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Tiger Prince
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Текст книги "Tiger Prince "


Автор книги: Iris Johansen


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Текущая страница: 16 (всего у книги 28 страниц)

It was the answer she expected; there was no reason to feel this jolting hurt. She laughed without mirth. "Good God, then why would I be fool enough to go?"

"I've told you all the reasons." He smiled. "Except one."

She waited.

"Obsession is seldom a singular passion. It demands a response and you're a very responsive woman. You want your railroad, you want safety and happiness for your friends." He paused. "And you want what we had together in Kasanpore."

"No!"

"It's not finished yet. We tasted just enough to tantalize us. We've never had enough. Neither one of us can ever be free of the other until we do." His gaze was almost caressing as it moved over her face. His words were soft, persuasive, weaving a sensual spell around her. "And you want to be free of me, don't you, Jane? Every night I was with you when you lay down in that bed in the cottage, just as you were with me on the mountain. Did you toss and turn and curse me as I did you?"

She moistened her lips. "It wasn't like that. I didn't—" Damn him, he was smiling faintly, knowingly, and she felt suddenly naked, as if he had been there watching her during those nights when she had not been able to close the thought of him out.

She had to get away from him! She whirled and ran down the hill. The cold wind struck her cheeks, but she barely felt it.

She didn't stop until she reached the cottage. She slammed the door, bolted it, ran across the room, and flung herself on the bed.

She was icy cold, shaking uncontrollably.

"Jane."

She tensed, her gaze on the locked door.

"I'll come back tomorrow for your answer," Ruel said. "I'm slipping the contract and Medford's survey report under the door. You'll have plenty of time before tomorrow to examine them both."

"I don't want to see them."

"But you'll still look at them. You'll think of Li Sung and Patrick. You'll remember how hard it is for a woman to make a place in this world." Two folded documents slithered serpentlike beneath the door. "I'll see you tomorrow, Jane."

She didn't hear the departing footsteps, but she knew he was gone.

She should be relieved, but she was not. It was as if he were in the room with her, looking at her, touching her.

It's not finished yet.

It was true. No matter how she had lied to herself, she had never been able to fight what she felt for Ruel. It had always been there in the background, like a melody with the verse left unsung.

Let it stay unfinished. She didn't want it to start again. She had struggled for three years to banish the love she had felt for Ruel. She could not imagine anything more terrible than caring for a man who wanted only to hurt her. The idea made her so frightened, she felt sick to her stomach.

But she couldn't tear her gaze from the two packets of papers on the floor.

Kartauk sat on the flagstones, his eyes closed, leaning back against the stone wall of the stable.

"You're not working?" Ruel strolled across the courtyard toward Kartauk. "I don't believe I've ever seen you so relaxed."

"I just finished firing a statue in the furnace. It's cooling down." Kartauk opened his eyes. "Margaret tells me I'm to go to Cinnidar. How very kind of you to invite me."

"I was going to get around to it. I've been busy. I need you, Kartauk."

"The entire world needs me."

"They need your work. I need your knowledge of Abdar. There's a good possibility he'll appear on the horizon and I'll need your help."

"I've spent three years avoiding Abdar and you wish me to place myself in a position where he cannot help but notice me?"

"You're not a retiring gentleman. Wouldn't you like to be permanently free of Abdar?"

"Permanently? Just how do you intend to 'permanently' remove a man in his position?"

"Cinnidar is mine. For all intents and purposes I'm the maharajah of Cinnidar. If Abdar makes an attempt to take it, I'd be within my rights to treat him like any other invader." He smiled grimly. "I have no compunction about making sure he won't get the opportunity to do it twice."

"In which case I can sit here and let you get rid of him for me while I tend to my own concerns."

"True, but his defeat will be swifter and more certain if I have an ally who knows the nature of the beast."

"Beast?" Kartauk savored the word. "He is one, you know. A total monster." He shook his head. "I do not think it wise for me to go."

"Why not?"

"Many reasons."

"You can have your own studio in the palace."

"I've gotten used to my studio here."

"And have you also gotten used to working only in bronze and wood?"

Kartauk's eyes narrowed on Ruel's face. "Are you about to dangle a bribe?"

"An irresistible bribe, a golden bribe. Cash may be a bit slim at present, but there's enough gold to meet even your needs."

"You'll be my patron?"

"Doesn't every ruler need an artist to beautify his palace?"

"Gold . . ."

"And my promise to give you my protection from Abdar."

"As long as you're alive to give it."

Ruel inclined his head. "Point taken. But I fully intend to survive Abdar."

