Authors: Sara Craven
'But then there's very little about the Caswell family that could
surprise me any more.' He moved, straightening his shoulders, and
Laura felt herself recoil. He saw it, and stopped, the grey eyes
narrowing glacially as they surveyed her. 'But I still seem to
have the ability to surprise you,' he said half to himself. 'How
interesting. Perhaps some further research is called for.' She
said hoarsely, reading his purpose in his face, 'You dare lay one
finger on me, and . . . ' 'You'll do what? Scream for your
uncle?' He shook his head slowly. 'Not this time, darling. He's
too busy chasing a contract to hear you.' As he spoke, he walked
forward, until he was only inches away from her. There was a row
of units right behind her, and nowhere to retreat to. Besides, it
suddenly seemed a matter of honour to stand her ground, as if
this unwanted proximity didn't concern her one bit, although her
breathing had become painful and even difficult. Jason's hand
touched the nape of her neck, his fingers stroking the smooth
skin. Her mouth went dry, and her hands clenched into fists at
her sides. 'This thing,' Jason said softly, 'is an obscenity.'
The elastic band was tugged from her hair, not gently, and the
soft tawny strands fell round her face. It was all she could do
not to cry out. She found herself wondering absurdly where the
waitresses had got to. Surely they would be back at any moment.
Surely . . . She'd cried a lot of tears and spent many sleepless
nights, trying to forget how it had once been between Jason and
herself, and she thought she had succeeded. Now, the first
seeking warmth of his mouth on hers
told her that she was wrong, and every fibre of her being
whimpered in shock. She stood rigidly, resisting the practised
sensual teasing of his mouth, the warm coaxing of his tongue
against the unrelenting contours of her lips. Pain armoured her
against response, and she was grateful for it, because it could
have been so tempting to let the past slide away, and with it the
icy restraint she'd imposed on herself. Sex was the great
betrayer. It made your body impose on your mind. It robbed you of
reason and commonsense. It made you believe there could be 'happy
ever after', and Laura wanted no more of it. But she wasn't
prepared for this gentleness in him, and it bewildered her. She
almost wished he'd shown her some of the brutality of their last
time together. It would have provided a focus for her hatred, for
her disgust. This insidious probing at her senses was less easy
to fight, and it made her afraid, because the memories it evoked
were not of anger or bitterness and accusation, but of their
early days together, and all the promise of them. A promise which
Jason had cynically and blatantly broken. That was what she had
to remember—all she had to remember. Nothing else mattered—no
laughterfilled days, or passion-warmed nights. No moments when
she'd wondered crazily why she'd been chosen to be so lucky.
Because ultimately and heartbieaJiingly, there'd been no luck
about it. She was simply Laura Caswell, a girl who had been
married for her money: Not the first one to find herself in that
situation, and certainly not the last. The thoughts ran wildly in
her brain, bolstering her against the first slow, sweet stirring
of the senses which Jason's kiss was inevitably arousing. He'd
taught her to want him, to want the pleasure which his mouth and
hands and body could give her, and her starved sexuality was
slowly, almost incredulously reviving under the insistent
pressure of his lips against hers. She wanted to open her mouth,
to sink against his body, and feel the hard possession of his
arms round her again. She wanted it so much that she ached
inside—an ache which pleaded for assuagement... With a little
cry, she jerked her head back, bringing up a clenched fist to
scrub furiously at her lips. 'You're disgusting.' 'You think so?'
he asked mockingly. 'Where have you spent the last three odd
years, Laura? In a nunnery?' 'That's none of your business.' How
dare he stand there so utterly unmoved, when her heart was
threatening to choke her with its hammering. 'And may I remind
you that you've lost the legal right to—maul me.' He shrugged.
'Merely an experiment, darling. Nothing to get hysterical about.'
He laughed briefly. 'And there wasn't, was there? It's all quite
dead. Not a single pang of unrequited passion on either side.
So— no reason why we can't behave civilly to each other when we
meet from now on—as we inevitably will. Shake hands forever.
Cancel all our vows. Isn't that how it goes?' He paused. 'We may
never be friends, Laura, but we have to be acquaintances. You can
surely see that?' There was another, longer pause, as if he was
waiting for some kind of reaction, perhaps even an answer to what
he had said. Then he added, 'Anyway think about it.' He turned,
the door gave its familiar monitory squeak, and Laura was alone.
THERE
was a lay-by about half a mile from the factory complex.
Laura drove the car into it, and stopped, slumping limply forward
over the driving wheel. She'd left Caswells at the run, uncaring
about who might see her, or what conclusions might be drawn.
She'd fumbled with the ignition, crashed the gears, and missed
the concrete gatepost at the exit by a whisker. It was a miracle
she'd got this far without an accident, only she'd stopped
believing in miracles. They were on a par with the tooth fairy,
who'd stopped calling a very long time ago. She sat very still,
her hands still gripping the wheel as she sought to control the
deep inner trembling which threatened to convulse her. She kept
hoping she would wake up and find it had all been just another
nightmare—trying, but purely transitory—but she knew that
however many times she might pinch herself, Jason was not going
to vanish like a bad dream this time. He was there. He was flesh
and blood, and for one endless, searing moment, he'd made her
feel like flesh and blood too. She groaned, nausea rising in her
throat, and sat up slowly, fighting her own self-disgust. How
could she have felt like that—even for a second? She knew what
Jason was—who better? she thought bitterly—so what in the
name of God had she been doing to allow him anywhere near her?
