Read Devil and the Deep Sea Online
Authors: Sara Craven
DEVIL AND THE
DEEP SEA
Sara Craven
"A year out of your life. What price would you ask?"
Samma supposed that any other woman would surely slap the face
of a man who would pose such a question. But Samma couldn't
afford
that
luxury
with
Roche
Delacroix.
With her stepfather ready to sell her "favors" to clear his gambling
debts, Roche represented Samma's only avenue of escape from an
unthinkable
future
on
Cristoforo
Island.
Only a few hours earlier, the lips that opened the suggestive
negotiation had made Samma so thoroughly aware of being female.
Samma couldn't help feeling that life was doubly unfair.
The breeze from the sea whipped a strand of pale fair hair across
Samma Briant's cheek, and she flicked it back impatiently as she
bent over her drawing-board.
The waterfront at Cristoforo was crowded, as it always was when a
cruise ship was in. Tourists were eagerly exploring the bars and
souvenir shops along the quayside, and stopping to look at the stalls
which sold locally made jewellery, carvings and paintings of island
scenes. And a lot of them lingered where Samma sat on an upturned
crate, amused and fascinated by her talent for capturing an instant
likeness on paper, and willing to pay the modest fee she charged for
her portraits.
She didn't consider herself to be an artist. She possessed a knack,
no more, for fixing on some facial characteristic of each subject,
and subtly exploiting it. But she enjoyed her work, and on days like
this it was even reasonably lucrative.
She had a small crowd around her already, and her day would have
been just about perfect, except for one large, mauve,
chrome-glittering cloud on her horizon—
Sea Anemone,
surely the
most vulgar motor yacht in the Caribbean, currently moored a few
hundred yards away in Porto Cristo's marina. Because
Sea
Anemone's
presence at Cristoforo meant that her owner, the equally
large and garish Mr Hugo Baxter, would be at the hotel tonight,
playing poker with Samma's stepfather, Clyde Lawson.
One glimpse of that monstrous mauve hulk lying at anchor had been
enough to start Samma's stomach churning uneasily. It was only six
weeks since Hugo Baxter's last visit. She'd thought they were safe
for at least another month or two. Yet, here he was again closing in
for the kill, she thought bitterly, as she signed the portrait she'd just
finished with a small flourish, and handed it over to her delighted
sitter with a brief, professional smile.
The fact was they couldn't afford another visit from Hugo Baxter.
Samma had no idea what her stepfather's exact financial position
was—he would never discuss it with her—but she suspected it
might be desperately precarious.
When Clyde had met and married her mother during a visit to
Britain, he had been a moderately affluent businessman, owning a
small but prosperous hotel, and a restaurant on the small Caribbean
island of Cristoforo. The island was just beginning to take off as a
cruise ship stopping-point, and the future should have been
rosy—except for Clyde's predilection for gambling. While Samma's
mother had been alive, he'd kept his proclivities more or less under
control, but since her death two years earlier things had gone from
bad to worse. The restaurant had had to be sold to pay his debts,
and the hotel hadn't had the redecoration and refurbishment it
needed, either.
Clyde seemed to win so seldom, Samma thought broodingly, and
when Hugo Baxter was in the game his losses worsened to a
frightening extent.
She motioned her next customer to the folding chair in front of her,
and began to sketch in the preliminary shape of her head and
shoulders with rapid, confident strokes.
Clyde's only remaining asset was the hotel. And if we lose that, she
thought despondently, I'm never going to get off this island.
Probably the woman she was sketching would have thrown up her
hands in horror at the thought of anyone wanting to leave
Cristoforo. 'Isn't this paradise?' was the usual tourist cry.
Well, it was and it wasn't, Samma thought cynically. During the
years when she'd spent her school holidays here, she'd taken the
romantic view, too. She'd been in the middle of her A-level course
when her mother had collapsed and died from a heart attack. She'd
flown to Cristoforo for the funeral, only to discover when it was
over that the trust which was paying her school fees had Ceased
with her mother's death, and that Clyde had no intention of paying
out for her to complete her education.
'It's time you started working to keep yourself,' he told her
aggressively. 'Besides, I need you here to take your mother's place.'
Sick at heart, confused by her grief for her mother, Samma had
agreed to stay. But it had been a serious mistake. When Clyde had
spoken of her working for her keep, he meant just that, she'd found.
She received no wage for her work at the hotel. The only money
she earned was through her sketches, and although she saved as
much as she could towards her airfare back to the United Kingdom,
it was a wretchedly slow process.
But even if she'd been reasonably affluent, she would still have
been disenchanted with Cristoforo. It was a small island, socially
and culturally limited, with a hideously high cost of living. And,
when the holiday season ended, it was dull.
