The Clouds Beneath the Sun
Russell almost certainly didn’t know about Odnate and if he did his priorities were elsewhere. The discovery of the ancient zebra skull had brought about a lively discussion at lunch, and then again at dinner. There had been no mention of the tibia and femur, or of the burial ground, and to an extent the unpleasantness of a few days before, if not forgotten, had been put aside.
    At dinner there had also been some light relief. Arnold Pryce and Eleanor had been into the nearby town of Karatu earlier in the day to refill one of the Land Rovers with diesel and top up the spare cans, and they had found a week-old copy of the London Times , which they had bought secondhand from a local white farmer they had met at the filling station. Russell North had observed Arnold reading the paper and snatched it from him. At dinner he had asked, “How can you have a newspaper that only has adverts on the front page? Adverts for schoolteachers, for tickets to the opera, for secondhand Rolls-Royces, for pity’s sake? Is that what the British think is the most important news?”
    “It’s meant to calm you down,” replied Arnold testily. “Most news is bad news and that only upsets people.”
    “And there’s a half page devoted to dances. Why are the British so interested in dancing?”
    “That’s the ‘season,’” said Arnold. “Mothers give dances for their eighteen-year-old daughters, so they can meet the best young men in London. It’s an ancient tradition.”
    “Sounds like anthropological gobblydegook to me,” said Russell. “No wonder you Brits have lost an empire.”
    “For traditions to be traditions,” insisted Arnold, “to last they must be successful at some level. But then we know you are not a great respecter of tradition, Russell.”
    That had closed the conversation.
    Today’s discoveries also showed that, so far as Natalie was personally concerned, she was now much more a part of the team. At the table, Eleanor had deferred to her superior knowledge on extinct forms of life, and the others too had heard her out in respectful silence when she was explaining about ancient forms of horse and zebra. She had felt good about that.
    She passed the whiskey across.
    Russell just wet his lips. “Eleanor is warming to you.”
    She had been ice cold where Richard and he were concerned.
    Natalie said nothing. It wasn’t her fight and she wanted to keep it that way.
    He wet his lips with whiskey a second time. “I saw you talking to Christopher in the gorge today. He seemed very animated.”
    She let a long pause elapse, to emphasize that her privacy was her own affair. “He explained the noise the thorn bushes make, and was telling me about his brother, Jack, that’s all.”
    Russell suddenly reached down between his legs, picked up some sheets of paper he had brought with him, and handed them across. “Here.”
    “What is it?” she said, not taking them but guessing what the papers were.
    “It’s the first draft of the article. Richard’s typing, with my corrections in blue. We thought you’d like to see it. He’s going over it again, right now.”
    “Article? You’re going against Eleanor’s wishes?”
    “No. Well, not entirely. We’re going to wait a bit, for her anger to subside, then try again. Once she sees the paper’s written, she’ll be excited, as excited as we are.”
    And by showing it to her now, before Eleanor saw it, Russell was trying to enlist Natalie as an ally, a co-conspirator.
    She took back the whiskey cup with one hand and dabbed at her damp neck with a handkerchief in her other one. “No, Russell. I don’t want to look. Not yet. You’re trying to … it’s as if you’re trying to solicit my support, coerce me, make me take your side. I don’t want you to do that. Leave me out of this, please.” She took a deep breath. “Christopher was telling me this morning that the Maasai are a very proud people, fierce even. He’s worried what they might do—”
    “Another

Similar Books

For the Love of Ash

Taylor Lavati

Invisible Influence

Jonah Berger

Fix

Ferrett Steinmetz

A Hundred Summers

Beatriz Williams

Eve: In the Beginning

Heather B. Moore, H. B. Moore

Calculating God

Robert J. Sawyer

Finding Carrie

C. E. Snyder