Kartauk studied him for a moment. "It's a gamble."

"Yes."

"All the gold I need?"

Ruel said warily, "Within reason. I can afford a golden door, but I might balk if you decide your artistic soul requires an entire railway car."

"I will be reasonable." Mischief lit Kartauk's face. "Not a passenger car, perhaps only a caboose." He stood up and turned back to the stable. "You've wasted enough of my time. I must go back to work."

"You'll come?"

"How can I resist? Fate has obviously seen fit to tempt me beyond my powers to refuse. Abdar's head and a golden caboose . . ."

"No, Ruel." Ian tried to keep his tone firm. "It's out of the question. I've told you any number of times I'll not leave Glenclaren. Why won't you accept it?"

"Because you're being stupid," Ruel said bluntly. "What difference will six months make? Do you think I'm going to keep you on Cinnidar forever?" His voice lowered persuasively. "Listen to me. Give me six months to heal that cough and I promise I'll send you back to Glenclaren."

Ian shook his head.

Ruel sat back in his chair. "Aren't you being selfish? What about Margaret? Are you going to leave her a widow after all she's done for you?"

Ian's lips twisted. "At times I believe it would be the greatest gift I could give her."

"Then you'd be wrong. Margaret has always loved you and she always will. She wants you alive."

Ian sighed. "I know. Poor lass."

"She doesn't feel sorry for herself."

Ian's tone turned suddenly fierce. "Well, she should. Married to a crock of a man who will probably never be able to give her a child."

"Is that what the doctor said?"

Ian shrugged. "He said there was a possibility of a child. But it's been two years."

"Two years isn't such a long time."

"It's a lifetime," Ian said flatly.

Ruel's lips tightened. "Sorry. I guess it has been for you."

"I didn't mean to sound selfpitying. Sometimes I don't understand—"

"Understand what?"

"Why God meant me to live."

"Are you still searching your soul for answers? I thought you'd decided I was the one who had thrown a rod into the spokes of destiny."

"Did I say that? Forgive me, Ruel."

"For God's sake, there's nothing to forgive."

"There's a great deal for both you and Margaret to forgive. God doesn't make mistakes, so there must be a reason I'm such a burden to you. I just can't see it yet. When I began to get stronger I thought it must have meant I was supposed to give Margaret a child." He smiled bitterly. "But it's becoming clear I can't even do that."

"You were very ill this winter. Once you're strong again, perhaps you—"

"Perhaps," Ian interrupted. "Or perhaps Glenclaren was meant to be my only child." He forced a smile. "So you mustn't try to keep me from caring for my child, Ruel."

"You're making excuses. I doubt if God cares as much for Glenclaren as you do." He paused. "Have you considered the possibility you're using Glenclaren as a way out?"

Ian glanced away. "I don't know what you mean."

"If you stay at Glenclaren this winter, you'll die. It's a mortal sin to take your own life, Ian."

"I wasn't . . ." His stricken gaze shifted to Ruel's face. "Was I?"

"How the hell do I know? You tell me."

"You seem to know too much ... as usual. Lord, I wish you hadn't come, Ruel."

"I didn't think you'd welcome me."

"It's not that I don't love you. It's just that—"

"I'm the barrier between you and what you want," Ruel finished wearily. "That is what I've been since the moment I pulled you out of the railway car. For God's sake, come to Cinnidar and lie in the sun and get your strength back. Let us try to make things right for you."

"You've already done a great deal for me and Glenclaren. I suppose I'm being very ungrateful."

"I don't want your gratitude. I want you to come to Cinnidar."

Ian didn't answer for a long time. "I'll consider it," he said slowly.

"Good." Ruel stood up and moved toward the door. "Rest now and I'll send Margaret up with your supper."

"No, I don't want—"

The door had already closed behind Ruel, and Ian leaned wearily back against the pillows. Clever Ruel, to have guessed what he had never allowed himself to admit to himself, that he had wanted the light to take him here at Glenclaren, not in a strange land. The light was almost always with him now; sometimes he dreamed about it and woke with a reluctance and wistfulness he was forced to hide from Margaret.

His lovely, strong, caring Margaret. She, too, was drifting away, paling beside the lure of the light.

Yet Ruel was right, he was not being fair. They were all trying so hard to keep him from the light that it must be God's will.

Cinnidar. Even the name sounded exotic and alien from his Glenclaren.

Ruel found Margaret in the study, making entries into an account book. "He's softening. It would do no harm for you to go to him now and add your arguments to mine."

