Authors: Penny Jordan
Alpha-men might be arrogant and demanding, entrenched in their maleness with all that that meant, but there was no denying their sexual appeal, she acknowledged, with a small sigh of envy for her boss's wifeâthe wife to whom everyone knew he was devoted. That was the thing. Once you'd tamed an alpha-male and he had decided on commitment he was yours for life.
Upstairs Saul, oblivious to her existence, closed his laptop and put it into its leather case, reaching for his BlackBerry as he did so. His intention was to tell Giselle that he was on his way home. But then he paused and just looked at the phone, before restoring it to his pocket.
Why? Why was he not phoning Giselle? Surely not because he thought that if he didn't he would catch her out in some way? Saul didn't much like the direction his thoughts were taking and what it said about himâany more than he liked the instinctive hard edged alpha-male egotism that was pushing aside the far less judge-mental, questioning and downright suspicious side of his nature that marriage to Giselle had encouraged within him. But Giselle's behaviour last night had been so out of characterâlike her suggestion that she came to the UK on her own. She had been justifiably angry about his deathbed promise to Aldoâmade without consulting her. Did that meanâ¦? What? That she no longer loved him? That she would be unfaithful to him? That she wasn't honest enough to discuss her feelings with
him? If there was one thing that Saul could not tolerate it was dishonesty. In anyone.
Â
Giselle was in the bedroom when Saul unlocked the front door and silently glanced into the other empty rooms before making his way there. She was dressed and ready to go out, and would indeed have already left the house prior to Saul's arrival if she hadn't been distracted by the fact that the packaging from the pregnancy testing kits and the kits themselves were still in her handbag. She would have to discard everything discreetlyâ
secretly,
she corrected herself, with sharp dislike of her own ongoing need for deception. Her fingers closed round one of the positive tests. Unable to stop herself, she took it out of her handbag, driven by her longing for things to be different to look at it again, as though by doing so she could somehow change what it said and undo everything that it meant.
It was whilst she was looking at it that Saul pushed open the bedroom door. Immediately Giselle thrust the tube back into her handbag, her face changing colour as she did so, and her voice unnaturally high and strained as she asked, âWhat are you doing back at home? I thought you were going to be in the office all day.'
âPerhaps I wanted to see my wife and find out why she turned away from me in bed last night,' Saul answered without emotion, his gaze tracking her loss of colour and obvious apprehension. She had put something into her handbag when he had walked in. What had it been? Her phone with a telltale message on it? A letter?
âI told you. I was tired,' Giselle responded.
âToo tired to be bothered with me, but not too tired to go out today. Where are you going, by the way?'
âNowhere.'
Saul's eyebrows rose.
âI was going to the bank, that's all. I wanted to draw out some money. I thought that my great-aunt might need some new clothes and I could take her out and buy them for her whilst I'm up there,' Giselle told him, flustered by his look into saying something that was only partly the truth but that concealed the real reason she was going out.
It was a plausible enough explanation, Saul acknowledged, but for the fact that Giselle hadn't looked at him once whilst she had given it. In fact she was desperately avoiding making eye contact with him.
Beneath the suspicion that had brought him home and the anger that was now burning inside him, Saul could also feel pain. Of all the people he knew, Giselle was the one person he had believed would not lie to him. Not ever.
âHave lunch with me, and then we'll go to the bank together,' he offered, testing her. â
No.
I mean, I'd love toâbut I know how busy you must be.'
That immediate no had been a bad mistake, Giselle knew. She could see that from Saul's reaction. He was now striding towards her, a very grim look indeed on his face. In her panic her handbag slipped from her perspiration-damp hands. The not-quite-closed clasp gave way as it hit the floor, the impact disgorging some
of the bag's contents in a tangle of packaging, lipstick, andâ Her heart leapt inside her chest on a surge of wild panic as she spied the telltale test lying half-concealed by its packaging.
Frantically she dropped to her knees, but she was too late. Saul had got there first and was gathering everything up. Kneeling on the carpet, facing him, Giselle saw first the confusion and then the realisation dawn in his gaze as he picked up the test kit and looked at it. Then he turned to look at her, to demand almost too quietly, âDoes this mean what I think it means?'
