Margaret Way Temple of Fire
Margaret Way Temple of Fire
Margaret Way Temple of Fire
Margaret Way
CHAPTER ONE
SHE was on the point of collapse and she knew it; stripped of control
by this, the last shock. Instinctively she shut her eyes to right her
rocking world and when she opened them again, he had her firmly
by the arm, supporting her.
She could have wept for the outrage and indeed tears sprang to her
heavily fringed eyes.
'Fleur?
She couldn't, wouldn't answer him though she remembered his voice
as clearly as though he had spoken to her yesterday instead of a
lifetime ago.
She kept her face averted, feeling such incredulity, such antagonism,
her drooping body straightened, then tensed into breakability. She
had thrown a shadowy black veil over her flaming curls and against
its border of fine lace her white, white skin had a shocking pallor.
She could feel the anger beginning to tremble inside her and she had
to try and breathe deeply to settle herself.
Of all the things she had dreaded, she had never expected this.
The minister's voice flowed on like an actor's the frailty of life,
the inevitability of death. Just at the moment, it was Fleur's private
opinion she didn't even care. How dared he come here on this
terrible day? She was consumed by a bleak and bitter anger. His
presence was an insult, calculated by an expert. There was even a
touch of contempt in. the way he was holding her. It must seem he
was supporting her, when in reality they both knew she was a
hostage, isolated by his power.
He had always had an excess of everything looks, virility, a rapier
brain, money. ... She could feel his eyes on her profile, searching for
any flicker of emotion. Was there ever a time he had held her with
great tenderness? Memories nagged at her, needling in her brain. As
a small girl he had been her demi-god, so her disillusionment had
been profound.
Here was a man who could have been her friend, an idol found
wanting. Now she judged him with a different set of measures.
Don't touch me! It was amazing she wasn't screaming it aloud.
Under that strikingly handsome exterior was a monster. Never again
would she commit herself into his hands. Her mother was laid to rest
now and the pain was like a naked blade to the heart. One tragedy
had ended, another could never be allowed to begin.
She tried to fix her attention in a grey, forbidding world and her
small face was like a cameo canned in alabaster against the sombre
black veil. 'She wouldn't easily forgive herself for having to endure
his touch. Her heart quailed at the harshness of her mother's hatred
for this man. Unlike her mother, hatred made her feel sick. A
compassionate Lord had taught we must all forgive one another.
Would her mother forgive in her eternal silence?
A sob broke from her trembling mouth.
He seemed to hold her to him more closely, an action she couldn't
survive. Whirling clouds seemed to be coming for her, divining she
could stand no more, and just as the minister brought the service to a
close, Fleur precipitated her own small crisis and fainted.
When she became fully aware again, she was half lying in his arms.
They were in the back seat of a chauffeur-driven, luxuriously fitted
Silver Shadow that was gliding powerfully away from the place
where her mother had been lain to rest for ever.
'And how will you do that? she asked brokenly. 'Who could ever
forgive you?'
'For what?' He took her small hands and held them. 'Tell me, little
one, what is it I did that turned me into a monster?'
'I want no part of you,' she whispered, and it was true. 'For the past
eight years I've been punished by your misdeeds. You see, my
mother detested you!'
'Did she?' he asked with deadly gravity. 'How can you be sure of
that?'
'She hated you as I do!'
'No, Fleur.' His grasp tightened. 'You're all light where there were
dark places in her soul.'
'She was beautiful!' It was impossible to break away.
'Yet she created so much ugliness.'
'I've just buried her today,' she whispered.
'Forgive me.' He looked down at their joined hands bleakly. 'I've
come to ask you, Fleur, to come back to Waverley.'
'Never!' She was profoundly shocked. 'Does a man like you ask for
absolution?'
'In point of fact, we all do,' he said wearily. 'Don't be afraid of me,
Fleur. It is nothas never beenmy intention to hurt you.'
'Yet you used your power to crush my mother. I know all about the
way you treated her after your brother died, how you turned your
family against her, how you made it impossible for her to stay on at
Waverley. She told me all about the terrible quarrel you had before
she fled.'
'Don't you want to see your brother?' he asked.
'You heartless brute!' She put out her hand convulsively as though to
ward him off. 'Don't you know the terrible thing you did to Matthew
and me? I had a little brother, a stepbrothersomeone of my
own....' Her distress was so intense, she couldn't continue. Tears
welled into her eyes and ran down her face.
'Here.' He took an immaculate handkerchief out of his breast pocket
and handed it to her.
'I don't want the damned thing!' Angrily she pushed his hand away,
brushing the tears off her face with the back of her hand. 'No one
knows the pain I've suffered growing up without my brother.'
'That's not true, Fleur, even if I know it's not the right moment to say
it. We couldn't let Matthew go. He's a Standford, my brother's only
child. Much as it grieved us, we had no rights over you.'
'You mean you didn't want another man's child!' she corrected him
bitterly. 'Well, I'm glad I don't have any Standford blood!'
'As it happens so am I.' He turned his dark head and his brilliant
gaze raced over her; the blazing small face, the column of her throat,
down to her small breasts. Her heart was beating so violently it was
disturbing the thin black material of her bodice.
In a second some new element had been introduced into their
fraught relationship and she moistened her suddenly dry mouth. 'I
haven't seen Matthew since he was six years old.'
'Then don't you long to be reunited?'
'And where is he today, with his mother dead?' she asked, and the
fluctuating colour died right away from her flawless white skin.
'We haven't told him yet, Fleur. It would have been too painful.
Things haven't been easy for Matthew, as they haven't been easy for
you.'
'And whose fault was that?' Her pretty voice went hard with
contempt. 'You deliberately kept two innocent children apart. You
did a more terrible thing to my mother and you didn't even stop to
think how deeply it would affect us all. I can never forgive you!'
'I'm sure you would, if you only knew.'
'And you're ready to tell me.' She gave a brittle laugh. 'Why not? My
mother's dead. She can't deny any of it.'
'She never gave us the chance!' he said coldly. 'That we never saw
you again nearly broke my grandmother's heart. You were an
enchanting child.'
'You mean you remember?' Her green eyes went wide with
mockery. Out of duty to her mother she had deliberately repressed
her memories of his grandmother, but now they came rushing back
to her ... the way Grandma Standford loved to curl her hair around
her fingers. She had always had a short, silky mop. She could even
feel now the warm, loving touch. In all the time she had been at
Waverley she had never known anything else but loving kindness
from Sarah Standford.
'When I read that she'd died, I locked myself in my room and cried.'
Later her mother had come and pounded on the door, furious that
Fleur had done such a thing.
'And she remembered you, Fleur.'
and black strongly marked brows and his darkly tanned skin. He
was still the handsomest man she had ever seen.
'Well?' he asked gently.
'You have a cruel mouth.' Why did she say it, when it was so
beautifully shaped?
' You haven't.'
Just the way he said it made her blink several times. As a child she
had been intensely attracted to his radiance, now she saw it for what
it was; a dazzling sexuality that repelled her. Men like that could
only wound a woman.
'There's no place for me in your life,' she told him curtly. 'There
never really was and there certainly never will be. I've done all my
crying about Matthew. Perhaps I'll cry to my dying day, but you
won't know about it. He's a Standford, he'll survive.'
'There's more to life than survival.'
'It would do Matthew no good for me to see himput in a brief
appearance, then disappear again. I could never hurt him like that.
He was too little to really remember me anyway.'
'You don't believe that.' He frowned and his black brows drew
together.
'I'm afraid to believe it. The hurt can't go on I've had too much of
it.' Her involuntary disclosure made her ashamed. It was so disloyal
to the strange, unhappy woman who had been her mother.
'My grandfather wants you to come.' he told her.
'It was quite true,' he said bleakly. 'You know that as well as I do.
We had no difficulty getting custody of Matthew.'
'And why would you?' she whispered brokenly. 'A family like yours
finds it easy to crush people. My mother had nothing, you had
millions.'
'Don't you find it remarkable you've lived so well?' he turned on her
brutally.
'How can you say that?' she asked painfully. 'We've lived quietly
very quietly. There was no money to send me on to university.'
'There was money,' he said deliberately. 'Money that was to be used
for you and on you.'
'Not from you?' She had the mad desire to wrench open the door and
jump out on to the freeway. She didn't want to hear his lying
revelations.
'I said we had no difficulty getting custody of Matthew. I didn't say
we had to pay for it.'
'You liar!' she gasped, then choked, and in a blaze of anger threw up
her hand to strike him.
'You see?' he caught her hand and nearly paralysed it, 'you know
nothing about the whole tragic situation, but your solicitor will tell
you you've been left very comfortably off indeed. That's if Helena
did, in fact, leave it to you.'
'Standford money?' she asked with low vehemence.
'It's kept you secretly for the past eight years. Maybe you haven't
noticed people don't live in houses as nice as yours?' he asked
coolly.
'As your brother's widow my mother was entitled to a great deal, but
she told me and I believed her that she refused to touch a penny. It
was all for Matthew, the son you deprived her of.'
Anger and arrogance flared into his face. 'You're right about one
thing, the money was for Matthew.'
'Why have you come after me?' Fleur gave a strange little laugh.
'You hated my mother, you've done everything in your power to
malign her, you're still doing it, at the same time appealing to me. I
want no part of you!'
'I'm afraid, Fleur, you're going to do what you're told!' His hand
closed under her chin and he held her face up to him. 'There are
debts to be paid and you're, going to pay them. Matthew has never
ceased to miss you. He's a solitary child, a lot like my brother.'
'Solitary?' She tilted her head away, although he was hurting her.
'He was an adorable little boy, full of life.'
'He's badly asthmatic,' he told her bluntly. 'The doctors have told us
the problem is emotional.'
'And you can't stand it, can you?' she asked feverishly. 'Standfords
demand perfection. My poor little Matt, he's flawed, is he? The only
reason your brother married my mother was because she was
beautiful. He didn't want her when he found out she had poor
health.'
'She told you that?' He looked at her, his handsome face impassive.
'Does it really matter now?' For the first time Fleur seemed
completely aware of her surroundings. The city was crowded and
people were turning to stare at the chauffeur-driven Rolls. She was
even bitterly amused that the driver hadn't heard one word, safely
shut off from them by the glass partition. It would be necessary, she
thought, otherwise employees might start selling secrets.
'Where do you think you're taking me?' she asked wearily.
'To my hotel. It doesn't suit me to drive around in the car for ever.'
'What a ghastly day!' She deliberately relaxed her back against the
deep plush upholstery, willing herself to gather up her resources.
She hadn't the slightest intention of going anywhere further with
him. She had to be by herself to think. Her darling little Matt, an
asthmatic? Why, in six years she doubted if he had ever even had a
cold. All kinds of jumbled plans were running through her head.
If Matt really wanted her, why couldn't they live together? She
would have no hesitation using Stand- ford money on the rightful
heir. It took her a moment to see the bitter irony in the fact that she
had accepted what he had told her and she shook her head
hopelessly. What a day to think her mother too had lied!
The Rolls was gliding into the loading zone outside the city's
leading hotel and she saw the smartly uniformed doorman make his
way briskly towards them. Now was her chance. Julian Stand- ford
had his head turned away from her, and in a flash she opened up the
offside door and sprang out.
To the startled onlookers it seemed like a good way to get killed, but
for the agitated Fleur it was salvation. With the heavy traffic slowed
by pedestrians moving out into the crossing, she made her frantic,
illegal dash.
'You silly girl!' an elderly lady said to her wrath- fully. 'You young
people have no respect for regulations!'
'Haven't you heard of desperation?' Fleur turned her wide eyes on
the woman's face, seeing the indignation give way to a puzzled
concern. She must have looked a sight with her white face and her
black dress, dashing madly away from the parked Rolls. On today of
all days she had worn no lipstick on her tenderly moulded mouth
and the only colour about her was the titian of her hair and her leafgreen eyes.
Like a miracle no policeman came forward to take her to task and
she hurried into a department store, knowing there was a taxi rank at
the other side. He wouldn't make any attempt to follow her. It would
only add to the intrigue. His name, even his face was well known to
the general public. It was always the way when one was heir to a
mining empire.
Her heart was beating very fast, but she never once looked back.
