The Eden Inheritance (59 page)

Read The Eden Inheritance Online

Authors: Janet Tanner

BOOK: The Eden Inheritance
7.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Beads of sweat stood out on Otto's face as he thought of what was almost certainly going to happen. Lilli was going to die just as her mother had died before her, because of the drug-smuggling, because of Jorge.

With the thought Otto suddenly found some of the strength he thought had gone forever. He slammed down the receiver and yanked open the drawer of his desk. At the back lay his service revolver. He pulled it out and struggled to his feet.

‘Where is my car?' he demanded.

‘Otto?' Ingrid was at his side, confused, concerned.

He pushed past her, ignoring her.

‘Where are the keys?'

‘Where they always are … Otto, what are you doing?'

Still he ignored her. He stumbled past her, the man who had scarcely walked unaided for weeks past, and out of the villa, grabbing his car keys from their hook as he went.

The car was on the drive outside. Though it was some time now since Otto had used it he had instructed Basil to drive it regularly to keep it in tune. He levered himself into the driver's seat and switched on the engine and headlights.

‘Otto!' Ingrid screamed, almost beside herself. ‘Where are you, going?'

‘Get out of the way!' He slammed the lever into drive and pressed his foot down hard on the accelerator. The car shot forward as a half-hysterical Ingrid threw herself clear and he turned the wheel in the direction of the airstrip. The headlamps cut a broad path of brightness through the dark; moths and mosquitos smashed into the windscreen in kamikaze flight. He felt no pain now, was aware of nothing but the all-encompassing sense of urgency. Get to Lilli. Save Lilli. Nothing else mattered.

Otto prayed to a God he had long since stopped believing in that he would be in time.

When Guy had landed on the tiny airstrip he taxied slowly towards the office buildings and commenced his shut-down checks. But tonight, instead of putting the baby to bed as quickly as possible, he found himself lingering over the procedure. Even when he was all through he made no move to get out of the aircraft, but sat holding the yoke between his hands, staring into the soft dark and wondering what the hell was the matter with him.

It wasn't just the unexpected turn of events over the last few days or the way his priorities had changed that was bemusing him, it was the change in himself that was throwing him into a state of utter confusion. He had always been such a decisive character before – the ability to think quickly and clearly, select a course of action and act upon it, was one of the things that made him a good pilot. Waffling, as he called it, annoyed him. It was a total waste of time. Yet here he was doing the very same thing himself. And for what reason? He had made up his mind to terminate his contract and return to England for all the reasons he had enumerated, and he knew, deep down, that it was the only course he could take. But he had put off actually doing anything about it and in odd moments, whenever his mind was not actively occupied with something else, he found himself going over it all again as if he was still clinging to the hope that this time he might come up with a different answer. It was stupid, he told himself, to go on tossing it round and round, stupid and unproductive. There wasn't another answer and he might as well accept it. But he couldn't. And he knew the reason was that he could not bear the thought of never seeing Lilli again.

To Guy, this in itself was deeply unsettling. He'd never felt this way about a woman before, and being at the mercy of his emotions was an experience he wasn't sure he cared for. Yet another reason to go – and go quickly, especially since she was refusing to speak to him for some reason he could not fathom. But still he delayed the moment of final decision – and despised himself for what he saw as his own weakness.

Guy sighed, reaching for his soft leather pilot bag, and began packing his equipment away in it. Then he tidied the cabin, locked the plane and tied it down, and walked back across to the little office building, somehow summoning up the energy to move at his usual brisk pace.

The office was in darkness. Guy turned on the lights, dumped his pilot bag on the desk and went to the shelf to fetch the box file in which the tech log was kept. Funny – it wasn't there. Somebody must have moved it. Guy suppressed a feeling of irritation. He liked everything in his working life to be methodical and tidy and expected his colleagues to behave with the same professional efficiency. He cast his eye around the office and spotted the dark-grey box on a lower shelf, laid flat instead of stacked upright as it usually was, beside a pile of flight magazines.

He fetched it, set it on the desk and opened his flight bag, extracting the clipboard bearing the details he needed to make up the flight log. He sorted them, made a few quick calculations and reached for the box file, pulling it closer. As he did so a sound from behind him made him turn, and he saw a slim figure, dressed in floaty cream cheesecloth, in the doorway.