She closed the account book. "I didn't think you'd be able to do it."

"It's not a certain victory yet. Have you arranged for anyone to manage Glenclaren while you're gone?"

"Timothy Drummond, the vicar's son, has recently returned from the university in Edinburgh. He's a canny, able man who has little imagination but could keep things in order until I return."

"Then tell that to Ian. He appears to regard Glenclaren as an offspring he must nurture and care for." He paused. "He wants very much to give you a child."

"Do you think I don't know that?" she asked fiercely. "He can talk of nothing else. It will not happen."

"Ian said the physician told him—"

"Because I forced him to lie to Ian. He would never have married me if he had known there was no chance."

"No chance at all?"

"Almost none. God sometimes performs miracles, but it's best not to count on Him."

"Too bad."

"Bad? It's worse than bad. Not only does Ian feel guilty for robbing me of a child, but a babe would give him purpose, a reason to live."

"I'm sorry, Magg—Margaret."

"Sorrow won't help Ian. We have to do that." She straightened her shoulders and moved toward the door. "I'll go up and talk to him now."

Li Sung. A railroad.

The words played over and over in Jane's mind. Why was she cowering on this bed, afraid to take up the challenge Ruel had thrown down? He was only a man, like any other man. Well, perhaps not like any other man, but still human and fallible. He had told her he intended to take revenge, but she knew him well enough to realize he would not try to trick her to accomplish it.

A railroad.

Sweet Mary, but she was afraid. She had no doubt Ruel would be completely merciless in any confrontation between them.

A railroad.

Why was she assuming she would not be able to gather the strength to fight Ruel? She had spent the last three years preparing her defenses against him. She was no longer the child he had known in Kasanpore, and who was to say she could not best him?

It was after midnight when Jane slowly got up from the bed and moved across the room to pick up both packets on the floor. She lit the lamp on the table, sat down, and opened the survey report.

"I'll do it," Jane said as soon as she opened the door to Ruel's knock the next morning. She thrust the contract at him. "Here. I've signed the blasted thing. I'll keep the survey report to study and send to the castle tomorrow a list of supplies and equipment I'll need to have immediately on hand when I arrive on Cinnidar. When do I have to be there?"

"As soon as possible. I'll be leaving on the next ship and Ian agreed this morning to follow me within the month. You can travel with Maggie and him." His gaze searched her face. "You look a bit haggard. A sleepless night?"

She ignored the mockery in his question and said brusquely, "I was studying the survey. You said it was accurate?"

"As accurate as Medford could make it, but there are always surprises."

"Those penalties could leave me with almost nothing if anything goes wrong."

He nodded. "Aye, that's true, but there are always penalty clauses in any contract."

"Even the maharajah didn't insist on this heavy a penalty. Lower the first penalty to twenty percent and the second to ten."

He shook his head. "You knew I wouldn't agree to that, or you wouldn't have already signed the contract. Lowering the penalties would lessen the incentive. I want you to work very hard to complete my railroad on time, Jane."

"You want to see me slave at your command and then lose everything."

"That would be one way to punish you, wouldn't it?" He smiled. "Do you wish to tear up the contract?"

She had had little hope of getting him to give her better terms, but she'd had to make the attempt. "It will be done on time."

"Then I believe we have nothing more to discuss." He nodded politely. "I'll see you on Cinnidar."

She watched him walk away, bold, tough, and dauntingly confident.

But she would not be daunted by him, blast it.

She would give him his railroad and grab this chance for an independent life for herself and Li Sung. She would work harder than she ever had in her life and not give herself a chance to think of anything else.

The mandarin would not win this time.

Chapter 12

It is truly a palace," Li Sung murmured, his gaze on the massive structure on the hill. "But it is not what I'd expect of Ruel."

Jane's grasp involuntarily tightened on Bedelia's reins as she looked at the magnificent palace. Two rows of cypress trees bordered the sides of the road leading up to a courtyard whose center point was a large marble fountain. The central section of the palace was domed, with wings sprawling with faultless symmetry on either side. The long veranda, extending the entire length of the palace, was interspersed with eight arched columns and sported white marble fretted balustrades that shimmered like diamond lace in the late afternoon sunlight. Everything about the structure spoke of exotic beauty . . . and power. Ruel's power. At that moment she did not need such a potent reminder that this was Ruel's kingdom. "Why not? He always said he wanted a palace."

"Words are not actions. Men like him are not truly comfortable surrounded by luxury any more than we are."