âIf you're asking if I'm pregnant, then, yes, I am,' Giselle was forced to confirm. âDon't look at me like that,' she begged him. âIt wasn't deliberate. Being pregnant is the last thing I want. It's the last thing I've ever wanted.'
âThen how come you
are?
' Saul demanded bluntly, as he fought against the shock he was too angry and proud to allow her to see. Giselle had deceived him. She had become pregnant totally against his wishes whilst pretending to agree with him about them not having any children. He had trusted her and she had deceived him. She had tricked him. That was something Saul's pride could not tolerate.
âI don't know how it happened.' Giselle defended herself. âI wasn't very well just after we flew back from the island, and sickness can effect the efficiency of the pill. It's the truth,' she insisted, when she saw the way he was looking at her.
âHow long have you been pregnant?' Saul asked grimly.
âJust over two months, I think.'
âTwo months?' His anger and disbelief was plain. âAm I supposed to believe that you've known for two months that you could be pregnant but you've waited until now to find out? You lied to me, Giselle. You lied to me about not wanting a child and now you've tried to trick meâ¦'
âNo, that is not true. I don't want a child any more than you do. I was on the pill. I had no reason to be suspicious or concerned⦠I just assumed at first that all the upset of Aldo's death was responsible for the fact that I'd missed a period. There haven't been any other signs, like early-morning sickness. I wish that there had been, then all this would be behind me and⦠I had no reason to suspect that I could be pregnant,' she repeated. âAnd as for tricking you⦠Tricking you into what? Being a father when you don't want to be? Do you really think I would do that, when I know just as you do how important it is for a child to be loved? Yes, I lied to you about the reason I wanted to come to London, but that was only because I needed to find out if my suspicions were correct.'
There was too much conviction in her voice for her to be lying, Saul recognised, and some of his anger abated as he recognised that his outburst had been the result of shock rather than the fact that he genuinely believed Giselle might have tried to trick him into them having a child. He even felt guilty about his outburst. The truth was that he couldn't bear to think of Giselle feeling that she needed to keep anything from him.
âAnd now that you know that they were correct, when were you planning to tell me?'
âNever,' Giselle answered him truthfully
âNever?' Now he was shockedâand hurt. âYou would have kept something so important from me, when we've always agreed on the importance of mutual trust?'
âFor your sake. I didn't want to burden you.' She hadn't wanted him to suffer the dreadful guilt and grief that were now afflicting her. But, manlike, she suspected that Saul would look on it as his role to protect her, not the other way around. âI didn't feel it was right to involve you,' she continued, adding miserably, âThere wouldn't have been any point. I know your views. Your reactions now have underlined them. The problem is mine, not yours, since it is contained within
my
body.'
âAnd you would never have said anything to me?'
Giselle stood up and walked to the window. âIt's my problem,' she repeated. âI'm the one who is pregnant, so it's up to me to make the arrangements. Toâ¦to make things as we agreed they should be.'
Saul discovered that he didn't very much like the image of himself her words were conjuring up in his own conscience.
âIs it? Or were those conversations you instigated about my need for an heir brought about because you already knew that you were carrying my child?'
His pride was making him defend himself from the unpalatable image her words had caused him by attacking her. But his pride could not ease his conscience, nor his concern for Giselle herself.
âNo!' White-faced, Giselle turned to confront him.
âNo. You keep doing this. You keep accusing me of secretly wanting a child and forcing one on you when that's the last thing I would do.'
The look on Saul's face said that he didn't wholly believe her. Seeing it, Giselle felt her self-control snap. Pain flooded through her, undermining her strength and her intentions. She couldn't bear any more. She told him fiercely, âYou are
so
wrong, Saul. So very, very wrong. And I'll tell you why. Even if I did want a child I can't have one. And that's why I instigated those conversations about your “need for an heir,” as you put it. Because if you
had
wanted one thenâ¦'
âThen what?' Saul demanded. âI want the truth, Giselle, all of it.'
She was caught in a trap of her own making, Giselle realised. âThen you would have had to find someone else to have that child. Because I could not be its motherâfor its sake and for yours,' she told him wildly. âAnd as for the truthâ¦'
Tears stung her eyes like minute pinpricks of glass. She had fought so hard and for so long to keep her secrets, so that she could protect those she lovedâfirst her mother and her father, and now Saulâbut her strength was gone, sucked away by Saul's accusations and the shock of her pregnancy. Still, she tried desperately to cling on to her determination never to let anyone else know what tormented her.