‘Lilli!' he said, pleasure as well as surprise in his tone. ‘What are you doing here?'

A slight flush of colour rose in her cheeks and she raised a hand to push her hair back behind her ear, a self-conscious gesture which betrayed her nervousness.

‘I heard the plane go over. I guessed you'd be here.'

‘A fair assumption.' He said it with throwaway sarcasm to cover the fact that he too felt self-conscious. Something else he was not used to! He guessed it was because she had occupied his thoughts so exclusively these last days; now, face to face with her, it was as though he was afraid she might realise it. ‘I didn't think you wanted to speak to me though. That was the message I was given the other evening.'

Her colour deepened.

‘I know. I'm sorry … I shouldn't have done that. That's really why I'm here now – to apologise.'

‘That's all right. Apology accepted. You had some problem with your father, did you?'

‘Not exactly. I guess I got things out of proportion again. Could we … do you think we could forget what happened and just … well, take up where we left off?'

He could see what it was costing her and he was melting inside. But he still couldn't understand why she seemed to behave so irrationally. She was upset, about her father's terminal decline, obviously, but even so, surely there was no need to be quite so neurotic. And the fact that she had come to apologise for cutting him dead could make no difference to his decision to leave Madrepora. The basic problems were still unchanged. It simply meant he would have to tell her himself instead of leaving her to find out from someone else.

‘I'm not sure that will be possible,' he said. ‘I might not be here for much longer.'

Her face fell.

‘What do you mean?'

‘I'm probably going back to England.'

‘When? Why?'

‘I'm not sure when – I haven't actually told Manuel yet that I want to terminate my contract. As to why – I came here for a specific reason – something I had to do. Now it's done there's no reason for me to stay.'

The colour left her cheeks, then returned again to burn dully, not from embarrassment now but from shocked disbelief that not only had Jorge been right about him but also that he should admit it so freely.

‘So it's true then,' she said dully. ‘ You did come here to spy on my father.'

It was Guy's turn to experience shock. How did she know what he had been doing?

‘I haven't been spying on anybody,' he said evenly. ‘There were some facts I wanted to establish, that's all.'

‘And in order to establish them you made use of me!' Lilli's eyes were blazing with anger as well as unshed tears. ‘How could you do that?'

‘Lilli, I didn't …' But a thought had occurred to him. If Lilli knew about her father and about the treasures, then there was really no need for him to leave at all! Perhaps there was still something to be salvaged from this whole mess.

‘Lilli, I promise I haven't used you,' he said.

‘I trusted you, Guy. I really trusted you.' Her eyes were glittering. ‘How could you do it?'

‘I had my reasons and I'd like the chance to explain. Just let me finish up here and we'll go and have a drink and talk about it.'

‘Is there anything to talk about?'

‘I think so,' he said firmly, reaching for the box file. ‘I just have to do the tech log.'

His hand was on the box file, his eyes on Lilli, when they heard the sound of a car approaching at speed. Startled, he straightened.

‘What the hell …?'

The car came to a halt outside with a screech of brakes. And then the door of the hut burst open and Guy found himself face to face with the man he had chased halfway across the world but never now expected to meet.

Gaunt, white-faced, the unmistakable scar etched down his sweat-beaded cheek, he stood there, and though he held on to the door frame for support it seemed to Guy he still retained something of the powerful presence which had once been his.

Otto von Rheinhardt. The monster who had terrorised his family and stolen his inheritance. Otto von Rheinhardt. Lilli's father.

As he flung the door open with a strength born of desperation Otto's fevered brain registered two things.

The first was the box file which he knew contained Jorge's letter bomb, less than two feet away from his beloved Lilli and about to be opened.

The second was the man whose hand lay on the file, and the sight of him was somehow even more of a shock to Otto than the file itself.

In a brief timeless moment it seemed that the years had melted away. He was back in France, scene of the excursions to the past which he had been making mentally these last days, only this time he was looking into the face of the man whose death he had ordered.

Charles de Savigny.