"Well, at least Ian will be comfortable." Jane glanced over her shoulder at the large carriage containing Margaret, Kartauk, and Ian lumbering up the hill a few hundred yards behind them. "He stood the trip very well, didn't he? Much better than the trip to Scotland."

"He's stronger now." Li Sung's tone was abstracted as he narrowed his eyes against the glare of the sun setting beyond the palace. "I think I see Ruel on the veranda. Let us hurry."

The man on the veranda was only a blur of white from this distance but she, too, knew it was Ruel. Jane tensed and then forced herself to relax. She had been dreading this moment since they left Scotland and must not reveal any hint of nervousness when she again confronted him. "You go on. I'll stay with the carriage."

Li Sung gave her a shrewd glance. "You cannot avoid him for the next seven months."

"But I don't need to rush to meet him. I'm surprised you're so eager. You certainly didn't display any vast amount of enthusiasm when I told you I'd signed the contract."

"Because you were afraid. I've never seen you afraid before."

"I'm not afraid. It's a splendid opportunity that could mean a great deal to us. Naturally, I wish everything to go well."

"And why should you fear it will not?"

"I don't fear—you read the contract and Medford's report. We can do this, Li Sung."

"And the compensation is extraordinarily generous," he said thoughtfully. "Too generous."

"That penalty clause isn't all that generous, but Ruel will comply with the terms of the contract."

"Yes, he will keep his promise. I admit I feel better about the arrangement since we've arrived. Perhaps this Cinnidar is the paradise Ruel believes it."

"He never said it was paradise." She made a face. "And the problems Medford stressed in his report certainly don't indicate any celestial Eden. Jungle, steep mountain grades, marshlands, tigers, elephants."

"We can do this, Jane." Li Sung smiled faintly as he repeated her own words.

"Hoist with my own petard." She felt a sudden lightness of spirit. "Of course we can. Why do you feel better about it now?"

"I do not know. It is a feeling without a reason. I saw the island and it—" He hesitated.

"Called to you?"

"Do not put such nonsensical words in my mouth. Islands do not have voices with which to call."

"Ruel says this one called him."

"He spent years searching for gold. No doubt he saw the mountain and his miner's instinct prompted him to believe this foolishness."

"No doubt." She smothered a smile. Li Sung was, as usual, scoffing at the mystical even while obviously feeling its magnetism. "And to what instinct did you respond?"

"It was most probably the instinct to abandon that ship and get my feet on firm ground again. A man who cannot swim is always uneasy on water." He kicked his horse into a trot. "I will see you at the palace."

Her smile vanished as she watched him disappear around the curve of the road. Strange that both Ruel and Li Sung had felt the same magnetism for this place. Beauty? From that mist-shrouded mountain to the quaint village encircling the harbor, Cinnidar was undoubtedly lovely, but neither Li Sung nor Ruel was susceptible to mere scenery. Perhaps it was because the island possessed an almost magical ambiance. The air seemed lighter, easier to breathe, and yet the fragrances. . . vanilla, sandalwood, jasmine, the cedarlike odor of deodar and a hundred other scents too subtle to distinguish assaulted the senses with every breath.

Dear God, she was reacting as besottedly as Li Sung, she thought impatiently. Cinnidar was just a place like any other, a place she would mold to her needs as Ruel had molded it to his.

"Jane."

She turned to see Margaret's head poking out of the window of the carriage.

"How far? Do you see it yet?"

Jane silently pointed to the palace on the hill.

Margaret's eyes widened as her gaze followed the gesture. "Merciful heavens." She started to laugh. "I believe I'm impressed. The rascal always said he'd do it."

Two white-coated servants rushed to open the door of the carriage the instant it stopped before the entrance of the palace. Four muscular native men appeared a moment later, bearing a huge thronelike chair mounted on four carved poles and shaded with a scarlet-silk tasseled awning. Another boy grabbed Bedelia's reins and led Jane toward the hitching rail, where Ruel stood with Li Sung. Ruel was dressed all in pristine white, his suit and shirt as elegant and impressive as the palace that was now his home.

He nodded politely. "Jane." He stepped forward and lifted her from the mare. "Welcome to Cinnidar."

"Thank you." She could feel the warmth of his hands through the cotton of her shirt and it sent a little shock of sensation through her. She stepped quickly to the side, breaking his grasp. Too quickly. She could see by his suddenly intent expression she had revealed what she had wanted so desperately to conceal. She promptly made it worse by saying hurriedly, "I didn't see any sign of Medford's tracks on the way from the harbor."

His brows lifted. "Do you think I lied to you?"