One day she had always told herself she would see Matt again. She
had kept his six-year-old image burning brightly in her mind. Her
most deeply treasured private possession. Her mother had called
him a Standford and dismissed him from her mind, but Fleur had
known that was only because of the terrible pain. To separate a child
from his motherwhat suffering!
Faces seemed to be alert on her, a white-skinned redhead in the sort
of black dress that said funeral. A big coloured man with a beard
knocked into her and apologised, then resumed his way through the
crowd. At least he distracted some attention from her because he
was very flamboyantly dressed.
She was breathless by the time she reached the street and within
sight of the taxi rank. Thank God there was a line-up! She almost
flung herself at the first car and just as she put her hand out to open
the back door, a man's hand came down forcefully on the slender
bones of her shoulder.
'Get in,' he said tonelessly.
Now, looking back at him, she saw she had better obey.
'Where to, sir?' the driver turned to them.
'Windsor Park,' Julian Standford said abruptly. 'One-two-one
Skyline Drive,' Fleur's anger flared again, though she was shaking
like a leaf. 'You've gone too far!'
'Let's not talk about it,' he returned curtly. 'I would have expected a
greater sense of self-preservation from you.'
'Look, I'm here!' she risked saying with a terrible banter.
He immediately transferred his attention to out of the window.
Heated discussions in a taxi weren't his style.
In complete silence they made the twenty- minute drive to the
garden suburb while the taxi driver kept casting surreptitious little
glances into his rear vision mirror. There was a lot of drama in
driving a taxi and he suspected the minute they got out there would
be a terrible fight. Both of his passengers looked tense and strained,
locked together in a silent passion. The man's face teased his
memory, but it wasn't until they got out he remembered who the
man wasthe mining guy, the millionaire.
Now they were in the house, the shadow of Helena came
relentlessly between them. There was a portrait of her over the
fireplace in the living room and Julian Standford went to stand
before it.
'I keep remembering how beautiful she was when David first
brought her to the house.'
Fleur made a sound of distress and came to stand at his side. He was
very tall and she felt small and beaten. Her mother had had the
darkest, deepest eyes she had ever seen. Now they looked down on
them both with a curious lifelike glitter. She was wearing a red
chiffon evening dress and her beauty was breathtaking.
'It's wrong for you to be here,' said Fleur, but Julian did not reply.
He didn't even seem to be aware of her staring up at the masterly
executed painting. Superb as it was, Fleur had never liked it. It
pointed up the strangeness in Helena, the kind of secret gloating.
The smile on the lovely mouth was slow and vaguely scornful and
in the depths of those fathomless eyes was a wicked triumph. It had
been painted in the early months of her second marriage, and even
then she had been very young.
Julian drew a long breath and released it wearily. 'Everything she
touched she damaged. My brother, irreparably.'
'You can't mean what you're saying!'
'David loved her, but she had no pity on him.'
'Please stop,' she said frantically. 'Let her rest.'
'I'm sorry, Fleur,' he turned to her at last, it's been hell on you.'
'Oh, spare me!' She moved away, putting distance between them.
'You can't do anything to either of us any more.'
'You're overwrought,' he said quietly. 'Why don't you sit down?'
'I will when you leave.' She had to turn away from the sight and
sound of him. There was only menace in the ruthless charm.
'Please, Fleur.' He came behind her and held her by the shoulders.
'Don't let the past keep on hurting you. You're so young.' He slid his
fingers down her bare arms and she turned her head.
'It must be an odd feeling for you meeting with resistance?'
'My concern is for Matthew. I'm asking you, begging you to come
back to him as his sister.'
'It's too late!' Her agitation was transparent and he drew her towards
him a little roughly.
'Then what shall I tell him? You won't come.'
'He doesn't even know I'm here.'
'He will soon. You were photographed in your mad dash across the
street.'
'What?' She froze with shock.
'The press think they're entitled to follow me around. Most of the
time we're pretty pally, but I have a feeling we're not going to be
able to cover up your little folly. To anyone looking it certainly
looked like there was a story.'
'Stories,' she corrected him scornfully. 'Hundreds of stories about
you.'
'Not a one of them that wasn't passed on.' He gave a short,
humourless laugh. 'We can't really be told anything, Fleur, unless
we want to be told. You've found it too easy to believe every
accusation. It's a good deal more difficult discovering the truth, and
sometimes it's better not to reveal it at all. I'm appealing to you as
the compassionate little creature I remember. Come back to
Waverley .-There's nothing there to make you afraid.'
Longing struck her like a physical pain ... the eternal summer of
Waverley ... Matthew, laughing, running after her in the dancing
sunlight. Even as a baby he had been physically all Stand- ford. That
meant he would be handsome and at fourteen probably a lot taller
than she was. All the Standford men were tall and superbly athletic,
yet Matt was asthmatic. It upset her when she knew how alarming
that condition could be. One of the girls in her senior year at school
had been a chronic asthmatic. It had been sobering watching her
struggle for her very breath and she had been terrified of misplacing
her atomiser, dependent on it really, as though to be without it
provoked an attack. She remembered, too, one of the teachers had
been very short with the girl as though if she only tried, she could
cure herself. Emotional, Louise, the teacher used to cry. Not an
allergy. Focus all your attention on getting better.
In spite of the fierce tension between them, Julian was still holding
her by the arms. 'What are you thinking about?'
'The agony of asthma. The torture of just trying to breathe. The
things we take for granted.'
He looked down at her glowing head. 'I know just having you back
with him will help Matthew. He's waited, for eight years.'
'You're using me, aren't you?' She fixed her great eyes on his face.
'But at least Matthew is important to you.'
'Then you'll come?' A kind of exultation lay on him like a patina of
light, and she clenched a small fist and hit it into his chest.
'I don't know. I've got to think!''
'You know in your heart you want to come.'
The faint tenderness in his voice haunted her. She remembered it
from so long ago. 'I'd sacrifice anything if I thought it would help
Matthew.'
'I'm convinced that it will. All of us are.'
'But then you're the sort of man who's always convinced of the
rightness of his decisions,' she said with fresh anger. 'Who caused
this dilemma in the first place? I must never forget that.'
'So you've been lonely,' he released her abruptly and went to stand
before the portrait again. 'So has Matthew, and he's not as spirited as
you. No one, even your mother, meant things to happen, they just
did.'
'You never approved of her.' Because she was shaking she had to
drop into a chair.
'No. I knew from the beginning what she would do to my brother.'
'What did she do?' Fleur stood up again in her agitation, a small, too
slender girl with a delicate, patrician face. 'I was only a child, but I'll
never forget the way he used to look at her.'
'Did she ever look at him the same way?' He turned around to her
and though his dark face was unmoving, she knew he was furiously
angry.
'Why, I ... ' She looked at him with terrified eyes. 'What are you
trying to say? All your damnable accusations!'
At the sob in her voice, all his anger seemed to spend itself. 'No
matter what she said, she never brought herself to destroy the
portrait.'
'But it's magnificent!' Fleur looked up at her mother in the heavy,
gilded frame.
'And 'it tells you all you ever needed to know about Helena.'
The starkness of his tone stripped her of her expected indignation.
Now suddenly she sensed some devastating truths her mother had
always kept from her. Stepping back in time was too painful a
process and though she had retained a clear picture of Julian, her
memory of her stepfather, Julian's elder brother, was surprisingly
hazy. She could remember he was like Julian but without the
dangerous attraction, the high-mettled determined look that was so
like the tyrannical old man who had made the family fortune. Her
mother had made her swear she would never go near the Standfords.
They were a brood of vipers who ruined everything they touched.
What should she do? How should she choose; for her mother or
Matthew? There had been enough tragedies at Waverley. She didn't
think she could bear to find out the hidden ones.
'I don't know,' she said aloud into the fraught silence. 'My mother
would never let me do this.'
'But we have only ourselves to live with,' he told her. 'How could
you turn your back on Matthew and be free of that memory? The
last thing he ever wanted was to lose you.'
'Put like that, you give me no choice.' The green eyes she fixed on
him were filled with a passionate longing. 'I don't even understand
myself. My mother found anger and enmity at Waverley mightn't I
find the same?'
'You're nothing like your mother,' he said, harshly, and his brilliant
blue eyes explored every fine contour of her face. 'Besides, you
were pretty happy at Waverley as a child. Surely the good times
sometimes come back to haunt you?'
'I remember how you used to call me Flower Face.'
'And you still look the same.' He smiled faintly and there was a dark
magic in the way his mouth curved. 'I don't want you to stay here.
There's nothing in this house but pain.'
She couldn't deny it, face to face with the facts. Still she flushed and
refused to bend to his strong will. 'I'll be perfectly all right.'
'Please allow me my concern, Fleur,' his glance struck her averted
profile. 'You shouldn't be alone.'
'Then what is it you want me to do?' She threw up her head
helplessly.
'Just come with me and shut the door.'
'I can't. Not yet.' She held a hand to the pulsing vein in her throat. 'I
have a job, the house, lots of things to be considered.'
'I can attend to all that.'
'I'm sure you can!' she answered him, and her tone wasn't kind.
'What will you do, dispose of everything so I have nowhere to come
back to?'
'You can have anything you want,' he said, and his blue eyes
glittered under the lids. 'We don't want you to come for a month or a
year. When you come back to Waverley, you come back as family.'
'I'm afraid!' Her softly impassioned voice betrayed her agitation.
'How can I be sure I can even help Matthew? You could be lying to
me now!'
He came to stand in front of her and looked down at her with a look
of brooding concentration. 'For God's sake, Fleur, let go. We've got
to salvage something from this mess.'
The hotness of tears scorched her eyes and she stood torn and
confused with the light glinting on her short, silky curls.
CHAPTER TWO
OUTSIDE the airport building the sunlight was blinding.
'This way, Fleur,' said Julian, and took her arm.
From somewhere close by, a flashlight went off, then another. She
winced and went to turn, but he kept on moving her briskly forward.
'Don't look around.' His voice was very formal, overlaid with ironic
tones.
'Mr Standford?'
A small wiry man rushed up and Julian gave him a thin smile. 'Not
now, Bob.'
'Back to business, then?'
'When I have a bit of news I shall deliver it to you. Privately.''
'Got ya!' The man made a gesture that came close to a salute, all the
while examining Fleur out of the corner of his eyes.
'Getting caught in an airport is like being under siege,' added Julian.
'The price of. fame,' the little man offered jauntily, and went off
apparently quite happy.
'Who was that?' Fleur lapsed into curiosity.
'Bob Garrity, one of our best journalists. He's always there when he
scents a story.'
'I see.' Fleur fell silent abruptly. There had been a very illuminating
photograph of her on the front page of the Sydney Morning Herald.
Attention fixed itself on the very rich and everyone who surrounded
them.
A porter followed them up, wheeling their luggage. She had
somehow expected another Rolls, and there it was, with the
uniformed driver standing outside waiting alertly for their
appearance.
'Good, there's Adams.' Julian said it very calmly without a touch of
arrogance. He was accustomed to being picked up at airports by
Rolls-Royces, but Fleur found it almost staggering.
'Good afternoon, sir,' the driver said to him with a smile. 'Miss.' He
tipped his hat respectfully.
'Would you please get the things in for us, Des.'
'Right away, sir.'
Of course he would jump. Everyone jumped, and he didn't seem to
care.
This time the Rolls was a different colour and there was no glass
partition inside. When they were all in the car, Julian introduced the
driver to her and he gave her a straightforward, guileless smile.
'Welcome home, miss.'
'Is my grandfather at home?' Julian asked.
'I ran him into the city for a meeting with the premier. That was at
ten o'clock. I know he wasn't expecting you home this afternoon.'
'We finished our business a little earlier,' Julian explained.
'Young Matt is so excited, I think he'll explode.'
'I feel the same way,' Fleur told him a little shakily, though it wasn't
strictly true. Her excitement was overlaid by a physical and mental
exhaustion.
The six weeks preceding her mother's death had almost extinguished
her strengththe terrible consultations, the tests, the brain scan that
had shown up the tumour. She couldn't cry in the daytime now, but
at night she knew her pillow would be wet.
Julian must have taken note of her expression, for his lean, longfingered hand covered her own. 'You're going to be happy, Fleur.'
'God knows,' she sighed.
