A Second Chance at Eden nd-7
Page 30
»Jesus! »
The snake's head reared up right in front of him. It was a demonic streamlined arrowhead seventy centimetres long, the jaw open to show fangs the size of fingers. A blood-red tongue as thick as his forearm shot out, vibrating eagerly.
Training or not, Eason lurched back in terror.
«Solange won't hurt you,» Tiarella shouted above the storm. «He's affinity-bonded to me.»
She was standing behind him, her rain-soaked nightshirt clinging like a layer of blue skin.
«That thing is yours?»
«Solange? Yes. He's another of my father's designs. But I'm not sure he was supposed to grow this big. He does eat rather a lot of firedrakes, you see.»
The real horror was the lightness of her tone. So matter-of-fact. Crazy bitch!
Eason took another couple of steps back. The snake had been on the island the whole time. She could have set it on him whenever she wanted and he would never have known. Not until the very last instant when it came rustling out of the thick concealing undergrowth.
«Do you want to question this one?» Tiarella asked, gesturing at Whitley.
«No.»
Her eyes fluttered shut.
Whitley started screaming again as the coils round him flexed sinuously. The sound was swallowed up by the crack of snapping bones, a sickeningly wet squelching. Eason looked away, jaw clenched.
«I'll take their boat out and scuttle it,» Tiarella said. «Everyone will think the storm capsized them. You can bury the bodies. Somewhere where Althaea won't find them, please.»
«She asked me how old I thought you were,» Rousseau slurred, then burped. «I said thirty, thirty-five. Around there.»
«Thanks a lot,» Eason said. He was sitting with the old man, their backs against a fallen tree trunk on the lagoon's beach as the gloaming closed in. A bottle of Rousseau's dreadful home-brew spirits had been passed to and fro for over an hour. Eason wasn't drinking any more, though he made it look like he was.
«You're a good man. I see that. But Althaea, I love her. The two of you together, it's not right. Who knows how long you're gonna stay, eh? These people, your enemies, they could find you. Even here.»
«Right.»
«She would cry if you left her. She would cry more if you were taken away from her. You understand? I couldn't stand to see her cry. Not my little Althaea.»
«Of course. Don't worry. I like Tiarella.»
«Ha!» He coughed heavily. «That's a mistake, too, my friend. She's a harsh, cold woman, that Tiarella. Cracked up completely after her Vanstone died. Never shown a single emotion since, not one. She won't be interested in you.»
Eason grunted his interest and passed the bottle back. A sheet of low cloud hid the stars and moons. Balmy warmth and serenity were a profound contrast to the storm of the previous night. «She loves Althaea, that's an emotion.»
Rousseau took a long swig, his eyelids drooping. «Crap. Loves nobody else, not even her own children.» He took another swig, the liquid running down his stubble. «Gave one away. Said she couldn't afford to keep it here. I pleaded, but she wouldn't listen. Damn ice woman. Never thanks me for what I do, you know. Kept Charmaine going, I have. All for my little Althaea, not her.» He started to slide over, the bottle slipping from his fingers.
Eason put out a hand to steady him. «Gave one what away?»
Rousseau only mumbled, saliva bubbling from his mouth. His eyes had closed.
«Gave what away?» Eason shook him.
«Twins. She had twins,» Rousseau sighed. «Beautiful twins.» Then every muscle went limp; he sprawled on the sand as Eason let go.
Eason looked at him for a long moment. Pathetic and utterly harmless. But he was a liability.
He scanned his retinal amps round the edge of the lagoon, searching for the tell-tale rosy glow that would reveal Solange watching him. All he could see was the black and grey of the tangled trees.
Rousseau was so drunk he didn't even react to having his head immersed in the water. Eason held him under for two minutes, then waded out and started to sweep away the incriminating tracks in the sand.