"I didn't say that."

He nodded to the west. "Medford's camp is a mile beyond that rain forest. You'll meet him at dinner." He turned and walked toward the carriage.

Kartauk had already stepped down to the ground and was brusquely motioning the servants aside. "I'll help him. He's used to me." He ducked into the carriage and emerged with Ian in his arms. He deftly settled him on the cushioned chair and tucked a silk throw over his knees. "There you are." He grinned. "The last time I saw one of these chairs it was occupied by the maharajah who was being grandly transported around the royal garden. You look much better in it."

"Well, I feel like a bloody fool," Ian said sheepishly. He leaned cautiously back in the chair. "But it's comfortable enough."

"That's all that's important." Ruel's gaze raked Ian's face. "How did you stand the trip?"

"You'd know if you'd bothered to meet us at the harbor," Margaret said as a servant helped her from the carriage. "I'd have thought you'd have had the courtesy to meet us yourself instead of sending that bevy of servants to the harbor. After all, we're here at your insistence."

"I'm properly chastened." Ruel's eyes twinkled. "I realize excuses are unacceptable, but I feel I should explain I arrived here from the mountain only an hour ago. You'd have been even more disapproving if I'd met you in the extremely disheveled and smelly state I was in at that time."

"Then you should have made arrangements to arrive earlier." Margaret cast a glance at the carriage. "However, I must admit the carriage was quite comfortable and your servants eager to please."

"I'm glad my humble efforts weren't wasted." He gestured to a tall, golden-skinned man who had just come out of the palace. "This is Tamar Alkanar. I brought him from his village to watch over Ian."

Like the other servants, Tamar Alkanar wore sandals, a waist-length white coat, and a colorful saronglike length of cloth that draped his narrow hips and ended midcalf. Two broad brass bracelets shone on both wrists. A gentle smile lit his fine features as he inclined his head in a bow. "I am most happy to greet you." He bowed even lower to Ian. "Be assured I will serve you well and obey your every command."

Margaret nodded graciously at him but turned immediately to Ruel. "We don't need him. Jock stayed at the harbor to supervise the unloading of the luggage, but Ian will prefer he—"

"Jock doesn't speak the local dialect," Ruel interrupted. "You'll need Tamar to help you supervise the other servants."

"And to protect you from the heathen hordes," Kartauk murmured, shooting her a sly smile. "They delight in eating virtuous Scots, you know."

"It wouldn't surprise me. But I've managed to survive three years of your barbarity, so I imagine I'll have no trouble evading them." She started up the steps, motioning to the bearers. "Come along, and mind you, be gentle with him. He's not a sack of rice, you know."

"They will be careful. I will not permit any harm to come to him." Tamar's thick, glossy pigtail bounced as he hurried up the steps to open the tall, carved door for them. A moment later Kartauk, Margaret, and Ian's entourage disappeared within the palace.

Ruel turned to Jane. "Tamar will be back in a few minutes to show you and Li Sung to your quarters. I felt it necessary to get Ian settled first."

"Of course."

"Would you like to go around to the back terrace and get your first good look at the rest of the island? The palace is perched directly over the canyon." He didn't wait for an acquiescence but led them quickly around the palace to a many-leveled terrace tiled in cobalt-blue and emerald-green mosaic. The waters of an ornate fountain tumbled leisurely from terrace to terrace into pools arranged with geometric precision and bordered with white jasmine trees.

Ruel led them through the splendid garden, past a number of reflecting pools, and then up three steps to still another terrace. "The view of the canyon is quite spectacular . . . and intimidating."

"More intimidating than Lanpur Gorge?" Li Sung asked.

Ruel stopped at an ornate stone balustrade. "See for yourself."

They stood on the edge of a sheer cliff that plunged hundreds of feet to the valley below where the jungle spread a dense green carpet as far as the eye could see to the east and west. To the north loomed the mountain, rising with the same stark abruptness as the cliff on which they were standing.

"Medford's survey said it was over a hundred miles from the canyon wall to the mountain. It doesn't look that far from here," Jane said.

"I guarantee it will seem a lot farther when you're trying to hack your way through that jungle," he said dryly.

She had no doubt of that. "Has the mountain no name?"

"Why should it? There's only one." He smiled. "I wouldn't have the temerity to give her a name."

He had said that about his pet fox, she remembered suddenly. He had not given the pet he loved a name for the same reason.

"It might offend her and she's been very good to me." A note of affection threaded his words, and his regard held a warm possessiveness that had not been there when he had strolled through the grandeur of the palace gardens.

