Authors: Sara Craven
She dressed with care for dinner, deliberately passing over the
honey-coloured dress and the disturbing memories it evoked for the
simplicity of a black skirt, teamed with a white silk blouse, high- necked and
long-sleeved.
She'd expected
madame
might be down before her, but she found the
salon
empty. Now might be a good chance to call Iris again, she thought restively,
picking up the phone and dialling the code for Britain. And this time, with a
certain amount of relief, she heard the number ringing out.
'Yes?' Her stepmother's voice was clear but querulous. 'Who is it? What do
you want?'
'It's—Margot.' Meg hesitated over the name.
'Margot?' Iris's voice almost squeaked. 'Oh, thank God. I've been nearly
going mad. Where are you, darling?'
'Why, France, of course,' Meg said slowly, all her warning antennae on red
alert suddenly. 'Madame de Brissot wanted me to let you know I'd arrived
safely.'
'Madame de...?' Iris sounded bewildered for a. moment. 'You mean it's you,
Meg? Why the hell didn't you say so, instead of pretending?'
'Because that would be difficult in the circumstances,' Meg returned drily.
'What's happened? What's wrong?'
'You may well ask. It's that damned woman- Steven Curtess's wife.' Iris
sounded like the messenger in a Greek tragedy. 'She's left him, for God's
sake. Just gone off into the blue, abandoning her children, and making all
kinds of damaging statements to the Press,' she added with a little sob of
pure indignation.
'I've had the most ghastly people from tabloid newspapers ringing up,
wanting to talk to Margot. I had to take the phone off the hook, just for some
peace. There've been photographs, headlines about love triangles. It's been a
nightmare.
'Margot's had to go into hiding, poor child. And Steven Curtess seems to
have had some kind of
brainstorm—lost all sense of proportion.' Iris laughed
angrily. 'Do you know he had the almighty nerve to come here to this house,
bringing his children, insisting that Margot look after them, because there
was no one else? Those beastly reporters had an absolute field day over that.
'I told him she wasn't here, but he left them just the same, saying he had to go
and look for his wife.' Iris's voice was pure outrage. 'And the children
wouldn't stop screaming. I was at my wits' end, until I thought of Nanny
Truman. I told her it was an emergency, and she came at once.'
Meg sat down shakily on the arm of the sofa. 'You mean you've still got
them?'
'No, no, Nanny took them down to her cottage, thank heaven. But he'll have
to make other arrangements. I can't be expected... It's not as if I knew where
Margot was, or when she's coming back. Especially after the awful things
Corinne Curtess has said about her in the Press. I'm sure half of them are
libellous.'
'I doubt that very much,' Meg said wearily.
'That's what my solicitor said when I spoke to him.' Iris gave another sob. 'I'll
never be able to hold my head up again after this. And I'm here quite alone,
having to bear it all. It was totally selfish of Margot to disappear like this,
especially when she must have known what would happen.' She paused.
'You've got to come home, Meg, right away. I need you, to answer the door
and telephone, if nothing else.'
'I'm sorry,' Meg said levelly, 'but that's quite impossible. I'm also needed
here, and this is where I'm staying. These other problems are none of my
making, and I don't want to get involved.'
Iris gasped. 'How can y oPul en
bet ys,
o M
h e
e g
a rtth
leosu
s g
? ht,
M a
y s
n seh
r e
v eqsu
i
a e
r tel y
i
n b
tuht ef ir
mm
o lsy
t tre
er prlia
b c
l e
e ds ttahte
e .r e
I cie
n isvie
st r ,t b
h u
at t a
y lol
u come back this minute.
of it was for Corinne Curtess. Although she didn't altogether sound as if she
needed it, she thought with a tinge of amusement. Mrs Curtess would
undoubtedly be devastated by her husband's adultery, yet launching a
pre-emptive strike through the tabloids, and transferring responsibility for
the children on to her erring husband and his mistress, was more of a
masterstroke than a bid for compassion.
But how typical of Margot to vanish once the going got tough, she thought,
her lip curling, although Nanny, kind, sensible and comforting, would be in
her element, of course.
'Bonsoir.'
Jerome was standing, framed in the open French windows, glass
of whisky in hand.
So he'd been on the terrace all the time, Meg thought in swift panic. How
much had he heard— and what had she said to give herself away? She
forced a brief smile as she got to her feet. 'I didn't know you were there.'
'Clearly,' he said laconically, strolling into the room, his dark eyes making a
mocking assimilation of her appearance. 'What modesty and discretion,' he
commented softly. 'Dare I offer you a drink before you leave for the
convent?'
She nodded jerkily. 'Thank you. I'll have a white vermouth.'
'You look as if you need something stronger.' His gaze became more
searching. 'I hope there's been— no bad news?'
'On the contrary,' she said, with an attempt at lightness. 'Things couldn't be
better.'
And maybe it was true, she thought, as Jerome poured her drink. Perhaps
Steven Curtess would come to his senses about his marriage, at last, and
Margot be taught a much needed lesson. And soon there'd be some new
scandal or sensation, and life would return to something like normality
again.
Although it was doubtful if Iris would ever forgive her, she decided, with a
mental shrug. But it was time she moved on anyway. From now on, she'd
spend every free moment she had in the library, until she'd mastered that
monster machine sufficiently to apply for an office job when she got back to
Britain. That was the way forward. The only way, she added in silent
emphasis, watching Jerome with sudden hopeless hunger as he walked
towards her, drink in hand.
