Cry Wolf Read online

Page 7


  work. Your column is syndicated in the Observer." She looked at him

  without expression, remarkably immune to the celebrated Swales smile.

  Her eyes, he noticed, were serious and level, sage green in colour, but

  shot with speckles of tawny gold.

  Jake's match burned his fingers and he swore. She turned to him and he

  stood up quickly.

  "I didn't expect a woman."

  "You don't like women?" Her voice was pitched low and had a husky tone

  that raised goose bumps on Jake's forearms.

  "Some of my favourite people are women." He saw that she was tall,

  reaching almost to his shoulder, and that her body had a poised

  athletic carriage. She held her head at a haughty angle which

  emphasized the strong independent line of mouth and jaw.

  "In fact, I can't think of anyone I like more." And she smiled for the

  first time. It had surprising warmth, and Jake saw that her front

  teeth were slightly uneven one pushed out of line with the other. He

  stared at it fascinated for a moment, then he looked up into the

  appraising green eyes.

  "Do you drive a car?" he asked seriously, and her smile turned to

  surprised laughter.

  "I do." said Vicky, laughing. "I also ride a horse and a bicycle,

  I can ski, pilot an aeroplane, play snooker and bridge, sing, dance and

  play the piano."

  "That will do," Jake laughed with her. "That will do just fine." Vicky

  turned back to the Prince. "What is all this about,

  Lij Mikhael?" she asked. "Just what do these two gentlemen have to do

  with our plans?" The towering purple hull of the Dunnottar Castle

  swung slowly across the back-drop of palm trees and the high sun-gilded

  ranges of cumulus cloud, as she pulled her anchors and came around for

  the harbour entrance.

  At the rail of the upper deck, the tall figure of the Prince was

  flanked by the white-robed figures of his staff, and as the ship

  increased speed and kicked up a white sparkling bow wave, he lifted an

  arm in a gesture of farewell.

  Swiftly, the shape of the liner dwindled away into the limitless

  eastern ocean as she made her offing before turning northwards once

  more.

  The four figures on the wharf lingered after it had disappeared,

  staring out at the horizon whose long sweep was uninterrupted except by

  the tiny white triangular sails of the fishing fleet coming in off the

  banks.

  Jake spoke first. "We'll have to find digs for Miss Camberwell. And

  at the thought, both he and Gareth made a grab for her single battered

  portmanteau and the typewriter in its leather case.

  "Spin you for it," suggested Gareth, and an East African shilling

  appeared in his hand.

  "Tails,"decided Jake.

  "Rough luck, old son," Gareth commiserated, and returned the coin to

  his pocket. "I'll take care of Miss Camberwell-" he went on, " then

  I'll start looking for a ship to take us up coast. In the meantime, I

  suggest you have another look at those cars." As he spoke,

  he hailed a ricksha from the row which waited at the head of the

  wharf.

  "Remember, Jake, it was one thing driving them down to the harbour but

  an altogether different matter driving them through two hundred miles

  of desert. You'd best make sure we don't have to walk home, he

  advised, and handed Vicky Camberwell into the ricksha. "Driver,

  advance!" he called, and with a cheery wave they jogged away up

  town.

  "It looks as though we are on our own, sir," said Gregorius, and

  Jake grunted, still staring after the departing ricksha. "I think I

  should also find accommodation," and Jake roused himself.

  "Come along, lad. You can doss down in my tent for the few days before

  we leave." And then he grinned. "I hope you won't be offended if I

  wish it was Miss Camberwell rather than you, Greg." The boy laughed

  delightedly. "I understand your feelings but perhaps she snores,

  sir."

  "No girl who looks like that could possibly snore," Jake told him. "And

  another thing don't call me "sir", it makes me nervous. My name's

  Jake." He picked up one of Greg's bags. "We'll walk," he said. "I

  have a horrible hollow feeling that it's going to be a long weary wait

  until next the eagle screams." They set off along the dusty unpaved

  verge of the road.

  "You said you own a Morgan? "Jake asked.

  "That's right, Jake." you know what makes it move?"

  "The internal combustion engine."

  "Oh brother," applauded Jake. "That is a flying start. You have just

  been appointed second engineer get your sleeves rolled up." Gareth

  Swales had a theory about seduction which in twenty years he had never

  had reason to revise.

  ladies liked the company of aristocrats, they were all of them

  basically snobs and a coat of arms usually made the coldest of them

  swoon. No sooner had they settled into the padded seats of the

  ricksha, than he turned upon Vicky Camberwell the full dazzling beam of

  his wit and charm.

  No one who had built up an international reputation in the hard field

  of journalism by the age of twenty-nine could be expected to lack

  perception, or be naive in the wicked ways of the world. Vicky

  Camberwell had made a preliminary judgement of Gareth within minutes of

  meeting him.

  She had known others with the same urbane good looks and meticulous

  grooming, the light bantering tone and the steely glint in the eye.

