now.'
'Can you swim?'
He didn't know it, but to me this was the sixty-four thousand-dollar question. If he was a good swimmer, I was in trouble. My hopes rose when I saw him hesitating.
'I can manage.'
'What's that mean? Can you swim a quarter of a mile? I want to take off from here.' I pointed to the map. 'That's around a quarter of a mile to the harbour.'
'I wouldn't want to swim that far.'
'Okay, so you don't come with me.'
As I started towards the door, he caught hold of my arm. His face had turned vicious.
'No tricks, soldier! You make one mistake and your wife will get branded !'
I hit him a back-hand swipe that sent him reeling across the room. He thudded against the wall, bounced off and came at me. He was so mad he forgot to get on balance. As he rushed at me like a charging bull I hung one on his jaw. It was a block buster of a punch and he went out like a match flame in a gale.
I heard a sound behind me and I turned swiftly. Carlo stood gaping in the doorway of the french windows.
'Sweep him up and put him to bed,' I said. 'I'm going out.' His brutish face showed bewilderment. I didn't give him a chance to begin thinking. I shouldered him aside and went down the steps and started across the sand dunes towards the distant arm of the bay.
* * *
It was a longer swim than I had thought but it didn't worry me. During my Army days I had swum five miles under pressure with Vietcong bullets splashing around me from time to time. I took it easy, and after a while, I came within sight of the Willington boat house. Slowly and cautiously, I swam towards it. There was a small harbour and I could see the motor boat. I swam just outside the entrance to the harbour, looking for any sign of life, but the place seemed deserted. Raimundo had said there was an alarm cable guarding the harbour. I didn't think it likely it would be operating during the day, but I wasn't taking a chance of alerting the two resident guards. I dived deeply and swam along one of the walls of the harbour entrance, then surfaced by the motor boat.
As I came up, shaking the water out of my eyes, a girl's voice called, 'Hi! Do you know you're trespassing?'
I looked up. Nancy Willington was standing on the cabin roof, looking down at me. She had on the skimpiest bikini I have ever seen : a joke of a bikini that was only just enough to cover her nipples and her crotch. At close quarters she was the most sensational-looking woman I had seen. Woman? Perhaps not yet . . . not mentally a woman. She reminded me a little of Brigitte Bardot when she had first set the movie screen alight.
'I didn't know anyone was here,' I said, treading water. 'I'm sorry . . . excuse me. I guess I've come to the wrong place.'
She laughed, leaning forward to look down at me, her full breasts threatening to escape from the tiny halter.
'Do you usually swim to people's places?'
'I said I was sorry, didn't I?' I started to swim, not fast but with purpose towards the harbour exit.
'Hey ! Come back ! I want to talk to you!'
I had gambled on her curiosity. The ninety-five to five chance looked as if it could pay off.
I turned round and swam back to the boat. I caught hold of the mooring-rope.
'I didn't mean to trespass.'
'Come aboard,' she said. 'Do you want a drink?'
I swung myself on to the boat's deck. I was wearing only a pair of white cotton trousers. They were sopping wet and they stuck to me. I could have been naked. I didn't think this would faze her, and I had too much on my mind for it to faze me.
She came off the cabin roof and joined me. Her eyes ran over me, missing nothing and she gave me a gamin grin.
'Some man !' she said.
'You think so? Okay . . . some girl!'
She laughed.
'What are you doing here?'
'I am looking for my wife.'
This was the idea that had come to me while I was talking to Raimundo. I had to find Lucy. This girl knew the district. She just might know of a villa or a bungalow that had been recently rented.
'Your wife?' Her green eyes widened. 'Have you lost her?'
I couldn't tell her the truth. If I did, she would think only of herself. She would be on the telephone in a moment to warn Diaz to keep away. So I had to lie to her.
'I've lost her,' I said, 'but I'm not bothering you with this. I'm a stranger around here. I saw this place and wondered if she was here. Sorry . . .'
'You're the craziest man I've ever met!' she exclaimed. 'You mean you are swimming along the coast, looking for your wife? I don't believe it !'