She turned away, staring at the glow of the evening sun falling in pools
across the terrace flags, terrified that he would read the self-betrayal in her
eyes. As he came to her side, she took the glass from him with a murmur of
thanks from her taut throat.
'Sante.'
He lifted his own drink in salute, leaning a shoulder indolently
against the frame of the window. Meg, aware of his scrutiny, felt the colour
rise in her face, and heard him laugh. 'Again, that incredible blush.'
She couldn't think of a single answer to that, so she continued to stare rigidly
in front of her. He was close enough to touch, she realised. If she turned, her
arm would brush against him.
'I didn't know grass could be so fascinating,' the tormenting voice went on.
Meg bit her lip. 'I was—thinking about something,' she said lamely.
'But not happy thoughts,' Jerome observed.
He saw far too much, Meg thought bitterly. She hunched a shoulder. 'It's just
so quiet here.' She made herself sound faintly resentful. 'And I'm used to city
life—things happening all the time.'
'Ah, yes,' he said meditatively. 'Then we shall have to arrange some
excitement for you here.'
She tried to ignore the undercurrent of laughter, teasing in his voice. She
swallowed some of her vermouth. 'Oh, yes, typing estimates for new roof
timbers, no doubt,' she retorted, her tone brittle.
Jerome laughed. 'But even those could be interesting,' he said, 'if you use
your imagination to visualise how the house will look when everything is
done.'
'Yes, I suppose so,' Meg said slowly, thinking back to the letters she'd
written earlier.
Jerome gave her an interrogative glance. 'Is something wrong?'
'No,' she said. 'At least—I just don't understand
why.
Why now, after all this
time?' She took a breath, hurrying on, as his brows rose. 'I mean, restoring a
house this size is going to cost a small fortune, and what's it all for? There
isn't a child— or anyone else to inherit.'
'You think Haut Arignac should just be left to die in peace?'
'No.' Meg hesitated. 'Well, perhaps. After all, who can really afford a home
like this any more? And besides, I don't think Tante has that kind of money.'
'And what she has could be put to better use?' There was irony in his voice.
She met his gaze squarely. 'Yes, probably. It's very isolated here, after all,
and there must be a lot of sad memories. She could get away—travel...'
'And forget?'
She moved a hand rather helplessly. 'Well—why not?'
'I don't think it's that simple. Love is not always transient—so easily
dismissed.'
'After all these years?'
'When the love is real,' Jerome said quietly, 'time ceases to matter. An hour
or a lifetime become the time.'
Meg's hand tightened round her glass. She said constrictedly, 'And if it turns
out to be the wrong person at the wrong time in the wrong place?'
He said harshly, 'Then it's a tragedy. But it doesn't change a thing,
ma belle
,
believe me. The ground's as deep, and the scar is eternal. 'And you won't get
Madame Marguerite away from here,' he went on after a pause. 'She's spent
o much of her life here. In fact, Haut Arignac has become her life, and her
love. Now she wishes pour into it all the accumulated passion of all these
sterile years. Would you deny her?'
'No,' Meg acknowledged with a sigh. 'Certainly not when you put it like
that.'
'Or are you considering your own interests, perhaps?' His tone of polite
interest deceived her at first. But as Meg absorbed the implication in his
words her head came round sharply.
'What do you mean?' she demanded.
'Madame
is frail and lonely,' he said with a shrug. 'Sylvie Aljou, her usual
companion, is a good woman, but she has no claim on her affection. Yet
already Marguerite is fond of you.'
Meg tensed. 'I already told you,' she said. 'I don't want anything from her.'
His voice hardened derisively. 'I know what you said. But anyone can
change their mind. And, in a month, you could achieve a great deal. Even
persuade
madame
to divert what resources she has totally in your direction.
An old dying house, or a young, lovely woman. I'd say the scales were
weighted in your favour,
ma chere
Margot.'
Furiously, her hand swung up, but before she could make contact Jerome
seized her wrist in a grip of iron.
'Ah, non,'
he said softly, and coldly. 'Not now. Not ever.' He jerked her
forward, smothering her swift cry of pain with his mouth. He was angry, out
of control as never before, his lips parting hers with merciless force,
devouring her—ravishing her. And her rage and need matched his, her own
demand suddenly as hot, blind and seeking. Hands locked behind his head,
Meg gave herself up to the dark, stinging rapture of the moment. Jerome. His
name seemed to sing through her veins. Dear God,
Jerome!
Oblivious to everything, they swayed in each other's arms as if rocked by
some high wind, their bodies moulded—welded together.
And then, as suddenly, as violently as it had begun, it was over. Jerome
released her, pushing her from him almost with revulsion. He said hoarsely,
raggedly, 'Ah,
Dieu,
no. Damn you, Margot, what have you done to me?'
He kicked the fallen whisky glass out of his path, and strode across the
salon
to the door, slamming it behind him.
There was broken glass on the carpet. It was important—imperative that she
should clear it up, she thought dazedly. She knelt carefully, gathering the
slivers into her handkerchief, wincing as one lacerated her flesh.
She looked down at the bright bead of blood. The wound is deep, she
thought, the scarring eternal. And tasted the saltiness of her tears on her
bruised mouth.
THE illuminated dial on her bedside clock said two a.m. Meg stared at it,
muttered, 'Oh, hell,' then turned it face downwards.
It had been, she thought, quite the worst evening of her life. She had only
just managed to pull herself together, and clear up the mess on the carpet
when
madame,
regal in lavender silk, had entered the
salon.
'So there you are,
petite
.' Fortunately oblivious to Meg's over-bright eyes,
and tear-stained cheeks, she seated herself in her usual chair, peering round.