The drive was a long one, but at last they turned into the long,
curved driveway which she now remembered as clearly as though
she had turned into it yesterday. It was the early days of December
and the four acres that surrounded the house were ablaze with
colour. An avenue of jacarandas led up to the mansion and the
flowering miracles of the tropics, the poincianas, were given all the
space that they needed. They filled the park-like grounds with their
sumptuous colour and their beautiful lacy branches threw shadows
on the ground.
Up ahead stood the house; no different from what it had been all
those years ago. Ivy sheened the rosy brickwork with green and
birds winged in to the high Tudor gables.
'It's no different,' she said huskily. 'Only we have changed.'
'Don't be bitter, Fleur,' he begged.
'Please! I'm doing the best I can.'
They were approaching the front of the house, and she felt her eyes
widen in a stare. A boy had run down the stone steps and emotion
hit her in such a rush she gave an incoherent little cry.
'Pull up, Des,' Julian saidalmost unnecessarily, because both men
had been moved to instant pity. The chauffeur swung the big car
effortlessly off the gravel and the instant he had stopped Fleur threw
open the door and started running.
She didn't need to wonder if this was really Matthew, her every
intuition told her so. The intensity of her feelings, like spring after
winter, were shared by the boy. His eyes glazed with wonder and
though his heart was hammering and his breath came almost
painfully he too was impelled into flight.
'God, it would make you cry!' the chauffeur said softly, and only a
few yards away brother and sister came together.
'Matt,' said Fleur on a caught breath. 'Matthew!'
He was much taller than she was and impossibly thin, but his eyes
were the same. 'I thought you'd never come.' The thin, boy's arms
gripped like iron.
'I'm here, really here.' She heard the terrible, rasping breath. He
looked beautiful to her, but so pitifully frail that the crushing guilt
she had felt on her mother's account fell away from her. 'We'll
always have one another from now on.'
'Matthew.' Julian Standford came towards them, put out his hands
and touched both of their heads.
'I can hardly believe it!' Matthew's blue eyes were great pools of
light. 'Thanks, Uncle Julian. Grandad told me you'd gone to find
Fleur and now that you've found her, she's never going away again.'
With their arms twisted around each other, they walked up to the
house. There was a storm of emotion inside both of them, a sadness
in the fact that their mother was dead, and a blissful happiness at
finding each other again.
In the cool formality of the entrance hall a woman greeted them, her
narrowed, measuring glance on both of their faces. 'So you've come
back to us, Fleur!'
'Aunt Charlotte.' Fleur went forward, by no means welcomed or
reassured by Charlotte Standford's presence. Charlotte didn't smile
or make any attempt to, but as Fleur drew close, she dropped a
conventional kiss on the girl's cheek. 'Let me look at you. You must
be nineteen now.'
'I feel years older.' Unlike the Standford men, though there was the
stamp of elegance about her, Charlotte missed out on their splendid
good looks. And their charm.
'We all have our bitter little facts to swallow,' she returned soberly,
then looked at the brilliant-eyed boy. 'You mustn't become overexcited, Matthew. You know it's bad for you.'
'On this occasion it could only be good for him,' Julian told his
eldest sister a little curtly. 'I'm sure you'll want to show Fleur her
room. She's been travelling since early morning. I had to make a
stop-over in Sydney.'
'Of course you're right, Julian,' a little colour came into Charlotte's
fine olive skin. 'Come up, my dear. We've given you your old room.
There wasn't time to redecorate it, but you may do so if you wish.'
'Let's!' Matthew took his sister's hand in a deeply loving gesture.
'Grandfather wants me to be an engineer like him and Uncle Julian
when it's time to go to university, but I want to be an architect. I
love houses, don't you?'
'Marvellous, really,' Matthew said. 'It's just he's so set in his ways.
When you're important and you've got such a lot of money people
don't seem to do anything but agree with you.'
'Except Uncle Julian,' Fleur supplied dryly.
'That's different!' Matthew looked at her and smiled. 'Uncle Julian is
splendid. He could come face to face with the devil and make him
back off.'
From the light in her stepbrother's eyes, Fleur could see he idolised
his uncle, but she felt a frightening wave of antagonism wash over
her. Like his grandfather, Julian Standford was made in the same
infinitely arrogant mould. People like that might found empires, but
they weren't men to mate with or call family. She had learned that
the hard way, and the bitterness would always linger.
'Are you tired? Would you like something to eat?' Matthew enquired
solicitously.
'I'm too bursting with happiness,' she said, a little emotionally.
'I know.' Matthew squeezed her fingers hard. 'Grandfather told me,
but I wasn't going to believe it until I saw you with my own eyes.'
'Have I changed?' They had paused at an open doorway and Fleur
turned to look at him.
'I never expected you to, and you haven't!' Matthew's eyes brushed
her glowing hair and her lovely young face. 'I've forgotten my
mother. Is that terrible of me?'
'You were only a little boy,' Fleur said softly.
'Anyway, she never wanted me.' Matthew's thin shoulders moved in
a shrug.
'Who told you that?' Fleur was shocked by the starkness of his tone.
'Why, Lottie,' said Matthew.
'Even if she was harming you by saying it?' Fleur felt that quick rush
of anger again.
'It doesn't matter, Fleur. Really it doesn't.' Matthew recognised the
flash in her eyes. 'I'm sorry she's dead, but I find it hard to care. If
she really wanted me, she could have put up a fight.'
'But, darling,' Fleur grasped his bony wrist, 'who could fight a man
a? rich and powerful as Sir Charles? Mother loved you. She just
couldn't have you, that's all.'
'Lottie said she was a strange woman and it was a good thing neither
of us had taken after her.'
'She had no right!'
'She's looked after me ever since you went.' Matthew's thin arm
encircled his sister's shoulders. 'Don't let's get upset. You're here
now.'
'Of course.' Fleur smiled at him, the green eyes revealing an
enormous tenderness. 'Now let's see what we're going to do about
my room!'
When Charlotte joined them five or six minutes later, Fleur was
sitting on the bed and Matthew was moving around the room with
both arms up. There was a flush on his skin and his gentle, rather
hesitant voice had firmed into a boyish authority.
'Of course you can get a decorator if you like, but I think we can do
it just as well ourselves, probably better. The walls would be super
covered with a very soft, metallic papersilver-grey like a pearl
with perhaps a green flower. You have a wonderful view across the
garden, so I'd pull all those curtains down and have shutters that fold
back. There's too much clutter in here too.'
'Actually there are some very good antiques and good pictures,'
Charlotte said, it won't do at all for you to get too carried away,
Matthew. You know Grandfather sees the bill for everything.'
'Really it's perfectly all right as it is,' Fleur intervened a little coolly.
Who had mentioned making changes in the first place anyway?
'Of course it isn't!' Matthew frowned and for the first time sounded
like a Standford. 'We're going to do everything we can to make you
happy and comfortable. Hang the expense! That's what Uncle Julian
always says.'
'That's all very well for him,' Charlotte replied a little dryly, 'but
Grandfather takes a different line with me.'
'And one of the reasons, is because he's made you his slave,'
Matthew supplied unexpectedly.
'Don't be ridiculous, Matthew!' Charlotte said sharply.
'I'm sorry, Lottie, it's true!' Matthew insisted. 'The nicer you are to
him, the more growly he gets. Sheena calls him the old tyrant.'
'Really, Matthew!' Charlotte said warningly, and cast a glance
towards Fleur, still seated on the bed.
'Sheena's Uncle Julian's latest girl-friend,' Matthew explained to his
stepsister confidingly. 'She's lasted the longest too. I don't like her
much.'
'You know very well she's a lovely girl,' Charlotte said. 'Grandfather
likes her and she's not likely to call him an old tyrant to his face.'
'I expect he'd like it!' said Matthew. 'The funny thing about him, he
likes people who stand up to him. I can't do it very well, neither can
Lottie. He might be an old man, but he's still pretty fierce.'
'I'm sure he's been very good to you, Matthew,' Charlotte said
reprovingly, 'so let's hear no more. Fleur, would you like something
to eat? We don't have dinner until eight o'clock.'
'I'd love a cup of coffee!' Fleur slid gracefully off the bed. 'Where
are my things, Aunt Charlotte? I'll put them away.'
'Don't bother, dear.' Charlotte waved a long, shapely hand. 'One of
the girls will do it for you. We pay them well and they won't mind.'
'All right, then.' Fleur subsided, though she would father have done
it herself.
'If you're not feeling tired, perhaps you'd like to come downstairs
again?' Charlotte paused at the door, unmistakably a Standford, but
too tall and too formidable of feature for feminine charm.
'I will after I freshen, up.' Fleur smiled at her, remembering a
younger, kinder, far less intimidating Charlotte.
'Come along then, Matthew,' Charlotte ordered, and held out her
hand. 'Give your sister a few minutes, then we'll all have coffee on
the terrace.'
'Would you believe it, I've stopped wheezing!' Matthew exclaimed
in wonderment, his head tilted to the side as he listened to his own
body.
'Really?' Charlotte advanced on him, her brow knotted in
concentration.
'I think so.' Matthew heaved a few, quick breaths. 'I didn't tell you,
Fleur, but I have this rotten asthma.'
Charlotte sighed deeply. 'We've had him to all the specialists.'
'It's rotten!' Matthew said again, apologising for his own condition.
'And as terrible as it is,' Fleur told him, 'it's been known to go away.
Just like that!'
'Nonsense, Fleur!' Charlotte's blue eyes darkened with annoyance.
'It's not a kindness to build up his hopes. He's suffered dreadfully for
years nowwe all have. Even Grandfather cares deeply, but no one
can do anything about it.'
'Perhaps he's been in a chronic anxiety state,' said Fleur, and took
her brother's hand. 'After all, the mind has tremendous control over
the body. He was wheezing badly when I arrived, now he hasn't had
time to think about it.'
'If it were only that easy!' Charlotte's expression softened magically
as she looked down at her nephew's face. 'David had a few passing
problems as a boy. He never had Julian's wonderful health and
vigour. I suppose it started there.'
'Then Matthew should take up some sport. Swimming,' Fleur
suggested.
'I get infections,' Matthew shook his head gloomily. 'Uncle Julian
even had the pool converted to salt, but I'm always coming down
with something.'
'Then skating,' Fleur began.
'I suppose I'll break a leg.'
'And I can't say I want that,' Charlotte said firmly. 'By the same
token I'm convinced this asthma will go awayin time. I never
cease to pray about it.'
'Meantime I'd try the ocean,' said Fleur. 'Hasn't Queensland got the
most beautiful beaches of all?'
'Quite,' Charlotte agreed, and got her hand on Matthew's shoulder.
'We'll talk about this again, Fleur. I guess you can't know everything
we've tried.'
Fleur accepted the reproof and Matthew's understanding half smile.
Still as they went down the hallway, she heard him say to his aunt:
'I'm certain no one said skating!'
For the rest of the afternoon brother and sister didn't waste a
moment. Hand in hand they walked all over the house and the
garden, with so much to say to one another it was like a wonderful
trip of discovery. The colour hadn't faded from Matthew's cheeks
and his breathing was still normal.
'All those letters I wrote to you,' he said, 'and you never got them.'
'Mother must have made the decision that they would only hurt me
more.'
'At least it's possible to start afresh,' Matthew said happily, it's like a
dream having you here.'
'And you really want to be an architect?' Fleur looked intently into
his Standford blue eyes.
'I do, but Grandfather frightens the hell out of me sometimes. How
could I ever tell him?'
'You've obviously told your uncle and aunt.'
Matthew bent and picked up a pebble, then sent it skimming across
the man-made lake that was glinting a shining silver. 'Well, Lottie
would never tell on me, she's extra protective, and Uncle Julian is
my idol. Honestly, he's brilliant! He's got so many qualifications.
I'm just glad he's around to be Grandfather's heir. I dread the thought
of big businessyou have to be a special kind of person. Apart
from anything else, it's so strenuous. I could never copeanyway,
not with asthma.'
'Why don't we get started on a swimming programme?' Fleur
suggested to him seriously.
'Poor old Lottie would have a fit. She needs a bit of peace. She's
really been terribly good to me, you know, running me all over the
place to doctors and sitting up nights. I've missed quite a lot of
school, so it's a good thing I'm pretty smart.'
