“Oh, don’t worry about that.” She waved a hand in dismissal. “I’m just dying to see all the stuff they make. I hear the ladies wear beautiful headdresses made of silver coins and beads. I’d love to have one.”
“Sounds heavy,” Carlos muttered. He ate more food to keep from laughing. Caitlyn was one sneaky rascal. She wanted to go to the Akha tribe because she’d spent time with them before. She didn’t want Tanit to know, so she was making it sound like a shopping spree.
“I should go and make sure everything is ready for our trip,” Tanit said. “I’ll pick you up at your hotel in the morning. Will nine o’clock be all right?”
“That’s great. Thank you,” Carlos replied.
“Are you sure you wouldn’t like some dessert?” Caitlyn asked. “I’m going to have some ice cream.”
“No, thank you. I should go.” Tanit stood and pressed his hands together. “Thank you for dinner.” He hurried from the restaurant.
Caitlyn watched him go. “Did he seem nervous to you?”
“Yes.” Carlos glanced at Tanit’s plate of Khao pad gai. “He hardly ate a bite.”
Caitlyn leaned closer. “Did you notice his tattoo?”
“No. You have a thing for tattoos, don’t you?”
“Only yours, because you hide it and that makes me want to rip your clothes off.”
“In that case, I should tell you I have a tattoo on my rump.”
Her eyes widened. “Do you really?”
His mouth twitched. “You’ll never know.”
She swatted his arm. “Don’t be cruel.”
He snorted. Cruel was sleeping on the floor, knowing that she was nearby in a bed and there wasn’t a damned thing he could do about it. He knew he loved her, but he still couldn’t have her.
She retrieved a small memo pad and a pen from her silk handbag. “Tanit had a small tattoo on the inside of his right wrist just like the professor had.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes, I’m sure.” She gave him a wry look. “All my years of shopping have given me a great eye for detail. I studied Tanit’s tattoo when he wasn’t looking.” She drew the design on her memo pad.
“Looks like a Chinese symbol,” Carlos said.
The waiter came to their table, and Carlos asked if they had ice cream.
“We have very nice vanilla, served with jack-fruit and grilled bananas.” The waiter gathered up their used dishes.
“We’ll take two of those.” Caitlyn showed the waiter her drawing. “Do you know what this means?”
The waiter frowned. “It looks Chinese. One of our cooks is Yao. Maybe he knows.”
“Could you ask him, please?” Caitlyn tore off the page with her drawing and passed it to the waiter. “Thank you.”
“You can’t understand written languages?” Carlos asked.
“No.” She shrugged. “I know it’s strange. If I could just get someone to say the word, I would understand it.”
Carlos sat back in his chair. “I have to tell you, Catalina, that hiring you was one of the best things Angus and Emma have ever done.”
Her face lit up. “Why, thank you. I thought you considered me hopeless and helpless.”
He smiled. “You’re not the best warrior around.”
“I’m not a violent person.”
“I know.” It was one of the many things he loved about her. She was soft and sweet. If he ever attacked her, it would be to make love. He pushed that thought aside and tried to remember the point he was making. “When it comes to investigation, you’re a natural.”
“Thank you.” She grinned. “I’m naturally nosy.” Her smile faded. “I’m still worried about this ‘master’ thing Pat talked about on the phone. He seemed desperate to me, and Tanit’s way too nervous. There’s something going on we don’t know about.”
Carlos nodded. “I’ve been thinking about that. Maybe Pat is involved with the trafficking of exotic animals. That could explain why the informant talked to him.”
She placed her hand on his. “Whatever’s going on, we need to be careful.”
He entwined his fingers with hers. “I’m still worried about your safety, but I’m glad you came. I’m not used to having someone to watch my back. You…you do it really well.”
She smiled at him, her eyes filled with love, and he wanted to kiss her. Hell, he wanted to take her back to the hotel room and make love to her.
