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Authors: Isobel Chace

Tags: #Harlequin Romance 1967

A Garland of Marigolds (18 page)

BOOK: A Garland of Marigolds
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He was moodily silent for a long moment.


You know perfectly well that I haven

t done a thing about it,

he said at last.

I

ve had my hands full with our wretched machinery.


That

s your job too,

I reminded him.

You

re also the mechanic.

He laughed harshly.

And I suppose you agree with him that I haven

t been doing that very well either?


I didn

t say that.


You didn

t have to,

he said gloomily.


Aren

t you exaggerating just a little?

I teased him.


You might think so, I don

t! The only person who has any time for me at all at the moment is Camilla.

I was determinedly cheerful.

Hence
your anxiety to know where she is?

He nodded.

I thought she might like to watch the fireworks with me. I think she

s the only person I could bear to have with me, quite honestly. At least she isn

t perpetually nagging me to be something that I

m not!

I sighed. I was puzzled that he should be even more gloomy now than he had been earlier.


Have you had another session with Gideon?

I asked.

Wouldn

t you like to know!

he retorted bitterly.

You

re not even grateful that I stuck out my neck for you by going to Delhi. Women!

he added almost as if it were a swearword.

I stood up. He had successfully destroyed my moment of dreamy comfort.


I was grateful,

I said clearly.

But I

m not going to fall over myself to prove it to you.

His eyes sparkled with contempt in the light of the lamp.

No, no. Never be seen fraternizing with those who are out of favor! Funny, I had you figured quite differently. I had a picture of you as a sweet, English girl, loyal and without too much ambition. But you

re not like that, are you? You

re crowing your head off that Gideon

s bought your scheme for the dam. But don

t crow too hard. If the monsoons come early, your cheap little success will come crashing around your ears and your stature will be no higher in the great man

s eyes than mine is now!

I bit my lip, feeling slightly sick. I had been quite unprepared for anything like this from Joseph.


You

re jealous!

I accused him sharply, the tactless remark rising almost unbidden to my lips.


Of course, I

m jealous!

he agreed.

But I wouldn

t have cared if you

d been different about it. I thought you were my friend!


I thought so, too,

I said coolly.

You

re making it rather impossible, though, aren

t you?


Am I?

He eyed me sardonically.

I

m not the one who

s been spilling tales to Gideon!


Meaning that I have?

I demanded.


Haven

t you?


Not that I

m aware of!

I denied sharply.

Look, Joe, what is all this?

He hunched up his shoulders and sat heavily in the nearest chair.


The jeep wouldn

t start again. The
Swami
had to fix it with his own fair hands. It seems he was a mechanic himself before he took to being a holy man. Never cease to surprise one, do they? I mean, who would have thought that he ever earned his living just like everyone else? Well, anyway, it was just about the final straw as far as Gideon was concerned. I rather gathered that not even you could find much use for me.

I was uneasily aware of a feeling of acute irritation that he couldn

t keep the vehicles properly maintained, and I wondered just what it was that Gideon had said to him.


I haven

t said anything,

I said.


Well, I did,

he said moodily.

I told him about our running into Julie in Delhi. That set him back, I might tell you.


The
Swami
doesn

t think she

s the right person for Gideon either,

I said without thought.

He flung back his head and laughed.


I suppose you

re planning to cut her out!

he exclaimed.

You might just manage it if you play your cards right!

I gave him a look of extreme distaste.


Gideon doesn

t see me like that!

I passed it off casually. But for some reason my heart was suddenly pounding within me.

It wouldn

t be fitting anyway,

I said gruffly.

For answer Joseph laughed again.


Well, well,

he said,

whoever would have thought it?

 

CHAPTER TEN

If I was pleased when Camilla joined us, Joseph—despite his earlier assertions—most certainly was not.


What do you want?

he asked her harshly.

She blushed, but held her ground.


Not you,

she returned pleasantly.

He gave her a rather haughty look and frowned.

What do you mean?

Camilla gave him a sunny smile and refused to answer directly. Instead she turned rather pointedly to me.


Suki, darling, Gideon says we

re to make the most of the celebrations tonight and that he

s coming with us to make sure that we do!

She turned almost reluctantly to Joseph.

I suppose you can come, too, if you really want to and if you

re not too busy sulking!


I? Sulk?

he d
e
manded indignantly.


Of course you

re sulking! You

ve sulked solidly ever since you came back from Delhi!

She sat down beside me.

You know what,

she went on,

I think it would be a great deal easier to do your work than to worry about the results of not doing it! It

s only an opinion, of course,

she added hastily.

I refrained from laughing with some difficulty.


And what do you know about it?

Joseph mocked her, but he was visibly shaken all the same.

You don

t have to do anything all day!


I find myself enough to keep occupied,

she answered smugly.

How about you?

Joseph flushed angrily.


I don

t know what

s the matter with me,

he complained.

I don

t seem to be able to please anyone today.

Camilla looked fleetingly sympathetic, but it didn

t last long.


Perhaps you don

t try hard enough?

she suggested.