âYou know the truth. I am pregnant with a child that you don't want and I can't have. I intend to end that pregnancy so that I can keep the promise I made to you.'
âYou're lying to me, Giselle. There is something more
to this. I can sense it, no matter how much you might try to deny it.'
When she looked at Saul she could see hostility and wariness in his eyes, along with disbelief. The pain of seeing those emotions in the eyes of the man she loved, in the eyes that normally looked on her with love, took the last of her strength from her. She was too weak to keep back the truth any more, and part of her longed to be rid of the burdenâto be able to stand free of it no matter what the cost. She owed it to Saul to stand away from the protection of hiding her deceit and let him see herânot just as she was, but as what she could become.
âVery well,' she told him tiredly. âIf you want the truth then you shall have it.'
And then she would see him look at her with horror and rejection before he walked away from her for ever.
She took a deep breath and Saul stood up. âI lied to you by default, Saul, when I let you think you knew there was all there was to know about my mother and my childhood.'
Whatever he had been expecting to hear it wasn't this, Saul acknowledged. They had surely dealt with all the trauma Giselle had suffered through her mother's death and that of her baby brother in a road traffic accident before they had married. âIf you are going to tell me that you still feel to blame because you were safe and unharmed whilst they were killed in the accidentâ¦'
He didn't know that what she carried within her would destroy their lives together and their love. He
didn't know because she had lied to him. He did not know what she really was: a potential madwoman and a child-killer.
'It wasn't an accident.'
T
HE FLAT CONVICTION
in Giselle's voice made the hairs rise up on the nape of Saul's neck. There was a haunted, agonised look on her face, a bleakness and pain that made him want to go to her, but the minute he stepped towards her she stepped back, lifting her hand as though to ward him off.
âGiselle,' he protested. âI know how badly their deaths affected youâquite understandably.'
As though she hadn't heard him Giselle continued in the same flat tone. âMy mother committed suicide. She took her own life and my baby brother's life and she would have taken mine as well if she could. She tried to beforeâ¦before my brother was bornâwhen I was only a baby myself. She'd taken some pills and she was going to smother me, but my father found her and stopped her.
âIt was having us that did itâhaving children. It sent her mad. Lots of women suffer from postnatal depression, but my mother's was very bad. A form of psychosis. She couldn't help it. She thought that by killing us and herself she would be keeping us safe. She was supposed to be taking some medicine to make her well. My father
had even got a nurse living in. She was supposed to be there to help my mother with the baby, but really she was there to protect him. You see, the specialist Dad consulted had told him that after Mum tried to commit suicide the first time it wouldn't be wise for her to have another child. According to my great-aunt, though, after she'd recovered from my birth and the mental problems it caused her, she wanted to show my father that she was completely well. She wanted to have another child to prove to him that
I
had been the cause of her problems because I was a difficult child. My father loved her so much that in the end he gave in.
âApparently throughout her pregnancy she was on top of the world. I was too young to remember. She was so excited about the birth that my father thought everything would be all right. He loved her, you see, and he believed her when she told him that it was me being a difficult child that had caused her depression.
âShe didn't want to have Nurse Edwards living with us. She wanted to do everything for Thomas herself. Then one day Nurse Edwards found him lying face-down in his cot, struggling to breathe. My mother said that
I'd
done it, because I was jealous of him. She wanted my father to send me away. I can remember him talking to me about it. Telling me that I must be an especially good girl and not upset my mother. He said that he wanted me to love Thomas and always make sure that he was safe and well.'
Giselle paused to look out of the window, but Saul knew that her thoughtsâthe whole of her, in factâwas back in the past.
There had been several times during her outburst when he had wanted to stop her, to comment and question, and most of all to reach for her and reassure her, but he had made himself stay silent, concerned that any interruption from him would cause her to stop talking and refuse to continue. So many different emotions had gripped him whilst he listened to her. Initially there had been astonishment, then a shocked awareness of how she must have suffered as a child, followed by anger that she'd had to suffer. He'd felt guilt too, because he hadn't realised that there might be more to her mother's death than she had told him.
