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Authors: Rosalind Brett

BOOK: Dangerous Waters
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It isn

t that—just the storm. And perhaps having to wait again this morning.

She drank some of the coffee, broke a piece of the grey bread, and smiled palely.

Seems an odd thing to ask, so much water about, but do you think I could get a bath, so that I can change into something suitable?


Of course. How

s the rash?


Drying up. It doesn

t itch.


It takes some days for the purple to wear off. I

ll see about the bath as soon as we

ve finished the coffee.

From then on he was businesslike. The bath was carried into the room—an oblong galvanized container which must have been intended for some other use. A Malay boy brought tepid water and Pete rigged a mat over the doorway and told her he would keep guard to see she was undisturbed.

An hour later, clean and refreshed, Terry made up her face with the aid of a handbag mirror, and had to rely on the fact that she had worn the frock before in order to be sure it looked right. Actually, the white leaf pattern on hyacinth blue enhanced her coloring. Even the stickiness of the mid-brown hair did not detract from the frock

s simplicity and correctness.

Perhaps deliberately, Pete neither lifted an eyebrow nor passed any comment when he saw her; she might still have been wearing the thing he had snipped apart at the waist. He packed his goods, had a boy take them out to the Landrover, and when Terry

s luggage was ready he got the same boy to stow them. Then he stunned the boy into heavenly bliss by giving him the canoe he had bought four or five days ago in Vinan.

The Landrover rocketed out of Tembin to the shouting and waving of the villagers. The driver sat in the back with the luggage while Terry shared the front seat with Pete. The soggy road was so narrow that palms and meranti branches whipped against both sides of the vehicle, and the track had been so tortuously carved out between the giant trees that at the beginning of the journey Terry was convinced every few minutes that they were driving straight into the living jungle.


What would happen if we met another car? she asked.


We

d have to try and back into the bush. There won

t be any traffic this morning, though, and even when it

s dry few cars come to Tembin. There

s no reason.


I can

t think why they don

t cut the upper growth back a bit. It would help visibility no end.


They do it every few months but it grows back. This is still the edge of the rain forest.

A black cobra slid across the road, and presently a wild pig, looking very cross, darted from the tangled undergrowth and back again to cover. They came to a frail-looking log bridge which was set up on supports that appeared no more substantial than bamboos. It swayed as they crossed, and Terry saw that the river underneath it swirled like whipped mud.


Is this the same river?

she asked.


The very same,

he said laconically.


Where does it go?


Close to Penghu and then straight on through the jungle to its source, in a mountainside. It joins the main river at Shalak, and runs on to the sea.


What are those things growing there?


Durians. They smell frightful, but the Malays eat them with great relish. I

ve never got down to it yet.

And that was how the miles passed. She asked questions and received polite answers. There was no attempt at banter or even sarcasm, and when they came to a deep waterhole that spread right across the road he handled it in the same non-committal manner—merely leaned over her and drew up her storm shield and drove straight in and up the other side.

There were almost in Penghu before there was a view of any kind, and when it came it was disappointing.
Bamboo one-roomed houses at each side of an earth track, a slight upward slope to where two or three fairly new stucco buildings were placed opposite a row of bamboo shelters which served as shops. There came a bend in the road, and then better-class houses, where well-dressed Malay women sat in their verandas and smilingly viewed the world. The sprawling houses of the few white people were set round a vast beaten earth square. They had no enclosed gardens, but a wide border of exotic flowers spread from each side of the wooden veranda steps and round to the back of the house. In the centre of the main square stood a giant meranti redwood with a few palms and thickets about its roots. In the shade of the palms sat two ayahs with two white children. They and a young brown boy who mooned about with a twig broom were the only signs of life. Pete stopped the Landrover and called the boy.

Where is the house of Tuan Winchester?

he asked.

The boy engagingly scratched his ear and pointed. The big one, tuan.

Terry looked at the house, and small nerves jumped in her body. The dwelling rambled a little farther than the others, and two sides of the veranda were enclosed by beautifully patterned woven grass, while the front was wide open and furnished in bamboo, like an open-air lounge. The main door of the house stood wide, but there was no one in sight.

Pete was instructing the driver.

Take the mem

s luggage up into the veranda—those two cases, the bag and the coat. We

re going on now to the rubber estate.

Pete then extended a hand to help Terry down to the path. She stilled her quivering and lifted a bright smile.

Well, it

s been very nice to know you, Pete.

His own smile was narrow and unrevealing.

Thanks. Think you

ll be all right?


Yes, of course. I can

t wait to see my sister!


Good. You

re a bit late, but you

re here in time. If there

s nothing else
...”


There is
...
something, Pete.

She took a hand from the pocket of her dress and a little shakily said,

There

s this

your ring. Please take it.

Coolly he looked down at the small ornamental gold band.

Keep it as a souvenir. One of these days you can show it to your children—yours and Roger

s—and tell them what you went through to get to him. Once you

ve nailed the chap you won

t mind his knowing all about you.