  Rogue, she had decided and every second in his company confirmed the

  initial judgement but damned good-looking rogue, and very funny rogue

  with the exaggerated accent and turn of speech which she had recognized

  immediately as a huge put-on. She listened with amusement as he set

  out to impress with his lineage.

  "As the colonel used to say we always referred to my old man as the

  colonel." Gareth's father had indeed died a colonel, but not in an

  illustrious regiment, as the rank suggested. He had worked his way up

  from the lowly rank of constable in the Indian police.

  "Of course, the family estates were from my mother's side-" His mother.

  had been the only daughter of an unsuccessful baker, and the family

  estate had comprised the mortgaged premises in Swansea.

  "The colonel was always a bit of a rogue, and moved with a wild crowd,

  you know. Fast ladies and slow horses. The estates went to the block,

  I'm afraid." Victims themselves of the grinding injustices of the

  British class system, mother and father had devoted themselves to

  lifting their only son beyond that invisible barrier that divides the

  middle from the upper classes.

  "Of course, I was at Eton and he was mostly on foreign service.

  Wish I'd got to know the old devil better. He must have been a

  wonderful character-" Entrance to the school had been assisted by the

  Commissioner of Police, himself an old Etonian. The mother's small

  inheritance and the greater part of the father's salary went into the

  costly business of turning the son into a gentleman.

  "Killed in a duel, would you believe it. Pistols at dawn.

  He was a romantic, too much fire
in his veins." When the cholera took

  the mother, the father's salary was insufficient to meet the bills that

  a young man casually ran up when he mixed sociably with the sons of

  dukes. In India, bribery was a convention, a way of living but the

  colonel was found out. It was indeed pistols at dawn. The colonel

  rode out into the dark Indian forest with his Webley service pistol,

  and his bay mare trotted back to the stables an hour later with an

  empty saddle and the reins trailing.

  "Had to leave Eton, naturally." Under considerable duress.

  It was coincidence that Gareth's friendship with the house master's

  daughter took place at the same time as the colonel's last ride, but at

  least it allowed Gareth to leave in a blaze of glory, as

  Lij Mikhael remarked, rather than as a nobody whose fees had not been

  met.

  He went out into the world with the speech, the manners and the tastes

  of a gentleman but without the means to support them.

  "Luckily they were having this war at the time " and even a regiment

  like the Duke's were not enquiring too deeply into the private means of

  their new officers. Eton was sufficient recommendation, and,

  with the help of the German machine guns, promotion was swift.

  However, after the armistice, things were back to normal and it

  required three thousand a year for an officer to support himself in the

  style the regiment expected. Gareth moved on, and had kept moving ever

  since.

  Vicky Camberwell listened to him, fascinated despite herself She knew

  that this was the cobra dance before the chicken, she knew herself well

  enough to realize that part of the attraction he held for her was the

  very devilry and roguishness she had so readily recognized.

  There had been others like this one. Her job took her to the trouble

  spots of the world, and men of this breed were attracted to the same

  hot spots. With these men there was always the excitement and danger,

  the thrill and the fun but inevitably there was also the sting and the

  pain in the end.

  She tried not to respond, wishing the ride would end, but Gareth's

  sallies were too much for her and as the ricksha drew up in front of

  the Royal Hotel entrance, she could not resist the almost suffocating

  urge to laugh. She threw back her head, shaking her shining pale hair

  in the wind as she let it ring out.

  Gareth had learned also to use the calibre of a woman's laughter as a

  yardstick. Vicky laughed with an unaffected gaiety, a straightforward

  physical response that he found reassuring, and he took her arm

  possessively as he helped her out of the ricksha.

  He showed her through the royal suite with a proprietorial air.

  "Only one suite in the place. Balcony looks out over the gardens, and

  you get the sea breeze in the evening." And, "Only private loo in the

  building, even one of those French jobs for sluicing the old

  privates,

  you know." And, "The bed is quite extraordinary, like sleeping on a

  cloud and all that rot. Never experienced anything like it."

  "Is this where I am to stay?" Vicky asked, with a small-girl

  innocence.

  "Well, I thought we could make some sort of arrangement, old girl." And

  she was left with no doubts as to the type of arrangement Gareth Swales

  had in mind.

  "You are very kind, major," she murmured, and crossed to the handset of

  the telephone.

  "This is Miss Camberwell. Major Swales is vacating the royal suite for

  me. Please have a servant move his clothes to alternative

  accommodation."

  "I say-" gasped Gareth, and she covered the mouthpiece and smiled at

  him. "It's so sweet of you." Then she listened to the manager's

  voice. "Oh dear," she said. "Well, if that's the only room you have

  vacant, it will just have to do then, I am sure the major has

  experienced more uncomfortable billets." When Gareth saw the room that

  was now his, he tried honestly to remember humbler and less comfortable

  billets.