âThe day it happened my father was called out unexpectedly to an emergency,' Giselle continued quietly. âIt was Nurse Edwards' day off. Before he left the house my father told me he wanted me to promise him that I would look after my mother and Thomas. I said that I would.' She stopped speaking again, before turning to Saul and telling him emotionally, âI gave him my promise but I failed to keep it. When my mother said that we had to go out I didn't want to go, but she insisted. I should have stopped herâ'
âNo, Giselleâ' Saul broke in, forced to when he saw how upset she was, stepping forward and continuing to step forward when she backed away from him, until she couldn't move any further because of the wall behind her. âNo.' He put his hands on her arms, his heart aching for her when he felt the rigid tension of her body.
âYes.' She overruled him. âYes, I should have stopped her.'
âYou were six years old,' Saul reminded her, repeating
what he had said to her when she had first revealed to him her guilt over her mother's and brother's deaths.
âI promised my father and I broke that promise. I gave
you
a promise too, Saul, and I promise you that I won't break that promise. I should have told you about my mother before we got married. My great-aunt believes that I did, but I was so afraid that you wouldn't want me any more if you knew. What man wants to marry a woman with madness in her genes?'
âPostnatal depression isn't madness,' Saul corrected her. âFrom what I've read it happens to many women, and it can be treated, cured.'
âNot always. Not when it's as serious as it was with my motherâand, according to my great-aunt,
her
mother before her, although she did not suffer from it quite as badly. But then it wasn't recognised so readily in those days. My father was warned that my mother's case was serious, because of her behaviour after my birth.
âAll my life I've told myself that I can never fall in love or risk having someone fall in love with me, because it wouldn't be fair to them. I knew that I could not risk having a child I might try to kill, as my mother tried to kill meâand succeeded in killing my brother. And then I met you, and I fell in love with you so fast that it was too late for me to do anything to stop it. But not too late to stop you from being affected by theâ¦the faulty destructive genes I've inherited. You said that you didn't want children and would never want them, and I thought that fate was sparing me because I'd been
punished enough. I was so happy, even though I knew that I wasn't being honest with you.'
âYou should have told me.'
âYes, I should,' Giselle agreed. âBecause if I had you would have been spared this. You would never have married me.'
âThat wasn't what I meant. You should have told me because I love you, Giselle, and it hurts me to think that you've suffered all this without me knowing. It hurts my pride as a man to know that you have shouldered such a burden. As the man who loves you, I should have been shouldering it with you. It hurts me too that you felt you couldn't trust me or my love enough to be honest with me and let me share your burden.'
As Saul spoke tears began to fill Giselle's eyes and slip down her face. Very tenderly Saul wiped them away, drawing her carefully into his arms.
âYou must have been so hurt and so afraid.' He could hardly bear to think of the torment she must have suffered as a child, not understanding her mother's behaviour, but feeling guilty after her death because she hadn't saved her, and then later as she grew up and began to understand the realities and complexities of the causes of what had happened. He ached to be able to do something to help her. âI can't think of anyone more sane than you are, my love. Just because your motherâ'
Giselle stopped him. âI dare say she was sane too before she had me. She must have been, because my father would have known it if she wasn't.' She looked at him, and then told him wearily, âNow you know why the last thing I would ever do would be to try and
conceive by accident. I was so afraid when I realised that I might be pregnant.' She had started to tremble in his arms. âI wanted it not to be true so badly. You don't know how it makes me feel to know that if I had a child I might end up wanting to kill it. My mother wanted to kill us because she felt it was the only way she could protect us from the pain of being alive. Like I've already told you, it's a form of madness. A form of madness that can be passed on from mother to daughter and granddaughter.'
Her voice softened with emotion and love. âI'll be honest with you, Saul, had things been different I would have loved to have children. Especially your children. I would have loved to nurture them and watch them growing up to be everything that I already see in you. But that can never be. I couldn't bear knowing that I might pass it onâthat another generation, my own child, would have to carry the burden I've had to carry. The fact that you do not want children has been quite literally my salvation. Just as your love has been the very best thing in my life.'
Saul could only hold her. He felt he could barely begin to understand what she had already gone through even before this accidental pregnancy. Her courage and her selflessness humbled him. He could tell from the longing in her voice that to give up something so deeply wanted in order to protect others must surely be the greatest moral bravery of all.