A cry gurgled in his throat and in that second he wondered wildly if he was dead already and this was a ghost come to greet him. Then, as swiftly, the illusion passed and he was totally lucid once more. This was no ghost. It was the pilot Lilli had come to see. But not just any pilot. Guy. Guy de Savigny. The child of the château. Charles' son.

The knowledge was upon him in a flash, the truth illuminated in his fevered brain like a scene made clear suddenly by an explosion of forked lightning.

Guy de Savigny. Would he have recognised the name if he had heard it? He did not know and in any case it did not matter now. This was the man Jorge bad denounced as an agent of the DEA. But he was not an agent of the DEA. The reason he was here had nothing whatever to do with drug-trafficking. He had come in search of Otto von Rheinhardt. And he had found him.

Otto gasped again, shock immobilising him momentarily. Then Lilli moved towards him, her lovely face the picture of bewilderment, and that other part of his brain, the part that knew about the bomb in the box file, activated again. The pilot's hand was on the box – one small move and both he and Lilli would be blown to pieces.

‘Stay back, Lilli!' Otto ordered.

Collecting what was left of his wasted strength he grabbed the box file before the startled pilot could stop him.

Into the night he stumbled, holding the box in front of him like a sacred offering, forcing his weak legs to a run. He threw the box into the passenger seat of the car, threw himself in after it and slammed the gear lever into drive. The car shot forward and beads of sweat gleamed on Otto's forehead.

He had done it. He had saved Lilli.

But there was no way he could prevent her discovering the truth about him. Guy de Savigny would certainly tell her. Emptiness and despair yawned in Otto as he remembered the distance that had begun to open up between them when he had told her the truth about her mother. That was nothing to the way she would react when she knew the truth about him, particularly if she learned it from the man she was so obviously in love with, son of the man whose death he had ordered.

Lilli would never forgive him – or at least, not in the little time that was left to him. She would despise him – and he could not bear it. To have her look at him and see the accusation in her eyes, to sense her horror at what he had been, what he had done, to feel her revulsion … no, he couldn't bear it. Better that he should die …

Otto slowed the car, reaching for the box which lay on the seat beside him, and opened the lid.

The resultant explosion shattered the night and turned the car into a ball of flame.

‘He died to save me,' Lilli said. She was pale, her eyes red-rimmed from crying, but Guy thought she looked quite beautiful. ‘Oh, I know he should never have been mixed up with Uncle Fernando and Jorge and the others. I know drug-trafficking is terribly wrong, but I'm sure he had his reasons. And in the end he was a hero, wasn't he?'

She pressed her hand over her mouth, choking over the words.

‘Damn Jorge,' Ingrid said. ‘ I hope he rots in hell!'

‘He will certainly rot in prison,' Guy said.

Since the explosion had rocked the night, killing Otto and totally destroying the car, it had all come out. Lilli, in total shock, might have said nothing, but Ingrid was made of sterner stuff. She knew that Jorge had been responsible for the bomb and she was determined he would not get away with it. Denouncing him to the authorities might mean she would be arrested as an accessory to the drug-trafficking to which Madrepora had been home for years – Ingrid no longer cared. Her life had ended, she felt, with Otto's death, and that death had to be avenged.

Besides, she knew that as long as Jorge was free there might be more blood spilled. He would undoubtedly try again to kill the man he believed to be a DEA agent and she was not prepared to allow that. Enough was enough. A telephone call to the appropriate quarter had alerted the authorities; they had arrived on the island in force. Jorge had fled back to South America but his minions had all been arrested and Ingrid fervently hoped it would be only a matter of time before they caught up with Jorge too. It wouldn't be easy – the basis of the empire in Venezuela was a stronghold and too many of those in power were part of the enterprise. But they'd get him eventually, she was certain of it, and in any case, the chain was broken. Never again would the undersea passages on Madrepora's shores be used for their wicked illicit purpose.

Other books

The Vicar of Wakefield by Oliver Goldsmith
Resilient (2) by Nikki Mathis Thompson
On Christmas Hill by Nichole Chase
Ruined by Scott Hildreth
Sammy and Juliana in Hollywood by Benjamin Alire Saenz
The Kiss by Emma Shortt
Giselle's Choice by Penny Jordan
Reign of Madness by Lynn Cullen