Exocet. Jack Higgins
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‘At your orders, my colonel.’ The captain retired in confusion. Montera looked at Gabrielle wryly and they both burst into laughter.
He took her hands and held them lightly. ‘You get a lot of that, I suppose?’
‘Since I was about fourteen.’
There was a shadow in the green eyes. He said, ‘Which has not improved your opinion of my sex, I think?’
‘If you mean, do I like men, no, not very much.’ She smiled. ‘In the generality, that is.’
He examined her hands. ‘Ah, good.’
‘What is?’ She was puzzled.
‘No wedding ring.’
He drew himself up and clicked his heels together. ‘Colonel Raul Carlos Montera, very much at your orders and I would consider it a privilege and a joy to secure not only this dance, but every other one available this evening.’
He took her hand and drew her on to the floor, as the trio started to play in slow foxtrot tempo Our Love is Here to Stay.
‘How remarkably appropriate,’ he said and drew her to him.
And to that, there could be no answer. They danced well together, his arm holding her lightly around the waist.
She touched the scar on his cheek. ‘How did you get that?’
‘Cannon shell splinter,’ he said. ‘Aerial combat.’
She played her part well. ‘But when? Argentina hasn’t been to war in my lifetime.’
‘Another man’s war,’ he said. ‘A thousand years ago. Too long a story.’
She touched the scar again gently and he groaned and said in Spanish to himself, ‘I’ve heard of love at first sight but this is ridiculous.’
‘Why?’ she replied calmly in the same language. ‘Isn’t it what the poets have been assuring us for centuries now is the only kind worth having?’
‘Spanish as well?’ he demanded. ‘Is there no end to this woman’s marvels?’
‘Also English,’ she said. ‘And German. My Russian isn’t fluent, though. Only passable.’
‘Amazing.’
‘You mean, for a beautiful blonde with a good body?’
He noted the bitterness in her voice and moved back to look into her face. There was genuine tenderness in his own and a kind of authority.
‘If I have hurt you, forgive me. It was not intended. I will learn, though, to mend my manners. You must give me time.’
And there was that breathlessness in her again as the music stopped and he drew her off the floor. ‘Champagne?’ he said. ‘Being French I would presume it to be your drink.’
‘But of course.’
He snapped his fingers to a waiter, took a glass from the proffered tray and handed it to her. ‘Dom Perignon – only the best. We’re trying to make friends and influence people tonight.’
‘I should imagine you’d need to,’ she said.
He frowned. ‘I don’t understand?’
‘Oh, there was an item on the television news earlier this evening. Questions in the British Parliament about the Falklands. Apparently your navy is about to go on manoeuvres in the area.’
‘Not the Falklands,’ he said. ‘To us, the Malvinas.’ He shrugged. ‘An old quarrel, but not worth arguing about. The politicians have it in hand. In my opinion, the British will do a deal with us one of these days. Probably in the not too distant future.’
She let it go, slipped a hand in his arm, and they crossed to an open French window and moved out. On the way, he picked another glass of champagne off a passing tray for her.
‘Don’t you drink?’ she asked.
‘Not a great deal and certainly not champagne. It creates havoc with me. I’m getting old, you see.’
‘Nonsense.’
‘Forty-five. And you?’
‘Twenty-seven.’
‘Dear God, that I should be so young again.’
‘Age,’ she said, ‘is a state of mind. Herman Hesse said somewhere that, in reality, youth and age exist only among ordinary people. All more talented and exceptional people are sometimes young and sometimes old, just as they are sometimes happy and sometimes sad.’
‘Such wisdom,’ he said. ‘Where does it all come from?’
‘I went to the Sorbonne and then Oxford,’ she said. ‘A women’s college, St Hugh’s. Not a man in sight and thank God for it. Now I’m a journalist. Freelance. Magazine work mainly.’
Behind them the trio started to play A Foggy Day in London Town. ‘I was a stranger in your city.’ He started to sing the intro softly in English.
‘Oh, no,’ she said. ‘Paris is my city, but Fred Astaire had it right in the movie when he sang that song. Everyone should walk along the Thames Embankment at least once, preferably after midnight.’
He smiled slowly and held her hands. ‘An excellent idea. But first, we eat. You look like a girl with an appetite. A little more champagne and then, who knows?’
It was raining hard and fog crouched at the end of the streets. The trenchcoat he had found for her was soaked, as was the scarf she had bound around her hair. Montera was still in uniform, his magnificence anonymous under a heavy officer’s greatcoat. He wore a peaked cap.
They had walked for several miles in the pouring rain followed by his official car, patient chauffeur at the wheel. She wore a pair of flat shoes he had borrowed for her from one of the maids at the Embassy.
Birdcage Walk, the Palace, St James’s Park. Montera had never enjoyed himself so much in the company of another human being.
‘Sure you haven’t had enough?’ he asked, as they moved down towards Westminster Bridge.
‘Not yet. I promised you something special, remember?’
‘Ah, I was forgetting.’
They came to the bridge and she turned on to the Embankment. ‘Well, this is it. The most romantic place in town. In that old movie, Fred Astaire would have held my arm and sung to me as we strolled with the car following us, crawling along the kerb.’
‘Ah, but the traffic situation has changed since that, as you can see,’ he told her. ‘Too many cars parked at the kerb already.’
Above them, Big Ben chimed the first stroke