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Authors: Jane Beaufort

Tags: #Mills & Boon Romance 1974

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BOOK: Love in High Places
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CHAPTER TWO

The
hotel dining-room was very splendid, and it was very full when Lou made her entrance with Valentine in attendance.

Heads were turned to look at them as the
maître
d’hôtel
himself bowed them to Lou’s table near one of the big windows. It was also in a corner, and further protected by a tall pillar and a torrent of colourful growth that was trained to climb upwards from the base of the pillar; but appreciative eyes peeped round the barricade at Lou in her shadowy black dress. There were iridescent green stones caught up in the folds of darkness, and they matched her emerald ear-rings, and her bracelet. Her shapely white shoulders were most effectively bare of any ornament, and her hair was brushed to one side of her head and swung in a lopsided golden cascade.

“I shall go to bed early,” she announced, when she had consulted the menu. “I can do with an early night.”

Valentine, who had been half hoping that they would sit and look on at the dancers

even if Lou was not in the mood to dance

repressed a pang of disappointment. She was wearing a very simple dress that had once belonged to her employer, but its tawny-gold colouring was peculiarly suited to her pale skin and arresting hair, and more than one of the pairs of eyes that were watching them dwelt on her. An Englishman who had arrived at the hotel only a few days before, and who was placed quite near to them, smiled at her suddenly across the vase of flowers on his table, and without quite realising what she was doing Valentine smiled back. Then her colour rose, and Lou regarded her quizzically.

“Why are you blushing?” she asked. “Because someone looked at you?” She glanced round to see who the admirer was, recognised the Englishman as a man she had talked to that afternoon on the snow slopes, and sent him a casual blue-eyed smile on her own account. “That’s a fellow-countryman of yours, and a well
-
known novelist. You ought to get together some time,” she advised. “He obviously likes your type.”

Then she grew petulant and pushed aside her plate, declaring she was too bored to eat, and the distant ballroom orchestra, playing a Viennese waltz, set her gold
-
covered feet moving restlessly under the table. She explained that, the night before, Alex had taught her to waltz in the Viennese manner, revolving continuously in a breathlessly glorious fashion until everything whirled round one

unless one kept one’s eye on the gentleman’s tie, and resisted the temptation to lose oneself in the liquid darkness of his eyes

and she was eager to try the experience again.

To Valentine, with the stars pressing close to the window, and the frosty brilliance of the snow outside, the thought of having such an experience once in this warm, flower-scented atmosphere was an oddly pulse
-
quickening one just then.

Perhaps because she was not likely to have it with the Baron von Felden, and even if the attractive Englishman asked her to dance ... he was looking her way again, with increasing interest
...
she couldn’t possibly agree, being what she was. Cinderella dressed up in borrowed plumes (or rather, cast-off ones!) and granted an evening off. For to-morrow she would be so much at the beck and call of her employer that it might be an offence if she stopped to talk with one of the guests.

Although on the other hand, if she happened to be in a good mood, Lou might hand her a whole day’s holiday quite graciously!

Without waiting for the sweet, or the coffee, Lou lighted a cigarette and ordered her to talk to her.

“Talk about anything,” she insisted. “Yourself, or
... anything! But preferably yourself! There must be a lot I don’t know yet about you.”

This was so true that Valentine gazed at her thoughtfully. Several months before, in America, she and Lou had run across one another in a New York beauty parlour, and but for Lou’s intervention Valentine would have lost a much-needed job on the spot. She had most unfortunately used the wrong rinse on Lou’s hair

even more unfortunate than it sounded, for the manageress was merely giving her a trial, and Lou was a special customer

and while the result was not quite disastrous, it would have been inflamed anyone less unpredictable than Lou. She had actually laughed, and pleaded for Valentine to be given another chance, and because the manageress could not afford to offend the only daughter of an Oil King, Valentine was given another chance, and she and Lou became in short space of time quite firm friends.

It was really an extraordinary relationship that grew up between them, for Lou confided in the English girl to such an extent that Valentine frequently felt embarrassed, and invited her to lunch at the Morgan’s palatial New York home. Then she invited her for the week-end, found out all about her

or as much as
Valentine cared that anyone should find out about her

and offered her a job. First as companion-secretary, and then as companion-personal maid.