The waiter returned with their ice cream. He handed the slip of paper to Caitlyn. “Our cook said it meant a worker, the kind who works for a master. No pay.”
“You mean like a slave?” she asked.
The waiter nodded. “That’s it.” He hurried off.
Carlos exchanged a worried look with Caitlyn. Professor Pat and Tanit were intelligent, modern men who worked regular jobs. How could they be slaves? And more important, who was their master?
After an hour of riding in the backseat of Tanit’s car, Caitlyn was struggling to stay awake. The mountain road swung back and forth, lulling her into a sleeplike trance. Fortunately, every time she nodded off, they’d bounce over another pothole or swerve to miss a motorcyclist.
The reason for her exhaustion was all Carlos’s fault. He was stubborn as a mule. She’d lain in bed last night, listening to him toss and turn on the floor. She’d invited him to share her bed, promising not to molest him. He refused. After another hour of hearing him thrash about on the floor, she offered to switch places with him. Again he refused.
Thirty minutes later, still awake, she took matters into her own hands. She grabbed a pillow and blanket and joined him on the floor. He ordered her to leave him be. This time she refused. She was comfy and he could have the bed.
He scooped her off the floor, strode to the bed with her in his arms, and dumped her. He returned to the floor, and she lay in bed, marveling over how strong he was. And sexy.
For another thirty minutes she considered stripping and straddling him on the floor. She’d never done anything that bold before. Or pathetic. If he wanted her, he’d make a move for her. She couldn’t force herself on him. And she couldn’t handle being rejected again. He still wanted a were-panther mate. Her secret fantasy of him tossing that away just to have a future with her was not likely to ever happen. So she’d stayed in bed, restless and frustrated, while he remained on the floor.
The car slowed to a halt as the road dwindled into a footpath through the jungle. The Akha tribe they were visiting lived in a remote area close to the Burmese border. Since she was pretending never to have been there before, Carlos was the one insisting they visit this particular tribe. She hoped their wily old leader, Ajay, was still there.
“We have about a thirty minute hike,” Tanit said as they exited the car. He glanced warily at the jungle. “There are other tribes not so remote, much closer to Chiang Mai, and they have wonderful handicrafts, too.”
“We’re going to this one.” Carlos hefted his backpack onto his shoulders. “If the cat shifters exist, they’ll be in a remote area like this.”
“I suppose that’s true,” Tanit mumbled.
Carlos slipped some knives into his belt, then handed one to Caitlyn. He’d bought them at the bazaar last night while she’d bought three beautiful silk scarves for the were-panther girls.
She wedged her knife under her belt, then slathered insect repellent on her bare arms and neck. “Want some?” She offered the tube to Tanit.
“Thank you.” He spread some on. “You know, there are worse things than mosquitoes in the jungle.”
“That’s why I bought this.” Carlos holstered a semiautomatic pistol on his belt.
Caitlyn shuddered. She hoped he wouldn’t have to use it. She fastened the ties of her khaki hat under her chin so it wouldn’t fall off. Like Tanit, she was nervous about trekking through the jungle. She had visions of huge poisonous spiders dropping out of trees to land on her head. At least her hiking boots were thick enough to offer some protection from scorpion stings or snake bites.
She jammed water bottles into every pocket on her backpack, then swung it onto her back. “Ready?”
Thankfully, their trip through the jungle was fairly uneventful. Carlos spotted a pit viper in a tree, but it ignored them as they walked by. Caitlyn bit her lip to keep from squealing.
The sun was high in the sky when they entered the clearing where the Akha tribe lived. She estimated almost twenty wooden houses with thatched roofs. Each house was built on stilts, with ladders to the main floor. Several huts were at ground level, and she remembered from her previous stay that one was used to store farming equipment while the other two were village workshops for making intricate silver jewelry.
Surrounding the houses were fields where the Akha grew vegetables and rice or raised pigs and chickens. In the center of the village there was a huge fire pit. Off to the side, a wooden tower rose high above the houses.
