. What woman of under thirty would want a teenage niece underfoot? Besides, the cousinship had made them more companionable, and for that reason alone Katie, who had no other relative that she knew of, was very willing to preserve it. But here in Numeh things were slightly different. It didn't really matter whether Simon Forbes knew they were niece and aunt, and surely Lorina would have more pull as Katie's aunt than as a cousin? Not that it would be policy to mention it; in any case, Lorina was shrewd enough to work out things for herself. Katie remembered times when Lorina's knowledge and experience had rather amazed her. She also recalled something which had occasionally occurred to her but never mattered much: at no time had Lorina been communicative about Katie's parents. Katie, of course, had wondered about them, but not very deeply. She knew her mother had died in a car accident when she was four, that she herself had been placed in the care of friends who had eventually sent her away to boarding school, Her father had taken a job as publishers' traveller . . . and then there was a blank, till he had come home from the South Seas to see her when she was ten. She had written to him care of a box number in Singapore, had received a few replies which told little except that he was working on Numeh and wanted her to have the best education he could afford. Then suddenly, only a month after her fourteenth birthday 24
the school principal had told her of her father's death and taken her to see the London solicitor who apparently regarded each client as a file in his cabinet. He could tell her nothing, except that he would pay her school fees, pocket money and holiday expenses, and that she would probably inherit her father's "estate" when she was eighteen. For weeks after that, Katie had felt unwanted and forlorn; and then Lorina, who had just come down from York, became the anchor she needed. Naturally, she had had to spend most of the holidays at the school or with a school friend, but Lorina had steadily kept in touch from her new post at the guest farm, and had had a place waiting for her when she had finished her last course. During recent months, while letters had been going backwards and forwards between Numeh and Sussex, Lorina had mentioned her sister only briefly. "She,was the lively one," she had said. "I was very fond of her, but we never really knew each other because she married so young. I was barely sixteen when she died." "What about my father?" Katie had asked. "I liked him and he liked me. He must have liked me or he wouldn't have written, later on, asking me to look after you." "You've never told me that before." "Because I didn't want it to influence you. And anyway," with a sisterly smile, "once I'd seen you again I wanted to help you in every way I could, for your own sake. For a schoolgirl you were quite appealing." Katie, unused to showing affection, had felt a lump in her throat and a new exasperation with the man in Numeh who wouldn't release her father's capital. She had repeated that somehow they would get the money and buy the farm, so that she and Lorina could feel quite independent and perhaps in time be comfortably off. She hadn't liked Charles Kain, but then he was just one of the "permanents" who happened to be keen on Lorina; there had never been anything to suggest that Lorina returned his feelings. Katie got up, saw that Lorina still slept, and went into the '25
bathroom. Fifteen minutes later, dressed in clean white shorts and shirt, the pale hair slicked back in one shallow wave, Katie walked through the lounge, where a boy was using an ancient carpet sweeper, and out into the sunny lanai. The air was fresh but warm, the bougainvillea spilling down from the trellis at the end of the paving billowed out into purple clouds, and the sea was rippling blue-green silk frilled with white where it lapped the pale gold sand. Old Uncle Jake Dorfling rolled round the building towards his favourite palm, looked about him to select a chair. Katie pushed the long lounger he liked best into position. "Good morning," she said. "Have you had breakfast?" He chuckled. "So you're the new waitress! I like your uniform, and," with a sigh as he sank down, ,'T like your youth. I don't eat breakfast any more - too old and fat." He gave her a sly smile. "I hear you're going to have a special lunch today." "Everyone gets to know everything in Mondulu, don't they? I noticed the waiters almost walked out backwards when Mr. Forbes was here last night." Uncle Jake's bushy grey eyebrows rose steeply. "Are you being irreverent, young lady? Mr. Forbes is a very good and esteemed master in this island. You've only seen Mondulu, but almost the whole of the rest of Numeh was developed by the Forbes family from raw jungle into plantations and the town of Kohti. There isn't a native in the place who wouldn't defend Simon with all he had, if necessary." "Lucky Simon," she said flippantly. "The iron hand in the threadbare velvet glove." His large smile was inquisitive. "I don't remember any casual visitors to the island being invited to the big house. You're the first, and perhaps your visit is not so casual, either. He came here for the purpose of seeing you last night." "Yes, he did." Katie hesitated, then said, "It may seem fantastic, but Simon Forbes holds the key to my future." "Ah, now, that's promising! You should be happy about it."
"I'm not. He's so cold and sure of himself that last night I 26
wanted to blow him and his island sky-high!" "You can't do that. Mondulu is on Numeh." She smiled. "I'd leave you here, and the hotel. Seriously, though, I can't make any impression on the man at all. I'm just someone negligible and distant who should be grateful to have the big man looking after my interests. Only I'm not grateful!" "You're not negligible, either. As a matter of fact, I believe you're the youngest white woman on the island - and that makes you someone! Mind you, though, you've got to be at least twenty-five before Simon will allow that you're growing up. Does he want you to stay here?" "No, he just wishes I'd stop reminding him of my existence." "And your cousin?" he probed. "Is she here to add beauty and blandishment to your cause?" Katie lifted slim shoulders, gave him another smile. "It's her future, too. But never mind; this morning I'm glad I came." She waved to him and went into the dining room, where the dozen or so tables were white and sparkling, with a section of yellow papaia set at each place. Violent scarlet pomegranate flowers splashed the white walls, their pots invisible beneath cascades of fairy fern. The room was small but a joy, and as Katie seated herself she couldn't help recalling the low-ceilinged dining room at the guest farm, where the dim mock-candles were needed for every meal, and arty copperware and Spode looked down from the walls. She caught herself up quickly. It was lovely there! The farm itself and the Downs, the boisterous sea and Morbay town, with its winding streets and leaning pubs, the market square and the church and the statue of some naval hero of long ago. Funny, though, and rather frightening, that she should have to remind herself so soon of the familiar details. She forgot them again, squeezed lemon over the papaia and dipped into the soft golden fruit with a spoon. She bathed- that morning, and got back in time to eat cream fancies with Uncle Jake. Lorina sat with them, but 27
drank unsweetened lime juice and ate nothing. Uncle Jake's weighty humour Lorina found irritating, but she smiled at him; she had never been known to make an enemy; enemies were incalculable, she averred, and it was better to be able to assess a person's reactions. This morning, Lorina was quiet and thoughtful. Her colour was better than at any time since she had left England, but the heat slowed down her movements and made her conscious that make-up quickly disappeared if one grew animated. Katie could be energetic; her skin was firm and young and golden. Not that Lorina had ever hankered for any but her own long delicate features, white skin and titian hair. At noon, the two girls went indoors to dress. Katie carelessly chose a sleeveless white linen which made her look more tanned than ever, and Lorina wore a flowery dress this time, one of those filmy feminine things that most women rather dislike but men find fetching. The car that called for them was a roomy sedan, almost new, mid-blue in colour and driven by a Malay in khaki drill. They sat in the back seat, and for the first time since their arrival in the dusk at Kohti harbour left the small district of Mondulu. "Do you suppose there'll be other people there?" Katie queried. "Somehow, I think not. And somehow, I think hell try to see you alone again. He senses that I don't want him to, so he'll do it deliberately. Upon reflection, I don't see that it can do any harm." Her smile at Katie was warm. "If I had to look for someone to boost my reputation I'd choose you, without hesitation." "I should hope so! The only thing I wished very fervently when I saw that man was that I'd knocked about a little more." "It wouldn't help you much. I don't find him a pushover myself." "Supposing we can't melt him at all - what shall we do?" "He'll unbend, some time. We may have to be very patient, though." She paused. "I've been thinking of writing an air
letter to Mrs. Barnwell, asking for an extension of our option. Four months from six weeks ago, when we left England, may not be long enoughi" "But the option is for sixteen weeks. We shan't be here a month, surely?" Lorina patted her hand. "When a thing is worth having it's worth waiting for. If we can't convince Simon Forbes in words, we'll have to stay and work on him. If we lose the farm I'm going to feel hellish." Katie looked at her quickly. "It ... it really does mean a lot to you, doesn't it?" "More than you know, honey. It's going to be a great success, and you'll never regret having your money tied up that way. Maybe you'll want to pull out in a year or two, when you marry, but you'll still get an excellent return on the investment." "You'd really love to live there - always?" "It isn't Morbay that attracts me, or even the farm, particularly. It's the business angle. If we built on a block of rooms we could double the summer trade and get away in the winter - perhaps go abroad. Can you imagine any better life than spending from spring to autumn at Morbay and the cold months in Spain or the South of France?" "No, I really can't. Are you quite sure we couldn't get the money in England?" "We could raise two-thirds of it - enough to satisfy Mrs. Barnwell for the time being. But the repayments would be a nightmare, and the extra building just impossible." She glanced at Katie's candid blue eyes, her sweetly curved red mouth, and said softly, "You wanted it enough yourself to come with me, darling. Not changing your mind, are you?" "Of course not. The man is such a trial, that's all." "Yes, I know. Don't upset him, if you can help it, but don't let him intimidate you, either. If he thinks you're easily overcome he's bound to conclude that you aren't fit to handle your own affairs. Today, I feel, we must try to keep off the subject." She stretched an elegant leg and waggled a white shoe. "There's one thing to remember. Every man has a 29
vulnerable spot. Mostly it's some woman, but in Simon's case it's more obscure. But don't worry. We'll find it." They left the matter there, and looked out upon plantations of coconut palms. During the whole fifteen miles between Mondulu and Kohti they saw no houses till they drove between the thatched native dwellings on the outskirts of the town. And then, just when it seemed they were approaching a surprisingly modem spot of civilisation, the car turned right, and sped down an avenue towards the sea, turned right again, and climbed a slow gradient to the Forbes house. Uncle Jake's description had hit it off nicely. It was exceptionally long, with a tremendous roofspan which extended to half cover a tiled lanai through which one entered the house. The whole building was raised on many concrete piles, for coolness, and the wide windows faced other windows on the other side of the house, so that one got the impression of bricks and glass and a glaring pale grey roof pitted by ventilators. The garden was already established; there were saplings covered with yellow and scarlet and orange bloom, budding yuccas among grey-green rock plants, and masses of foliage which Katie did not recognise at all. In a year or two, she was sure, the house would be accepted by its tropical setting. "Heavens," murmured Lorina. "But isn't it like him! I'll bet it's the only house in the South Seas so obviously shaped by the demands of the climate." Katie had no time to add her comment. The car stopped, a figure rose from a chair in the lanai and came down the three shallow steps to the gravel. Simon was tall and immaculate in off-white tropical slacks and a white shirt with a flowing tie. His skin was bronzed in the sunlight, his hair, blue-black, glistened as he opened the car door; he showed his white teeth in a suave smile, looked at them dispassionately with those dark eyes. "Welcome to Kohti," he said urbanely. "I hope you enjoyed the drive?" As if we were tourists, Katie fumed to herself. This was another Simon; not the boatman or the half-sinister creature 30
who put one in one's place, but the considerate host who nevertheless remained conscious of his exalted position on the island. He led them to the shaded portion of the lanai and seated them in comfortable modem chairs near a low table which was apparently a crude plank of local wood which had been smoothed and polished to mirror brilliance; it was part of this place, of course. Lorina sat back in her scarlet chair. "I expect you're tired of being told you have an astonishing and very charming house," she said. "I see you don't even run to glass doors; everything slides!" He took the box of cigarettes from the table and opened it. "The place has been completed about six months. The old house was stuffy and out of date; I'm having it modernised and converted into a school building. The children here do their lessons outdoors under an awning, but they need a building, of course, and a dignified one will give them the right outlook." He poured gin juleps, topped them with ice and a sprig of mint and handed them, before seating himself once more in his angular white chair. He raised his glass, and Katie, feeling as if she were in a world that she had so far known only from the glossy magazines, tasted her drink and found it deliciously cool if slightly heady. "Imported luxury," she said. "I like it. Are we permitted to put the obvious questions?" "Ask away," he replied. "I haven't many secrets." "No? I should have thought you had hundreds - big ones. What is the white population of Kohti?" "About a hundred and fifty. These days, white people aren't allowed to settle as planters; the land is for the people." "Do you have plantations of your own?" "Not really. I own the controlling interest in a development company that runs copra plantations, rice fields, sugar and a number of factories. All the growing is managed by local people - Chinese and Malays chiefly. I do take a working interest in the couple of industrial concerns, but if you 31