Valentine often wished she had more talent for typing letters and receiving dictation than she had for adjusting hemlines and invisibly mending lace underwear, for until Lou discovered how invaluable she was in the latter capacity she had had more status. Her father, if he had been still alive, would have felt less horrified to know that his daughter was earning her own living in a very down-to-earth manner if she could have been categorised the equivalent of a black-coated worker, and not transformed into someone whose task it was to turn the bathroom taps, and keep them running at just the right temperature, and brush a golden cloud of hair night and morning (and wash and set it at least three times every week!).

Not that Valentine herself minded, for it was dull typing letters, and she took a kind of pride in performing a miraculously neat darn. And in America it didn’t seem greatly to matter what she did, so long as she was left in obscurity. But when they went off to Europe, taking in London on the way, she began to feel differently about the freakishness of Fate.

In London she and her father had once lived very happily together. There was a certain tall town house which she did not dare go near in case it should bring back all too vividly days that were dead and done with. And in the pleasant countryside, quite close to London there was another house beside the river
...

She had prayed that Lou would not want to see too much of England, or linger too long, and fortunately the American girl had had other plans, and they had gone on to Paris, where there was less likelihood of someone who had once known Valentine well bumping into her accidentally and demanding to know where she had been hiding herself. And after Paris there was Monte Carlo and Nice, then Florence and Rome, where they passed the strangest Christmas Valentine had ever known, and Lou became involved with an Italian prince who was so plainly after her money that even she recognised she had had a lucky escape when another heiress caught his roving Italian eye.

And now they were high up in the mountains of Austria, so far from the weathered thatch of an Oxfordshire village beside the Thames, and the hum of Piccadilly, that Valentine felt she could safely draw breath again, and take a certain amount of pleasure in her new and altered life.

For one discovery she had made was that there are moments of happiness in every way of life, even moments of satisfaction and exaltation. One did not need to be rich and secure to enjoy a sunset, and the beauties of the world are free for everyone to gaze at. She could go out in the early morning with nothing at all in her pocket, but the feel of the sun and the wind on her face could make her suddenly quite content.

There were also moments when she was not content

when she knew there were a great many things that she secretly craved

but these were controllable moments. The one thing she found it extraordinarily difficult to do was talk about herself, and Lou’s curiosity about her was aroused at regular intervals. She tapped impatiently with her scarlet-tipped fingers on the fid of her delicate toy of a platinum and diamond-encrusted cigarette-case while she waited for some diversion for her thoughts, and Valentine was saved by the tall Englishman somewhat diffidently approaching their table.

He accorded them each a diffident little bow, and then addressed himself to Lou.

“I was wondering whether you would be so very kind as to have coffee and a liqueur with me ... both of you, of course!” he added hastily. “In one of the lounges, or the ballroom if you would prefer it.”

Lou regarded him without very much interest or appreciation.

“That’s sweet of you, Mr. Haversham,” she murmured languidly. Then she introduced Valentine. “This is Miss Brown. Val, Mr. Giles Haversham, writer of thrilling detective stories.”

“I love detective stories,” Valentine told him, as she gazed at him shyly.

He had very white teeth, and eyes that were reassuringly grey and kind. Why was it, she wondered, that grey eyes were nearly always kind ... unless they were a certain steely type of grey. Compared with lustrous dark ones, that had the power to confound you, the fact that you could trust them came right out at you.

She did not know that inwardly he smiled as he thought that, if she had been born plain “Miss Brown
,”
then his powers of detection were decidedly at fault.

Lou rose and smiled at them both dismissingly.

“I don’t think I feel like staying down here any longer,” she said. “You two can go off and dance if you like, and I’ll go straight up to my room. After all, you’re both English, so you’ll probably have a lot to talk about while you dance!”

Valentine looked at her uncertainly, but Lou touched her cheek in a condescending manner.

“Go off and enjoy yourself, my child. I’ll put myself to bed!”

Giles Haversham stood politely staring after her as she whirled away from them in a cloud of green-flecked draperies and French perfume, and then he said a little bewilderedly to Valentine.

“Do you normally put her to bed
?

Valentine laughed.

“I’m her personal maid, so of course I do.”

“You don’t look like a personal maid to me,” he remarked, as he regarded her gravely; “but, then, I didn’t think many people had them nowadays, so I wouldn’t honestly know how much a rapidly disappearing species looks when it actually exists.” He placed a hand lightly under her elbow and guided her towards the ballroom. “Apparently it’s quite permissible for red hair and golden eyes to enter into the picture!”

She glanced up at him with a smile in her eyes.

“Auburn hair, Mr. Haversham, if you please! It was red in my schooldays, but those happened a long time ago.”