They held the funeral two days later. A dozen people attended from the neighbouring islands, staid men and women in sturdy clothes gathered round the grave. Althaea leant against her mother the whole time, sobbing softly. The ceremony was conducted by Lucius, a forty-year-old deacon from Tropicana's Orthodox Church, an archipelago-based sect which had split from the Unified Christian Church a century and a half earlier. He was a broad-shouldered, powerful man who captained the Anneka , one of the Church's traders.
Along with three men from the islands, Eason lowered the coffin he had built into the hole while Lucius led the singing of a hymn. The coffin came to rest on a bedrock of coral one and a half metres down.
After the mourners departed, Eason shovelled the rich loam back in, two of the men helping him. Nobody questioned his presence. He was the new labourer Tiarella had taken on, that was enough for them.
It started him thinking. He'd only possessed the most generalized notion for the future when he stole the Party's antimatter. Dump it harmlessly in interstellar space, start over somewhere else. No destination in mind, simply a place where he could live without ever having to watch his back.
Looking around, he didn't think he could find a more Arcadian location than the archipelago to live. It was just the lifestyle which was the problem, this vaguely sanctimonious poor-but-proud kick which the islanders shared. That and a snake which even hell would reject.
But changes could be made, or paid for, and snakes were not immortal.
The wake was a mawkish, stilted ordeal. Conversation between the islanders was limited to their fishing and the minutiae of large family genealogies. Althaea sat in a corner of the lounge, her mouth twitching in a kind of entreating helplessness if anyone offered their condolences. Even Tiarella allowed her relief to show when it limped to its desultory conclusion.
«I've arranged with Lucius for a picking team to visit us next month,» Tiarella told Eason after they saw off the last of the boats. «They'll be coming from Oliviera, that's one of the Church's parish islands about twelve kilometres away. They usually come about twice a year to pick whatever fruit is ripe. Some of the crop is handed round to other parishes, the remainder is sold to a trader in Kariwak and we split the proceeds.»
«Couldn't you find yourself a better partner than the Church?» he asked.
She cocked her head to one side, and gave him a derisive look. «It was the Church which looked after Vanstone when he was a boy, he grew up in their orphanage.»
«Right.» He gave up. Rousseau had been right, she was too odd.
«I don't accept their doctrine,» she said. «But they make decent neighbours, and they're honest. Oliviera also has several parishioners who are Althaea's age. Their company will be good for her; she deserves something to cheer her up right now.»
Both moons were in the sky that night, casting an icy light that tinted Charmaine's trees and foliage a dusky grey. Eason found Althaea arranging a garland of scarlet flowers on Rousseau's grave, a quiet zephyr twirling her loose mane of hair. The dark blouse and skirt she had worn for the funeral seemed to soak up what little light there was, partially occluding her with shadows.
She stood up slowly when he arrived, making no attempt to hide her dejection. «He wasn't a bad man,» she said. Her voice was husky from crying.
«I know he wasn't.»
«I suppose something like this was bound to happen.»
«Don't dwell on it. He really loved you. The last thing he'd want was for you to be unhappy.»
«Yes.»
He kissed her brow, and began to undo the buttons on her blouse.
«Don't,» she said. But even that was an effort for her.
«Shush.» He soothed her with another kiss. «It's all right, I know what I'm doing.»
She simply stood there with
her shoulders slumped, as he knew she would. He finished unbuttoning her blouse, and pushed the fabric aside to admire her breasts. Althaea looked back at him, numb with grief.
«I can't make you forget,» he said. «But this will show you your life has more to offer than grief.»
He led her, unresisting, back through the unruly trees to his chalet.
The parishioners from Oliviera were a chirpy, energetic bunch. There were twenty of them, trooping down the jetty from Anneka 's deck: teenagers and adolescents, loaded up with backpacks and wicker baskets. After Charmaine's usual solitude they were like an invading army.
Eason had prepared a section of the island ready for them, determined the harvesting arrangement would be a prosperous one for both sides. It'd been a hectic, happy time for him since the funeral.
After the sun fell, Althaea would slip away from the house, returning night after night to the darkness and heat of his chalet. She was a sublime conquest—youthful, lithe, obedient. Taking her as his lover was sweet revenge on Tiarella. Replaced by her own daughter. She must have known, lying alone in her own bed as Althaea was ruthlessly corrupted in his.