keep a finger on everything you can't specialise." He knocked ash from his cigarette. "Next question?" Lorina said, not too quickly but before Katie could speak: "Why not ask a few of your own, Mr. Forbes? You said you haven't many secrets. We haven't any at all." His smile was sardonic as he leaned back into the whitecovered, deeply-upholstered chair. "That's quite a challenge, from a good-looking woman, but I doubt if it's true. In any case, if I began to probe we'd get back to the reason you're here, and I've a feeling you want that as little as I do. Have you decided how long you're going to stay?" "Not yet. It may be two or three weeks." "Then you'll be glad of the car - the one that brought you today. We have about two hundred miles of roads crisscrossing the island, and they're all good in dry weather. It's best not to wander into the jungle near the hilltops or into the plantations, but as you're from England it's unlikely that you'll feel an urge for it. If you're keen on seeing the local sights, there's a mosque and several shrines, bazaars and so on." He paused. "I believe Dan Willis is most anxious to escort you, during his spare time." "I thought him most friendly," said Lorina casually. It was strange how the conversation remained on the cool and distant level and yet suggested quite strong undercurrents. They went indoors, to lunch at a table in the far corner of that extensive lounge upon succulent cold meats, salads, cheese and fruit, but though there was scarcely a pause in the talk, it never did more than flow over them genuy, the hint of electricity remaining ominously static. The meal ended back in the lanai, with coffee and cognac. And then, at two-thirty, when Lorina was consulting her watch and Katie was feeling uneasily that in a way matters were worse than they had been last night. Dr. Willis drove round the gravel path in a dusty black car. He came into the lanai, a broad-shouldered smiling man in official-looking bush-khaki, bowed to the two women and spoke to Simon. "Thought I wouldn't make it," he said. "Old Ah Ting had 32
a stroke just as I got home for lunch - his eleventh, to my knowledge. He's broken all records." "How is he?" "Who knows? A man who survives his umpteenth stroke at ninety-six could confound anyone. I left him sleeping among a brood of quarrelling grandchildren in his daughter's house." He hitched the drill slacks and sat down. "I should be free now for two or three hours. Larry Brendon is on duty," "My ward here," said Simon, with mockery, "should meet that young assistant of yours. You must arrange it, Dan." "All right, I will." He smiled paternally at Katie. "You look as if this climate agrees with you." "It does. I love it." "What do you think of Simon's house?" "It has everything except a heartbeat." "Like Simon?" "I'd rather believe he has a heart somewhere." "Why not try him out?" "How can I? I wouldn't know where to begin and I haven't much time. You can't invade a fortress without ammunition, and I don't seem to have any." "You have your share," put in Simon tolerantly. "It needs a few years to mature, thats all. Just be content to be young and in possession of an income which may not be large, but will provide you with most of your requirements." Lorina smiled at him, ruefully. "We've come a long way for those few words, so you mustn't be surprised if it takes us several days to accept them." She made as if to move. "Katie and I ought to go now." "You can't go. I invited Dan to lunch, but he couldn't be here in time, so I suggested he come as soon as he could, and we'd go for a drive. Unless you're tired?" "I'm not a bit tired," said Lorina quickly. "May we walk in the town first?" asked Katie. "It's too hot for you." "You can't postpone things .simply because it's hot," she protested. "That's part of the fun, anyway." 33
"Not for me," said Lorina. Dr. Willis leaned forward. "I'll take you, and Miss Carew can start out with Simon. They can find a good spot to wait for us, on the road." Strangely, Katie hoped Simon would disagree. He didn't, though. "A good idea," he said. "You two start away at once, and we'll follow. Keep her out of mischief, Dan." Lorina had gone quiet and watchful; Katie knew that she was marshalling her wits to make the most of this sudden piece of luck. Dr. Willis stood up. With another faintly anxious glance at the two who were remaining behind in the lanai, Katie went with the doctor to his roomy black car. He put her into the front seat, took his place and started the engine. They moved down the drive and out on to the coast road, turned left along the palm-lined avenue and took another turn down into the town of Kohti. He drove along a spacious esplanade between the sea and a line of buildings, pointed out Simon Forbes' sleek white yacht riding at anchor in the bay, and found an empty side-street in which to park the car. Dan Willis was a good companion. He took her into stores where she had the joy of examining all kinds of local products and gewgaws from other islands without buying a thing, showed her the mosque, with its eloquent line of shoes outside, the weaving shed, where brown fingers moved swiftly and intricately to produce delicate baskets and plates and bowls, of thin white grass, and a tiny Chinese coffee room full of young men with almond eyes and black hair who were earnestly discussing some problem. "You must walk along these streets after dark," he said. "Everyone comes out, the smells are indescribable and you hear the clicking of mahjong mingling with guitar music and the wail of a snake-charmer. Oh, yes, we have our snakecharmer, though only the small boys bother to watch him. I'm afraid he's not very genuine." "I'd rather believe he is!" "Of course you would." He waved at the crowded main street. "You find this exciting, don't you?" 34
"Yes, but it makes me uneasy, too. I can't imagine anyone living here for long and not being altered by. it. Except, perhaps, you." "Why me?" "I don't know. You're one of these bedrock types. How long have you been in the East?" "Fourteen years, though it's not much more than a year since I came to Numeh. I think I shall settle here." "You wouldn't like me to train as a nurse and come out and help you, would you?" He laughed. "I'd like it very much, but that's not your ambition, is it? I seem to have heard that you want to settle on a farm in England." "Yes, I do." But as she spoke Katie was aware of a tiny qualm. "Lorina and I are very happy at Morbay. If the place is sold well either have to look for other jobs or work with the new owner. Lorina runs the whole thing, practically, so buying it wouldn't be much of a risk, from our point of view. I can't think why Mr. Forbes is so set against it." "He doesn't meet many young women - just a few in Singapore when he goes there on business. He hasn't said much about you, but I should say that he thought of you as a schoolgirl and can't quite believe in your having grown up. At the moment, your money is in gilt-edged stock - the Numeh Development Corporation, no less! Last year they paid a dividend of twenty-one per cent. You won't find a better investment anywhere." "I didn't know about that," Katie said soberly. "Why didn't Mr. Forbes tell us?" "Are you sure you encouraged him to tell you?" "No, I'm afraid I didn't. Oh dear, that does complicate things!" He asked quietly, "Because of Miss Carew? Is she so very enthusiastic about taking on the responsibility of running a hotel of sorts?" "I'm afraid so." "Has she any . . . ties in England?" "Family, you mean? None at all." '35
"Well, perhaps things will work out. By the way, don't tell anyone what I've just told you about your capital. It's not really my business and I'd rather you waited till Simon himself mentions it." "I'm glad you're here," she said with a frank smile. "It would be too awful if there were no one to speak to about Mr. Forbes." He was leading her back to the car. "Talk to me whenever you like. Come down to the clinic and look round, if you're interested." "I'd like to. I'll bring Lorina, if she'll come." "Do that," he said, and Katie knew he was tacitly admitting that he would like to know more about Lorina Carew. "Why is it you men don't marry?" she asked curiously. He smiled. "With most of us it's through a combination of circumstances. Some men hurriedly become engaged before they come out, and the girl follows fairly soon. Others are the type who marry a little later; they get out here and there aren't many unattached women, so they don't marry at all. I'm one of those." "It seems a pity," she said frankly. "You're a good husband going to v/aste." "Jean Petlow said that once, when we were working on a child. She's my nurse." "Oh, you do have one. What is she like?" "Quiet and efficient - early thirties. She was here when I came, and she says she'll stay on when I go. When you find a woman just working in these places it never does to be inquisitive. They have their reasons, and one must respect them." '. "I can think of worse ways of spending one's life," she said. And then: "Isn't that a car right over there on the hill?" "Yes, it's Simon's. He's found a way down to the beach." Automatically, he put on speed, and a few minutes later they had drawn off the road and were coming to a halt beside the Mercedes. Lorina and Simon, they discovered, had gone a little way down the slope towards the sea, and were seated on a natural rock bench among fat succulent plants 36
and low shady trees. Simon stood up, and Katie noticed, with a queer leap at the heart, that he was smiling as if at something Lorina had said. There was a smile, too, ^ on Lorina's lips; they had actually been enjoying something together. "Well?" Simon queried. "Did little Kate get her fill of the town?" "Enough for the moment," she answered. "You've found a magic spot for a rest. Has this part of the island got a name? " "There are Malay and Dyak words for the headlands and bays, but the island is roughly divided into two-thirds Kohti and the other third Mondulu. This is Kohti, but about eight miles farther on you meet Mondulu. Both were named after people." "What people?" "I'll te0. you, some time." He sounded offhand again. "What did you consider the most exciting part of the town?" "I'm not sure. The whole blend was rather intoxicating. I noticed the Forbes name rather often. Forbes Square, Forbes Avenue, and so on. And a statue of Andrew Forbes ; was he the first on Numeh?" "He was," laconically. "He started the whole bag of tricks." "Why don't ytfU like talking about it?" Lorina gave a small laugh. "In time, Simon, you'll be prepared for my cousin's compulsion to hear and tell the truth about everything. Shall we have the tea now?" Simon nodded and went at long strides up to the car. Katie sat still and looked at the sea washing over the beach and about the few rocks half buried there. Lorina had called him Simon and there had been something in her voice that Katie hadn't heard since before their arrival; a note of confidence and friendliness. Katie couldn't decide whether it was a good sign or a bad one; she only knew that it was somehow distasteful. Simon brought a metal picnic container and set it down among the plants. He lifted the lid and delved, produced 37
flasks of ice-cold fruit juice and hot' tea, tins of little cakes and sandwiches, a packet of plastic napkins, cups and glasses. They nibbled and drank, watched the sea and enjoyed the densely-grown green coastline with its edging of rocks. The shadows lengthened; Dr. Willis said he would have to leave them - he had a couple of patients to see in the wilds while it was still light. "We'll all go," Simon said. "For the ladies' benefit we'll change partners. Go ahead, if you want to. I'll pick up Lorina at your house." It was all so matey that Katie could only shrug off her bewilderment and accept the situation. They all climbed to the cars, Lorina entered Dan's, and waved as it moved away. Simon stowed the picnic container and then paused to offer Katie a cigarette and light up for them both. He pushed a hand into his pocket, indicated the lush wild banana and plantain trees along the coast. "It's possible to live here without spending a penny," he said, "There's fish galore, abundant fruit - even breadfruit cassava trees, sago palm, and wild pigs in the forest. I know white men who live almost entirely on nature in neighbouring islands." "Good heavens! What do they do with their time?" "Loaf, chiefly. One of them - quite a close friend of mine - is a painter. I'd been staying with him and another man when I met you on Mondulu beach that morning." "Do they come here?" "Sometimes. Pete Craven is coming over in a,week or so." "Does his stuff sell?" "Oh, yes. He's no Gauguin, but he has an English agent who's built up the 'Back to Nature in the South Seas' angle. I have a couple of his pictures in my den; I must show you them . . ." He broke off as she suddenly dropped her cigarette, held her right shoulder with her left hand and swung round to him. "Look! Something horrible is clinging to me." It was purple and egg-shaped, blown out to the size of a 38
very large pea, and its teeth were tightly fastened into the flesh of her upper arm, near the shoulder. Simon pushed her hand away, swiftly blew the ash from the tip of his cigarette and tightly pinched up the flesh to which the hideous thing was attached. "Keep still," he said, and applied his cigarette to the swollen body. Within two seconds the thing had fallen to the ground, leaving only a red mark in the whiteness of the gripped flesh. Simon let go and pushed the palm of his hand over the spot, bent and looked searchingly at her bare legs before straightening again. "Haven't seen one of those for a long time," he said. "They're dying out." "What was it?" "The Numeh leech. If you should ever get another don't prise it off or you'll leave the teeth and the poison in your ekin. Either get someone to do what I did, very carefully, or drive straight down to the clinic and let them deal with it." "Is the poison dangerous?" "It's not fatal, but it can cause painful inflammation and a slight fever." He looked at her curiously. "You're quite a girl, Katie. Not a sign of panic." "I didn't like it much. If I'd been alone I might not have felt so calm. I suppose I realised that if I had to be attacked by one of your parasites I had the best possible companion for the occasion." "Thanks a lot," he said dryly. "We're beginning to know each other. Let's move." She slipped into the front seat of the long, beautifullyfitted car, and he took his place behind the wheel. And then, when he was ready to start up he glanced down at the mark left by the leech. With a movement that seemed almost unconscious he took hold of her upper arm and gently smoothed his fingers over the pale gold skin marked by an angry spot. "Its like satin," he said. "The damned nerve of the pest!" Something strange happened within Katie. She felt her 39
limbs go tense and a tickling dryness in her throat, and the smile she tried for wouldn't come. It was a tremendous relief when he started the car and had to concentrate on the road.