And working at the hotel, and more particularly in the small
nightclub Clyde had opened in the grounds, Samma had been
shocked when she'd experienced the leering attentions of many of
the male guests. Coming from the comparative shelter of
boarding-school, almost overnight she'd discovered that to most of
the male visitors to the island she was an object, rather than a
person, and she'd been revolted by the blatant sexism of their
attitude to her. She'd soon learned to hide herself in a shell of aloof
reserve which chilled the ardour of the most determined predator.
But she was aware that, by doing so, she was also cutting herself
off from the chance of perhaps forming a real and lasting
relationship. However, this was a risk she had to take, although she
was forced to admit she'd never been even mildly attracted by any
of the men who stayed at the hotel, or hung round the bar at the
Black Grotto club.
One day, she thought, one day, when she got back to England and
found herself a decent job, and a life of her own, she would meet
someone she could be happy with. Until then, she'd stay insulated in
her cocoon of indifference.
Except when Hugo Baxter was around, she reminded herself
uneasily. He seemed impervious to any rebuff, seeking her out,
taking any opportunity to touch her, Samma's skin crawled at the
thought. One thing was certain, she was keeping well away from
the Black Grotto tonight.
She handed over her completed portrait, and glanced at her watch.
It was nearly noon, and people were drifting away in search of
lunch and shade. Time for a break, Samma thought, getting to her
feet and stretching vigorously. As she lifted her arms above her
head, she was suddenly aware she was being watched, and she
looked round.
Startled, her eyes met another gaze, dark, faintly amused and totally
male in its assessment of the thrust of her rounded breasts against
her brief cotton top, Samma realised in the embarrassed moment
before she looked away with icy disdain.
But she was left with a disturbing impression of height and strength,
and sun-bronzed skin revealed by a brief pair of cut-off denims. 'As
well as an absurd feeling of self-consciousness, she thought
resentfully.
She should be used to being looked at. In a community where most
people were dark-haired and dark-skinned, her pale skin and blonde
hair, as straight and shining as rain water, naturally attracted
attention, and usually she could cope with this.
But there had been something so provocatively and
deliberately—masculine about this stranger's regard that it had
flicked her on the raw.
And her antennae told her that he was still looking. She picked up
her sketch-block, and began drawing at random—the neighbouring
stall, where Mindy, its owner, was selling a view of the marina to a
tourist couple who were trying and failing to beat him down over
the price. But her fingers, inexplicably, were all thumbs, fudging the
lines, and she tore the sheet off, crumpling it irritably.
She stole a sideways glance under her lashes, making an
assessment of her own. He was leaning on the rail of one of the
sleekest and glossiest of the many craft in the marina, and looking
totally out of place, she decided critically, although she supposed he
was good-looking, in a disreputable way—that was, if you liked
over-long and untidy black hair, and a great beak of a nose which
looked as if it had been broken at least once in its career.
He was the image, she thought contemptuously, of some old-time
pirate chief, surveying the captive maiden from his quarter-deck. He
only needed a cutlass and a parrot—and she would give them to
him!
Her mouth curving, she drew the preliminary outline, emphasising
the stranger's nose almost to the point of caricature, adding extra
rakishness with earrings, and a bandanna swathed round that shock
of dark hair. She transformed his expression of faint amusement
into an evil leer, gave the parrot on his shoulder a squint, then
pinned the sketch up on the display board behind her with a
flourish.
He would never see it, of course. The boat's owner had clearly left
him on watch, and probably with good reason. Only a thief bent on
suicide would want to tangle with a physique that tough, and
shoulders that broad.
She had a quick, retentive eye for detail, but it annoyed her just the
same to find how deeply his image had impressed itself on her
consciousness. One eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation and a quick
sideways glance, and she'd been able to draw him at once, whereas
she normally allowed herself a much more searching scrutiny before
she began. Yet this sketch had worked, even if it was a shade
vindictive.
And, in its way, it turned out to be a good advertisement. People
strolling past stopped to laugh, and stayed to be drawn themselves.
They seemed to like the element of cartoon she'd incorporated,
although Mindy, loping across with a slice of water melon for her,
raised his brows when he saw it, and murmured, 'Friend of yours,
gal?'
'Figment of my imagination,' she retorted cheerfully.
Another swift glance had revealed, to her relief, that the rail of the
boat was now deserted. Doubtless he'd remembered the owner
didn't pay him for standing about, eyeing up the local talent, she
thought, scooping a handful of hair back from her face with a slim,
suntanned hand.
She was putting the finishing touches to the portrait of a pretty
redhead with amazing dimples, undoubtedly on honeymoon with
the young man who watched her so adoringly, when a shadow fell
across her pad.
Samma glanced up in irritation, the words 'Excuse me' freezing
unspoken on her lips.
Close to, he was even more formidable. Distance had cloaked the