“Or it seems a long time ago, is that it?” he asked gently, as he placed her in a chair that was companionably arranged alongside another, with a table between them, on the fringe of the dance floor. He ordered coffee, and although he couldn’t tempt her with a liqueur

“Not even something colourful and innocuous, like
crème
de merit he?”

he toasted their better acquaintance in brandy that looked rather lonely at the bottom of a huge glass, and continued to regard her with thoughtful interest. “I take it your ‘employer’

is that the correct term
?—
has other uses for you, apart from those involved with assisting her to retire, since you appear to be on fairly good terms with one another
?
Very friendly terms!”

She nodded.

“Miss Morgan is an American, and the Americans are not sticklers for formality. Also I believe she quite likes me.”

“I haven’t a doubt of it,” he assured her, “since she asks you to dine with her.” He offered her his cigarette case and lighted one for her. “Miss Morgan is the daughter of Martin C. Morgan, the oil man, isn’t she? An almost painfully wealthy man, and I’ve no doubt the suitors are thick as flies wherever she goes.”

“The would-be suitors,” Valentine corrected. “Lou is no fool, and she keeps most of them at a distance.”

“But she’s a highly glamorous young woman, and that can’t be too easy. It is part of your job to fend some of them off? Take the overflow and relieve the tension
?

She smiled

“Lou was bored to-night, and she asked me to have dinner with her. I don’t often do so.”

“I’m very glad you did to-night,” he told her, with strange earnestness. “I’ve glimpsed you several times in the few days I’ve been here, but you always seem to be terribly preoccupied and have no time at all for light dalliance. Don’t you believe in it
?
... Light dalliance, I mean!”

Her expression grew serious.

“I’ve a job to do, Mr. Haversham. I’m not here to waste my employer’s time.”

“But you must have
some
time of your own, and tonight you’ve have been encouraged to dance.” He stood up, his grey eyes warming her with the eagerness of their invitation. “Shall we
?
I’m not very good at cha-cha-ing, and that sort of thing, but I’ll have great respect for your toes.”

Actually, he was quite a good dancer, and if the modern rhythms defeated him a little he was quite masterly in the old-fashioned waltz. Valentine, drifting dreamily in his arms, remembered how little she expected to be sampling this excellent floor to-night, wondering whether she dare ask him if they could attempt the Viennese method of whirling round the room

especially when the orchestra struck up the inevitable “Blue Danube”

but decided against it when she caught sight of Lou on the edge of the floor.

Lou had evidently decided against going to bed, and was sipping a drink in company with one of her numberless admirers in the hotel. Rather an elderly man, with patches of white hair at his temples and a generally distinguished appearance, who was often to be seen talking with the Baron von Felden, he was plainly endeavouring to convince Lou that the Baron’s absence was not a complete disaster. And although she still looked bored, she was obviously thawing a little under the influence of so much flattery, and was not prepared to find the Baron standing suddenly at her elbow, looking down sardonically at his fellow-countryman with the monocle.

The latter uttered an expression of pretended disgust, and flourished the monocle. Lou turned wonderfully, gloriously pink

like the dawn on a high peak

and her blue eyes blazed with delight. She actually sprang to her feet.

“Alex!” she cried, and anyone who had any doubts at all of the fatal attraction the handsome Austrian

an acquaintance of such a short time!

had for her must
have had those doubts resolved instantaneously.

For the time being, at any rate, he was her sun, moon and stars, and lesser men simply hadn’t a chance. Not a hope of persuading that particular heiress to endow them with all her worldly goods!

“But you didn’t even warn me you might get back tonight,” she approached him, as she clung with both hands to the sleeve of his coat. “Alex, that was too bad!”

“Nevertheless, I’m here.” he returned, and to make up for a certain soberness of tone he lifted one of her hands off his sleeve and kissed it. “Here, and completely at your service,
Liebling
,” he told her, smiling at her a little crookedly. His dark eyes were less brilliant than usual, and there was something jaded about his whole expression. “Don’t run away, Willi,” he requested the older man. “I feel like a celebration with champagne.”

“Why?” Lou asked quickly. “Were things better than you expected to find them at your
schloss
?

“No worse,” he answered, and signalled the waiter. Willi

otherwise Count Wilhelm von Hochenberg

looked suddenly acutely depressed.

“Nothing that is really bad ever gets better ... without a considerable effort,” he observed. “Or a smile from Providence,” he added, looking thoughtfully at Lou.

BOOK: Love in High Places
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