Authors: Sara Craven
'I don't see anything wrong with that,' Meg said demurely.
'Oh,
la.'
His smile was warm and sensuous as he stroked a finger down the
curve of her cheek. 'I shall remind you of that tonight.'
'I hope so.' Her eyes met his with candour, nothing hidden, least of all her
sheer physical enrapturement with him.
'And this time I shall treat you with the gentleness you deserve,' he
promised. 'I should have known from the first you were not Margot.' He took
her hand, caressing her fingertips with his lips.
'Because I'm a lousy typist?' she teased.
He laughed. 'No—everything you said—everything you did. But I silenced
my doubts—saw only what I wanted to see.' His mouth twisted
remorsefully. 'Last night, I should have realised you were untouched. And
when I knew beyond question that you were a virgin, and could not be
Margot, I got angry—but angry with myself for being a blind, insensitive
fool. And,
helas,
the anger rubbed off on you.'
He groaned. 'At the moment when we should have been learning how to love
we were screaming at each other.' He looked at her gravely. 'Couldn'tyou
have trusted me with the truth before then, Marguerite?'
'I wanted to, so much.' She took a breath. 'But I wasn't the only person
involved. Margot had blackmailed me into coming. They were threatening
to sell my old nanny's cottage and force her into a home, unless I agreed.'
She frowned. 'In fact it could still happen. I don't trust Margot, or Iris for that
matter.'
'She is very old, this nurse, and infirm, perhaps?'
'Indeed, she isn't,' Meg said strongly. 'Otherwise she couldn't be looking
after your cousin Corinne's children at this minute.'
'Then it might please her to live in France and look after our babies, when
they come.'
Tears pricked at her eyelids. 'I think she'd love it. Oh,
Jerome.'
'Of course,' he said softly. 'It all depends on one small point—that you love
me as I love you. You haven't said so yet. And, maybe, for you it's too soon.'
'No,' she said. 'It's not too soon. And how strange that we can both be so
sure.'
'We're not the only ones,' he said drily. '
Madame
was sure from the first. I
must telephone her as soon as we get to the
mas
and let her know you are
safe with me, and not waiting for some plane to England.'
'I hope she'll be pleased.' Meg wrinkled her brow. 'She was very chilly when
I left.'
'She was anxious for you to leave. She could sense that Margot's arrival had
added to your tension and unhappiness.' He grimaced slightly. 'She was not
pleased with me this morning when I told her what a mess I had made of
everything.'
Meg worked this out. 'So, when I saw her later, she already knew I wasn't
Margot?'
He nodded. 'She said, like me, she had always known. That the spoiled
ill-tempered child could not have grown into a girl of such quiet grace.' He
glanced at his watch. 'By now I think Mademoiselle Trant will have left the
chateau, sadder perhaps and wiser, though I doubt it. And my guests will
also have left the
mas.
I hope they don't meet on the road.'
'Your guests?' Meg gasped. 'You mean Corinne? Then it was her that I
saw...'
'You have sharp eyes.' Jerome sounded amused. 'Her husband is with her
now. She telephoned the
mas
that first evening we were together to say she
was on her way. He joined her yesterday. That was the phone call I took at
dinner. They are now heading for Paris to continue their second honeymoon
in my apartment there.'
Meg digested this. 'But how in the world did he know where to find her?'
'He knew,' Jerome said simply. 'As I knew just now. Which gives me hope
for their future together. Although I am more interested in ours.' He kissed
her gently, but very completely. 'Will you be my wife, Marguerite, and share
the storms and the sunlight with me?'
'Yes,' she said, and her mouth trembled into a smile. '"
Ma doulce amour, ma
plaisance cherie."
And will you show me another dawn?'
'Every morning of our lives,' he said huskily. 'Now let's go home.'
As he started the car, she said, 'There's one problem, Jerome. What are we
going to do about Octavien? When do you think he'll stop calling me
Anglaise?'
He laughed. 'Probably,
mon amour,
at our son's christening.'
And he was right.