But Joseph had had enough. He glared at her and then at me and silently walked off, his hands in his pockets and scuffing the toes of his shoes as if he more than half-expected us to call him back. Camilla looked after him sadly.


What

s the matter with him?

she asked impatiently.

Doesn

t he know that it hurts when he goes into a grouch?

I looked at her closely, noticing the drooping lips and the tears in the corners of her eyes. She looked the picture of heartache bravely borne, and I felt terribly sorry for her.


I don

t suppose he thinks,

I answered.

Does it really matter to you?

She closed her eyes and the tears squeezed out on to her cheeks. Restlessly, she wiped them away with the back of her hand.


Yes,

she admitted.

It matters very much.

I felt a hollow sensation in my middle. I remembered Gideon

s admonition that Joseph was incapable of being friends with any woman. It was only now that I was beginning to see what he meant.


The trouble is,

I began,

that men don

t grow up nearly as quickly as we do.
J
oe is all right, but he doesn

t really know where he

s going.

Camilla began to cry, the tears spilling out with increasing ease.


But I

m young, too!

she cried out.

And he isn

t even interested!

I sighed, knowing that I was going to have to talk about Timothy.


You see,

I said,

Joseph is just like Timothy, so I feel I know him rather well.

Camilla stopped crying and gazed at me in astonishment.


Your Timothy?

I smiled wryly.

Yes, my Timothy. Why not?


Well, I don

t know,

she said uncomfortably.

Gideon said I wasn

t to ask you about him, though we were both dying with curiosity,

she added naively.

For an instant I was shocked that they had discussed me.


Both of you?

I asked dryly.

I can

t believe that Gideon was interested.


Oh, but you

re wrong!

Camilla insisted.

He said Timothy didn

t sound your sort at all. Oh, do tell me about him, Suki. Was he madly attractive?

I blushed a little.


No, he was quite ordinary. He was very clever though.


And were you really in love with him?

she asked.


I suppose so,

I said softly.


I don

t think you were,

Camilla said practically.

He was just an interest for you. I expect you needed something while you were studying.

I gazed at her with respect. And to think that I had started out in this conversation to warn her of the dangers of youthful infatuation!


Well, yes,

I admitted.

Like Joseph.

She smiled a rather superior smile and she didn

t look young at all.


And that

s why you think they are alike, Timothy and Joseph?

she asked.

I nodded. It was why they were alike. They were both cast in the same mold, lovable but weak, not the sort of man I really wanted at all.


It

s difficult to admit,

I went on with decision,

but I

ve grown out of Timothy. It happens that way sometimes. No matter how much you think you are in love with a person, you change and so do they, and you find you are no longer in love with them at all.

Camilla smiled more broadly.


And you think that

s what will happen to what I feel for Joseph?


Well, yes,

I said very gently because I didn

t want to hurt her.

You see Joseph isn

t very mature, is he?

Camilla shook her head at me.


You don

t really understand at all,

she told me.

Timothy was one thing and of course out here you feel differently about him. Gideon says he doesn

t believe you were ever in love with him at all! But what I feel for Joe is quite different! You see I know he

s silly and weak and a bit lazy, but it doesn

t make any difference to me.


I don

t see what it has to do with Gideon,

I said with a throat that had suddenly gone dry.

Camilla grinned.


Poor Suki!

she murmured.

You know, of the two of us, you

re the poor mixed-up kid! And don

t start worrying about Joseph and me! We

ll look after each other perfectly well. You

d do better to worry about Julie!


Why?

I asked blankly.

Her face filled with impatience mixed with despair.


If you don

t know, I

m not going to tell you!

she exclaimed, and sauntered off into the house to find out what had happened to dinner. I stared out into the darkness. Here and there fireworks burst forth, let loose by someone

s impatient fingers. As an older woman and a confidante, I had not been a howling success.

Gideon joined us for dinner. With a great deal of laughter he had fashioned a couple of crutches. He came across the verandah with a flourish of independence and a broad grin on his face.


Isn

t that something?

he demanded.

I laughed.

That

s something!

I agreed.

He sat down heavily and chuckled.


Know something, you

re getting quite cheeky!

he teased me.

How does it feel to have a whole village
en fete
for you?


Unbelievable!

I told him.

Not that it is for me exactly. I think they

re just beginning to realize what this dam could mean to them.

His eyes twinkled.

Well, the dam is your project!

He laughed at my discomfiture.

And you

re going to find a lot of work. Have they done their full day

s quota?

I shook my head.

No, but this is
the first day. It

ll take a day or so to make it clear exactly what has to be done. I

m hoping then it

ll go like a bomb, as Joe would say.

The smile died out of Gideon

s eyes.


What do you think of that young man?

he asked abruptly.

Did I hear you and Camilla talking about him earlier?

I blushed to the ears, wondering what else he had heard.

It was just in passing,

I said.

He looked straight into my eyes.

Have you heard from that Timothy of yours recently?

he asked.


No, I haven

t, though I can

t see what business it is of yours!

I added hotly.

He grinned.

I suppose you can

t, you ridiculous blockhead! Don

t you think it

s about time you wrote to him?

BOOK: A Garland of Marigolds
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