CHAPTER III SIMON drove at a moderate speed and slowed each time they approached a view he considered Katie should not miss. He showed her the mountains, hazing in the late sun, a bay which formed an enchanting natural harbour for prahus and outriggers, a long village which was exclusively Malay and the padis, where young rice was growing in vigorous green spikes. She sighed contentedly. "You're an awfully good guide to your own island. I wish . . ." She tailed off, a little shyly. "What do you wish?" "Just something silly." "I've wished silly things myself. What was it?" "Well ... I wish I hadn't come here as Katie Howarth. I don't want problems or to be treated as a child. I just want to wallow in Numeh." "There are two reasons a young woman comes to these places: to many someone or to visit a relative. Take your choice." "If you were my big brother -" she began tentatively. "I'm not!" "All right, I was only supposing. Let's say that if Dr. Willis were my big brother . . ." "That's better, but it won't do." His tone changed slightly. "Had you been old enough a few years ago, you could have come to visit your father." She nodded, and looked down at her hands. "I'm sorry I said we mustn't speak about him. Actually, I think we should. I didn't know him at all, but one does miss having a background, and I think it will make me feel better when I get back to England if I can manage to get a clear picture of the way he lived here, and what he did. Where was his plantation?" "Plantation? Your father wasn't a planter." 41
"What was he, then?" He let quite a minute elapse before answering, "He was an accountant, working for the development company. A very good accountant." "But where did he get all his money?" "He saved, and invested wisely - for you. We'll turn off the road before entering Kohti and 111 show you where he lived. A shipping clerk and his wife live in the house now." Katie was silent for a mile or two. Then she asked. "Why are you so reticent about everything? You didn't like my mentioning your great-grandfather, did you?" "It's my nature to be reticent. You can find out all there is to know about Andrew Forbes in the guide books. He came here at the age of thirty and found the island uninhabited. As usual, the first natives ashore named the place and for some reason connected with their gods they named it Kohti. He put a Malay chief, called Mondulu, in charge of the other end of the island. He invited immigrants from China and the adjacent islands, and as soon as they saw he was setting up a proper little government and planning for prosperity they came in swarms. The rest you can see for yourself." "You tell a romantic story in the most cold-blooded fashion. What sort of man was he? Did his family grow up here?" "He was a Scot, married to an English woman. They fought over the education of their two sons, and eventually one stayed and the other went to England. The educated one came back and took over, while the other lazed, so after that all members of the Forbes family were schooled overseas. I lived in England from the age of ten till I was twenty-two; I did come back in between once or twice, but not for long." She was gazing at him, too interested to dissemble. "Did you ever want to do anything else?" "No. I was bom on the island and felt I belonged here." "No brothers or sisters?" "A younger sister - she always lived in England and married into the Grenadier Guards." Katie smiled. "You're rather extraordinary. How did you 42
come to take on the doling out of my legacy?" The invisible shutter came down between them. "I knew your father and he asked me to do it. We have no solicitor on Numeh, but I have the power myself to seal any sort of agreement or contract. The reason you've never seen a copy of the will is because there isn't one." "The solicitor in London talked about a will." "Possibly that was because you were young and he thought it unlikely you'd understand the legal terms. Actually, there was merely a contract between your father and me." "And I was the only one mentioned in it?" "Yes. He did tell me, though, that your sole relative, as far as he knew, was Miss Carew." She said softly, "He liked Lorina. He wrote to her not long before he died, asking her to take care of me." Simon looked at her briefly, but didn't comment. Instead he said. "You're very fond of her yourself, aren't you?" "Well, it's natural, isn't it? She's the only person who ever took a close interest in me. I wish she'd married, though." "She hasn't lost the chance. It's my guess that Dan Willis is already under the spell, and there must have been others. Her kind of beauty is very magnetic to a man, you know." She said hesitantly, "I don't think Lorina would marry out here unless she fell really desperately in love, and I can't see her doing it." "What do you know about love?" he scoffed. "Tell me the difference between the passionate kind and the desperate." "All right!" She sounded defiant. "There's a genuine, deep, sweet kind of love that's bound to become passionate . . . sometimes. Desperation only enters into it when you're unsure of the other person. At least, that's what / think." "Not bad at all. Heaven preserve you from desperation, little Kate. I think it will, too. You're going to grow into one of those glowing, charming women whom everyone trusts even a husband. And if he feels he can trust you there's every hope that you'll be able to trust him." He turned the car off the main road and into a by-lane that led towards the hills above Kohti. "In England the girls go in for male friends at 43
an early age, don't they? Had any yourself?" "One or two. We sometimes get young men staying at the guest farm for a couple of weeks; they hike over the downs and go out fishing in motor-boats. When the weather is bad we make up card tables and have dancing, and occasionally we go off to a film." "No permanent attachment yet, of course?" "I don't want to get married for ages." "Good. That shows sense." Katie tried him out. "But you don't think I've quite enough sense to know what I want for the future?" He said, tolerantly, "It isn't a case of sweet reason, my child. You were persuaded to work at the guest farm - you didn't choose it. I'm not saying Lorina was at fault in any way; she did what she thought was best, so that you would be learning something and also be under her care till you were accustomed to being let loose on the world. Her intentions were admirable, but she was a little blind to your particular personality. In my opinion you should have had at least a year at university." "But that's ridiculous. I couldn't afford it!" "We'd find the cash, from your father's capital. He always thought you'd study music." "I can't. It's too late, and I don't even want to." "You honestly mean," he said deliberately, "that you don't have a single idea of your own about your future? I thought better of you." "I want the guest farm," she said doggedly. Instead of a flat refusal to consider the subject, he queried, "What price are they asking?" "It's rather steep - twenty thousand pounds plus the expenses of the sale. But that includes everything, the whole business. There's a big turnover, and there are ways we can economise. A firm of auditors told us it's a bargain, and we know from our own experience that the business pays well. It's been keeping the owner and his wife as well as the rest of the staff. We'd have to get a bond for part of the money, but Lorina has ideas for expansion . . ." 44.
"Leave it," he said abruptly. "I merely asked the price." Deflated, she answered, "I seem to blunder round you like an excited spaniel faced with a ... a panther, or something. I can't decide what you're going to do next, but I do know it's going to be unpleasant." "That's hardly fair," he said calmly. "By refusing to agree to your proposition I'm protecting your interests." It was true; Katie knew it. She had learned from Dr. Willis that her money brought in a far higher rate of interest than she could hope for from the farm. That meant, of course, she realised suddenly, that the capital must be smaller than she had thought. Oh, dear, if only she knew more about finance. She looked out of the window at the palm plantations, saw that they were nearing a few houses splodged over the hillside. They came down into a valley, rose again and at the top of the hill saw the town, and the sea beyond it. They went down a side street into a tranquil avenue, and she felt a little raw when Simon stopped the car and said, "There's the house your father had; plain but comfortable. He lived there nearly two years." "But he was here longer than that." "His previous house has been destroyed. Do you want to go in?" "No," she said quickly. "No, thank you." He cast her a swift dark look and set the car moving again. "Don't start getting yourself tied up, there's a good girl," he said quietly. "Emotions are the devil at any age, but at your age they can take control. Don't let them." She looked away from him. "Why should I be emotional? I've told you I didn't really know my father." "Perhaps that very lack could make you more sensitive." He shrugged. "I wish you were either a bit younger or a bit older. Everything would have been much easier, of course, if you'd been a boy." "Would it? Even as a boy I might have had ideas different from yours." "But if a boy had tried to back out of further education 45
I'd have got tough with him." She smiled tremulously. "You're pretty tough with me. How can I prove to you that I know what I'm doing?" "I have to decide that for myself, after I've known you for a week or two. I've a hunch about this business, and only time can prove whether I'm right or wrong. How do you feel about making a bargain with me?" "What sort of bargain?" "That we'll keep off the subject of your money and the guest farm for two weeks. After that, I'U tell you what I feel about it." "Do you really think that knowing me better will alter your ideas?" He laughed. "You're shrewd, little Kate. No, I don't think it will, but I do think it will help me to suggest what you should do with your life. After all, I wouldn't be much of a , guardian if I destroyed your present future and didn't suggest another." "You're not my guardian, anyway!" "In a way I am, whether you like it or not. Do you agree to the bargain?" "I may not be here for two weeks." "You will, because both you and Lorina are tenacious. Say "Yes, Uncle Simon, I agree'." "I won't admit to any relationship. But I agree." "Fine. I'm not sure that I'd want you for a niece, anyway." They were apparently nearing their destination, for he slowed the car. He said, with a tolerant smile, "I suppose to you I seem fairly ancient?" She considered this. "Not senile," she said. "You're rather a tricky age; not young enough to be impressionable in any way, and not old enough to make one feel safe. So I'm not too satisfied with your age, either." "Well, it's not important. When you leave Numeh we may never see each other again." Katie seemed to fall into a sudden blankness. But she nodded. "There wouldn't be any reason, would there? Is this the clinic?" 46
He braked, and spoke in his normal cool tones. "Yes, and the house is Dan's. You may as well stay in the car. I'll collect Lorina." Katie sat there, feeling cold in spite of the sunshine that beat slanting rays upon the white clinic buildings and the thickly thatched house on its left. She saw Simon come out of the house with Lorina, speak to her as if they had known each other for a long time and walk with her through an opening in the hedge and into the clinic; presumably they were going to say goodbye to Dr. Willis. Katie watched the doorway, saw a white nurse in starched cap and apron emerge and approach the car. She got out quickly. The nurse was of a mid-brown fairness, her skin was pale but seasoned by sun and heat. She was slim and wore no make-up of any kind, so that she looked faded, particularly where lines had etched themselves below her eyes. But the eyes themselves were good: grey, intelligent and kind. "Hallo," she said. "Simon told me you were here. I'm Jean Petlow." "I'm Katie Howarth. How do you do." "I thought I'd make myself known - just in case you should need anything down here when the doctor's out. You can always come to me here during daylight hours, or send for me, if you like. Off-duty, I live in quarters up the road. Any of the islanders will show you the way." "You're very kind. Miss Petlow. I'm sure you're always busy, and I hope I shan't need you professionally. But we could meet for a chat. Do you ever come to Mondulu?" "Sometimes. I have a motor-scooter." "Would you come out and have lunch with Lorina and me?" Jean Petlow looked a little awkward and surprised. "I'm just the nurse at the clinic, you know. Miss Carew might not care for me to come." "Good heavens, we're only hotel staff ourselves. Do come." "All right, but not to lunch. I'll have some coffee with you next Sunday morning." Her smile made her look younger 47
than her thirty-odd years. "Dan told me he took you round the town and that your enthusiasm was a tonic. I suppose it's natural that he should find the women here a bit jaded and unresponsive. I'm afraid we lose some of our looks too." "I don't think that's true. You were probably just as eager when you saw Kohti for the first time." The nurse shook her head slightly. Her pale lips looked thinner and resigned. "I hardly noticed the place; I still hardly notice it. I've been here eight years." "You do like it, don't you?" "Yes, I like it." But there was nothing ecstatic in the liking, it seemed. "I don't want to work anywhere else." Katie thought of something suddenly. "You must have known my father - William Howarth." "I knew him quite well. He talked of you many times." "Then I must certainly see you again - for that reason as well," exclaimed Katie warmly. "Do come early on Sunday, and we'll have a long chat. There's so much I want to know, and Mr. Forbes only answers questions. He won't gossip." "If you take Simon as he is, he's the best friend in the world. There's just one thing you have to accept - the island comes first. With him, it always will. It's probably why he hasn't yet married." Simon appeared then, with Lorina. Tall, dark and vital, he came to the car, laid a friendly arm across Jean Peflow's shoulders. "Have you met our Katie? So refreshing, isn't she - like lime juice on a hot morning. I think we'll have to arrange a few events for our visitors. What do you suggest, Jean?" "I'm no socialite - never think beyond picnics." "Very well, I'll do the thinking. Now, you run along in you've had a long day. I'm always telling Dan he expects too much from you." "He doesn't believe it. Doctors are like that with nurses." She stood back. "Glad to have met you both. Goodbye. Goodbye, Simon." She turned and walked back into the clinic. Automatically, Lorina took the front seat, and Katie was 48
put into the back. As Simon started the car he said, "Jean's an admirable creature - a good nurse, self-effacing and always available. Seems to have missed the bus when she was young, but it doesn't bother her. She'll grow old gracefully." "She's not old!" said Katie. He glanced over his shoulder in some astonishment. "She's about my age, and in a woman that's not exactly youthful. I like Jean, but there's no denying that she's more nurse than woman. Don't you worry, little one. She doesn't mind." "Any woman minds having that said about her - that she's missed the bus!" "You're too touchy for the China Seas," he said lazily, and left it at that. Ten minutes later they were pulling up in front of the long airy house among the palms and he was helping them from the car. The dark, smiling servant brought drinks of some sort, and Simon left the women to sip them while he went off somewhere. He appeared again, in the mid-blue car which he parked just beyond the lanai. He came and held out the keys. "Here you are, girls. She's all yours for as long as you're here." Lorina took the keys, gave him a sweet, grateful smile. "Thank you, Simon. We'll take great care of it. We're ready to go now." "Yes, I think you should go before dark. The gears move very easily and the tank's full. Uncle Jake at the hotel keeps plenty of petrol, and there's a garage in Kohti. Mention my name and it won't cost you anything." "What does that mean?" asked Katie. "That they send you the account?" He looked both pained and exasperated. "You needed at least another year of finishing school, little Kate. Why don't you just sit back and accept things, as Lorina does? They call it poise." Katie shrugged, and took her place. The blue car moved off down the drive and turned on to the road. It was quite dark when they entered the bedroom. Katie 49
