Read Devil and the Deep Sea Online
Authors: Sara Craven
shoulders. 'I'll be five minutes,' she called back shakily.
There was laughter in his voice, 'You are making me impatient,
Samantha. Are you sure you need no assistance—with a zip,
perhaps?'
'No.' She got the words out somehow. 'I can manage.'
'Quel dommage,'
he said still laughing, and she heard his footsteps
retreating.
Samma pulled out another dress at random, black, square-necked
and long-sleeved. It was chic, and its stark lines added an air of
fragility to her blonde looks, but it was not the dress she had
dreamed all day of wearing for him, of entrancing him in so that he
would forget Elvire for ever—the dress she'd imagined him
removing with passionate tenderness.
When she was ready, she surveyed herself. The happy colour in her
face, the light in her eyes had faded, she thought sadly. She looked
strained, wary again. What was it he'd once called her? 'A little cat
that has never known kindness.'
A little cat, she thought, that's been kicked too many times.
She let herself out on to the balcony and went along to Solange's
room. The little girl, propped up by pillows, was reading, her face
still tearstained. She glanced up with a mutinous thrust of her lower
lip, as Samma walked towards her, then her face sharpened with
surprise and disappointment.
'Where is your lovely dress?'
'I think you know' Samma kept her voice level. In the big bed,
Solange looked so small, so fragile to have inflicted such damage.
Solange frowned. 'I do not understand.'
'Then that makes two of us.' Samma sat down wearily on the edge
of the bed. She said, 'Solange, things can't go on like this. I thought
we had agreed no more tricks—although what you did to my dress
is worse than any trick.' She glanced round her. 'What did you
use—one of the knives from the kitchen? You'd better give it back
to me and . . .'
'What did I use for what?' Solange's face was small and pinched
suddenly. 'The dress—something has happened to it?'
'It's cut to ribbons—totally ruined, as you very well know.' Samma
swallowed. 'And this is something we can't keep between the two of
us. Papa is bound to find out eventually . . .'
'You think I cut your dress? But I did not. I could not! It was so
beautiful. I wanted to see you in it looking like a fairy princess. I
wanted to be with you when you wore it.' The anguish in the child's
voice was genuine. 'Samma, you must believe me. I would not do
such a thing, even if I was angry—oh, beyond words.'
'Nevertheless, it has happened, and someone must be responsible.'
Samma kept her voice level. 'Have you any idea who it could be?'
There was a perceptible hesitation, then Solange said in a
half-whisper,
'Le Diable . . .'
'Is dead,' Samma said patiently. 'My dress was damaged by
someone who's very much alive.'
Solange shivered. 'But he—makes things happen, I think. I said you
were in danger.'
Her gaze did not meet her stepmother's. Samma thought, She's
protecting someone—she must be. Someone who established a
right to her loyalty before I ever got here. But whom? Almost
against her will, she remembered the sound of that desolate, bitter
weeping from Elvire's room earlier. Had that lonely grief erupted
into malice, and a final despairing blow against the girl who was
supplanting her with Roche? It was almost as unpalatable an idea as
her original fear that it might have been Solange. She got up
wearily.
'We'll talk tomorrow,' she said quietly. 'Don't worry, I'll sort
something out.'
Solange gave a small, reluctant nod. 'But take care,' she said in that
same scared whisper.
Roche was waiting for Samma at the foot of the stairs. His brows
rose in autocratic enquiry when he saw her. 'Why that dress,
ma
belle,
and not the other?'
'The—the white dress needs some alteration,' Samma improvised
hastily. It wasn't altogether a lie, she thought sadly.
'It does?' Roche sounded faintly surprised, then smiled reluctantly.
'Eh bien,
I am well paid for my arrogance in thinking I could gauge
your size with total accuracy.' The dark eyes caressed her with
disturbing warmth. 'And what does it matter? You,
mignonne,
look
beautiful in anything—or nothing,' he added softly.
Swift heat invaded Samma's face, and she couldn't think of a single
thing to say in reply. And the silence continued as she sat beside
him in the car, as they sped towards St Laurent.
'Why so quiet?' he asked at last. 'Are you regretting your promise to
dine with me?'
'Oh, no!' The denial was so immediate and vehement that she
embarrassed herself.
'Then what is wrong?'
She swallowed. 'Oh—things.'
'Solange?'
Samma moved her shoulders evasively. 'Perhaps.'
He sent her a swift smile. 'I said she was not to accompany us,
ma
belle,
and I meant it. I want no one in your thoughts tonight but
myself.' His mouth twisted in self-deprecation. 'Desire for you
makes me selfish,
cherie.'
Her heart was beating like a drum. It was so difficult to remember
she wasn't the first one he'd beguiled with that seductive tenderness
in his voice, the first one to be taken to heaven or hell in his arms.
Although the hell would come later, she thought, biting her lip,
when he no longer desired her.
She found a voice from somewhere. 'Where are we going?'
'To the casino. I remember you once expressed an interest in it, and
I have an excellent chef there.' He shot her a glance. 'I hope you are
not disappointed?'
'Not at all.' If he'd suggested a visit to the local electricity plant she
would probably have been equally beguiled, she thought ruefully.
Her first sight of the casino made her gasp out loud. A great central
tower, flanked by ramparts and gun emplacements, it loomed over
the edge of the harbour like some predatory grey stone beast.
'What do you think?' Roche asked, as he swerved the car expertly
under its gate.