'A lot of well known athletes have suffered from asthma in their
youth,' said Fleur, collapsing into a garden seat. 'The thing is to
build yourself up.
We might have to cope with a few infections, though I don't see why
if the pool is salt...'
'Well, actually I haven't been in it all that much,' Matthew
confessed. 'Especially not at exam time. I didn't want to miss out.'
'Well, now you're on holiday for two months,' Fleur pointed out to
him. 'We'll swim in the pool and we'll go to the beach a lot.'
'Do you really think so?' Matthew asked so wistfully that Fleur tried
to lighten it with a joke.
'All except football,' she said firmly. 'All those wild spills that finish
up in being strung up in pulleys.'
'Uncle Julian was very good at it.'
'Matthew,' Fleur began.
'All right, all right,' Matthew took her hand again, seemingly
starving for loving contact. 'Uncle Julian I can't be, but I promise
you, you won't be ashamed of me.'
'You can do what you damned well like and I'd never be that. Except
maybe rob a bank,' Fleur added consideringly.
'Or hijack a plane.
'Or sell secrets to the other side.'
Matthew's wistfulness dissolved like mist. All the way back to the
house they made a joke of it, so that nobody looking at them would
ever know their lives had been deeply touched by tragedy.
Fleur heard her brother's breathing, light and even, and the first
peace she had known in a long time touched her heart. What was
life after all but service to the people one loved? The thought made
her humble and started the thaw in her own heart. Both of them had
lived through years of emotional insecurity, but time was merciful.
They would heal.
It was approaching eight, and Fleur stood before the long mirror in
her bedroom staring abstractedly at her own reflection. She was
wearing the one and only dress she had judged suitable for the
eveningindeed, for such an occasion. It was an amber slip of a
dress, far from expensive, but her slight girl's body lent it surprising
style. Not that she really cared about her dress with the emotions of
the day churning around inside her. Now Sir Charles was back to
welcome her into his home. She was very conscious of his motive,
but what did it matter? Matthew was special to all of them.
He had put his head around the door more than an hour ago to tell
her his grandfathergreat-grandfather, though everyone dropped
the great had arrived home. Not that Fleur had needed telling.
From the balcony of her room, afloat over the beautiful garden, she
had seen the dark blue Rolls sweep up the drive. A few minutes later
she had caught Sir Charles' tone, then Julian's, both of them
damnably attractive and so terribly self-assured. There was no doubt
about it, both of them possessed shattering poise and charisma. The
thought almost amused her, except that she had been reared to
regard them both as enemies. No matter how Matthew longed to be
like Uncle Julian, she was glad he favoured his gentler, more
sensitive, far less ambitious father; David, who had died so
violently, so unexpectedly in a car smash. Such deaths seemed the
hardest to bear. Yet had her mother mourned him?
Fleur turned away and walked to the French doors that led out on to
the balcony. It was a heavenly night, the sky alive with stars. She
traced the downward path through Orion, the mighty hunter's belt, to
Sirius, the brightest star in the heavens. The Southern Cross was
particularly bright tonight, its lowest star pointing to the Pole, a star
of the first magnitude.
Such majesty! She drew a deep breath that came out as an emotional
sigh. Almost at the same moment, she realised someone was looking
up at her.
'Fleur?'
Light was spilling out from the ground floor and as she leaned over
the balcony, Julian stepped into a brilliant triangle. 'That was a
heartfelt little sigh I heard,' he said gently.
'Oh, good evening,' she answered politely.
'A bit more than that, I should say,' he said dryly, it's a very long
time since I glanced up and saw you looking up at the stars. What
did they tell you?'
She tilted her face upwards again. 'Oh, that I'm very small.'
'You ought to come down,' he said.
'I'm sorry, have I been keeping you waiting?'
'Grandfather is anxious to see you.'
'Then I'll come right away.'
Obviously one couldn't keep Sir Charles waiting. She didn't hurry,
but moved as gently as the breeze off the balcony. Sir Charles
Standford might be an extremely important man, but she had never
cared and she didn't care now.
They were waiting for her in the handsome drawing room and she
was vaguely aware there were strangers present.
'Ah, Fleur,' said Sir Charles, his vibrant voice cutting into the
silence, 'come here and let me look at you!'
She had expected him to be much older, but he still looked the same,
a proud old eagle of a man, tall and upright, with the Standford
metallic blue eyes staring coolly at her.
'Good evening, Sir Charles. How very kind of you to ask me back.'
She spoke her tribute with a good deal of his cool calm.
'If my son had lived, you would never have left.' He took her hands,
staring at her intently, then to her surprise drew her closer and
kissed her on the cheek. 'I do believe you haven't changed at all
the same little flower face, the same glorious skin and delicious
curls. Please accept my sympathy in your loss.'
The last bit was a little peremptory, as though Helena's death was
nobody's loss.
Julian stepped smoothly into the breach. 'Fleur,' he said gently, and
held out his hand to her, 'let me introduce you to our friends.' She
had to accept his hand, irritated beyond measure with the way her
skin tingled. His clasp was warm and dry, light but very strong.
Probably he still had the uncanny knack of reading her mind.
Two men were moving towards her, smiling, and seated on the sofa
with Charlotte was an exquisitely groomed young woman in her
mid- twenties, her lustrous dark hair curving around a goldenskinned, full-lipped face. Her eyes were light brown and though the
red mouth was parted in a smile the expression in the eyes was
vaguely off-putting.
Her name was Sheena Lloyd. One of the men, a very pleasant and
prosperous-looking business man, was her father and the other was
Sir Charles' lifelong friend and personal physician Hugh Alistair.
'Of course I remember you, Dr Alistair,' Fleur shook hands in faint
confusion. Though Sir Charles remained as indestructible as ever,
the doctor had altered a good deal. Stones had fallen off his once
rugged frame and Fleur learned from Julian later that he had an
inoperable cancer. Still his kind, wise eyes lit up with pleasurethe
It was Julian who answered and Owen Lloyd who backed him up.
'What perfectly beautiful hair!'
'But such a worry, with that white skin!' Sheena pointed out in
concerned tones. Her own skin gleamed with a year-round deep
golden tan.
They were seated at the table and the meal began. Fleur had
expected Matthew to join them as a matter of course, but it had been
Matthew himself who had told her Sir Charles didn't care for
children at the dinner table.
Of course he wouldn't! Fleur had thought, but Matthew was quite
happy with the arrangement. It was much too late to wait for dinner
in any case, and he dreaded being addressed by visitors in case his
grandfather snorted at his immature replies. A .brilliant man Sir
Charles might be, but he wasn't a very tolerant one.
'You can begin serving, Maria,' he said to his unfailingly
goodnatured Italian housekeeper. 'Wine, Julian. The wine. I don't
remember seeing the wine.'
'The Pommerol '62,' said Julian, and didn't move. The light from the
massive chandelier overhead played up his extravagant good looks.
His hair was jet black, his skin polished bronze, and the eyes he
turned towards his grandfather a startling sapphire. Though he
always sounded smooth and respectful, it was apparent to everyone
that he wasn't in the least intimidated by the imperious and shorttempered old man.
'All right, then.' Sir Charles gave a grunt of approval or disgust. Old
as he was, he had even a more physically commanding presence
than he had in his prime, and Fleur guessed Julian would be the
same.
Fleur took a deep breath, intervening. 'I couldn't easily study when
my mother required so much of my attention.'
'Of course!' Dr Alistair nodded his head at her like a kind and
understanding wise old owl. 'What you need now is a period of calm
and relaxation, the warm security of being with young Matthew.'
'Homecoming,' said Julian.
'Fair enough!' Sir Charles conceded. 'Now eat up your food. I have a
couple of calls I must take tonight.'
Even to Fleur's uninformed palate the wine was very good, and as
she bent to pick up her glass she was aware of Sheena's hard,
speculative glance on her. There were many more of them until the
men went off and the three women were left talking together.
'It can't be a comfortable situation for you, Fleur,' Sheena swung
herself into an earnest conversation.
'In what way?' Charlotte was betrayed into asking the question, a lift
to her strongly marked dark brows.
'Oh don't be so stuffy, Lottie.' Sheena reached over and touched the
older woman's hand. 'A family like the Standfords can't keep all that
many secrets.'
'Rifts happen everywhere,' Charlotte replied a little stiffly. 'Fleur
was only a child when she was taken from Waverley. Short of
kidnapping her, there was no way we could prevent it. My
grandmother was frightfully upset by it all.'
'Yet Fleur isn't really family?' Sheena smiled at Fleur very gently.
'She was, and she is now!' Charlotte said flatly.
Sheena shrugged gracefully. 'You're all your mother, are you?' she
asked. Her dark eyes appraised Fleur's vivid colouring.
'Her mother was a great beauty,' Charlotte said heavily.
'But surely Fleur is very pretty?' Sheena looked from one to the
other in feigned bewilderment.
'My mother was dark. Dark hair, dark eyes,' Fleur explained. 'She
was the most beautiful woman I've ever seen. I don't resemble her in
the least.'
'That's true!' Charlotte's mouth had a tight, drawn look. 'Neither in
looks nor personality. Matthew has nothing of his mother in him
either.'
'You sound as though you're glad,' Sheena commented with uneasy
challenge.
'I'm sure if you've heard all the stories,' said Charlotte, 'you'll know
my sister-in-law hurt a lot of people.'
'Hurt and was hurt!' Anger flared in Fleur and she got swiftly to her
feet. 'You'll excuse me, won't you? It's been rather an exhausting
day.'
Vaguely she heard Charlotte call her name, but she was tired of all
the wounding. Would it never cease? The night seemed the best
place, the perfumed quiet of the garden. Without her inhibiting
presence Charlotte would feel free to tell Sheena everything she
wanted to know. As far as that went, Sheena probably knew more
about the old tragedies than Fleur herself.
She slipped swiftly past the bronze statues in the hallway and out
into the glorious tropical night. There were gardenias flowering
somewhere and their perfume dominated a heady mixture of scents.
'Yes, but for Matthew. She loves Matthew, I can see that.'
'He reminds her of David. David was her favourite brother.' He said
it casually without the least bit of resentment.
'You mean Charlotte likes to be needed and you've never needed
anybody.'
'And what do you really know of me, Fleur?' His hands came down
on her bare shoulders, challenging her in every way there was. 'Do
you think I would ever willingly injure you?'
'I had nothing to do with it,' she cried. 'It was my mother you ruined.
Why were you so cruel, Julian, tell me?' She looked up into his dark
face, but could only see the glitter of his eyes.
'We were all concerned for your mother,' he said a little harshly, 'but
we couldn't help her. Helena was bent on self-destruction. She
courted excitement and danger.'
'In what way? I've got to know the truth!'
'You more than anyone, Fleur, must have known the storms in her.
She never spoke about her childhood, but it couldn't have been
happy. Perhaps it even flawed her for life. She was always reaching
for what she couldn't have.'
'You mean she wanted her own son!' Fleur choked on her own
words.
'She didn't, Fleur.' He spoke with shattering conviction. 'From the
moment Helena came into our home, she'd decided what she
wanted.'
'The easy life, why not?' Fleur knew she was weeping again. 'She
was never very strong, yet you begrudged her security, a home for
her child.'
'You can't begin to know what it was like. Fleur. You were only a
child.'
'And I wouldn't stay here another day, only for Matthew.'
'We're all doing it for Matthew,' he told her rather wearily. 'He hasn't
got your spirit or self- reliance.'
'If you'll forgive my saying so, Sir Charles would crush anybody,'
she said acidly.
'When we all know you don't give a damn about him and never
have. I suppose you, don't remember my grandmother used to get
some of her best laughs watching you standing up to her husband.
Ginger spunk, she used to call it, though you've always had hair like
a flame.'
'I miss her,' Fleur murmured. 'Even now.' She was beginning to feel
distinctly confused. Perhaps it was the wine. 'She was so gentle and
kind. I never could understand how she came to marry Sir Charles.'
'I take it you've never fallen in love?' Gently he steered her back
towards the house.
'I don't ever intend to.'
'Insofar as any of us intend to.' He laughed beneath his breath.
'Falling in love can happen very suddenly, in an instant.'
'You prefer to play games.'
CHAPTER THREE
FLEUR slept late in the morning and when she finally opened her
door Matthew was hovering outside.