switched on the bedlamps, stretched and ran her fingers through her hair. She stepped out of her shoes and set the bath-water running. Back in the bedroom she said, "You can have the bath first, if you like, Lorina." "No, I want to take my time." Lorina let out a satisfied sigh. "It was a bit too hot, but I really enjoyed this afternoon. You know," with a small laugh, "Dan Willis is forty, and he's getting it rather badly - for me." "How could he - so quickly?" "Love, my dear, is supposed to happen that way - like a thunderbolt, or toast burning. No warning at all. I don't quite believe it, myself, but Dan did lay on the compliments rather heavily. He also told me how very enjoyable life can be on Numeh." "I hope you didn't lead him on, as you did that poor thing who came to the farm last year!" "Dan's not that type. He's a plodder, a sticker, and he takes his time. He won't go beyond compliments because we shan't be here long enough." She paused. "How did you get on with Simon while you were alone with him?" "Not very well. He doesn't like my age." "He hasn't much patience with the young. You know" thoughtfully, and with a smile on her lips, "I like him, rather. He has a subtle sort of charm, he's clever and very commanding. There are moments when he's so vital you feel weak, and others when he goes .lazy and watchful. Some person-' ality." "He's domineering." "I wonder?" Lorina bent to unfasten the straps of her high-heeled sandals. "He wants to be fair to us, wants to know us better before coming to a decision. I made a bargain with him this afternoon. The guest farm is taboo as a subject for discussion for a fortnight. After that, we talk." Katie stood very still for a moment. Blood rushed to her cheeks and ears and unconsciously her hands clenched hard at her sides. The cunning of the man! He had approached them both, separately and in different ways, contrived to get 50
the same agreement from each, and could now sit back, slyly superior in the knowledge that he could do as he liked, with anyone. He had them both gagged for a while . . , or he thought he had. Katie went into the bathroom, stepped into water that was much too hot and wasn't aware of it. All she knew was an awful urge to punish the man. For a couple of days life was tranquil. Katie and Lorina toured the coast of Mondulu, bathed, read a good deal and wrote letters. The bi-weekly mail came in, bringing a note from Mrs. Barnwell. It was off-season at the guest farm, and apart from the half-dozen permanents the place was empty. Though it was not yet Christmas, Mrs. Barnwell was already booking up for the Easter holiday, but she hoped very much that Lorina and Katie would have some news for her long before then. She was still anxious to visit her married daughter in Canada, and thought Easter a good time to arrive there. "The old girl fusses too much," remarked Lorina. "In a few days she'll have my letter asking for an extension of the option. She'll probably blow her top." "You can't blame her," said Katie. "If we hadn't said we were almost sure of buying the place she'd have advertised it weeks ago. She's depending on us." "Well keep our word to her - but it can't be arranged for a week or two. I'm counting on Charles to keep her as sweet as he can." Katie said casually, "Charles Kain would stay on if we bought, wouldn't he?" "I hope so. We'd need all the permanents we could get." "What is his job, exactly?" "You know it already. He writes." "Isn't Morbay rather out of the way for him?" "His sort can write anywhere. And anyway, Charles is hoping to do some serious work - a book on antiques." "There must be thousands of books on antiques." Lorina turned on her sharply. "There are thousands of 51
books on every subject under the sun, but that doesn't stop people writing more, in their own particular style and from a new angle. It was through Charles that I learnt about the history of the guest farm. He'll get out a booklet and publicise us. You'll have reason to be grateful to Charles!" As if aware, then, that her tone had been revealing, she added more gently, "I want to use him for our benefit - don't you see that? You're too young to be aware of all the ramifications of the business, and I shall need a man to handle some of them," "Yes, I'm sure you will." Katie hoped she didn't sound as abrupt as she felt. "I sometimes wonder if I'U be much good as a partner." Lorina patted her hand affectionately. "Of course you will. You learned a good deal in a year, and when we're in charge you'll have certain duties, just as I will. In time, you'll probably run the housekeeping while I look after bookings and the accounts." "We couldn't possibly sack the old housekeeper. She's a widow I" "Darling, we'll cross all those bridges as we reach them. No one is going to suffer, I give you my word. Meanwhile, we'll make the most of this trip." She laughed gaily. "I must confess I hadn't realised just how rich and exalted your guardian is. I doubt if we shall have to return to England by cargo vessel as we came!" "All I want from him is what belongs to me." "Even at that, we might run to the plane fare. Don't look so grim, Katie. You seem to have lost your sense of humour " Oddly, that was how Katie felt just now. Deep within her she was now certain that something had gone Very wrong' They had started out in high spirits and with the utmost optimism. Lorina had hated the smelly ship and felt ill most of the way, but their morale had remained high, their eagerness unbounded. They had arrived here happily and full of hope. Numeh itself had brought about the change; not at once - not, in fact, till they had begun to feel their way towards 52
the crisis of their journey. The crisis being, in effect, Simon Forbes. On Saturday morning, Katie went down alone for an early bathe. When she returned to the lanai, tanned and blooming from the sea and wearing a knee-length robe over the damp swim-suit, she met a sandy young man in white drill, who looked at her severely and said, "You've been sunbathing down there. I saw you when I arrived. You're asking for heat-stroke." Katie gazed at him with violet-blue eyes, saw his stethoscope dangling from his pocket and answered vaguely, "I do it every morning - I can take it. You must be Dr. Brendon." "Yes, I am - and you're Miss Howarth. Dr. Willis told me I must be sure to look you up while I'm here in Mondulu." "That's good of Dr. Willis. Do you come here to see patients?" "If necessary," he said. "Today I'm doing vaccinations children." "I haven't had breakfast yet. Would you like to join me?" He cast a hasty glance at her long golden legs and damp, ruffled hair, and looked away. "I haven't time, I'm afraid. Will you be about all morning?" "I think so. 111 try to look more dressed if you'll come back." He unbent slightly. "It doesn't do to go too South-Seas, you know. Looks bad. I know I'm young to talk like this, but you're much younger. You have to realise from the first that dignity is essential in these places." "One has to bathe," she reminded him. "Or do you stay out of the sea?" He teetered. "It's different for a man, isn't it?" "Is it? What would you advise me to do - put up a tent at the water's edge?" "Now you're laughing at me. It's just that . . . well, you're very pretty, and the men at the hotel are the trader type. You should be careful." "You'd be surprised how nice the men are, but I know you 53
mean well. Thank you for calling. Come back, if you can manage it." Larry Brendon did manage it. He was twenty-seven, not long out of his internship and very conscious of his position on an island where a doctor was regarded with awe as well as friendliness. He drank a julep and seemed reluctant, when the time came, to drive away. Katie decided he was tolerable but not impressive. You couldn't imagine a doctor, or anyone else, growing into a stuffed shirt in these surroundings, but if anyone could manage it it was Larry Brendon. Far more to her taste was Jean Petfow, who sputtered up on her scooter the following morning. Jean was not the type to don a snazzy outfit to match the bike; she wore an ordinary cotton frock and a scarf about the brown hair. She propped the scooter against a palm and came across the lanai just as Katie came out to meet her. Katie, with the white sleeveless linen heightening the tones of her skin, looked healthy and alive. Just for a moment Jean Pedow hesitated before she said, "I thought you might have forgotten I was coming." "Heavens, no. Coffee, or something cool?" "Coffee, please." "Good. Let's sit at the end table, away from the others." Katie pushed up a stool and fitted it against one of the chairs. "There you are - a lounger. All modern comforts in primitive and beautiful surroundings. I even remembered to bring out some cigarettes. Do you smoke?" "Too much." She took a cigarette. "Thanks. Is your cousin about?" "She drove to Kohti an hour ago. We had a note inviting us to Simon Forbes' house." "You stayed, because of me?" "I was glad to. The men on this island make me a little sick; they continually harp on my age. Women don't do it not often, anyway." Jean Petiow lay back and blew smoke above her head. "Women can't see anything wrong with being young And 54
even at nineteen we're awfully knowledgeable. Not that I remember myself at that age. I seem never to have been younger than thirty." Katie's smile was gentle and sympathetic. "It's because you've lived here and been alone so long. Don't you really want to go back to England?" "I've nothing there - nothing at all. Here, I have a job to do, and I enjoy doing it. One shouldn't really want much more than that from life." "Well, there are two sides to all of us, aren't there? A job doesn't really satisfy both sides." "A good many people get through on a one-sided existence." She changed the topic. "Your turning up here was quite a surprise. Simon was all set to visit you in a few months' time in England." "We didn't know, and couldn't have waited that long, anyway. Did he ... talk very much to you about me?" "More than to anyone, I believe. I'm the only other white person here who knew your father really well." Katie's eyes went bright, as if tears weren't far away. She smiled as she leaned forward. "Tell me about him - my father." Jean shrugged evasively. "There's not much to tell. I knew him distantly for some years, and then he had a heart attack, and I visited him every week. We used to play gin rummy, and he'd talk a little. He worried about you, and after he'd had the second attack he made the contract with Simon." Jean smiled. "Simon agreed to it, dictated the terms and your father was put at ease. He was tremendously relieved to know you'd be taken care of financially. He probably felt it vindicated him for all the mistakes he'd made." "Mistakes?" Katie took her up quickly. "What mistakes?" Jean drew in her lip, watched her own action as she knocked ash into a metal ashtray. "I'm sorry. I said that without thinking. Your father was essentially a good man; he was just unfortunate. The details don't really matter very much, particularly now, but if you want to know them, ask Simon." 55
The coffee things had been cleared and the hotel residents were ordering pre-lunch drinks when Jean looked at her watch and said she must go. "I have to be on hand for the doctor early this afternoon. It isn't Sunday to the Malays." "Do you work much with Dr. Brendon?" asked Katie mischievously. "Quite often. He's dictatorial and jumpy at the same time, but hell settle down, and Dan's helping him as much as he can. Dan himself has had so much experience with SouthSea people. You should see him handle them." Her grey eyes were soft in their unspectacular setting. "He talks to them in pidgin Malay or Chinese, gets a giggle out of them, however bad they feel. Dan looks stolid, but he isn't." "He's not stolid - he's splendid. And he doesn't mind what you say to him. I even asked him why he hadn't married." "I've asked him, too," Jean said dryly. "Whatever he says, the fact is he hasn't met anyone he wants to marry." She looked away. "I think he's a bit gone on your cousin though." Katie cast her a glance, saw something which hurt. It wasn't blatant, but if you were tuned in to it, it showed. "Lorina's quite beautiful," she said, "and in her time she's saddened quite a few hearts. Here, of course, they don't see many really beautiful women. She's even made an impression on Simon Forbes." Jean asked, very casually, "Would she stay and marry one of the men, do you think? I know it's early days to talk of it, but things of that kind do happen quickly out here Would she?" "I honestly don't know, but I shouldn't think so. Lorina's a clever person, and she's always wanted a business of her own - wanted it more than marriage, I believe. I shouldn't think she'd give up an ambition she's cherished so long, and live in a way that doesn't appeal to her very much." "What about . . . falling in love? Being a business type doesn't exclude her from that possibility." "No, it doesn't. But so far I'm pretty sure she's heartwhole 56
yS^K^^W*-''^^"'^'^-'^''^''-""'*'^^™?^^^^^^^'-^'''
I don't believe she. even thinks about marriage." "You don't either, do you?" Katie smiled self-consciously. "Your island has made me dream a bit. I suppose you got over all that in a very short time?" Jean Petlow started to walk towards her scooter. Her shoulders lifted. "When I came here I was in no mood to dream. By the time I was ready to be affected by the sun and the sea it was too late. I was an institution." Her smile was a little tight. "I'm happier here than I would be anywhere else, and what more can anyone aspire to?" She started the bike, patted the tank almost affectionately and with a word of thanks for the coffee, moved off. Katie watched her go, a slight figure in a print dress astride a grey scooter. The dust settled and she was gone. Katie thought of the nurse's tired, smiling face which had never been pretty but which had once been attractive and young. Now, it seemed, Jean Petiow didn't think too much, or bother with her appearance. All her energies were concentrated on her job at the clinic, and what was left of her feelings had become channelled towards Dan Willis. For something, Katie was sure, had stopped her from wanting to feel many years ago. A man, naturally; it was always a man. She had been very unhappy, once. And it looked as though she were going to taste more of the old medicine every time she saw Dan Willis and Lorina together. Oh, lord, what a muddle it was all becoming. She wanted so much to talk to someone about it. Not Dan, of course; with him one could only discuss ordinary topics and perhaps Simon. Lorina was too intent upon her quest to be helpful here on Numeh. And Simon? Katie shivered. She didn't want to approach Simon unless it was unavoidable. She went off to wash her hands and tidy the breeze-blown hair. Her face, she thought, should have looked much older today. She felt as if she had put on a dozen years since her arrival on Numeh. 57
CHAPTER IV ON Monday there was a picnic at Mondulu Bay. The hotel provided the food and all kinds of drinks, Simon Forbes was host, and the guests included Major Crawley, who was both a governmental and military authority on the island, a couple of planters who were hereditary owners of land, their wives and one son. Wongan Sue, who led the Chinese community, Kim Kalai of the Malayans and some pretty island girls and youths put in a brief appearance, but the party was mainly white. Dr. Willis was there for lunch and Jean Peflow turned up at tv/o o'clock. Though Katie was looked at with pleasure, Lorina was the chief attraction. In England, Katie recalled with surprise, Lorina had been deemed good-looking but a trifle hard; she had magnetised one or two men, but had not been unpopular with women, as the beautiful of the sex often are. Here in Numeh she was different. The tweedy appearance, which might be discouraging, was gone, and in its place was an ultra-feminine look, heightened by the soft red wavy hair and green eyes. In the most dainty of summer clothes Lorina had become a femme fatale. This was even more obvious the following night, when Simon gave a dinner party for the two women from England. Lorina wore a youthful and exceptionally pretty creation in willow green and her manner matched it. She smiled just enough, expressed just the right degree of regret when someone asked for a dance that was already spoken for, and took the floor in Simon's arms as if that was where she had longed to be all her life. Katie watched him, saw his easy smile, the dark glance as it slipped over the titian head and white shoulders. Was he falling? Was he? She asked herself the same question a day or two later, at a function given for herself and Lorina by the stiff-necked Major. Simon was charming and inscrutable, but unmistak58