He is not a man to be truly comfortable in palaces any more than we are, Li Sung had said.

"The river doesn't have a name either," Ruel added.

"River?" She glanced back at the jungle.

"You can't see it from here because of the trees. It runs south to north before curving east to empty into the sea."

"If your mountain was so good to you, why did it take you three years to scrounge out enough gold to get you even this close to your goal?"

He shrugged. "She offered me opportunity. I couldn't ask more than that. I wouldn't have felt the same sense of accomplishment if she hadn't made me work for it." He grimaced. "Which, I assure you, she did."

She understood exactly what he meant. There was no better feeling in the world than work successfully accomplished against odds. It always gave her a—

She experienced a sudden rush of alarm. She must not allow herself to feel this sense of kinship with Ruel.

She quickly shifted her stare from the mountain to the jungle to the east. "I expected to see the sea. The island must be wider than I thought."

He nodded. "It's only three hundred miles long but it's over six hundred wide." He pointed to the west. "But you can see a faint glimmer of sea there."

"Can we see the road you cut through the jungle from here?" Jane asked.

Ruel shook his head and pointed to the south. "It's beyond those trees. You're planning on laying the tracks on the mule track?"

"If possible. We'll have to do more clearing and widening, but it will still give us a head start. What about my supplies?"

"I've had Medford's crew transport them to the base camp on the mountain. See how helpful I'm being?"

"I'm sure it's greed and not goodwill that's making you so accommodating."

He laughed. "That's true."

"We'll start out for the mountain tomorrow morning. I'll need a map."

"I'll do better than that. I'll go with you and shepherd you all the way to the mountain."

She tensed. "That won't be necessary. I wouldn't wish to inconvenience you."

"It's no inconvenience. I have to go back to the camp anyway. I returned only to make sure Ian is settled." He smiled. "Take advantage of the little help I offer now. Once we reach the mountain, your job officially begins and you can expect nothing else from me."

"I expect nothing now."

"Not even an interpreter to make your needs known to the workers?"

"I'll get Medford to recommend someone."

"Tamar has a cousin who is already at the base camp. Dilam worked as a crew supervisor for Medford, is well liked by the other Cinnidans, and knows elephants."

"I need someone who knows railroads, not elephants."

"You may find it to your advantage to know both. Those jungles have been home to the elephant herds for centuries. They're not fond of intruders in their domain."

She frowned. "Medford's report mentioned elephants but no particular problems. However, I'll accept your Dilam, if I consider him competent."

"Oh, Dilam's exceptionally competent."

"And loyal to you?"

"How suspicious you sound. Dilam won't be a spy in your camp. The Cinnidans are a very independent people. Even I can't buy their loyalty."

"That must be a great disappointment to you."

"No, actually it pleases me." He glanced at Li Sung and raised his voice. "And the Cinnidans have your fondness for pigtails, Li Sung."

"What?" Li Sung turned away from the balustrade, and Jane noticed again that expression of total absorption he had worn ever since he had arrived on Cinnidar. "Oh, yes, I noticed on the way from the village. This proves they must clearly be a very superior people."

"Clearly," Ruel agreed solemnly.

"And they're extremely handsome but they don't look Indian. Their skin is more golden than dusky and they're taller and huskier than most of the Indians I saw in Kasanpore. Are they of mixed blood?"

Ruel shook his head. "Tamar tells me the Cinnidans originally came from one of the Polynesian islands in the South Seas and settled here. Abdar's great-grandfather's 'annexation' was very brutal, and the Cinnidans refused to have anything to do with the Savitsars or their retainers. They moved all their tribes away from the coast to the jungle in the canyon. Since the canyon was nearly inaccessible, they were untroubled by any interference."

"Very clever." Li Sung started to turn back to the balustrade, when his attention was caught by something else. "Who lives there?" He pointed to a charming pagoda-style cottage with a curling slate-blue tiled roof a short distance from the terrace.

"No one. That's the summerhouse. I had it built to use as a retreat when I needed to get away from the palace." He smiled at Jane. "I haven't used it yet, but I'm sure I will soon." Before she could speak he turned away. "Ah, here's Tamar. If you'll excuse me, I'll see you both at dinner."

Jane breathed a sigh of relief as she watched him saunter toward the palace. Except for that brief moment of intimacy when they had first arrived, Ruel had acted with the casual courtesy and good humor of a host welcoming honored guests to his domain. She had no hope his behavior would continue in this vein, but she would gratefully accept any respite until she got her bearings.


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