'Gosh, I thought you were never going to wake up!' He smiled
widely, full of peace and contentment.
'It's all the quiet. I'm used to the sounds of traffic.'
'You don't have to worry. You can do anything you like,' Matthew
promised expansively.
'Good.' Fleur put her arm around him. 'Then I want you to come and
sit beside me while I have my breakfast.'
'I would have waited,' Matthew sounded apologetic, 'only Lottie
grabbed me by the arm and made me have some cereal. I don't
understand what's so great about cereal!'
'I'll tell you, fibre in the diet,' Fleur answered playfully. 'You can't
have too much fibre.'
'Except Grandfather won't touch it, and I believe he'll live until he's
a hundred.'
'Some people are blessed with perfect health,' Fleur said soothingly.
'All in all Sir Charles takes very good care of himself.'
'Oh, by the way, Uncle Julian wants to speak to you,' Matthew told
her.
'Hasn't he gone yet?' Fleur looked at her stepbrother in surprise.
'He's been exchanging phone calls for the past hour,' Matthew told
her. 'Business. It's going on all the time.' Clearly the idea terrified
him.
'Where is he, in the study?'
'I'll come with you.' Matthew looked at her soberly. 'I hope I never
have to take Uncle Julian's place. The demands are colossal. Even
when he's sleeping, I'm sure his brain is ticking over.'
'Ah, yes,' Fleur said dryly, and resisted the temptation to say any
more. Her own feelings about Julian were so complicated it was in
her best interests to continue to regard him as her enemy.
The door to the study was open, and as they hesitated outside,
looking in, Julian put his hand over the mouthpiece of the phone and
called to her:
'Come in, Fleur. I won't be a moment.'
'What do you feel like for breakfast?' Matthew asked her. 'I'll tell
Maria.'
'Don't try and give me cereal,' she smiled at him. 'I usually have
orange juice, a boiled egg and coffee.'
'No toast?'
'I'll have it today,' she assured him.
'Beaut! I'll join you,' said Matthew with satisfaction, and turned
away. 'Don't be long.'
Inside the study, Fleur let her eyes stray around the room. It had a
remarkably satisfying look about it; three walls lined with
bookshelves from floor to ceiling, a magnificent Persian rug over
Tm sure you don't have to.' She stared up at him. 'There must be
hundreds of people you can give orders to.'
'Unfortunately most people are frightened of giving orders, didn't
you know?'
'I know you're not one of them.'
'Just as well,' he said cynically. 'What would happen to the
Standford fortunes if I suddenly took off into the blue?'
'But you'd never want to.' The sarcasm was there in her voice and
her shimmering eyes. 'You enjoy being rich and splendid.'
Julian laughed and tied up her gaze again. 'Do you really think I'm
that.''
Such was feminine perversity she couldn't keep the unwilling
attraction out of her eyes. 'I feel for Miss Lloyd,' she told him.
'She's quite old enough to look after herself. You aren't.'
'May I go now?' She simply couldn't stay there duelling with him.
'Sure,' he answered with mockery in his voice. 'I'll take you into
town tomorrow. Plan on a full day. You'll be needing lots of
thingsplenty of clothes. Sheena might be able to help you there.'
'I can help myself, than you very much!'
'I suppose I should expect a redhead to be naturally explosive,' he
drawled. 'I only meant Sheena is a beautiful dresser and she knows
all the best places to go.'
'I can make clothes,' Fleur said thriftily, proud of her ability both as
a cutter and a sewer.
'Please, darling, don't!' he glanced at her, his eyes half closed with
amused mockery. 'You'll be expected to be perfectly turned out for
every occasionthe price of being a Standford.'
'Oh, but I'm not!' she threw back at him aggressively.
'But you're stuck with us.'
That was undeniable, and for an instant she bitterly resented it, until
she remembered her stepbrother.
'Then you have no objection if Matthew and I go where we please?'
'Within reason, flower-face!' He lifted his briefcase on to the desk
and put the blue file into it. 'Certainly not Europe or the States. Not
just yet. If you're especially good, I'll take you both over to Japan
when I go. Probably the end of March.'
'Won't we be in the way?' She knew perfectly well their Japanese
business connections.
'It sounds crazy, I know, but I'd probably enjoy it. Once you get
going I'm sure you have a fascinating tongue.'
He was ready to go now, walking towards her, and her heart gave
that funny little leap again. 'Have a nice day,' he said.
'I think you ought to know I'm going to do everything I can to
preserve my independence.' She gazed up at him defiantly, knowing
too well the authoritarian approach of the Standfords.
'Exactly my view of your character!' He put out a hand and twined
one of her silky curls around his finger. 'It's wonderful to have you
back, Fleur.'
So great was his destructive fascination she literally leapt away from
him. 'You're wasting your time trying to charm me!'
'Ohis that what I'm trying to do?' He pulled her to him with
confidence and kissed the top of her head, just like a baby. 'Now I've
got to get going. I have a lot of work to do. See you tonight.'
She scarcely seemed to taste her breakfast, her thoughts coming
back abruptly to how she felt tucked up against his side. It wasn't
reassuring to know that though her mind was free from his
domination, her flesh was weak. Starved of deep and demonstrative
affection as she had been, it was too easy for him to deal with her.
She could still feel his touch in her hair.
'What's the matter?' Matthew asked.
'Why, nothing!' Fleur turned her dreamy face towards him. 'What
are we going to do today?'
'Oh, anything you like. Sit around and talk, go into town, go for a
drive. Can you drive?' he asked her.
'Of course I can!' She blinked at him in mock affront. 'Uncle Julian
is going to get me a car so we can trip around the countryside.'
'Is he really?' Matthew looked greatly pleased. 'What kind?'
'I suppose a jolly old Daimler.'
Charlotte came back on to the sunlit terrace, overhearing the
conversation. 'I hope, Fleur, you're a good driver?'
'I enjoy it,' Fleur made a valiant effort to answer pleasantly. The last
thing she wanted to do was antagonise Charlotte even when she
could see the older woman's attitude towards Matthew was very
'I wish you wouldn't, Fleur,' Charlotte said with chill displease on
her face. 'I realise you mean well, but pools have caused no end of
trouble for Matthew. He's had ear infections, eye infections and
infections on the chest. I'm tired of all the worry.'
'I can see that,' Fleur started, 'but Matthew hasn't really tried our
own pool since Julian had it converted to salt.'
'That's true,' Matthew nodded, none too happily himself. 'I'm not
really the sporting type, Fleur.'
'But you desperately need the exercise.' Fleur caught his hand and
held it. 'Swimming is marvellous for asthmatics. I'm a good
swimmer, but we could get a coach if you liked.'
'Please do not attempt to go over my head,' Charlotte put in rather
grimly. 'Matthew is my responsibility and has been for a long time.'
'Please, Aunt Charlotte,' Fleur's green eyes were beseeching, 'we
won't help him this way. It would be better to risk an infection and
build up his chest. I'm sure it's only because of the Standford frame
that he's not in a far worse condition.'
'Can't you just accept what I'm saying to you, Fleur?' Charlotte
challenged.
'No, Aunt Charlotte, I can't!' Fleur answered gravely. 'I've come all
this way for Matthew, no one else. With all due respect, and I know
how deeply you care for him, I have a responsibility too. It's a well
proven fact that swimming is wonderful therapy for anyone with
Matthew's condition.'
'Do you think we haven't tried?' Charlotte asked sharply.
'His uncle thinks he ought to try.' She had to use Julian's authority as
a last resort.
Short of launching into a full scale argument, there was little else
Fleur could say. Crushing down her natural thoughts of rebellion,
she began to speak about the beauty of the grounds.
Charlotte, a keen gardener, nodded agreeably. 'In the spring, of
course, we have the most wonderful display of azaleas and
camellias. It's a place of enchantment then.'
'I remember,' Fleur answered pleasantly, trying not to feel hurt and
rebuffed. She had been twelve years old when she left.
'Of course she does!' Matthew burst out in an irked voice. 'She
remembers everything!'
'Except what drove us all apart.' Abruptly Charlotte stood up, her
mind apparently far back in the past. 'Excuse me, won't you,
children, I have things to attend to.'
'Certainly.' Fleur made a little bobbing gesture out of her chair.
'End of conversation,' Matthew hissed as they both watched
Charlotte's tall, straight-back figure disappear through the French
doors. 'Don't take any notice of Lottie,' he begged his stepsister.
'She's a good person really, but she's got lots of hang-ups.'
'You can say that again!' Fleur gave a tense little laugh. 'I suppose
it's not easy being the unmarried daughter of the house.'
'Actually she's quite keen on the gardener,' Matthew volunteered in
a hushed, confidential tone.
'What?' Fleur could feel her mouth fall open.
'Not an ordinary gardener,' Matthew amended, 'he's in landscape
construction and design. Uncle Julian thinks he's brilliant. He put
the pool in and the surrounds, then Uncle Julian got him to do the
lily pond.'
'More like a lake?' Fleur glanced around at the shimmering sheet of
water. 'He is cleververy creative. What's his name?'
'Kurt Werner. He and Lottie have long, earnest conversations about
soils and chemicals and wonderful things like that. I used to think
Uncle Julian was encouraging them because then he got pergolas
done and the terraced gardens and, of course, the grounds need
looking after they're so big. Kurt's men attend to that and we usually
see him once or twice a week.'
'Do you like him?' Fleur asked, unable to picture Charlotte in a
tender moment.
'Oh yes,' Matthew's answer was boyishly offhand. 'He's all right, but
he's very quiet. Grandfather doesn't like him at all. He calls him
Attila and poor old Lottie hates it. I think that's why Grandfather
keeps it up. He can be quite cruel sometimes. I know, because I
overhead Uncle Julian telling him.'
'Well, well!' Fleur stared into Matthew's blue eyes. 'That's a
surprising twist. I'm looking forward to meeting Kurt.'
'Then you probably will this afternoon,' Matthew grinned. 'Try and
get him to talk.'
Mindful of Charlotte's opposition, Fleur didn't venture into the pool,
nor did she suggest it to Matthew; a hardship, because it was very
hot and the brilliantly glistening water looked wonderfully inviting.
Lunch passed uneventfully and afterwards brother and sister went
for a long stroll around the neighbourhood admiring all the
architect-designed homes and the well kept gardens ablaze with
colour. Matthew was in his element pointing out different designs
and the ones he favoured, and Fleur looked at him with deep
affection.
'One day .you'll be designing a special home for yourself.'
'We'll share it,' Matthew assured her.
'I take the view you'll be married by then,' Fleur smiled at him.
'Wives don't take kindly to sharing their husbands.'
'Who'd want a husband who was wheezing all the time?' Matthew
stopped suddenly and turned around to face her. 'You haven't seen
me when I'm having an attack.'
Fleur answered positively, 'You can beat this thing, Matthew. How
about trying?'
'But how?
'By telling yourself every day you're going to get better. As well
we're going to add practical help to the psychology.'
Thanks very much.' Matthew's smile widened bit by bit and he
started walking again. 'Does this mean I have to do physical jerks?
Uncle Julian has already bought me dumbbells and things.'
'Come on now,' Fleur slipped her hand into his, 'exercise isn't all that
bad. Wouldn't you like to get better?'
'I sure would!'
'Right then, let's astonish the experts!'
By the time they got home, it was mid-afternoon and just as
Matthew had said they found Charlotte in her wildflower garden
talking to a blond giant of a man with shy blue eyes and a fine, fair
'Oh, that looks scrumptious,' said Fleur, and came to stand beside
Maria's ample figure. 'Would you mind, Maria, if I make tea and
coffee?'
'Allow me,' smiled Maria, and began to wipe her hands.
'No, please.' Fleur touched her shoulder. 'Go on with what, you're
doing. I'm not used to being waited on.'
'Is no bother.' Maria looked uncertain.
'Fleur's making tea for Charlotte and Mr Werner,' Matthew told the
housekeeper round- eyed.
To Fleur's astonishment Maria broke into Italian.
'What does that mean?' Fleur looked at her stepbrother for
enlightenment.
'It means Maria is surprised.'
Maria did indeed look surprised, but as Fleur filled the electric kettle
and plugged it in, Maria walked away to the pantry and returned
with a couple of cake tins.
'Matthew,' she ordered, ' 'elp your sister. You know where the cups
and saucers are.'