ably appreciative. Dr. Willis, on the other hand, was anything but inscrutable. His admiration was in his eyes, warm but a little embarrased, as if he were perpetually reminding himself that he was just Dan Willis, passing forty, a hard-working doctor and no catch. Katie found herself tightening up a little inside, yet she didn't know why she should. It couldn't possibly have anything to do with the fact that Lorina had produced, from the trunk which had been stowed in the hold during the voyage, a selection of clothes which Katie hadn't known she possessed. It was enough to make one wonder, but not to make one feel a little scared and depressed. But the clothes stayed on her mind, and the next day, when she and Lorina were lunching in the hotel dining room, Katie mentioned them. "I don't remember your buying the green, or the new black, or those spotted and striped cottons ... or the nylon weave. They're lovely," she said. Lorina smiled, almost impishly. "I got the whole lot that day I went up to London - cheaply, too, because they were left over from an autumn display for people spending the winter abroad. There'll be too many for England, so when we get home I'll give you some of the dresses to see you through the summer." "They look anything but cheap, particularly the evening dresses." "Those did cost plenty," Lorina admitted. "As a matter of fact," apologetically, "I did something I've never done before. I borrowed a little money from Charles." "Did he actually have some to spare?" Lorina lost her smile. "That's unkind, Katie. He knew I'd feel lost if I arrived here without a rag, so he helped me. And by helping me, he helped you. Don't forget that." "I'm sorry. They're marvellous clothes and everyone's falling for you." "Not everyone. It's Simon I want." "You wantT' "To impress, of course! He won't fall in love - too cold 59
and canny - but if I can stir him enough to get the needful , . . you wouldn't mind at all, would you?" "No," said Katie reluctantly. She added, "I wish Dr. Willis were a little less conscious of you/' Lorina's laugh was light and silvery. "Don't tell me you've a thing for dear old Dan! He's twice your age." "It's not for myself," said Katie. "I believe Jean Petlow feels it rather. She stays out of the gatherings, if she can." "The nurse?" Lorina spoke the words in astonished tones, and Katie knew they were genuine. Jean simply hadn't made her presence felt. "I think she's fond of the doctor." "I daresay she is, but then nonentities often aim high without getting anywhere." "She's not aiming so high!" Katie was becoming a little hot. "Doctors mostly marry nurses, and Jean has worked with Dr. Willis ever since he came to Numeh. I think they're well suited." "It's up to Dan, isn't it? If Nurse Petlow couldn't get him without competition she's not likely to manage it now, is she? In any case, she's too mouselike to make a hit with a man." "She's not mouselike! She's quiet and efficient and very' sweet." "Have it your own way, darling," said Lorina magnanimously. "I'm quite sure Dan would be horribly surprised if he knew his nurse was goofy about him." "You mustn't tell him! I've only surmised it, you know." Lorina pushed away her fruit plate, smiled fondly at Katie. "There's one thing you don't seem to realise, honey. It's extremely pleasant to discover that I can be attractive to two men who are poles apart in character and background, and it's fun to know that one can don another personality with a new range of clothes, but I never lose sight of our object in life - yours and mine. I don't mind Dan losing a little of his rugged heart to me because it's going to help us." "How can it?" "By making me more desirable to Simon." 60
Katie's breathing became a little difficult, and she drew a pattern on the table-top to give herself time. She said, slowly, "You can't trick Simon into anything. I may not have much experience, but I'm sure of that." "There'll be no trickery, my pet. Simon will give in about your cash because he's been asked by someone he finds resistible but very charming." Lorina wrinkled her nose in a teasing smile. "On your own, you wouldn't have got a thing out of him, and you know it." "You haven't got it yet." "I'm preparing the way. When the scheduled fortnight is up, Simon will have a talk with us. By then, I'll have him in the mood to yield almost anything." "I don't like it," Katie said stubbornly. "Not if it's going to hurt others." "How can it, my dear? Possibly we shan't be here more than two or three weeks all told." "That's long enough to upset people. Dr. Willis may . . . may get really serious; Jean Petlow may shrink wholly into a nurse and forget she was ever a person. If we hurt others I shall wish my father had left his money to the clinic. I almost wish it now." Lorina's smile became cool and fixed. "Oh, come now. You're talking like an infant. Your father wanted you educated and to have enough to give you a good start in any career you might choose. That's what he worked for. That money is yours, and no one else's." "Well, I'm coming to hate it!" "Just because I'm making an impression on the men? At your age, you shouldn't be jealous, Kate - particularly of me. I got a job in the south of England to be near you, I found a comfy billet for you right in a spot where you could stay, if you took to it. It may sound a bit hard-hearted to say this, but it's time we were more frank with each other. It was great good luck that Mr. Barnwell died when he did just before you left the finishing school. A year of running the guest farm on her own proved to the old lady that it was too much for her, and during that time you managed to get 61
experience at her expense. But it wasn't all luck; I contrived some of it, you know." "I'm not jealous." Katie was choked. "I didn't know you thought about me Barnwells like that. They were good to you, and Mrs. Barnwell has been kind to me." "Of course - and we shall pay her what she asks, in return for that kindness. But don't let's be sentimental about it. We know what we want, and we're going for it. I've done a lot for you, Katie. You couldn't let me down now." Katie shook her head. "I won't let you down. More than anything I want you to have the guest farm. I know you can't upset Simon Forbes, but the doctor and Jean Petiow are different - more vulnerable. Please don't encourage Dan Willis!" Lorina's white brow cleared. "I've no intention of it, darling, but don't blame me if he refuses to be discouraged. Are you happier now?" Katie nodded, though she wasn't. "Do you need the car this afternoon?" "Well, I did think of ... but no. You have it, Katie," she said generously. "Go into the town and buy a few things. It'll make you feel good. As we're going to that function tonight, I'll lie down for an hour or two. You have to be in top form to enjoy anything with Simon." Katie dropped her napkin on the table and stood up. "I'll go now, Lorina. See you later." Within five minutes Katie was in the blue car, her bathing things and a couple of bananas on the seat beside her. But it took longer than five minutes for the suffocating mound in her throat to subside, though when it did she felt calmer and more philosophical. She drove towards Kohti, but took a turning down to the beach before reaching the town. She had heard about this particular inlet from Dr. Larry Brendon, who had advised her, very seriously, not to go there alone; he was always advising someone, very seriously, not to do something. For a man under thirty he was too didactic and grave. Katie found the beach and thought it delightful. Rough 62
little headlands closed in a half-moon of pale sand which was backed by grasses and flowering plants and a few wild bananas. Some nets were drying and an upturned boat was under repair, but there was no one about; it was rest hour on Numeh. Katie got into a white swim-suit and lay in the shade of a tall rock till the sun moved round and roasted her legs. Then she ran into the sea, marvelled at its clearness and at the bright little fish darting among the coloured weeds. She swam lazily, floated with the sun warming her and then swam again before she came out to dry. She got back into the shade of the rock, leaned against it and closed her eyes. For about ten minutes she dozed, luxuriously. Then something, a deepening of the shadow across her eyes, perhaps, brought them wide open. Standing above her, his rough wheat-coloured hair blowing slightly in the breeze, his aquiline features smiling wearily, was a man in green. Awful green slacks and a faded green shirt which was splodged with ineradicable stains. He was brown and nonchalant, gazed down at her as if he had got beyond being surprised at anything in this world. "You're Katie, the heiress, I suppose?" She blinked. "You might call me that. I don't remember you." "I'm not surprised. You haven't seen me before. I'm Pete the Painter." She laughed suddenly. "That's a funny thing to be. I do remember hearing about you, from Mr. Porbes. You've had pictures hung in some of the European galleries. I'm glad to know you." He slipped down, about a yard away from her, leaned back in full,sunshine. "What did Simon tell you about me?" "Almost nothing. He just mentioned that he'd visited Pete Craven, and you were coming here. Did you arrive today?" He nodded. "Boat leaked all the way and soaked the only glad rags I have. I was wearing them." "Whose get-up is this?" "Mine. My working togs." "Are you going to paint someone here on Numeh?" •63
"I might." He studied her face. "I might paint you." "Oh, no. You'll change your mind when you see my cousin." "Is she the glorious redhead? Her fame has penetrated even to Bemba Island - and we're known to be backward. Actually, Doc. Willis told us about her when he came over for an inspection." He looked about him. "You seem very much at home. Come here often?" 'This is the first time. I went temperamental and wanted to be alone." "And of all people, I had to be the one to find you." "Is something wrong with that?" He shrugged, and his smile was old and jaded. "People don't trust their womenfolk alone with me. I've been around too much." Katie digested this, found it rather amusing because he didn't look a lady's man. "Am J safe with you?" she asked, looking clear-eyed at him. "Oh, sure. Any woman who makes me feel a cad calls out the protective instinct in me." He added matter-of-facUy, "Your eyes are a very unusual blue - gentian, I think. It's the colour an artist gives to a blue-eyed woman on canvas, when he wants to flatter her." "And I really have it? How nice." She paused. "Are you staying with Simon?" "Yes. I was taking a walk and then going back for tea. Bit late for that now, so I'll wait and have an early drink when Simon gets home. I came a couple of days earlier than he expected me. I wanted to let him know that my sister is on her way here. She arrived by plane at Singapore a few days ago." "Your sister? Does he have to be warned against her?" He grinned. "Sure does. Cherry has more pull with Simon than any other woman in the world, and this time she means business. An ultimatum, in fact." "I'm fascinated. Tell me more." "Why not? You'll see it all for yourself as soon as she gets here." He slipped back further and looked at the sky. 64
"Cherry's twenty-four, and actually my half-sister. She and her mother came out to see me last year, and then Simon met her again a few months ago, in Singapore. She's one of those gay, highly-strung people - both sweet and acid, stormy and gentle. Just Simon's cup of tea, really. For him, a woman has to be all things." He glanced at her sideways. "How does he treat you?" "As someone young and faintly amusing. What is this ultimatum of your sister's?" He smiled. "What do you think? She's not one of your patient, waiting types, and she'd love to queen it here on Numeh. In addition to which she has quite a bad case on Simon. He likes her enormously, so she'll get her way." "She can't very well propose to him." "She won't have to." He sat up again. "Didn't happen to bring a drink with you, did you?" "Afraid I didn't. Can't you wait?" "I suppose so. Where's your car?" "Up there, under a tree. It's Simon's." "Will you drive me back to his house?" "Yes, of course." She slipped her arms into the sun dress and buttoned it to the hem, let him take her hand and help her up. When he kept hold of her hand she looked at it pointedly. "It's not detachable, you know." He laughed. "I think it would take a long time to get near enough to you for a kiss. Don't worry, Katie. I was only trying you out." "Do you do that with every girl you meet?" "It's just one of those reflexes that nasty men acquire. But you're bad for a nasty man - remind him he has a conscience somewhere under the whisky and late nights. Can you manage?" He went ahead up the footpath, stopped near a cycad root and picked some sort of flower. Katie's head was bent as he tucked the blossoms into her hair, but she looked up at him and smiled ruefully. "Everyone treats me as if I'm juvenile. For a while I thought you weren't going to." 65
"Neither am I." He stood over her, looking down into her eyes. "You're young and innocent, but you're not a child. There's even just a shadow of adult suffering in your face. You're waking up, and it's not very pleasant, is it?" Katie did not prevaricate, as she might have done with someone else. She answered simply, "Things do seem a bit tangled at the moment, but they'll straighten out." She pointed. "There's the car - race you to it!" She won, and told him he was out of condition. He reached into the car and brought out the bananas, and laughingly she told him he could have one. They ate, and then, before she could slip behind the wheel, he was putting her into the other seat. "I'll drive. We don't have motor roads on Bemba, so we have no cars. That's one of the reasons I like to visit Simon." He started the engine, and as they moved away from the beach he elaborated, in tones which seemed to be naturally tired, upon how he had studied in London and Paris and started travelling. He had found Bemba three years ago, and was now becoming sated with the delights of the South China Sea. "I generally move oh about a year after I'm fed up, but this time I'm not sure I will. If Cherry marries Simon I'd just as soon live near them. Reflected glory, and all that - I wouldn't have to work so hard." "You don't strike me as a man who's on his last legs from overwork." He let his jaw drop haggardly. "You don't know the half of it. I'm out of touch and out of date, and the kernel of it all is that I don't care if I never paint another black damsel or white one for that matter. Simon says I'll never do anything really good till I starve, both physically and emotionally. So it seems I'll never do any good work." She laughed a little. "I never imagined he could have a friend like you. You must irritate him profoundly." "Sometimes. Sometimes, believe it or not, he climbs down and becomes quite an understanding cove. Don't you find that?" 66
She looked down and shook her head. "Not really. He takes good care never to get on my wavelength." "Does he now! That's bad. He told me at lunch-time why you came, and even though I hadn't, met you I understood your angle, and said so. He told me I had about as much normal common sense as the stuff I paint with." "He would." Katie shrugged off the subject. "How long will you stay on Numeh?" "Depends on Cherry. She'll be here on the next ship, and I may stay over to watch events. They should be both interesting and fruitful." He turned the car down the avenue, away from Kohti, took the right rum, and slowed. "Will you come in for a drink?" "No, thanks," she said, quickly. "111 find a whistle you can blow if I start to get fresh." She smiled. "I wouldn't need it. I've already proved I can run the faster." "You can trust me - really." "I'm sure of it, but 111 go back to the hotel now. Will you be at the show tonight?" "Island stuff?" He shrugged his indifference to the entertainment. "All right, 111 come - if you'll promise to sit with me." She said candidly. "You don't have to flatter me, Mr. Craven. I want to go because I've never seen anything like it before." "And I want to sit with you because it's a long, long time since I met anyone like you. You make me feel I'm being very good, and it's healthy for my battered ego. Well, here we are." And then: "Here's Simon. He must have got back early." As the car stopped Simon was crossing the lanai towards them. Pete Craven got out of the car, and Katie slipped across the front seat and into position behind the wheel. With her fingers on the key she turned her head and looked up at Simon. He opened the door, said coolly, "I see you've annexed Pete. Come inside the house for a minute." 67