She lay back in her seat, staring sightlessly through the
windscreen. Well, it had happened, and while it was shaming to
realize just how close her body had been to betraying her, the
situation wasn't totally irretrievable. Because Jason had not
guessed. She repeated the words aloud to herself, giving each one
its own resounding emphasis—because it mattered. It really did.
She'd been a total innocent when they'd first met, but under his
tutelage she'd blossomed, discovering depths in her nature,
aspects of sexuality which she'd never dreamed existed. Jason was
the first man to whom she'd been physically attracted, the first
one to teach her sensual delight. It was hardly surprising that
she'd imagined she was in love with him, or that she'd been naive
enough to believe that he loved her in return. She'd soon learned
differently, of course—even before that first, crazy, delirious
year had wound to a close. 'Trust me,' he'd urged. 'Laura, trust
me please.' I trusted him, she thought.- I'd have done anything
for him. I'd have followed him naked, if he'd asked me. Only he
never asked. She hadn't let herself cry much during the long
months while she was waiting to be divorced. She hadn't cried a
great deal since, but there were tears now. Laura put her hands
over her face and sobbed. The moisture ran between her splayed
fingers, and down the backs of her hands. She could hear herself
moaning, and the desolation of the sound frightened her into
silence, and ultimately into control again. There was a box of
tissues in the car, and she used them to blot the worst signs of
her emotional collapse from her face. She didn't want to have to
face Celia with red eyes, and a blotched skin. In fact, it
occurred to her, she would prefer not to have face Celia at all
just yet. She sat for a moment, drumming her fingers restlessly
on the steering wheel, then started the car with new
determination. She would go to Alan's house—take him up on one
of the many invitations she'd always steered clear of in the
past. After all, she liked Alan, she argued defensively to
herself. She'd enjoyed their dates together over the past year,
but she'd been wary of allowing their relationship to develop
along more intimate lines, and when Alan had shown signs of
trying to force the pace a little, she'd always drawn back. One
day she might be ready for a serious involvement again, but that
day had not yet arrived. And although to seek him out like this
might not be altogether fair to Alan in view of the ambivalence
of her feelings, it was necessary. She needed the reassurance of
his undoubted regard for her. He was the present tense in her
life. Jason was the past. It took Laura just under ten minutes to
drive out of town to the small village where he lived. One minute
there were suburban houses and neat gardens, and then, as
abruptly as if someone had drawn a line, there were fields and
trees and narrow lanes, with fingerposts pointing out the hidden
life of the countryside. She parked her car on the verge opposite
his small cottage, and crossed the lane to the gate, returning
the friendly nod she received from an elderly man working in the
neighbouring garden. As she walked up the path, she could hear
the sound of Alan's typewriter clicking away through the open
window, and she hesitated for a moment before knocking at the
door. Alan had trained originally as a teacher, but because of
the cuts in education spending, he'cf never managed to secure a
permanent post in an English department anywhere. So, instead,
he'd turned to freelance writing, and was managing to make an
adequate living if not an affluent one, eked out by some private
coaching. Among other things, he wrote a restaurant column for
the local paper, as well as being its drama critic, and In a way
it was through this column that they'd become friends, because
when they'd been casually introduced at a party, Laura had told
him bluntly she didn't always agree with his praise or criticism
of the local eating houses, and they'd enjoyed discussing their
differing opinions. It was clear he was working now, and she was
unwilling to disturb him for such purely selfish reasons, but
just as she was preparing to turn away, he called, 'Come in,
Laura. The door isn't locked.' He met her in the tiny hall,
smiling delightedly. 'Hey—this is fantastic. I was just going
to 'phone you. What brings you this way?' 'Oh, I was just
passing.' She hated lying, and was bad at it. 'Could I use the
bathroom, do you suppose?' 'Of course,' he said briskly. 'It's on
the right at the top of the stairs. And I ' l l make some
coffee.' As she made hurried repairs to the ravages which emotion
had done to her face, Laura wondered wryly whether Alan had seen
she was upset, but been too tactful to enquire about it. On
balance, she decided the dimness of the light in the hall had
probably been to her advantage, and he hadn't noticed a thing.
She hoped not, anyway. She didn't want to have to embark on
lengthy explanations. He was emerging from the kitchen with a
tray as she came downstairs, and she followed him into a
sizeable, cluttered living room. There was a large desk under the
window, and a frankly sagging sofa in front of the empty
fireplace, flanked by a couple of easy chairs which had also seen
better days. But for all that, the room had a cosy welcoming air,
which in Laura's view, the Caswell mansion totally lacked. The
coffee was good too. Alan was fussy about the blends he chose,
and it showed. She accepted the pretty pottery beaker he handed
her with a murmured word of thanks.