In the end, it turned out to be a very pleasant little tea-party. They
spoke exclusively about plants and gardens and when Kurt went off,
Charlotte accompanied him ostensibly to confirm an order for
hundreds of new seedlings.
'What did I tell you?' grinned Matthew. 'She's sweet on him, poor
old Lottie.'
'And what's wrong with that?' Fleur gave him a close stare. 'He's a
very nice man.'
'The trouble is,' said Matthew, ignoring her, 'Lottie can't make a
friend of him.'
'Why not?' Fleur loaded the tray.
'Grandfather would never hear of it.'
*'The old snob!'
'He is and he isn't,' Matthew said. 'Just cynical mostly, I suppose. He
probably thinks Kurt is after Lottie's money.'
'He's not that sort of person.'
'Lucky for him,' Matthew shrugged, and polished off the last piece
of cake. 'Lottie had a disastrous romance a couple of years ago. He
was definitely after her money. Uncle Julian found out and told her
so. You can bet your life he's had Kurt checked out as well, so I
really think Kurt must like Lottie for herself.'
'Good grief, it's enough to give a girl ulcers,' Fleur remarked
soberly. 'I'm glad I'm not an heiress.'
'I'll tell you something,' Matthew grinned, and took the tray off her,
'you're the first person who's ever offered Kurt tea on the terrace!'
CHAPTER FOUR
WHETHER she wanted Sheena's company or not, Fleur found that she
had it.
'You're tired, aren't you, you poor darling?'
'Just a little.' Fleur stood in a green silk chiffon evening dress the
colour of her eyes. It was the day of her shopping trip and Sheena
had accompanied her. And what a treasure she was! She knew
everyone who was anyone in the fashion world and her taste was
superb.
'What about something of Zandra Rhodes?' Sheena said to the
fastastic-looking woman who owned the exclusive boutique. 'Fleur
has such vivid colouring she could take it.'
'I have just the thing!' the woman gushed, filled with bliss at having
sold more clothes in one morning than she had done in the past
month. Besides, the girl could carry any dress she had, she was so
slight and pretty and chic, and Sheena Lloyd was one of her best
customers.
To Fleur's surprise, Sheena was looking genuinely pleased and
excited, Sheena loved clothes as a couturier loves them and it gave
her intense satisfaction to be able to assist Julian's young' relative in
her choice of a complete wardrobe.
The Zandra Rhodes looked brilliant, the quilted gold satin bandeau
fitting snugly over Fleur's small, high bosom.
'Now let's see,' Sheena put her glossy head to one side, 'is there
anything you haven't got?'
'A raincoat?'
'Maybe not,' Sheena released her breath, 'but I've been searching for
Julian all my life. He's the one man I've met who has everything!'
Except a heart. Fleur smiled and nodded to the waiter to take her
plate away.
While they were waiting for coffee, Sheena didn't spare her. Julian
was so utterly special, so alive and fascinating, so dedicated to big
business at which he was brilliant. He was almost completely in
control now that Sir Charles had turned eighty and according to
Sheena he enjoyed a tremendous popularity with the miners,
something his legendary grandfather had never achieved. Though
she never said it, Sheena undeniably hinted; he was also brilliant in
bed.
Fleur cared nothing for their sexual adventures. Of course he'd be
brilliant; one had only to look at him to see that.
Almost two hours passed at the hairdresser's (Sheena had her hair
done as well), but when Fleur finally looked at herself she had to
admit Sheena's hairdresser had a magical way with the scissors. He
had taken her short cap of curls and somehow set all the curl free as
he tamed it. It clustered around her small head, defining the
beautiful shape of the skull with little fiery splashes of curl drawn
gently on to her white forehead. It wasn't a fringe at all, yet it made
the most of her eyes. They looked very green and enormous.
'Beautiful!' the hairdresser brought his head down to Fleur's level
and smiled into her mirrored eyes. 'Next time it will be even better!'
'Julian will be pleased!' Sheena stood up and tossed her gleaming
mane back. 'Now you look just right to be a Standford.'
The remark put Fleur into a slow burn and she was still smarting at
the end of the afternoon when Julian picked her up. Today it was a
Daimler Double Six, but it could just as well have been the silver
Maserati or the Porsche 924 in the garage.
And that's what money's for! Fleur thought wryly, and slipped
quickly into the bucket seat.
'Well, how did it go?' Julian's blue eyes just barely flickered over
her, yet she drew in her breath sharply.
'Sheena was a great help,' she said demurely.
'No other comment?'
'It's a nice little car.'
'Less cumbersome than the Rolls,' he answered in the same, dry
tone. 'I like your hair.'
'Sheena again. She knows everyone.'
'You look utterly, totally, the most expensive baby in the world,' he
told her.
'Thank you. I did spend a lot of money.'
'What's wrong with that?'
'Nothing. It's too good to be true.' She looked out the window at the
passing traffic. 'Why is it there are no animals at Waverley?'
'As in pets?' he answered a little sarcastically.
'Exactly.' He never did anything for the sweetness of her temper.
'Animal hair, darling, since you ask.'
'OH.' However much she disliked the way he answered her, she had
to accept it. i didn't think. Is Matthew supposed to be allergic to it,
then?'
'God knows!' Julian said soberly. 'We've covered just about
everything,'
'I think he'd love a dog,' said Fleur. 'A couple of them, with all that
wonderful space to roam around in.'
'I understand flower gardens are very popular with puppies.'
'We could get full grown dogs from the pound. Think what it would
mean to them to be given a good home.'
'I'm certain Charlotte will have something to say to that.' Smoothly
he overtook a slow moving vehicle.
'We all know you're the boss, Julian.' She stole a brief glance at his
handsome, chiselled profile. 'Just a prick of a needle would tell us if
Matthew really is allergic. Somehow I don't think he is. We patted
Aplenty of dogs when we were out walking yesterday with no kind
of unfavourable reaction. I think it would be a lovely surprise to
present him with a couple of pets.'
'It would be a surprise, certainly.' His mouth quirked in a smile.
'You must let me discuss it with Charlotte first.'
'And please, Julian, while you're at it,' Fleur turned to him earnestly,
'mention about the pool.'
'I've a feeling you already have.'
'And Aunt Charlotte doesn't approve. I understand how she feels,
but I've promised Matthew we'd start on a swimming programme.'
'You mean well, Fleur,' Charlotte burst out, 'but you simply don't
know. Haven't I got enough on my hands without having Matthew
sick again?'
'I'm here now to help you.'
'Forgive me if I don't see it that way.' Quickly Charlotte stood up.
'When you see Matthew having an attack, you'll understand.'
And perhaps I will. Left on her own, Fleur went to the piano and sat
down. She was beset now by worry, anxious about Matthew's
wellbeing, but she had to try. Matthew did need building up. She
couldn't sit back and accept Charlotte's opinion, yet overriding
Charlotte made her feel guilty.
The feeling of her fingers on the smooth keys reassured her. Her
troubled thoughts switched from the tensions within the house to the
calm beauty of a Chopin nocturne. She began softly, then because
she was accomplished the piano gathered volume. The safest thing
to do wasn't always the best.
'All right, whenever you say,' Fleur answered casually. 'Let's try
another lap.'
Inside the house, Charlotte heard their laughter and shrieks and her
anxieties began to fade a little. Matthew was responding to his
sister's love and attention like her plants to water. Kurt was coming
tomorrow. What a splendid idea of Fleur's to invite him to have tea
with them. Picking up her exquisite needlework, Charlotte walked
outside to the pool area and found herself a comfortable chair out of
the sun's glare.
'Watch me, Lottie!' Matthew called, and Charlotte put up her free
hand and waved. It was incredible how much better her beloved
nephew was looking, tanned and healthy from this distance, though
much too thin. If she narrowed her eyes he could easily pass for
David at the same age. And thinking of David, Charlotte avoided
looking in Fleur's direction. She hadn't the heart for it. Yet.
'Gee, you're good to us,' grinned Matthew, and began opening the
doors.
'Thank you, Julian.' Fleur came to stand at Julian's side.
'Is that all?'
'I wouldn't know what else you want.' She looked up at him quickly,
titian head tilted, green eyes large and wondering.
He didn't answer, but just looked down at her, and she found to her
dismay that she was trembling.
'Aren't you going to get in?' Matthew was demanding, surprised they
hadn't heard him the first time.
'Well, don't just stand there, baby,' Julian said to her, 'take us for a
drive.'
So for the next twenty minutes Fleur took them all for a ride. She
was in an agony of nerves for the first minute or so, more from
Julian's effect on her than any nervousness about driving the car, but
Matthew's buoyant mood made them both relax.
'We'd better head home now,' Julian said smoothly. 'I'm having
dinner out tonight.'
'Not Sheena!' Matthew threw back at him.
'Don't you like her?'
'She's all right,' Matthew waved a hand vaguely. 'Why don't you take
Fleur out some time?'
'There's really nothing I'd like more!' Julian's voice was suave and
mocking.
By the end of the following week Sir Charles decided Fleur had
better meet a few people.
'Arrange something, Charlotte,' he told his granddaughter before he
stomped out to the waiting Rolls. 'She's a captivating child and this
is her home.'
'I suppose a party would be nice.' It was plain from Charlotte's
sudden blush that she would have loved to include Kurt Werner in
the guest list, though she knew perfectly well her grandfather would
never accept him. 'Why don't you ask Kurt?' Fleur asked gently,
reading Charlotte's face.
'Oh, heavens, no!' Charlotte put a watch on her unguarded face.
'He's a very shy person, as you know. He would only be
uncomfortable.'
'I think he's more quiet than shy,' Fleur pointed out. 'Now that I've
got to know him better I can see he's really a collected kind of
person.'
'It wouldn't do, Fleur,' Charlotte sighed, but her eyes looked
confused. 'My grandfather can be very unpleasant when the mood
takes him. Whatever you and I may think of Kurt, he's just the
gardener to Grandfather.'
'It seems to me you're entitled to make your own friends.' Fleur
leaned against the windowsill and looked out over the magnificent
rose garden.
'The ordinary things don't apply to me,' Charlotte told her brusquely.
'I've been kept down all my life.'
'It's for you, then, to break out.' Fleur turned round to survey
Charlotte's tall, upright figure. 'You quite like Kurt, don't you?'
'I don't know.' Charlotte looked rattled. 'I don't know what he thinks
of me.'
'I think he very much admires you,' Fleur answered truthfully, 'but
he thinks a sensible man would know nothing can come of it. Your
money terrifies him.'
'Why not?' Charlotte said bitterly. 'Everyone knows we've got too
much.'
'Such a problem!' Fleur laughed.
'It can't safeguard any of us against loss and grief.' Charlotte's stern
face looked pained. 'All we've ever had is money. When I was
younger I yearned for a man of my own to love, but I have no
capacity to attract.'
'That's not true, Aunt Charlotte!' Fleur responded to that bitter selfcondemnation.
'You're a nice child,' Charlotte murmured unexpectedly. 'I thought
when David brought your mother to the house I'd never seen anyone
more beautiful in my life. I remember the way David looked at
herGrandfather, every man that came her way. Only- Julian was
immune. Your mother broke up my engagement, did you know
that?'
'No!' Fleur drew a sharp, amazed breath.
'It doesn't matter now. He wasn't worth anything.'
'She couldn't have done it deliberately.' Fleur walked across the
room to look into the older woman's eyes.
'She did, Fleur,' Charlotte said tiredly. 'She was like that, and then it
was very easy for a woman with her beauty. I think the reason
she....' Charlotte paused abruptly and broke off. 'A strange moment
to speak about the past. The only thing any of us can do is forget it.'
But who was going to take away the pain? Fleur stood for a long
time looking out at the fragrant bobbing heads of the roses.
Fighting to control herself, Fleur reached for her robe and pulled it
on. What had she done with her sweeping new ideas? Because of
her, Matthew would suffer. Yet no terrible wheeze assailed her ears.
She got her arms around him, intending to take him back to his
room, but instantly he went rigid and choked out a little cry.
'I'm going to be sick!'
The urgency in his voice galvanised her into action. She rushed him
into the bathroom and stood there holding his head while he was
violently ill. Afterwards he stood there shivering and she wiped his
sick, clammy face with a flannel.