He hadn

t lifted a hand to take the ring, and for a moment she thought he was going to turn away without another word. Quickly she reached up and dropped it into his shirt pocket. He stared at her sardonically, then shrugged.


Well, it

s goodbye.


Yes.

With hard but impersonal hands he held her shoulders as he bent to plant a firm kiss on her mouth.

Less lasting than a ring,

he said. And without another glance he swung up into the Landrover and set it moving.

The vehicle had disappeared before Terry turned and moved draggingly up
the
veranda steps and across the wooden flooring to the open door of the house.

It was anti-climax to find the house empty, except for two servants. Terry walked into a long sitting-room which was dim and cool and seemed ultra-luxurious after the devious voyage from the coast. A Malay in a white sarong and a white linen jacket came sof
tl
y from some inner room and bowed, a politely enquiring smile on his brown, triangular face.


Mem?

he murmured.


I

m Miss Fremont

s sister,

she told him.

I was expected four days ago.


Oh, yes,

he said, turning the smile into a delighted one.

I can show the mem her room and bring the luggage.


Where is Miss Fremont?


With Mrs. Winchester. They visit other mems. Please
...
will you come this way?

There was nothing remarkable about the bedroom except the big circular fan in the ceiling. The bed was of some dark wood and appeared to be fairly old, the bedspread was an ordinary rose pink, and the white mosquito-net was draped from its framework and tied back with pink ribbon.
A long bamboo chair upholstered in chintz stood near the closed french window and a plain dressing table, a wardrobe that reeked of DDT and a bright grass mat completed the furnishing.

Feeling oddly lightheaded, Terry opened her case and disposed of the things she had recently been using. The other
c
ase had not been opened since she had left the ship at the coast, and now she felt curiously reluctant to turn the key. Inside it were wedding gifts for Annette, one from her parents and her own, as well as the dainty pale turquoise frock she herself was to wear as Annette

s bridesmaid. The whole contents of the case might have been ruined by water, but somehow she couldn

t investigate. She left it, and walked back into the sitting-room, looked through an archway into a small dining-room, where
a
servant was placing mats and cutlery on the table.

She felt as if she had suddenly been dropped here and was now suspended in time. Pete was gone—her heart plunged—and she had to begin something new, something that she didn

t feel quite up to. She looked about her at the rattan chairs with their gay cushions, the small tables which appeared to have seen much use, the hand-made rugs. No curtains, it seemed; only reed blinds of a rather better make than those she had met in the jungle.

She wandered into the doorway, saw that the ayahs and their charges had disappeared, and that a sandy-haired man was walking across the square towards her. Vic Hilton!

She reached the foot of the steps as he did, felt both her hands grasped in his hot ones.


Terry! By all that

s unbelievable! We

ve been moving heaven and earth to find you. How did you get here?


It

s a longish story. Tell me about Annette!

He slapped a fist into the palm of his other hand.

It

s too bad—you weren

t even welcomed. Annette and Vida Winchester are due back any time now—been bridge-playing with the other women. Annette

s taken to bridge, thank goodness.


Good lord, do they even play in the mornings?

He nodded, and his rugged features looked humorously long-suffering.

Twice a week. Come on inside. Have you had a drink?


No, but I can wait.

She mounted the steps at his side and preceded him into the house. Then she turned and surveyed him.

Well, how are you both
?


Pretty good, considering. Annette

s only broken our engagement twice and at the moment we

re tied.

She searched his face, saw something dark in his eyes and a frank smile on his lips.

You

ll be darned glad when you

re married, won

t you?

she said soberly.

Well, it won

t be long now.


Longer
than
you think. It

s postponed for a week.


Through me?

He lifted his shoulders and sighed.

That

s what she said.

Digging his hands into his pockets he turned towards the window.

Are you on my side, Terry?


If you

re on the same side as Annette, yes.


Do you want her to marry me?


You know I do.


Then I

m going to ask you to promise me something, before she takes the floor. Promise you won

t let her postpone the wedding again!


I can

t promise that without even seeing her first, but I

ll do my best for you, Vic.

He turned, looked at her pale face and said quickly,

I

m as bad as the rest—putting myself first. I just had to get it said at the very beginning.

He paused.

You

re an odd color, young Terry—sunburned and yet pale, and you look appallingly tired. What in the world have you been doing
?


Just getting here. I

m perfectly well.


You

re not waiting any longer for that drink, anyway. I

ll give you gin and ginger, with ice. You

ll like it. Sit down.

He had given her the drink and mixed one for himself when a small mud-splattered car pulled up in the square and two women emerged from it. Terry jumped up and gazed, walked quickly into the veranda.

There was Annette, a sheer beauty from the sheen of her red-gold hair to the tips of her coral-tinted toenails. She wore a white frock and green blobs in her ears, and though she had never tanned very well, the tan make-up was even more effective than the real thing might have been; it was so delicate, so very much Annette. She was an inch or two taller than Terry and had the gentle, unpronounced carves of the true model. She had a model

s walk, too, though she forgot that when she saw her sister standing in the veranda. She ran up the steps, flung her arms about Terry and kissed her.

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