palm trees.
An ask ari policeman recognized the fluttering pennant on the front
wing, red and blue and gold with rampant lion and unicorn, and he
pulled himself to foot-stamping attention and flung a flamboyant
salute. Gareth touched the brim of his hat to the manner born, then
turned to his companion who had not taken her eyes from his tanned and
noble face since they had left the grounds of Government House.
'There is a good view place up ahead, looks out across actually.
Thought we'd park the channel, very beautiful there for a while.' She
nodded vehemently, unable to trust herself to speak.
Gareth was glad of that she had a squeaky little treble and he smiled
his gratitude. That brilliant, completely irresistible smile,
and the girl blushed a mottled purple.
She had good eyes, Gareth tried to convince himself, that is if you
like camels' eyes. Huge sorrowful pools with long matted lashes.
He would concentrate on the eyes and try and avoid the teeth. He felt
a sudden small twinge of concern. 'I hope she doesn't bite in the
critical moments.
With those choppers, she could inflict a mortal wound.' For a moment
he considered abandoning the project. Then he made himself imagine a
pile of one thousand sovereigns, and his courage returned.
Gareth braked the Bentley and searched for the turnoffs It was well
concealed by underbrush and he missed it and had to back up.
Gently he eased the gleaming limousine down into a small clearing,
walled in by fern and scrub and roofed over by the cathedral arches of
the palms.
'Well, here we are, what?' Gareth pulled on the hand brake and turned
to his companion. 'Actually you can see the channel if you twist your
neck a bit.' He leaned forward to demonstrate, and with a convulsive
leap the Governor's daughter sprang upon him. Gareth's last controlled
thought was that he must avoid the teeth.
Jake Barton waited until the huge glistening Bentley began to heave and
toss on its suspension like a lifeboat in a gale, before he rose from
the cover of the ferns and, carpet-bag in hand, crept around to the
bonnet with its gleaming winged initial V and the stiffly embroidered
household pennant.
The noise he made in opening and lifting the engine cowling was
effectively smothered by the whinnying cries of passion that issued out
-of the car, and Jake glanced through the windscreen and caught one
horrifying glimpse of the Governor's daughter's white limbs, long and
shapeless and knobbly kneed as a camel's kicking ecstatically at the
roof of the cab before he ducked his head into the engine.
He worked swiftly, his lips pursed but the tune stealthily muted,
and his brow creased with concentration as the carburettor jumped and
heaved unpredictably under his hands and the whinnies of passion and
the high-pitched exhortations to greater effort and speed rang
louder.
The resentment he had felt at Gareth Swales's refusal to assist in
painting the iron ladies faded swiftly. He was pushing and pulling his