âYou should have told me all of this before. It should have been something we dealt with together.'
âIt isn't your problem or your responsibility.'
âOf course it is. You are the woman I love. Do you really think I would want you to go through this on your own? What kind of man do you think I am, Giselle? I thought you knew me.'
âI do know you. I know that you don't want children and that I must not have them. I know where my duty and my responsibility lie, Saul. I've got an appointment in a few days' time at a clinic here in London. It was the first one I rang and I decided to go to them.'
Saul held her even more tightly. Her grief and despair touched his own emotions so forcibly that it was as though he felt her pain with her. âIt needn't be like this,' he told her. âYes, I know what I said, and what we agreed, but that was before⦠I can't pretend that I wanted you to become pregnant, but now you are. Why don't we seek proper expert medical advice about your mother's postnatal depression?'
âThere's no point. I know what she did. I know what I might do myself. Don't you see that, Saul?' Giselle could feel her panic growing, and with it her fear. She felt as though she was incapable of thinking logically already, and their child hadn't even been born yet.
Their child.
Pain wrenched at her heart.
âAll right, we won't talk about it right now,' Saul soothed her.
âWhere are you going?' Giselle demanded frantically, when he released her and moved away from her.
âI want to ring Moira to tell her that I won't be in for the rest of the day. I'll make us both a cup of coffee, and then if you want to we can talk some more.'
âThere's nothing else to say,' Giselle told him. âYou
know it all now.' She closed her eyes and said despairingly, âI just wish so much that this hadn't happened.'
No more than he wished the same, Saul acknowledged. Not for his own sake now, but for hers.
Â
In the end Saul decided that it would do Giselle good to get out of the house, so he drove her to Richmond Park, relieved to see a faint smile touch her lips when she recognised when they were heading. She'd always loved the park, and they'd often come here to walk and talk together when they were in London.
At first Saul thought that he had done the right thing. He had forgotten, though, that the schools had closed for the half-term holiday, and watching Giselle wince at the sound of children's voices made him wish that he had chosen somewhere else, child-free.
When he looked at Giselle her eyes were filled with tears.
Children.
She ached so badly to be able to hold her own child. She felt so torn, so afraid. It was all very well for Saul to talk of consulting experts. They couldn't tell her anything she didn't already know. She had seen what severe postnatal depression could do. She had experienced its horror at first hand.
Saul pulled her in to his side, his arm round her waist. He loved her so much, and he felt guilty for not having sensed that she was withholding something from him that was hurting her so badly.
The panic inside Giselle was like a physical pain. And when, engrossed in her own thoughts, she slipped and lost her footing, her first instinct as Saul grabbed
her and held her steady before she fell was to place her hand protectively against her body, in defence of the life she was carrying within her. Fresh tears filled her eyes and spilled down onto her cheeks.
Giselle wasn't really hungry, but Saul insisted on driving down into Richmond so that they could eat at a small restaurant overlooking the river. He was going to cancel all his appointments and stay with Giselle until it was time to return to Arezzio, he told himself as he watched her toying with her food, her face white with despair and grief. He was desperately afraid for her, having seen the state she was in, but he dared not say so in case it made her feel worse.
More than anything else he believed that they needed to get some expert medical opinions from those best qualified to help them.
Â
It was gone ten o'clock when they got back, and Saul told Giselle, âYou look tired. Why don't you turn in? I won't disturb you if you want to get off to sleep. I've got some work I can do.'
He was saying that to her because of last night, Giselle knew. But right now she had never needed him more.
âNo,' she told him. âI want you to come with me. I want you, Saul. I need you.'
There was a pleading note in her voice that tore at his heart. Giselle, his Giselle, had no need to beg him to love her or to hold her.
They showered together, and Saul's touch on Giselle's body was both careful and watchful. When Giselle saw
him glance down at her still flat stomach she shook her head. âThere's nothing to see. If anything, I've actually lost weight.'
Because she'd been worrying, Saul recognised. But she was wrong. There
was
something to see. Her breasts felt different to his touch, filling his hands when he cupped them. Saul closed his eyes against the savagely sharp sense of grief that surged through him out of nowhere.
When he kissed her she clung to him almost in desperation, burying her face against his shoulder, her warm wet flesh slick against his own.