"No. No, thank you." But his hand was on her arm, compelling her to get out of the car. Even so, she stood there, with her fingers caught firmly round the edge of the door. One fair eyebrow raised, Pete said equably, "I'll go in and pour something cool." And he sauntered away across the lanai. "I'm not coming in," she said, vexed that her voice sounded husky. "Your friend asked to be brought home, that was all." "Where did you meet him?" "On the beach." She was suddenly conscious of damp, untidy hair and a face without make-up. "He insisted on driving or I'd have . . ." "Hurriedly turned the car and shot away," he finished for her. Coldly he added, "You enjoyed Pete, I suppose?" "Yes, I did, rather." "But you have no time for Larry Brendon." "He's an earnest young doctor, but he's a pompous ass." "He's decent and he admires you - the sort of escort you can depend on." His eyes dark and angry, he demanded, "How long were you with Pete?" "I don't know. About three-quarters of an hour." "What happened?" She was trembling now. "What do you mean, what happened? We just talked . . ." With a savage movement he tugged something from her hair, making her wince. He showed her his palm, where three withered flowers lay; blooms which had been pink and gold fifteen minutes ago. Flower of the Morning, she thought faintly - the flower that bruised when touched. "I didn't know what they were, Pete just put them there when . . ." His grip on her elbow tightened. "So it's Pete already! He's a friend of mine and I like him - but I don't like his private life. Quite certainly you're not becoming part of it. You came here innocent and you'll stay that way!" "Simon, you're hurting!" 68
His fingers relaxed slightly. "I'm sorry." But he didn't sound it. "I suppose you can't be expected to pick out a philanderer when you meet one, but surely there's some extra sense that puts a girl on her guard? Pete's an artist in the South Seas!" "That doesn't make him a menace to everyone. I thought him pleasant and friendly." "Because he intrigues you - as the forbidden always does intrigue the young. You're not interested in Brendon simply because he has no glamour." "That isn't the reason at all," she said. "He bores me." "And Pete appeals to your vanity - that's his line. I don't want to have to tell him to keep away from you - that would be too ridiculous - but I won't have you going all girlish over his rakish charm." She wrenched her arm from his hand, blazed up at him. "You haven't an ounce of understanding, have you? And for all your shrewdness, you know nothing about women. Young women, anyway. Since I was fourteen you've done your best for me - I accept that. But during that time I happen to have grown up; I'm no longer someone who can be put in an institution, so that all you have to do is dole out fees and pocket-money. I'm an individual and I want to live my own life!" "Isn't that what you were doing in England?" he asked sharply. "Your coming here wasn't my idea, you know!" She said recklessly, "It wasn't mine, either - I merely agreed to it. If I'd known what I know now, nothing could have dragged me here!" He didn't answer at once, but stood back slightly and pushed his hands into his pockets. When he spoke, his manner had changed, even softened a little. "Why the deuce do you have to be so impatient? We've agreed not to discuss that proposition of yours till a given date, so why don't you relax and have fun? Young Brendon really likes you . . ." "Be quiet about him!" she said. "Why should you be so keen for a friendship to develop between us?" 69
"I think it would be wholesome for you, do you good," he said abruptly. "You may enjoy Pete, but you aren't sophisticated enough to handle him." He paused, and added grimly, "If only you'd waited in England till I could be free to come over! Let me tell you something, little Kate. Your letters worried me a bit - they put your case so well that I knew your cousin had a part in them. But one thing you didn't mention was that you were willing to allow anyone I might name to go into things and report back to me, and that made the business slightly shady. Now that I've met Lorina I'm pretty sure the whole thing is straight and sound, but even so, I'd rather see the place before you cut yourself off entirely from a regular allowance and the chance to do what you want to do. I'm not going any further into it now, but you may be happy to know that I've instructed the solicitor in London to get in touch with Mrs. Barnwell and assure her that if she will keep her guest farm off the market till she hears from me again, she'll be amply rewarded." Katie looked at him, drew in her lip and looked away. "The all-powerful .Simon," she said in an undertone. "Do we stand any chance against you at all?" "I'm not against you. I like you." She flickered another glance at him. "Thank you for almost nothing. I'll go now, if you don't mind." He let out an exasperated sigh. "I don't get you - don't get you at all. Sometimes you seem to have great fun out of living on the island, and at others you're on edge and just yearning to leave. Why is it?" "Maybe that's how I react to your climate, Mr. Forbes," Katie said, "or it could be that I'm that type - unpredictable." "I don't think you are. You're just a golden girl, growing up." "And you, if I may mention it, are an autocratic individualist with no comprehension whatsoever of the ordinary female mind. I don't wonder that fiancee of yours went off to Singapore for a little normal petting . . ." She stopped suddenly, aware of the warning that glittered 70
from his eyes. Defensively, she looked over her shoulder and saw Pete Craven mixing drinks at the table. She opened the door of the car, but before she got in said casually, "Pete told me his sister is coming soon. She has a pretty name - Cherry." "She's a pretty girl," he said laconically. "Three of them all at once will be a record for Kohti. You'll still be the youngest, I'm afraid." "And therefore negligible?" "You'll never be that, little one - not to me. Maybe you haven't yet realised that I shan't feel I've done all I could for you till you're settled and happy, and preferably married." "How sweet," she responded coolly. "You'd even like to choose the man, I suppose?" "The way I see it, he'll just happen. But you could do worse than take a look at Larry Brendon - a real look. He won't want to marry for a couple of years, but then you won't, either. By the time you're twenty-one you'll really know him ..." Katie slipped into the car and slammed the door. She looked up into a face that was hard and watchful . . . and something else. Without a word, she switched on, roared the engine and sped away over the gravel. She heard him shout, "Be careful!" and felt like turning, and making him leap out of the way. But he wouldn't hurry, not Simon; he'd step aside, as though he were humouring a child. Katie was halfway back to the hotel before her thoughts became coherent. Why did he harp on Larry Brandon . . . why? Did he really want her to become more friendly with the man, or, knowing more about women than she was willing to believe, was he plugging Larry in order to put her against him? He was capable of it, though why he should want her to stay clear of the young doctor was another puzzle. Perhaps he was only trying to confuse her, or maybe all he felt was that if she looked kindly on Dr. Brendon during her stay she would have a yardstick with which to measure other men . . . men such as Pete Craven, who ad71
mitted himself a bad lad and might take advantage of the admission. The light was going when she got back to Mondulu. The bedroom was empty, so she took a shower and dressed for the evening in a blue and white dress she had made for herself last summer. She was putting on lipstick when Lorina came in, yawned and threw her book on her bed. "Have a nice time, darling? What did you buy in the town?" "I didn't go into town," Katie answered. "I had a bathe instead." "You're always bathing. It beats me how you can enjoy it on your own." Katie capped the lipstick, and casually mentioned her' meeting with Pete Craven. Lorina seemed unimpressed, till the^ name of Cherry Craven came into the conversation. "Dan Willis told me something about her," she said. "On her mother's side she has relations in government circles in Singapore. He seemed to think she and Simon might get together, some time." Katie nodded. "That's her reason for coming, apparently." "So?" Lorina's green eyes went dark and bright. "How interesting.- What else did you hear about it?" "Very little. It does seem that with her connections, and so on, she's the right type for him." They dined at seven-thirty, and at eight-fifteen Dan Willis collected them for the variety show which the islanders were putting on. Tonight's show was held on a patch of cleared ground near the town and the sea. It started with a toast in tuak a strong island brew which made Katie see even more stars than the the myriad which hung up there against the black velvet sky Then came a speech in Malay, followed by one in Chinese both delivered from the low stage at the open end of the horseshoe. More lanterns were brought and hung on poles to illumine the stage, there was tumultuous clapping and the first dancers appeared, a group of six young men in gold silk tunics and scarlet pillbox hats. They posed stiffly and strutted 72
their faces mask-like with make-up and lack of expression; then three of them disappeared and three girls took their places, small pretty girls with almond-shaped eyes elongated with mascara, lips highly coloured and immobile, faces heavily powdered, brows blackened, and their black hair dressed high and covered with white blossoms. The tempo of the dance did not change, but the girls brought grace to it with the fluttering of their hands. The music came from a guitar, drums and a combination of other instruments which were tapped or plucked to create a weird cacophony of sound. When the dancing had ended and been suitably applauded, a miming comedian took the stage. His antics, Katie realised after he had sweated and grimaced for about ten minutes, depicted a man running home with his market produce in the teeth of a hurricane. The islanders rolled with laughter, wiped their eyes and appealed to each other for more breath with which to laugh again. Katie laughed at their laughter; she couldn't help it. Pete Craven said, "You're sweet when you're amused. You should always smile, Katie, and never put on that look you had when Simon first spoke to you this afternoon." "What sort of look was it?" "A bit hurt, a bit frightened and a whole lot defiant. Did he warn you off me?" "I'm-afraid so." "He didn't say anything to me, but to set his paternal mind at rest I told him I thought you charming and unspoiled. He now knows you'll be as safe with me as you might be with Dan Willis!" "I wish you'd been able to speak to him before he started on me," she said with a sigh. "He may be the big noise on Numeh, but I find I can row with him quicker than with anyone I've ever known." "It's probably because he's the great chief here that you do it," he said understandingly. "I thought that was a marvellous smile he gave you when we all met together this evening." • "Lovely," she echoed scathingly. "I believe it was supposed to convey that he quite understands, and forgives." 73
Pete laughed. "Don't try to undermine Simon. You'd arrive nowhere and get knocked about on the way. You should imitate your cousin's attitude. Ultra-feminine, aloof and yet spiced with the age-old query. In confidence, Katie, I'm expecting a few fireworks when she meets my sister." "Oh dear, I hope not. You talk about your peaceful South Sea islands, but I've yet to find peace on Numeh." "And you blame Simon?" "Yes, I do. If he'd been just a little more trusting he'd have agreed a year ago to let me have the money my father left. He could have gone his way, married your sister, and neither Lorina nor I would have known or cared." He asked, with rallying inquisitiveness, "Aren't you glad you've met Simon?" "Occasionally. And sometimes I think it was a disaster when my father left him in charge of my finances." To change the subject she asked, "What do you think of Lorina?" He glanced past several people at the white shoulders and titian hair, the pale hand fingering a pearl necklet. "Some doll," he commented lazily. "What is she really after - Simon, or your money?" "What a horrible thing to say!" He looked at Katie's bright cheeks and parted red lips. "Blame the cynic in me. But remember I've had a good deal of experience, and I know a hell of a lot more about women than I want to." He lifted his shoulders as though in mild apology, but went on, "Simon once had a girl with red hair; maybe your cousin reminds him how she might have been by now. Personally," with the easy, flattering note in his voice, "I'm a goner for a honey-blonde with true-blue eyes. Will you marry me, Katie?" "Ssh. There's something special beginning." He shook his head with wry resignation. "The girl thinks I'm having her on. That's what I get for proposing in my best suit." The show ended, more tuak was taken by those who could stand it, hands were shaken and flowery compliments paid 74
r"""""'--—-—.I' SSimondiditsuavely,ashehadpresumablydoneithundreds ;oftimesbefore,andtheislanderslistenedwithmouthsand .eyeswideandfullofadmiration. |Theydriftedtotheircars,andthistimeLorinaandKatie ^werewithSimonandPete.Goodnightsweresaidandcars 'drewaway.Simonwaitedtillallhadgonebeforeheletin theclutchandstartedtheMercedesmovingslowlyover ;roughgrasstotheroad. "Well,littleKate,whatdidyouthinkofit?"heasked, overhisshoulder. "Itwasexciting.Thewomenarefarbetter-lookingthan 'themen." s"Buttheyruntofat,"putinPeteregretfully,atherside. "Justforkicks,lastweekIlookedoutmyfirstpaintingon Bemba.Itwasdoneonlythreeyearsago,andyetthegirlI :paintedistwicethesizenowandstillgrowing.Quitedis'heartening." "Idon'tknow,"saidKatiereasoningly."Youdidcapture thebeautybeforeitwashidden.Thatshouldbeasatisfacfaction." "Alittle,butlookingoverthatoldstuffdepressedme. EverythingpassesastheFrenchsay,andifI'mnotcareful I'llpasswithit,andleavenoripple.That'swhyIaskedyou tomarrymethisevening." Therewasasuddensilence.EvenLorina,inthefrontseat, wasoddlystillwhilethecarrolledon. ThenSimonsaid,"That'snotparticularlyamusing,Pete. Ifyou'vemadeyourjokealreadythiseveningyoudon'tneed torepeatit." Petesoundedwhimsical."I'mnotsureitwasajoke,old chap.Whenyou'velivedasIhaveyouknowthegenuine articlethemomentyoumeetit.You'veoftenbeenafterme tomarry,butI'veknownforalongtimethatifIdoitwill havetobesomeoneyoungandrathertouching,whoneedsto belookedafter."HetappedKatie'shand,companionably. "Sorry,sweetie.It'sthattuak.Icantakewhiskyingenerous doses,buttuakisinclinedtomakememaudlin.Forgetit." Thecarmovedfaster,andfiveminuteslatertheywere 75
entering the lounge of the Mondulu Hotel. Simon ordered nightcaps and offered cigarettes. He looked as masterful and non-committal as ever. They talked a little about the show and the possibility of hurricanes at this season, finished the drinks. Simon put away his cigarette case. He said with a slight smile, "I've a commission for you Pete. A portrait." "I charge five hundred. Ten thousand to you." "Five hundred," Simon nodded. "I want a portrait of Lorina." A flush swept up from Lorina's neck, her eyes were emeralds. "Simon," she breathed, "you can't do that!" "I want to," he said. "How about it, Pete?" Pete lowered his eyebrows. "I was kidding. I've never charged more than two-fifty." "Just go ahead with it," said Simon, "and make it a good job." After that there seemed to be little to say. All four drifted out to the lanai, the men said goodnight and drove away. Katie stood there in the darkness, her heart a hard, prickly ball. Lorina said softly, vibrantly, "Could 'it possibly happen, Katie? If it could, the guest farm can go chase itself!" Katie didn't ask what she meant. Fatalistically, she knew that Lorina was dazzled by the sudden and overwhelming possibility that Simon was at last in love . . . with Lorina Carew.