'Come back to bed, darling. We'll have to ring the doctor.'
He didn't seem capable of getting back to his own room, so Fleur
folded back the top sheet and the blanket and helped him into her
own bed. 'Will you be all right for a minute?' she bent over him
anxiously. 'I must get help.'
'I had the most atrocious night,' he whispered. 'All terrible
nightmares.'
'You're all right now. You're with me,' she said.
'I won't be sick, again for a while,' Matthew tried to reassure her.
'There can't be anything left in my stomach.'
'I'll be as quick as I can.' Fleur patted him on the shoulder.
She charged down the hallway, totally disregarding the fact that she
was still in her flimsy night attire. It was still early, she knew that by
the quality of light, but there was sure to be someone about. She
would check downstairs first, before knocking on Charlotte's door.
Charlotte was an early riser and she always supervised the men's
breakfasts.
As she flew down the staircase, Julian's voice came as a shock to
her.
'What is it, Fleur?'
He stood in the entrance hall, staring up at her, and she hurled
herself towards him.
'It's Matty. He's ill!'
'Damn!' Julian said no more but hurried them both back up the
stairs.
Matthew was still lying in a crumpled heap on Fleur's bed and Julian
went to him, pladng a hand on the boy's brow.
'A bit of a temperature, not much. No sign of a wheeze.'
'Thank God!' Fleur had her hands joined at her breast like a little
saint.
'Best be on the safe side and call the doctor,' Julian was still
searching his nephew's face. 'What's the main trouble, Matt?'
'Something I ate,' said Matthew. 'I've been sick.'
'Ghastly, isn't it?' Julian smiled at him and smoothed back his hair.
'They've got injections these days to take care of nausea. I'll give the
clinic a ring.'
'Too early,' Fleur told him, her small face desperate with worry.
'What is the time, Julian?' He glanced at his watch, already dressed
except for his jacket. 'Two minutes past seven. The call will be
recorded and the doctor will be along as soon as he can.'
'Oh, I hope so.' She sat down on the chair beside the bed. 'How do
you feel now, Matty?'
'A bit better.' Matthew tried, but his face looked a misery.
'I'll ring now.' Julian spoke with his usual calm authority. 'Fleur,
stop worrying. It could very well be something he ate.'
Fleur's young face didn't look convinced. It was obvious she was
punishing herself, and Julian caught her by the shoulder, saying
briskly, 'You'd better get dressed.'
His blue eyes travelled over her, extraordinary eyes that alternately
melted and stiffened her bones. A brief moment when she flushed
deeply, then she leapt to her feet. 'Just give me a moment.'
In the bathroom she pulled on a T-shirt and cotton slacks and trod
into her sandals. She didn't even glance in the mirror, all her
thoughts with her stepbrother.
'Right?' Julian nodded to her briefly when she emerged again. 'I'll
make that phone call.'
He had only been gone a moment when Matthew-was sick again.
Fleur held him, murmuring words of sympathy, and when they
staggered back into the bedroom there was Charlotte in the
doorway, her eyes full of dismay and hostility.
'Nobody ever takes any notice of me,' she said shortly. 'I told you,
Fleur, all this swimming was a mistake.'
'I'm sorry, but we're not sure.' Fleur's expressive face pleaded with
her not to start now.
'Then I'll leave you to look after him,' Charlotte announced with
tears in her eyes. 'You and Fleur together, seeing you've got such
faith in her.'
'You're becoming emotional, Lottie,' Julian told her. 'It's not like
you.'
'I've got them, you know,' Charlotte countered, then turned abruptly
on her heel.
'What's wrong with Lottie?' Matthew wheezed from the bed.
'Oh, God!' Fleur jumped up in anguish, her face pale and upset. 'You
just stop that, you hear me?'
Matthew just lay there staring up at her.
'You're not going to have an attack,' she said with perfect surety.
'You're not, I won't let you. All you've got is a sick stomach.'
'A sick stomach? Is that all?'
'Yes,' said Fleur. 'So just be sensible. The doctor will be here
shortly.'
Julian sat down on the side of the bed and took Matthew's flickering
hand. 'A lot rests with you, Matthew: It's time you took yourself in
hand. I want you to lie quietly and find your own centre, the place
where you think you inner being resides.'
'Here?' Matthew pressed the area almost directly over his heart.
Julian nodded, still holding the boy's other hand, 'Now tell yourself
what Fleur has said. You're not going to have an attack.. You're not.
You're not!''
Matthew closed his eyes and his thin body lay still, 'Fm not going to
have an attack. I'm not. I'm not!' The lines of sickness and
bewilderment began to smooth out of his face. He didn't look
thirteen at all, but six, and Fleur was devastated by an upsurge of
remembered grief.
With Julian and Matthew softly chanting she rushed out of the room
and sought the privacy of the sitting room opposite.
Julian found her there a few minutes later, her face in her hands and
her slender body shaking.
'You mind so much, Fleur.' He turned her into his arms.
'What if I'm to blame?' Responsibility flooded her. 'How can I tell
him to just stop, when he can't? Who am I to tell anyone anything?
I've hurt Charlotte, and it's the last thing I wanted.'
He went on holding her, easing her like a child. 'The wheeze has
gone.'
'What?' She lifted her drowning eyes. 'Where did it go?'
'Evidently Matthew can banish it if he tries hard enough.'
'I'm hurting, Julian,' she told him, leaning against him with a sigh.
Her head barely reached the top of his shoulder and his arm linked
her closely to him at the waist.
'Fleur?' he queried, but she didn't answer. He wasn't comforting her
any more. Something had flashed between them. Something
powerful. Always hidden from sight.
His hand speared through her short curls and he lifted her head to
him.
'Don't, Julian,' she whispered, and it sounded like a prayer. 'I don't
believe you.'
'Don't wreck my life!'
'You little fool,' he said curtly, but he didn't release her immediately.
The whole room seemed to be closing in on them, not a forbidding
darkness, but a flame. There seemed no escaping him, then they
heard Matthew's call.
'Fleur?'
'It's all right, I'm here!' She glanced quickly up at Julian, frightened
of their intimacy.
'Go to him.' His blue eyes were remote. 'I'll wait until the doctor
arrives.'
Less than an hour later the doctor was admitted to the sickroom.
Fleur stood up as soon as she heard footsteps and went to the door.
To her surprise, Julian had accompanied the doctor, a young man,
and he quickly introduced them.
Anxious as she was, Fleur quite missed the bedazzled look that
showed in the young doctor's eyes, to be almost reluctantly replaced
by professionalism. Julian, as usual, missed nothing, and he directed
the younger man's attention to the bed.
'How are you now, Matt?' he asked pointedly.
'A little better, I think.'
'Well, let's have a look at you,' Jon Talbot said cheerfully, surprised
by the heavy thud of his own heart.
Fleur, still distressed, moved around to the other side of the bed and
Julian went to stand by the window.
The examination continued, the young doctor offering in an
undertone the warming information he had read up Matthew's card.
It was Dr McNulty, Matthew's usual doctor's day off, and the
receptionist had called him at home.
'He was wheezing a little this morning.' Fleur's green eyes met the
doctor's, barely even registering his fair good looks.
'Well, he's quite all right now.' Strong fingers beat a tattoo on
Matthew's brown chest.
'I talked myself out of it.' Matthew reached for his sister's hand and
held it.
'Good man!' The doctor opened his bag with a flourish. 'There's
been a twenty-four-hour virus doing the rounds. A lot of my young
patients have got it. I'll give you an injection to settle the tummy and
you can spend the rest of the day in bed.'
Relief brought out Fleur's enchantingly sweet smile. 'We were so
worried!'
'It's boring to be sick, isn't it, old man?' Dr Talbot looked at
Matthew, then plunged the needle home. 'Nothing to eat, just sips of
water. He'll be back to normal by tomorrow. If I'm able, I'll call back
and have a look at him late afternoon.'
Julian came away from the window, his dark face sardonic, but he
said nothing, just waiting patiently for the doctor to leave. If it was
true, as they said, that the eyes revealed the self, young Dr Talbot
had fallen madly in love at first sight.
CHAPTER FIVE
IT didn't take Charlotte very long to apologise. 'Forgive me, Fleur. I
don't know what came over me.'
'I understand.'
'Yes, you do, don't you?' Charlotte's fine eyes softened into the ghost
of a smile. 'Where did you learn it, Fleur? You were the same as a
child.'
Matthew, to everyone's relief, rallied quickly, and Julian at least
wasn't surprised when Dr Talbot found the time in his busy day to
pay the patient another call.
'I like him,' Matthew said. 'I want him for my doctor from now on.'
'It couldn't have gone better if he'd planned it,' Julian was heard to
observe very dryly, but as yet Fleur was quite unaware of her
conquest.
The days slipped away and the morning before the party she plucked
up the courage to put a suggestion to Charlotte.
'Why don't you get your hair cut?' she asked lightly as though she
had just thought about it, instead of at least a couple of times every
day.
'My hair?' Charlotte put down the morning paper and touched a
hand to her heavy chignon.
'You've all got splendid hair,' Fleur pointed out sincerely. Only
Charlotte's was pulled back tightly from her face, dragging out the
natural curl.
'I'm too old to change my hair-style,' Charlotte said doggedly.
'A woman is never too old to change her hairstyle,' Fleur said
patiently. 'Anything that enhances a woman's personal confidence
and well being is well worth thinking about. You know how much
you liked my hairwell, I'm sure Glenn could fit you in.'
'But I'd feel naked without my hair!' Charlotte's expression was
comical, it reaches almost to my waist.'
'It would be smarter, Aunt Charlotte, and it would make you look a
whole lot younger. Most women would give anything to have thick,
shining, naturally curly hair.'
'I'm nearly forty.'
'I'm not asking you to have a face-lift! Besides, the great beauties of
the world are in their forties. Do let me ring Glenn. He'll make you
feel and look so much better and we'll shop for a new dress.'
Some urge was on Charlotte, for after about an hour she told Fleur
to ring up and see if she could make an appointment. As if we
couldn't get in, Fleur thought to herself. Society put great store on
the very wealthy and hairdressers depended on women who went to
a great many social functions. Glenn would be only too pleased to
see them and the appointments were made for mid-afternoon.
Glenn on his mettle, went full out to effect a transformation. 'If you
just step this way, Miss Standford, I think we can surprise you.'
And stun them he did. With the great mane of yesterday swept
away, Charlotte was overwhelmed by her unfamiliar reflection in
the mirror.
'Congratulations, young man,' Charlotte said grandly, and actually
smiled. 'I was so terribly nervous, but you've worked wonders.'
'I did,' Fleur answered quite calmly, and put a hand on his arm. 'You
did tell me it was my party.'
'And this, miss, is my house. Since when have we included the
gardeners on our guest list?'
'He's more than that, Sir Charles.' Fleur kept the luminous smile on
her face. 'He has quite a successful business and he's turned your
garden into a paradise.'
'I won't have Charlotte making a damn fool of herself! Where's her
pride?'
'Look at them,' Fleur begged him. 'Really look at them. I'd say they
make a very personable couple.'
'I'd say you've got too much to say for yourself altogether!' The old
man gave her a fierce glare.
'Humiliate Charlotte,' Fleur told him quietly, 'and I'll walk out of this
house tonight.'
'You won't, you know!' The fierceness died out of the blue eyes.
'And that's one hell of a way to blackmail me!'
'You know what they say, Sir. Charles,' Fleur took a deep, long
breath, 'all's fair in love and war.'
'Because Charlotte's in love?' he shot at her with obvious disbelief.
'I would say well on the way.' Fleur swallowed hard.
'Bah, she was born an old maid!' Sir Charles muttered, and stalked
off to his friends.
With her chin tilted like a princess Fleur circled the reception
rooms, conscious that everyone knew her background and
speculated on her future. In a kind of mad defiance, Charlotte in a
royal blue crepe-de-chine that showed her splendid back snatched
glass after glass of champagne off the trays, the unaccustomed
alcohol boosting her confidence and loosening her tongue. It was,
all in all, a kind of feverish evening.
Sheena kept close to Fleur as though in a short time they would be
family anyway, though Fleur kept remembering how Sheena's
mother's jaw had literally dropped open when they were introduced.