  The Chinese prison in Mukden had been cooler and not placed directly

  over the boisterous uproar of the public bar, and the front line dugout

  during the winter of 1917 at Arras had been more spacious and better

  furnished.

  The next three days Gareth Swales spent at the harbour, drinking tea

  and whisky in the office of the harbour master, riding out with the

  pilot to meet every new vessel as it crossed the bar, jogging in a

  ricksha along the wharf to speak with the skippers of dhows and

  Tuggers, rusty old coal-burners and neater, newer oil, burners, or

  rowing about the harbour in a hired ferry to hail the vessels that lay

  at anchor in the roads.

  His evenings he spent plying Victoria Camberwell with charm,

  flattery and vintage champagne for all of which she seemed to have an

  insatiable appetite and complete immunity. She listened to him,

  laughed with him and drank his champagne, and at midnight excused

  herself prettily, and nimbly side-stepped his efforts to press her to

  his snowy shirt-front or get a foot in the door of the royal suite.

  By the morning of the fourth day, Gareth was understandably becoming a

  little discouraged. He thought of taking a bucket of Tusker out to

  Jake's camp and cheering himself up with a little of the American's

  genial company.

  However, he did not relish having to admit failure to Jake, SO he

  fought off the temptation and took his usual ricksha ride down to the

  harbour.

  During the night a new vessel had anchored in the outer roads and

  Gareth examined her through his binoculars. She was salt-fir ned and

  dirty, (Id and scarred with a dark nondescript hull and a ragged

  crew,

  but Gareth saw that her rigging was sound and that although she was

  schooner rigged with masts which could spread a mass of canvas, yet she

  had propeller drive at the stern probably she had been converted to

  take a diesel engine under the high poop. She looked the most likely

  prospect he had yet seen in the harbour and Gareth ran down the steps

  to the ferry and exuberantly tipped the oarsman a shilling over his

  usual fare.

  At closer range the vessel seemed even more disreputable than she had

  at a distance. The paintwork proved to be a mottled patchwork of layer

  peeling from layer, and it was clear what the sanitary arrangements

  were aboard. The sides were zebra-striped with human excrement.

  Yet closer still, Gareth noticed that the planking was tight and sound

  beneath the execrable paint cover, and her bottom, seen through the

  clear water, was clean copper and free of the usual fuzzy green beard

  of weed. Also her rigging was well set up and all sheets had the

  bright yellow colour and resilient took of new hemp. The name on her

  stern was in Arabic and French, HirondeUe, and she was Seychelles

  registered.

  Gareth wondered at her purpose, for she was certainly a ringer,

  a thoroughbred masquerading as a cart horse. That big bronze propeller

  would drive her handily, and the hull itself looked fast and

  sea-kindly.

  Then as he c
ame alongside he smelled her, and knew precisely what she

  was. He had smelled that peculiar odour of polluted bilges and

  suffering humanity before in the China Sea. He had heard it said that

  it was an odour that could never be scoured from a hull, not even sheep

  dip and boiling salt water would cleanse it. They said that on a dark

  night, the patrol boats could smell a slaver from over the horizon.

  A man who made his daily bread buying and selling slaves would be

  unlikely to baulk at a mere trifle like gun running decided Gareth, and

  hailed her.

  "Ahoy, HirondeLle!" The response was hostile, the closed dark faces of

  the ragged crew stared down at the ferry. They were a mixed batch,

  Arab, Indian, Chinese, Negro and there was no answer to his hail.

  Standing in the ferry, Gareth cupped his hands to his mouth and,

  with the Englishman's unconscious arrogance that assumes all the world

  speaks English, called again.

  "I want to speak to your captain." Now there was a stir under the poop

  and a white man came to the rail. He was swarthy, darkly sunburned and

  so short that his head barely showed above the gunwale.

  "What you want? You police, hey?" Gareth guessed he was Greek or

  Armenian. he wore a dark patch over one eye, and the effect was

  theatrical. The good eye was bright and stony as water-washed agate.

  "No police!" Gareth assured him. "No trouble," and produced the

  whisky bottle from his coat pocket and waved it airily.

  The Captain leaned out over the rail and peered closely at Gareth.

  Perhaps he recognized the twinkle in the eye and the jaunty piratical

  smile that Gareth flashed up at him. It often takes one to know one.

  Anyway, he seemed to reach a decision and he snapped an order in

  Arabic. A rope ladder tumbled down the side.

  "Come," invited the Captain. He had nothing to hide.

  On this leg of his voyage he carried only a cargo of baled cotton goods

  from Bombay. He would discharge this here at Dares Salaam before

  continuing northwards to make a nocturnal landfall on the great horn of

  Africa, there to take on his more lucrative cargo of human wares.

  As long as the merchants of Arabia, India and the East still offered

  huge sums for the slender black girls of the Danakil and Galla,

  men like this would brave the British warships and patrol boats to

  supply them.

  "I thought we might drink a little whisky together and talk about