76
CHAPTER V THERE were no planned social events for three days. Katie drove down to the clinic and was shown round by Jean Petlow, she had tea with Jean and Dan Willis, and when the nurse was called away she remained talking with Dan, about the children's section and his X-ray outfit, and his hope that one day it would be possible to hospitalise people on the island. At the moment he dealt only with general medicine and emergency operations; other surgery cases had to be sent away. He was extra busy just now because Larry Brendon had gone off on a tour of the small islands. Katie heard, with relief, that the young doctor would be away about a week. She asked if there were anything she could do to help. "It's good of you to offer, but I'm afraid not. We'd have to teach you, and we just haven't the time. Jean manages somehow. I don't know what we'd do without her." Katie nodded. "And she remains cheerful about it, too, though it isn't humanly possible for a woman to be always happy if she lives alone." Dan looked surprised. "Jean's never miserable; that's one thing you can count on. She's more even-tempered than I am." "She's learned over the years to cover up, I suppose." "But she has nothing to disguise. I'd know it, if anyone did." Katie said casually, "You might not. When you work close to someone you don't see them clearly. I remember your telling us that you don't even know why she came to work in the East." "Of course not; She has a right to her privacy, like the rest of us. She probably drifted here when she was more adventurous, and got dug in." "Only into her job. You don't dig in very far if you 77
haven't any friends." Dan sat back in the chair behind the desk. In shocked tones he said, "No friends! We're all Jean's friends. If she needed help in any way both Simon Forbes and I would do all we possibly could for her." Katie wondered how far she dare go, whether she hadn't already overdone it a little. But she couldn't resist remarking, "What none of you seem to realise is that she's still young, not at ail bad-looking, and would probably make someone an excellent wife." Dan stared at her, genuinely bewildered. "What are you trying to say, Katie - that we use Jean and don't care about her private life? Is that how it looks to a newcomer?" "Yes, I suppose it is. I know she's invited to many homes; she's picked up and taken back to her quarters, talked to and danced with. But no one bothers to get to know her personally. If ... if I lived on Numeh, I'd love to have Jean for a friend, but she wouldn't gain much from friendship with someone like me. We get on very well, but I'm just a bit too young for us to be equals. She's become a litue wary of women friends, and you can't blame her, because here in the islands girls either marry or they don't stay." She gazed rather studiously at a cockled calendar on the wall. "You're older than Jean and you're a man. If you were really interested you could find out how deep her contentment goes." "Good lord," he said soberly. A pause, and then, with a shake of his head: "No, Katie. It's not my business. I could poke my nose only if I were prepared to do something about any unhappiness I might uncover. Otherwise, things are best left as they are." Dr. Willis went back to his work, Katie wandered into the nurse's office and arranged to come along later, to see if Jean had found something for her to do. During two long evenings she worked on records with Jean, and went with her to her quarters for ten o'clock tea and biscuits. Had she needed more proof of the nurse's dependability and cheerfulness those two evenings provided it. But as she drove back in the soft, star-sown darkness to the hotel, 78
Katie knew there was nothing she could do for Jean. She found herself thinking that though she liked Dr. Willis immensely, she hoped he'd feel really bad after she and Lorina had left Numeh; it might make him just a little more tender and perceptive. It was eleven-fifteen as she drove round to the parking space beside the hotel. She locked the car and walked across to the lamp-lit lanai, was about'to enter the hotel when Lorina came out quickly, took her arm and drew her across the paving stones to the dark shadow of a tree. "You're a nuisance, Katie," she said agitatedly. "Why did you clear off for so long in the car?" "You had it all day. I spent the evening with Jean Petlow." "Why didn't I think of that! The liner is in, with Pete Craven's sister ... or is it half-sister? They came out here for an hour - Simon, Pete and the glorious Cherry. I told Simon you were in bed with a headache." "But why?" "Because he fussed! He wanted you to meet that gii-1." "Is she ... lovely?" "Lovely enough. But I'm more concerned with some mail they brought us. I wasn't able to read any of the letters till they'd gone, but I've read one of them several times and it still scares me. Charles Kain has managed to snaffle a brief assignment in Singapore from a magazine. He says he'll be leaving England by air - in less than a week now!" "Is that terrible?" "It can upset everything! The very last thing I want is to have to deal with Charles out here. But there's a loophole. If I can cable him at once that we're taking the guest farm he'll stay there and look after our end of things. That's what I shall have to do, Katie." '• "But you can't, until we're sure Simon will agree." Katie recalled something which Lorina did not yet know that her inheritance was likely to be much smaller than they had thought in England. She had half promised Dan that she ••, would say nothing about it till Simon himself divulged the • fact, but surely now was the time for frankness? But a half 79
promise was as good as a whole one to Katie. She asked, "Why did you want the car?" "I had a mad idea that I'd send the cable right away. But of course, you can't send cables at this time of night, and I'll have to think out the wording very carefully." "If Charles is keen to remain at the farm why did he even consider the assignment?" Lorina shrugged impatiently. "Our letter to Mrs. Barnwell had arrived, and also one from the solicitor about Simon. It seems Simon's promised the old lady that she won't be out of pocket if she extends the option. Charles was furious when he read it - and he says all it does is to stretch the uncertainty and keep us out of England." "I can't see that any of it is Charles Kain's business." Lorina's tones changed slightly, went smooth. "It isn't, of course - except that I did ask him to watch things for us. None of us foresaw Simon taking a hand with Mrs. Barnwell did we?" Katie reached overhead and pulled a dark shiny leaf. "What if Charles does come out? Singapore is two or three days away from Numeh, and he wouldn't be able to run out on the job he's taken." "He says a brief assignment. He could be right here on the island in about ten days!" "Before then, we'll have had our talk with Simon." Lorina said sharply, "And Charles will already be out here. I have to stop him leaving England, and the only way to do it is by telling him the guest farm is going to be ours!" "But ... but I don't think we'll get it." Lorina's swift, irritable movements were stilled. Her head went back, so that her face was pale and expressionless in the darkness. "Oh? Where did you get that idea?" "It's a ... feeling. I'm sure Simon is dead against it, and we haven't much with which to convince him, have we?" "We have to convince him, darling. In fact, I'm beginning to see that you'll have to do it alone. If I enter into it any more than I have already he'll get the notion that I'm after 80
your money, whereas all I want is to make a success of the business for you," In low tones, Katie said, "The other night you were starryeyed over Simon's wanting your portrait; you thought it was a sign of his eventually wanting you yourself. Supposing he did fall for you - what then?" Lorina closed up, but spoke gently. "I'd marry him, Katie, and you'd be able to please yourself whether you remained here or went back to England. The guest farm could be put on the market and you'd get your own money, in cash. I'd arrange it all myself." "To me," said Katie, dully, "it looks as if you're trying to hang on to Charles Kain till you're quite sure you've nailed Simon Forbes." "That's an appalling thing to say!" "I'm saying what you force me to think, Lorina." Lorina smiled. "But you're talking like someone who's jealous and hurt ... not like yourself, at all, darling. Charles and Simon rouse different sorts of feelings. You don't arrive at my age without deciding to take other things than the emotions into account when you settle for a man. You just aren't quite capable of understanding, Katie." She paused. "What gave you the feeling that Simon will flatly refuse to hand over the money for the farm?" Katie dissembled. "I'm not sure." "You're not sure because of some reaction within yourself since you came here. Are you trying to go back on your promise?" "Good heavens, no. If I could, I'd give you the whole of the money tomorrow, and you could do what you liked with it." "Then I don't see that there's anything to argue about. I'll cable Charles early tomorrow, telling him we're buying but to say nothing to Mrs. Barnwell till the official word comes through. That will keep him in England." She drifted slowly into the lamplight. "I have a hunch of my own, Katie. After seeing Cherry Craven this evening, I'm rather inclined to believe that Simon will have to decide about her soon. Where
I'm concerned, his feelings are more complex, but I'm sure that if he doesn't propose we'll get what we came for. It'll be one or the other." Katie, half a pace behind Lorina, asked quietly, "Is Charles Kain in love with you?" "I think he may be," was the equable reply. "Supposing you marry Simon - what does Charles get out Lorina had reached the lounge door before she replied, lightly, "Leave that to me, darling. Once I'm certain where I stand I shall be able to handle anything or anyone. Like a nightcap?" , "No, thanks. I'll go straight to bed."' Katie wondered, as she quickly undressed and brushed her teeth, whether life on Numeh could possibly become more difficult. Sliding into bed and hurriedly snapping off the light as Lorina came into the room, she felt it might, at that. Lorina sat for her portrait in the Forbes house at Kohti. Pete Craven had been given a large light room for the purpose and after the first sitting Lorina walked straight into the room each morning at ten. There was no question of whether she could handle Pete; she ignored his sallies and sarcasm, carefully said nothing to antagonise him and left him strictly at eleven, when she took a drink with Simon and whoever else might be there, before driving back to the hotel. The morning after she had received the letter from Charles Kain, Pete followed her into the lanai, where Simon Pete's sister and Katie were sitting. She raised an eyebrow at Katie. '•I left you in town. Did you walk all this way?" Simon said easily, "Cherry and I found Katie gazing at bazaar stalls, so we brought her here." "Oh, good. It will save me a trip into town." She smiled at the servant. "Iced lemon, please." Katie was drinking iced orange, holding the glass so that it froze her fingers and gave her something to think about But she was looking at Cherry Craven, whose mobile heartshaped face was turned continually towards Simon. She was 82
a beautiful girl, very dark, with auburn lights in her hair, amber-eyed and red-lipped. She sparkled, spoke with a slight accent which must be a legacy from her Latin mother, but knew England as if she had grown up there. She also knew the islands very well, and the history of the Forbes family on Numeh. For her half-brother she seemed to have a kittenish affection. "How is that portrait going, you naughty thing?" she asked him. "I believe you will take a long time because Miss Carew is so very attractive." "No, it won't take so long. I painted a picture of you in two days - remember?" She shrugged her slim, half-bare shoulders. "I was your sister and sixteen and had no character. It was just a likeness." "And you feel Miss Carew has enough character to defeat me?" "You are not so difficult to fox," she said airily. "Is he, Simon?" "I wouldn't bet on it," Simon answered. "Are you finding the portrait easy or otherwise, Pete?" "It's never easy to paint someone who goes deliberately poker-faced," Pete remarked, with a narrow-eyed smile at Lorina. "It always bothers me, because I keep asking myself what they have to hide." Lorina took her glass and lay back, comfortably aware that she looked starflingly elegant in the lime green dress with its high collar and knife-pleated skirt. "You're excusing your failure before it's happened," she commented. "Have you seen the portrait yet, Simon?" "Yes, last night. It's coming along, I think." "May I see it?" Cherry demanded. "Oh, lord," from Pete. "Why should you be interested?" "Because this is the first time Simon has commissioned a portrait and I want to be certain he is to get his money's worth!" She stood up. "You must show it to me, Pete, and perhaps Miss Carew will come, too, so that I can compare the portrait and the original." 83
Lorina, looking bored but willing to humour the effervescent. Cherry, got up from her chair. Pete shrugged, and went with the two women into the house. Simon sank back into his lounger, looked at Katie, who was a yard away and staring past the palms and the beach at the glassy green sea. "Well, young Kate?" "Well what?" she said distantly. "Still angry because I insisted on your coming here to wait for Lorina?" "I wasn't angry." "You certainly didn't smile - except at Cherry; that was an admirably bogus bit. of gaiety you put on for Cherry." He pushed back slightly. "What do you think of her?" "She's very attractive and full of life. Nothing like Pete." "Don't you think Pete attractive?" "Not superficially. You have to speak to him before it shows." "Ah, there are depths to the man, and' little Kate has plumbed them," he said mockingly. "I hear from Dan that you've been lending a hand to Jean at the clinic." "I haven't been able to help much." "He's grateful, anyway, but he thinks that for your age you're a trifle too serious. Which gave me to think. Katie. When you first came you weren't what I'd call too serious; it's grown on you right here on the island. What's on your mind - besides the business proposition in England?" "Not very much. Do you still think we should stick to the bargain?" His dark eyes sharpened. "Why not? It's only four days now. Has something cropped up?" It was like him to find the spot with the first dig of the probe. "I find the waiting exhausting," she said. "Are you sure that's all? It couldn't be frightening you a little, as well?" "Frightening?" "Lorina," he explained succinctly. "Lorina and Dan." Katie's lips went dry. "It doesn't frighten me; it's their business." 84
"I see. I was going to tell you to stop worrying. Lorina would never marry Dan Willis." "No, I know. Do you think Dan . . . realises?" His shoulders lifted. "That's not the sort of question one man can ask another. She hasn't been here long enough to get very far under his skin." Katie was wondering whether Lorina had been here long enough to get under any man's skin, when he added, "If Dan had been easy meat he'd have been hooked before this. For your information, little one, so would I." "I would never question your toughness where women are concerned," she said. "What does that mean?" with a hard smile. "That even now you know me you can't imagine me falling in love?" "Partly. I do think you could become very fond of someone . . ." "Thanks." ". . . but you could never lose your head." "Become delirious?" he said with a- cool smile. "I hope not. You know, Katie, you're in such an odd frame of mind that if you were to fall in love right now it would be the desperate kind you once told me about. I believe you said that desperation came from being uncertain of the one you loved." A brief pause. "You're uncertain about Pete, aren't you?" "Pete?" she echoed. And then some sixth sense told her not to deny it too strenuously, if she did not want him to come too near the truth. "So we're on Pete now." He was still smiling, but his tones were faintly unpleasant. "I've seen it happen before. I don't know what it is about Pete Craven, but he either floors them at first meeting or not at all. Lorina hardly sees him, but you're conscious of him the moment he shows up. Don't deny it, Katie. I saw it happen only fifteen minutes ago, when he came out here with Lorina." "So you saw it," she said stiffly. "And what did it make you think?" His teeth came together, not sharply but with force. "I 85
thought it was the hell of a pity! I felt like shutting you up somewhere till you came to your senses. The last thing I would want to happen to any girl is an affair with Pete, and even less would I want it to happen to you. To me, you're rather special." Her heart jumped a beat, but she said evenly, "Because you feel responsible for me? Whether you like it or not, I've grown out of needing you." "Have you?" His glance rested on her bent head. "I'm not a bit sure of that. Something is pushing you around, something for which we can't blame Pete because he wasn't here when it started. The only reason I can think of is ,Dan. Dan and Lorina." She shook her head. She would like to tell someone about the horrible sense of let-down, the doubts and hopelessness. But she couldn't tell Simon - not about Lorina. "I shall feel better when everything's decided. May I have a cigarette?" He gave her one and took one himself, lighted them. Then he leaned forward and smiled at her; Katie's heart rose suffocatingly into her throat and she pretended the smoke hurt her eyes, so that she could dab at them with a handkerchief and hide the quiver in her expression. He nodded towards the house. "I can hear them coming they're talking," he said softly. "I'm taking Cherry to Major Crawley's for lunch, but I shall be free at about two-thirty. I'll come along to the hotel for you at three. Does Lorina rest every afternoon?" "Mostly." "All right. Be on the lanai." He got up as the others appeared. Cherry talking animatedly, Lorina very straight and calm and detached, Pete smiling quizzically. "Well, what was Cherry's opinion of the work of art?" She wrinkled her short pretty nose. "He is not an artist," she pronounced. "I could paint a better portrait of Miss Carew myself!" "Now, now," said Pete. "put your claws away. The portrait must be very good or you wouldn't have erupted. If you 86
were any sort of sister you'd try to get me another commission from this plutocrat, not blast the one I'm working on." "If you want to work on an adult picture of me, you think again, my good Pete! I wouldn't let you exercise your horrid mind upon my features." "Who said you?" he queried mildly. "Simon might like a portrait of Katie. She's the only ward he's ever had, and he may want to remember her." "So! You want to have long sittings with Miss Howarth, do you, and to be paid for them? And I thought you were really fond of someone nice at last!" "You talk in spirals, honey," he said, wearily good-natured. "For my own edification I've already made half a dozen sketches of Katie without her knowledge. I'm not likely to forget her." There was one of those silences which seem to stretch on taut wires between people. Simon'ended it, his voice expressionless. "Would anyone like another drink?" "Not for me," said Lorina. "Katie and I must leave you now." Five minutes later the mid-blue car was on its way to Mondulu, with Lorina at the wheel and Katie at her side. For most of the distance neither of them spoke. Lorina's mouth was tight, her hands were clenched with unnecessary firmness on the wheel and she stared ahead with eyes that were bright and stony, They were driving through the coconut plantation near Mondulu when she said, "That girl's a phoney right through, but she's clever with it. When she saw the portrait she kept saying that I was far more beautiful than Pete had made me; she said Pete was hiding the beauty with a mask of ruthlessness. That's what she'll pass on to Simon." "Simon can assess things for himself," commented Katie. After an hour in the bazaars of Kohti and another hour in Simon's company she was feeling tired. "I don't think there's anything artificial about Cherry Craven. The sparkling type are seldom secretive." 87
"She can afford to sparkle! Her mother has just married money, and Cherry has to decide whether she'll marry out here or go and live with her in luxury on the Riviera. Either way, she's well off ... while we have to scheme and flatter and wait even to get the few thousand we're entitled to!" "You can't measure your own fortunes by other people's." It was quite an effort for Katie to ask, then, "How do you think Simon regards her?" "They've known each other some time, and it's difficult to say. But she's staying there with Pete, in Simon's house, probably wandering about in a playsuit or a housegown. In her place, I'd have Simon in, my pocket in no time, and she's no less clever than I am." This last thought of her own apparently gave Lorina something to reflect about, for she spoke no more till they had left the car in the shade of a tree and were entering the bedroom. Then she began to unbutton her dress. "You didn't ask about the cable," she said. "I suppose you got it off?" The titian head nodded. "And I made it a long one, so that Charles would think we felt rich and expensive. He won't leave England now." Katie pushed off her sandals. "If Simon knew you'd anticipated his decision we'd be cooked for sure." "He won't know." Lorina shrugged off the topic. "Darling, would you like the car to yourself this afternoon?" "Won't you want it when you've had a rest after lunch?" "There's nowhere to go. Once you know this place it's more boring than Morbay." "Yet you'd consider staying on here - in certain circumstances?" Lorina smiled her gentle smile. "If I had plenty of cash I would stand it, periodically. Would you like the car for the afternoon?" Simon hadn't asked her to say nothing about their appointment for three o'clock, but Katie had sensed that he wished it to be kept quiet. So she said. "Thanks, Lorina," and left it there.