Men stopped their work in the fields to watch them as they approached. Children ventured from the village to gawk at them. Women came, too, dressed in indigo tunics they’d decorated with silver beads, coins, and shells. The sun gleamed off their silver headdresses.
Tanit spoke to them in Thai, and Caitlyn could tell that most of them understood him even though their own language was closer to Burmese. They smiled at Carlos and Caitlyn, eager to have tourists who might buy their embroidered handwork or silver jewelry. She smiled back, inwardly wincing at some of the women’s teeth. They enjoyed chewing on betel nut leaves that had the unfortunate effect of staining their teeth reddish-black.
She listened carefully as they spoke to each other, so she could recall their language. She’d spent two weeks here several years ago and had become fluent at that time. She smiled when two women discussed how ugly her khaki fedora was. Children commented on the strange color of her hair and eyes, while a few men speculated that she’d been here before.
As the small crowd escorted them to the center of the village, Caitlyn spotted Ajay. He’d grown more frail and had lost more teeth, but his eyes were still sharp.
He approached her, smiling. “Pretty American lady,” he said in their Burmese dialect. “You have returned.”
She pressed her hands together and spoke in English. “How do you do? I’m Caitlyn.” She bowed, and when her mouth was close to his ear, she whispered in his language, “Can I see you alone?”
His eyes widened. “Yes, of course.” He motioned toward the silversmith shop.
“Carlos,” she called to him, where he was standing close to Tanit. “I’m going to look at their hand-crafts.”
He nodded, and she hurried toward the silver-smith shop with Ajay. “You remember me, then?” she said quietly in his language.
“Yes.” His eyes twinkled as he opened the door for her. “You came before and sat in our tower with a radio so you could spy on the Burmese.”
She winced. “‘Spy’ is such a strong word. I was conducting research on a possible incursion across the border.”
He chuckled. “My people had to flee from Burma a hundred years ago. I was happy to help you spy on them.”
She shrugged with a sheepish smile. “Okay, I was spying. How have you been, Ajay?”
“My people are happy. But very poor.” He motioned toward the table filled with silver jewelry.
She could take a hint. She examined the beautiful items. “You nearly bankrupted me the last time I was here.”
“Are you here to spy again?”
“No. I don’t work for the government anymore. I’m helping the man who came with me. Carlos Panterra. He’s searching for…something.”
Ajay nodded with a wise look. “Aren’t we all?”
“It’s a little…unusual, and I’m not sure we can trust the guide who is with us. So I’ve been pretending not to understand any language other than English.”
Ajay frowned. “You are deceiving him?”
“Well, yes. I’m worried he might have bad intentions toward Carlos.”
“Ah.” Ajay nodded. “So you are spying on him.”
Again with the spying. “When we join the others, I’ll be pretending not to understand anything. Our guide doesn’t know that I’ve been here before, so I’ll also be pretending not to know you.”
“Hmm.” Ajay crossed his arms, scowling.
“I’m just doing it to protect Carlos.” She bit her bottom lip. “There’s one more thing I should tell you. Carlos and I are pretending to be married.”
Ajay’s brows shot up. “Pretending?”
She felt her face grow warm. “It’s…complicated.”
“Of course it is. When you start deceiving people, it always gets complicated.” He shook a finger at her. “It’s like I always tell the children, once you start lying, it always comes back to bite you in the butt.”
She grinned. “Don’t worry. We’ll be all right.”
“We shall see.”
She glanced up from the jewelry and wondered if she should be concerned about the mischievous gleam in his eyes. Ajay was a wily chieftain. No one in the village got away with anything he didn’t know about.
Among the jewelry and headdresses, she spotted two engraved silver cats, each about eight inches long. They’d make good presents for the two were-panther boys. “Are these tigers or panthers?”
“Once you pay for them, they are whatever you want them to be.”
She removed a handful of baht from the zippered pocket of her khaki pants and left it on the table. “Is that enough?”
“I believe they cost more when the buyer has secrets.”