'It looks more like an armed fortress than a place of entertainment,'
Samma said rather dazedly, and he laughed.
'You are right,
ma belle.
It was, of course,
Le Diable's
stronghold.
But these days the victims come willingly to be pirated of their
loot.'
The forbidding exterior gave no clue to the luxury to be found
within, Samma soon discovered. While the character of the building
had been retained, no expense had been spared on the decor, and
other details. It was romantically and unashamedly opulent, Samma
thought, gazing upwards at crystal chandeliers, while her high heels
sank into deep piled carpet.
'The gaming-rooms and the restaurant are all on the first floor,'
Roche told her. 'And the administrative offices and my suite are on
the next floor. We will see them later.'
There was a table awaiting them in the bar, and an attentive waiter
hovering to serve drinks.
'A champagne cocktail.' Roche's smile was wicked as he handed
Samma her glass. 'I thought you should know what they really taste
like. Perhaps it will stop you from hurling it at me.' He ran a slow
finger down the curve of her cheek. 'I am still waiting to exact my
revenge for that little incident,' he murmured, and Samma's first
sampling of her drink was a gulp which nearly made her choke.
When she had recovered her breath, and her equilibrium, she began
to look around her, partly out of genuine curiosity, but mostly to
avoid the disturbing intensity of Roche's gaze.
The restaurant lay beyond an elegantly draped archway, and
Samma could see that nearly all the tables were already occupied
by sleek, bejewelled women and their dinner-jacket-clad escorts.
From somewhere she could hear dance music being played by a
small but sophisticated combo. The whole atmosphere breathed
money, and something more. There was a buzz, a genuine
excitement in the air that she supposed gambling for high stakes
engendered. She shrugged mentally. She herself had never been
able to see the attraction, but then she'd had Clyde as an awful
warning.
'What are you thinking?' Roche asked, his face quizzical.
She smiled faintly. 'Just wondering where all the rich people come
from.'
'I think they flock like migrating birds from one fashionable place to
another,' he said drily. 'At the moment, Grand Gay is a fashionable
place.'
'And if they suddenly change their minds?'
He laughed. 'Afraid I will let you starve,
mignonne?'
he mocked. 'I
won't. The casino is only one of my business interests—and the
least interesting. Like my black-hearted ancestor, I prefer boats.'
Samma felt a little shiver run through her. She said tautly, 'Could
we leave
Le Diable
out of the conversation for once, please? I've
had enough of him.'
'My own sentiments entirely. And we have other topics to discuss.'
He paused. 'Samantha, do you remember my telling you early in our
acquaintance that I had a mistress? It is time I explained to you
exactly what I meant.'
Her mouth went dry. 'There's no need. I—I know already.
You—you must know that I do.'
'What do I know?' His mouth twisted wryly. 'We are just beginning
to learn about each other,
ma chere.
I did not realise you found me
so transparent.'
'That's hardly the word I'd have used,' Samma said in a low voice,
her gaze fixed on her barely touched drink. She took a deep breath.
'Roche—I can't—share you.'
'You will not have to,' he said softly. 'That period in my life is over.
At the time it filled a need—a loneliness, or I thought it did.'
She thought, wincing, of Elvire's need, of Elvire's loneliness. Had
she spoken to Roche, told him she was leaving? No more secrets,
he had said, but there were still questions she dared not ask.
Perhaps there always would be. Perhaps this would be the price she
would pay for loving a man like Roche Delacroix.
She said huskily, 'Please can we talk about something else?'
'Later,' he said gently. 'First, we have a small matter of business to
transact.' He looked past her, lifting his hand in smiling
acknowledgement. As Samma glanced round, she saw Maitre
Giraud coming towards them.
'Madame Delacroix.' He bowed over her hand, his eyes dancing
with admiration. 'You look radiant—
ravissante.
I need not ask if
marriage is agreeable to you.'
Samma flushed, murmuring something in reply, while Jean-Paul
turned to Roche.
'I have the papers here,' he announced, tapping the document case
he was carrying. 'Have you explained your intentions to your bride?'
'Not yet.' Roche took her hand. 'I am making certain settlements on
your behalf,
cherie.
It is time your finances were placed on a
regular basis.'
'Is that really necessary?' she asked, unevenly.
'It is, believe me,' Jean-Paul put in. 'One must be prudent, after all,
and if anything were to happen to Roche . . .'
Samma shook her head violently. 'I don't even want to think about
that,' she said. 'Please—can't we leave things as they are?'
'That is impossible,' Roche told her gently. 'You are my wife,
ma
belle,
and your status requires safeguards. I wish to do this for you.'
Samma looked down at the table. 'It—it wasn't in our—original
agreement,' she reminded him, low-voiced.
His fingers clasped hers more strongly. 'That, I think is something
we shall have to re-negotiate.' There was a faint note of laughter in
his voice. 'When the papers are signed, and we are alone.' He got to
his feet. 'I suggest we waste no more time.'
Samma felt as if she was being swept away on some slow,
inexorable tide.
She was trapped, she thought, between the force of her own desire,
and the enigma Roche still represented. Caught, as she'd always
been, between the devil and the deep sea which waited to engulf
her.
I ought to run, she thought. Escape while I still have the
strength—before, like Elvire, I have no pride left.
They rode up to his office suite in a streamlined lift. Roche's room
was vast, dominated by a battery of television screens which
provided a panoramic view of the gaming-rooms below.
'Don't you trust your staff?' Samma stared at the screens, intrigued
in spite of herself at the hectic activity they displayed.