On an impulse she got quickly into a swim-suit and ran jown to the sea. Cool and refreshed, the short beach jacket swinging about her knees, she came back into the lanai and stopped for a chat with Uncle Jake Dorfling, and to caress the ever-present Siamese cat. Then, after changing into a pink woven sun-frock, she had lunch with Lorina at their table in the dining room. As usual, they had coffee outside, and wandered along to the bedroom at about two-thirty. Lorina shed her frock and lay down, Katie slipped a handkerchief and compact into her pocket and went out again, to sit in one of the long wicker chairs. She closed her eyes and dozed. A shower of cool petals touched her face and she awoke, to find Simon standing above her and showing those very white teeth in a teasing smile. "You've had too much lunch," he said. She sat up, and queerly, her heart was .pounding as though she were faced with sudden danger. "No, it's the sun. There's no breeze today." "All right, we'll go and find one. Ready." She took the hand he offered and let it pull her to her feet, knew a swift moment of alarming delight when he steadied her with an arm about her. They went to his car and got in, he swung it round and headed down through the coconut plantation. His sidelong glance at her was appraising and companionable. "You look sweet in pink - all pink and gold, in fact." "Like the Rower of the Morning?" "A little, but more like an English rose." "Thorns, too?" "I suppose so. You have your share, but you must keep them sealed off this afternoon. Cooler now?" "Yes. But if you keep up this speed we'll reach Kohti in no time, and be hot again." He didn't slacken off. "I've planned something you're still young enough to enjoy. We're going round the island in a motor-boat." Her eyes shone. "Where do we start?" 89
"At the cove where you first met Pete. Oh, yes," as she cast him a quick look, "I know where the great moment took place. It's only about ten minutes' walk along the beach from my house. By the way," casually, "Pete wanted to come with me this afternoon. Would you have liked that?" As carelessly, she answered, "I might have, but this is rather more of an honour, isn't it? I have the great Tuan Forbes of Numeh all to myself!" "Aren't you lucky?" he said, with cynicism. "This afternoon, though, I'm just Simon, and we're friends - no barbed wire about." He turned the car along the lane towards the beach. "We're probably the only white people stirring this afternoon." "What happened to Pete and his sister?" "After I'd told Pete I didn't want him he went disgruntled to bed. I left Cherry curled up on a chair like a kitten." "An extraordinarily pretty and unaffected kitten." "A delicious one," he agreed with a grin. "The sort any man would love to keep as a pet. Cherry has the advantage of being a woman as well." Katie turned away with a shiver. She smiled. "Here's our little inlet. Where will you leave the car?" "Near the bushes. The sun will go over and shade it." He didn't bother to lock up, but took the metal picnic container from the boot and carried it with him as they descended to the deserted beach. The long white boat was sheltered in a cave; Simon pulled it a short way out and stowed the picnic, took off his shoes and dropped them into the bottom of the boat before giving the sleek craft its final haul down to the sea. Katie yanked off her sandals, jumped in and , picked up an oar. "Don't be too enthusiastic," he warned. "If you don't mind, I'll get us away without help." She laughed, for the sheer joy of it, and he gave her a surprised smile as he shoved off and leapt into the boat, just beyond her. For a few minutes he was busy with oar and ropes, and when they were thirty feet from the shore he spun the motor. It roared, the boat nosed round and a magical 90
Ijibreeze whipped about them. jj'> Sunshine glared whitely across an aquamarine sea, rocks Jjtowered and disappeared, showed beneath the water like giant jifish. The coast was the thick lush green of wild coconut jfepalms with a strip of beach at every inlet and an occasional jjband of coral rocks just inside the sea-line. In a wide bay lay Jl-the town of Kohti, with its neat little harbour packed with J;-prahus and larger vessels, the white council buildings and the j bank and shipping offices just beyond the waterfront, and the | thatched and orange-tiled houses running away from the sea I and up the hill towards the coconut and sugar and fruit j. plantations. j Katie pointed to a square building on the green headland |, above the town. "What's that?" ESimon sat back with one arm across the petrol tank of the motor. "The old Forbes house," he said. "The upper rooms still contain some of the original furniture, but the lower half j is being converted into school offices." He ended laconically, I "I was bom there." | "I'd like to go over it before I leave Numeh," she said. 1. "May I?" I "Why not?" He sounded offhand, and said nothing more I, while they skimmed on over a gently moving sea, leaving a ; turbulent white arrow behind them. | Now the coastline was monotonous in its dense greenness. | Simon turned the boat into a river mouth; they entered a ^ green tunnel, he switched off the motor and they glided I through a dappled gloom in almost complete quiet. Then a ; parakeet shrieked, was answered by a long trill from the ' jackass bird. "It's eerie," Katie whispered, "but marvellously cool. How far can one go up the river?" "About a mile, to the rapids. Beyond that it's a series of waterfalls from the mountains." "Amazing what heat and water manage between them, isn't it? What are the trees?" He told her, and pointed out one whose bark was peeling. "That's a species of fig, but it hardly fruits at all. The islan91
ders make cloth from the bark - tapa. The giant over there is a mahogany. On the other side of the island there was a mahogany forest, but we needed the wood - for furniture and dug-out canoes - and the ground for planting. My greatgrandfather fancied himself as a diarist, and he wrote that the island was a vast green jungle running up over the mountains and hiding the rivers. But that was a good many years ago." Simon remained in his easy position, looking at her smooth, eager young face. "I have a photograph of you which was your father's. You must have been about twelve. At the moment you're very like it." She bent her head. "That's no compliment." "It certainly isn't an insult. In the photograph you look fine-boned and intelligent and rather tender." She coloured faintly, but did not smile. "I remember telling you when we first met that I used to have a snapshot of you, too. Either it wasn't at all a good likeness, or my imagination gave you such a vastly different personality that the real you doesn't compare at all." "When did your father send it to you?" "Only a short while before he died. It was with the letter in which he told me a bit about you, He ... he must have been ill then." "Yes, he was." She flickered him a glance, looked away at the dim greenness. "Don't you think it's time you told me all about him?" "What do you want me to tell you?" She shook her head. "Not just . . . questions and answers, Tell me all you know - how he lived and . . . and why he wouldn't come home." "He lived simply, in the house you've seen. When a man has become accustomed to the South Seas he often doesn't care if he never goes away. The islands become his home." She said quietly, "That isn't a full reply, is it? I've often talked to Uncle Jake at the hotel. He's known everyone on the island since he was a young man, yet he's never connected me with William Howarth, who used to work for you." Simon was silent for some minutes. At last he said, "I 92
(an never quite make up my mind whether young people hould be told things that don't matter, or left in happy gnorance. You've put me on the spot, though, so that I have o tell you your father was known here as William Clarke. )nly Jean Petlow and I knew his real" name, and that was >ecause she took care of him and I was his executor." I Katie's blue eyes, already shadowed by the dimness, became darker. "But why did he use a different name? Had he ;. . . had he something to be ashamed of?" "Not a thing, in my opinion. Look here, before we go any further we'll find somewhere to rest. Do you want to stay here, or get out into the sunshine?" "The sunshine, please," she said a little huskily, and lay back against the cushion. He kept the motor thundering till he sighted a beach, made for it and leapt into the water before she realised how close they were to the sand. She stepped out, waited while he made the boat safe and then walked with him, barefoot on the hot beach, to the shade of a thicket of young coco palms. She sat down and drew up her knees, took the cigarette he offered and leaned to the flame of his lighter. Lying back on one elbow, he was apparently in no hurry to speak. He smoked half the cigarette, blew away ash and then said meditatively. "I'd better tell you the whole thing, though it's possible you know some of it. How your mother died, for instance." H "My parents had a small car. She was driving it alone, and H crashed." j He nodded. "Seems your father blamed himself for it, j» though there was nothing to prove that anyone except the j driver was at fault. He did the car repairs himself to save j'cash, and he thought he might have left some part of it Jj insecure. He never got over it." ^ Katie made a sound of distress, turned her head from him | and pushed her cigarette into the sand. | Calmly, he went on, "He was the sort of man who would J always blame himself for everything that went wrong, either jp in his private life or in his job. He farmed you out, and I 93
blamed himself for not having provided you with a loving home. He took various jobs, always hoping to make plenty of money, to make up to you for the other things you'd missed. On his last job before coming to Numeh he had the bad luck to fall among crooks. They used him without his knowledge and he was dismissed; it broke him up. He came to Numeh as William Clarke, asked to be allowed to build some sort of home and live on what he could produce. As you know, it's not policy to allow white people to settle here. They can guide the islander, but they mustn't take his land." "So ... so he was at the end," she murmured shakily. "You . . . engaged him?" "There was no charity about it, I assure you. He interested me, and I let him live in an old house on one of the plantations for a while. He improved in looks, but he had fever in him and was always thin. Then we needed a man in the accounts section of the development corporation and I offered him the post. The house you've seen went with it, and he was happy there for a long time. He saved two-thirds of his salary every month without stinting himself because he lived so simply, and as the money grew it became his salvation. You're not a man with responsibilities, so perhaps you won't understand that." "Oh, but I do," she said on a caught breath. "If only I'd known him - really known him." Before she was aware it was happening, tears fell down her cheeks. She bent forward, her fists to her eyes, her knees raised against them, and wept uncontrollably yet with little sound. Simon sat up quickly, slipped an arm round her and lifted her head so that her face pressed against his shirt. For a long moment he just held her there, his hand hard over her hair. Then roughly he said. "For God's sake stop it. I'm not used to this!" She stilled automatically, pushed away from him and took her handkerchief from her pocket. "Sorry," she said thinly. "I just couldn't help it." 94
I- "Itls a11 right'" ^y-