She narrowed her eyes at him. “Are you threatening to tell on me?”
He laughed and slapped a hand against his thigh. “No, pretty spy lady. I’m just playing with you.”
She grinned at him. “You are such a rascal, Ajay.”
His eyes glittered. “You have no idea.”
She picked up one of the silver panthers she’d just bought. “Have you seen any panthers around here?” When he pointed to the other one on the table, she groaned. “I mean real panthers. In the jungle.”
He shrugged. “Not in several years. You’re not hunting them, are you?”
“We’re searching for…this will sound strange.”
He chuckled. “Everything from you is strange, pretty lady.”
“Have you ever heard of people who can change into animals?”
His eyes widened. “You are looking for such a people?”
“Yes.” She dropped her backpack on the earthen floor and stuffed the two silver panthers inside. “What do you think?”
“I think…I am glad to have you back. You make life very interesting.”
“And?”
He smiled. “We must celebrate your return with a feast. You will be our guests tonight.”
“Thank you.” Caitlyn followed him from the shop, wondering what the clever Ajay was up to.
By that evening Carlos was growing increasingly frustrated and impatient. He’d asked Tanit to question the villagers about any panther sightings in the area, but he wasn’t getting any definitive answers. Some said there were tigers a few valleys to the north. Several men talked about seeing glowing golden eyes in the jungle at night. One guy insisted a giant cat had stolen his favorite pig two years earlier. A few women tried to sell him silk cloth embroidered with golden tigers and black panthers. Even Caitlyn added to his frustration by showing him two silver panthers she’d bought for Emiliano and Tiago.
Meanwhile, the village chieftain, Ajay, insisted they stay the night and join them for a feast at sundown. They gathered around the fire in the center of the village. He and Caitlyn sat cross-legged on woven mats of bamboo close to Ajay, who lounged regally in the one chair. The fire crackled, and smoke curled up into a cloudless sky of brilliant stars. Mosquitoes buzzed about. Caitlyn coated her arms and neck with more insect repellent, then passed him the tube.
The feast was delicious but dragged on forever. Some of the dishes were so hot, he and Caitlyn drank nearly a gallon of tea.
At the end of the meal, a platter of exotic fruits was passed about the circle of villagers. As everyone enjoyed their fruit, Ajay droned on and on in a monotonous voice.
About five minutes into Ajay’s speech, Carlos leaned close to Caitlyn and whispered, “I need to relieve myself.”
“Me, too,” she muttered under her breath. “But we have to wait for him to finish.”
After another five minutes Ajay finished, and the villagers applauded and shouted praise.
Caitlyn rose to her feet, pressed her hands together and murmured, “Restroom?”
Tanit translated into Thai, and Ajay pointed toward an outhouse far across the village by the rice field.
“I’ll take you.” Carlos jumped to his feet and escorted her across the village.
“I tried the outhouse this afternoon,” she muttered. “It scares me more than the jungle.”
“Then let’s find some bushes.” He led her toward the line of trees in the distance. “What was the speech that Ajay was giving?”
“He was reciting the list of his ancestors by memory. The Akha can go back many generations.”
“Interesting,” Carlos grumbled, “but we haven’t learned a damned thing about any panthers in the area.”
“You have to give it time. These are a proud and independent people. They’re not going to tell you everything right off the bat. Besides, it’s a good thing that they want us to hang around for a while. If there are any big cats nearby, they’ll be drawn to me.” She cast a wary eye at the jungle. “I hope they don’t show up while I’m using the bathroom.”
Carlos walked past a few trees, then found a large tree with a clump of bushes around it. “This looks like a good spot. You go first.”
She glanced up at the tree. “What if there’s something up there and it drops down on me?”
He peered up at the tree. “I don’t see anything.”
“There could be a snake or a spider.”
“Then you’d probably pee in your pants.”
“It’s not funny,” she hissed. “I can’t do this unless I know it’s safe.”
Eat Prey Love las-9 Page 18