By day, the two of them set about righting Charmaine. Eason renovated a rotary-scythe unit which fitted on the front of the mower tractor. He and Althaea took it in turns to drive the vehicle through the grove of citrus trees which was fruiting, blades hacking at the thick tangle of vines and low bushes, terrorizing the parrots and firedrakes. The chips were cleared away and piled high, making bonfires which burned for days at a time. Now they were left with broad clear avenues of trunks to walk down. That one section of island, two hundred metres long, stretching right across the saddle of coral between the lagoon and the ocean, was almost back to being a proper grove instead of a wilderness. Crooked branches still knotted together overhead, but all the fruit was accessible. Pruning could wait until later; his synaptic web didn't have any files on that at all.
«We'll need another boat to cope with the load,» Lucius said after they'd filled the Anneka 's outrigger holds by the middle of the afternoon on the first day. «We normally only get three or four boatloads out of the whole week. I wish I'd brought a bigger team now, as well. You've done a good job improving things here, Eason.»
Eason tipped back the straw hat which Althaea had woven for him, and smiled. «Thank you. Can you get hold of another boat?»
«I'll put in at the cathedral island this evening, ask the Bishop to assign us a second. It shouldn't be a problem.»
At night the picking team gathered on the lawn. Tiarella had set up a long open-range charcoal grill. They ate lobsters and thick slices of pork, washed down with juice and wine. After the meal they sang as a moon arched sedately across the sky, and the fountain sent a foaming white jet seven metres up into the air.
Althaea was in her element as she moved between the groups with a tray, her face animated in a way Eason had never seen before. Still later, when they had stolen away to make love in the jungle beyond the restored grove, he lay back on his blanket and watched her undressing, skin stippled by moonlight filtering through the thick canopy of leaves, his resolve crystallized. Her body, a rewarding challenge, beautiful location, it didn't get any better. He was going to stay.
Eason didn't see them together until the third day. It was a lunch break, and he'd just walked back from the jetty to help himself to the sandwiches Tiarella had made in the kitchen. Through the window he could see most of the garden.
Althaea was sitting in the shade of a eucalyptus tree with one of the parishioners, a lad in his teens. They were talking avidly, passing a chillflask to and fro. Her easiness with the lad irritated Eason. But he made a conscious effort to keep his feelings in check. The last thing he wanted was a scene which would draw attention and comment.
When his retinal amp focused on the lad's face, Eason could see a disturbing amount of adoration written there. Fair enough, she was divine after all. But there was something about his features which was familiar: he had a broad face, strong jaw, longish blond hair, clear blue eyes—a real charmer. Faces were Eason's business, and he'd seen that face once before, recently. Yet offhand he couldn't even point in the direction Oliviera lay.
It was Althaea who introduced him to the lad. His name was Mullen, he was seventeen, polite and respectful, if slightly overeager. It was an engaging combination. Eason found himself warming to him.
The three of them sat together for the meal that night, biting into broad slices of pineapple coated in a tart sauce, drinking a sweet white wine. Tiarella sat on the other side of the grill, her outline wavering in the heat shimmer given off by the glowing charcoal. Her gaze was locked on them.
«So how many times have you come here to pick?» Eason asked.
Mullen tore his attention away from Althaea. «This is my first time. It's wonderful. I've never seen a firedrake before.»
«Where were you living before Oliviera?»
«Nowhere. I've always lived there. This is the first time I've been anywhere except for other parish islands, and they're pretty much the same.»
«You mean you've never been on the mainland?» he asked, surprised.
«Not yet, no. I'm probably going to go next year, when I'm eighteen.»
«You've got a real treat in store,» Althaea said. «Kariwak's a riot; but just make sure you count your fingers after you shake hands.»
«Really?» Mullen switched his entire attention back to her.
Eason felt lonely, out of it. The truth was, their conversation had been incredibly boring all evening. They talked about nothing—the antics of the firedrakes, weather, which fish they liked best, how the picking was progressing. Every word was treated as though it had been spoken by some biblical prophet.
He was also very aware of the way Mullen's eyes roamed. Althaea was wearing just her turquoise shorts and a cotton halter top. It was distracting enough for him, so Heaven knew what it was doing to Mullen's hormones—the other boys from the parish, too, for that matter. He ought to have a word with her about it.
When he looked round the garden, Tiarella was still staring at him; her face sculpted, immobile. Maybe she was finally realizing her time was coming to an end. After eighteen years of stagnation and inertia it would be a jolt for any personality.
He allowed Mullen and Althaea to babble on for another ten minutes, then plucked at her halter strap. «Come on.»
She glanced at him, frowning as he rose to his feet, slapping sand and grass from his jeans. «Oh . . . not just yet.»
«Yes. We need to get some sleep afterwards.» He let an impish grin play over his lips, and picked up their blanket.
Althaea blushed as she glanced at Mullen, lips twitching into an embarrassed smile.
«Come on.» Eason clicked his fingers impatiently.
«I'll see you both tomorrow,» the lad mumbled.
«Sure. Good night.» He steered Althaea towards the black picket of trees. He liked Mullen, but the lad had to understand exactly who she belonged to.
«That was very rude,» Althaea whispered.
His free arm went round her shoulder. «Not as rude as what I'm about to show you in a minute.»
Althaea fought against a grin as he tickled her ribcage. Her finger poked him in retaliation. «Rude!»
«Was not.»
«Was too.»
He looked back as he reached the trees. The glowing charcoal was spilling a pool of tangerine radiance over the lawn. It showed him Mullen covering his face with his hands, shoulder muscles knotted. And Tiarella, who hadn't been staring at him after all, because her eyes had never moved when he and Althaea departed. She was watching Mullen.
When the lad's hands slipped back down to reveal a crestfallen expression, the corners of her mouth lifted into a serene smile.
Eason stood on the jetty, his arm around Althaea as they waved goodbye to the Anneka . The parishioners were leaning over the gunwale, waving back,
shouting farewells which were scrambled by the wavelets lapping against the coral.
Tiarella started walking back to the house. Eason turned to follow, and gave Althaea a reassuring hug, noting a certain wistfulness in her eyes. «Don't worry, I'm sure your new boyfriend will be in touch. He's madly in love with you, after all.» He grinned broadly to show he understood.
Althaea shot him a look of pure venom, then her face became the identical blank mask which defended Tiarella from the world.
«Hey, listen—« he began.
But she shook herself free and ran off down the jetty. He stared after her in consternation.
«What did I say?»
Tiarella arched her eyebrow. «It's not what you say, it's what you are.»
«You make me out as some kind of ogre,» he snapped, suddenly exasperated with her, the unending stream of oblique remarks.
«In medieval times that's exactly what you would be.»
«Name one thing I've done to hurt her.»
«You wouldn't dare. We both know that.»
«With or without your threats, I wouldn't hurt her.»
Her lips compressed as she studied him. «No, I don't suppose you would. I never really thought about how you would be affected by your time here. I should have done.»
«My time? You make it sound finite.»
«It is. I told you that the day you came.»
«Your fucking cards again!» Crazy bitch!
Tiarella shrugged and sauntered off down the path to the house.
He slept alone that night, for the first time since the funeral. Guilt soaked his mind as he lay on the cot, yet he still didn't know what it was he'd done.
The next morning over breakfast she gave him a timid smile, and he glossed over any awkwardness with an enthusiastic account of how he intended to clear all the island's old service tracks with the mower tractor. Then they'd be able to start attending to the coffee bushes.
That night he welcomed her back to his bed. It wasn't the same; she had become reserved. Not physically, as always her body was defenceless against his skill and strength. But somewhere deep inside her thoughts she was holding herself back from him. No matter how exquisite their lovemaking was she no longer surrendered completely.