'On account of your red hair,' Sheena had explained away her
mother's sheer amazement. Fleur herself had the uncomfortable
notion that Mrs Lloyd had taken an instant dislike to her, but for
what reason, she couldn't imagine. Maybe it was the admiration that
was coming her way or the way the unpredictable Sir Charles
insisted she play the piano for them and clapped loud and long when
she was finished.
'Grandfather is in a good mood,' Charlotte whispered to Fleur, when
she had been tense with worry. No one could say he had made a fuss
of Kurt,-neither had he ordered him straight out of the house. In her
own way, Fleur had worked a revolution.
Immediately after supper, Matthew was sent to bed and Fleur
walked up the stairs with him. 'You seemed to be enjoying
yourself?'
'I actually had a glass of champagne.' Matthew burst out laughing.
'Only one, I hope!'
'All everyone is talking about is you,' Matthew told her. 'I'd say you
were a huge success.'
'I meant what I said, Sir Charles,' Fleur whispered softly in the old
man's ear.
'Did you, you little witch!' He put his arm around her narrow waist
and kissed her on the cheek. 'If I've learnt something, you're one of
the. few people who's always stood up to me.'
'I expect you like it.' She smiled at him.
'I do.' Sir Charles paused to say goodnight and Charlotte watched
him walk away with obvious relief:
'Dear me, I' was terrified he would start, when I'm so desperately
tired.'
'Go up to bed, then,' Julian told her. 'Fleur and I will lock up.'
'A lovely, lovely night!' Still brushed with happiness, Charlotte
kissed both her brother and Fleur. 'I think I'll have a sleep-in in the
morning.
For once.' She paused in the doorway and blew them another kiss.
'II hope -' Fleur wondered if she could even voice her hopes
aloud.
'For a girl who's frightened of marriage you're doing your best as a
matchmaker.' Julian sat down on a sofa and pulled her down beside
him.
'But you know how Charlotte feels?' she answered him a little
apologetically.
'No, not reallyCharlotte has never confided in me.'
'She has so much, yet she's so vulnerable,' Fleur sighed.
'Then think about it again!' she cried contemptuously. 'I won't allow
you to destroy me like you destroyed my mother.'
She tried desperately to obliterate excitement with anger, uncaring
that his own anger was unleashed. He jerked her easily right across
his knees, his hand under her chin, forcibly holding her glowing
head up to him.
'Don't touch me, Julian!' Even as she spoke the words, her eyes were
luring him on, her mouth anticipating the feel of his own.
'Do you think I don't know when a woman is leading me on?' His
voice was steely with anger and something far stronger.
'All you have to do is let me go.'
'You've got a hell of a nerve to ask that!'
A finger of flame flickered deep in her body, gathered strengtha
conflagration, with herself the victim. The situation was beyond her.
She gave an incoherent little cry, more seductive to the male than
she would ever know, and Julian lowered his head, not crushing her
into surrender but taking her mouth with passion and a consummate
slow urgency.
She had nothing leftno pride, no resistance. The victory had been
all too easy. The hurting hand under her chin moved to her hair, but
still he didn't take his mouth from hers, nor did she attempt to turn
her head away.
What price honour, moral fibre and a lifetime of disgust? He had set
a trap for her to fall into which in itself was the lowest form of
betrayal. Unsophisticated. A virgin.
He moved her closer into his arms, her capacity for sensuality
driving him past the punishing kiss he had intended. His hand came
down over her shoulder, under the flowery necklace that glittered so
erotically, exploring the delicate bones. Her body was made for a
man's delight; the skin so fine and dazzlingly white, small uptilted
breasts that were now revealed in a deep semi-circle above the tight
bodice of her dress.
His fingers burned across her sensitive skin, intent on inflicting the
most exquisite pain.
'You don't know when to stop, do you?' she challenged him, while
her body arched tautly with a will of its own. 'The one thing they
never taught you!'
'What is written, is written,' he quoted in a voice that mocked them
equally, while still sensuous beyond belief.
'I'll write my own fate, thank you. Not you!' Fleur whispered
vehemently, the words ending in a strangled gasp as his hand slid
down over her breast and captured it, delighting in its tender
promise.
For an instant she was incapable of finding her voice and when she
did, it shook badly. 'You have no right to touch me, Julian!' She
caught at his wrist.
'But you love me.' His blue eyes blazed like the sky at midday.
'What are you saying?' She was visibly panicked, recoiling against
his shoulder.
'A long time ago, you did,' he told her gently.
'Now I know how truly cruel you are.' She was scarcely aware her
eyes were full of tears, silent, silver tears for the lost, loveless years.
She had loved him, of courseidolised him, which made his fall
from exalted heights too bitter to be borne.
What was left was fascination; the terrible physical bond that still
linked her so strongly to him. Her mind was chilled to ice, but her
sorry, traitorous body was filled with a fire and audacity that would
allow him to ruin her life.
'Poor little one. Poor flower-face.' He lifted his hand and with a
gesture that could not deceive her, brushed away the shimmering
tears. 'Don't cry!'
Her heart contracted at his tone. An actor's voice, to play upon the
emotions. What an asset! 'I'm not going to let you jeopardise my
little chance of happiness,' she told him with shaken turbulence.
'Because you're a child still, a frightened, bewildered child, bred on
lies.'
'No, Julian. No more!' She made a determined attempt to lift herself
out of his arms, but he held her so easily, infinitely stronger.
'It's a long time since you've let me cradle you in my arms,' he said
softly. 'I thought I liked you best when you were round about five,
but now I'm not at all certain.'
'You'll be certain of a vulgar scandal, if you don't let me go!'
His reaction to that was to laugha genuine laugh, full of soft
amusement. 'You silly, bird- witted baby! Why, I've hardly touched
you.'
'You've touched me where nobody else has,' she replied heatedly,
then blushed deeply. Damn her rash tongue!
'Have I?' he brushed a kiss over her quivering mouth. 'I'm glad.'
'You should have been a sultan. And what about Sheena? Just how
many women do you fit into your busy life?'
'As it happens, I'm only interested in one.' He pinned her flailing
hands together and held them to his chest.
'Then I can't make much sense of what you're doing now.'
'Helping you grow up?' he offered helpfully, his blue eyes sparkling
with insolence.
Her blood sang with fury. She wanted to kill him, but he held her
hands. 'How kind! You should talk to Sheena about itbetter yet,
her mother. She took an instant dislike to me.'
'You're not the plainest little thing in the world,' he pointed out very
dryly.
'And you're utterly untrustworthydespicable! How can you hold
up your head?'
'How? he asked, mimicking her disparaging tone. 'Are you implying
I'm wronging Sheena?'
'She can't possibly know what she's letting herself in for.'
'Surely you're not going to tell her?' Some primitive emotion
prowled in his blue eyes, an inclination towards violence.
'Please, Julian, you're hurting me!'
'I want to!' He slid his arm under her back, half lifting her: She tried
to cry out, expecting to be annihilated, but instead he tipped her
head forward and released the catch on the necklace that sparkled so
brilliantly around her throat.
'You really don't deserve such an honour. I'm keeping this for my
wife.'
'You brute!' Her humiliation turned to scorn.
'That's just your view of my character.' Julian slid the necklace into
his breast pocket with supreme unconcern.
'Don't forget the earrings.' Fleur tugged at her earlobes, wanting only
to fling them at him.
'The earrings aren't important.'
'Oh yes, they are!' The hot blood was throbbing in her veins. 'You
excel at this kind of thing, you rotten beast!'
There was a brilliant flash in his eyes, next thing he had flung her
across his knees. She wanted to scream as his hand administered
several hard slaps, but not a sound grazed her throat.
'You deserve that!' he told her unfeelingly, and finally turned her
over again.
'You lily-livered thing!'
'You earned it,' he said hardly.
'Are you going to beat your wife? she asked him passionately.
'Very likely.' His blue eyes swept over her, brilliant and ironic.
'Then I hope you end up in jail!'
'A pity you said that.' His hand twisted her head back into his
shoulder and he kissed her with such violence she thought she
would bear the imprint of his mouth for ever.
In. fact, the slight swelling didn't take all that long to fade. When
Fleur got up the next morning after a few hours dominated by
savage dreams of Julian, it was gone. No questions would be asked,
except the questions she asked her own heart.
tell you now. Uncle Julian has placed an order for two pedigree
collies. I love collies, don't you?'
'He's what? Fleur burst out. She had intended going to the pound.
'He thought you might prefer a bitzer or an Irish wolfhound, but he
said Grandfather had to be considered. Two pedigree pups or
nothing. Grandfather might just understand.'
'So when are we getting them?' Fleur subsided, saying goodbye in
her mind to two four-legged orphans.
'For Christmas.' Matthew turned back to his sister and smiled. 'It's
all in the timing, Uncle Julian says. Don't forget, it's a secret.'
As it happened, Kurt hurdled the problem of getting them to the
beach. While he worked on a. miniature waterfall, Matthew told him
all about Charlotte's fears.
'Could I not take you?' Kurt offered gravely. 'Miss Fleur could drive
one way and I would drive the other. I'm sure all your aunt needs is
reassurance. After all, your sister is a very capable young lady and
you're a strong, big boy.'
'Getting there, anyway.' Matthew had gained almost seven pounds.
'If Miss Fleur is agreeable, I'll speak to your aunt this afternoon.'
'Oh, great! We haven't got Uncle Julian to help us, you see and no
one bothers Grandfather.'
Kurt, who was well aware of Sir Charles' difficult temperament,
characteristically said nothing to the boy, nor to the woman who
occupied a good part of his thoughts. Their social equal he might
never be in the old man's eyes, but he could, just possibly, offer
friendship.
'Please, call me Fleur.' She reached out and touched his hand.
'Forgive me, I don't mean to pry, but I think you have a special
regard for Charlotte.'
'I do.' Kurt plunged his big hand into the white sand. 'I have tried to
conceal it, but it is proving too strong for me. Then, little Fleur, you
have made your own bid on my behalf. It was your idea to invite me
to your party, was it not?'
'A very good idea,' she said quietly.
'You can't know what it cost me to come. I have experience of the
so-called elite. Some of them can be very cruel, and none more than
Charlotte's grandfather. He is a very arrogant man.'
'He's what life has made him.' Fleur stared out to sea.
'I'm afraid he would never accept me in any capacity other than the
gardener.'
'And what is it you want?' she asked him as gently as possible.
'I would very much like to ask Charlotte's hand in marriage. I'm an
old-fashioned man and Charlotte is very conscious of her duty to her
grandfather. She would need his approval.'
'Have you spoken to her of this?' Fleur was a little astonished things
had gone so far.
'No, no.' Kurt put his head in his two hands. 'Not only the
grandfather but the money is the obstacletoo much money. A man
must be master in his own home.'
'You mean you're jealous of Charlotte's money?'
'I have money of my own,' Kurt said with dignity. 'Not money as
Charlotte is used to, but enough to keep a wife happy and
comfortable. Then too, I have plans. In the ordinary way I would not
be wasting my time coming every week to Waverleyonly to see
Charlotte. Such feeling we share was mutual from the very first day.'
'Don't forsake her, Kurt, because of a mistaken ideal. Charlotte
hasn't known a great deal of love.'
'If I truly thought she was serious!' Kurt seemed to be drowning in
doubt, is it because she is so isolated? Men would fear to approach a
goddess like that.' Fleur looked at him quickly, but it was entirely
serious. 'She could help me so much with my work. My interests are
hersthe wonderful discussions we have!'
'You must tell her how you feel.' Fleur was torn by a mad desire to
laugh, though it was far from being a laughing matter.
'It would enrage the grandfather.'
Thoroughly, Fleur thought, but she said aloud: 'Charlotte has the
right to lead her own life, to find happiness in her own home.
Waverley goes to Julian on Sir Charles' deathI know this for a
fact; Charlotte herself told me. Julian will marry and his wife will be
mistress of the house, not Charlotte. Yet she loves it and has given
her whole life to looking after her grandfather's interests.'
'If only she didn't have all that money,' Kurt muttered, his face
twisted. 'The money is the worst part.'
'Is it so important?' Fleur asked abruptly, looking at his inflexible
expression.
'I am afraid, yes.'
CHAPTER SIX
As a result of the party at Waverley, Fleur received a good many
invitations to parties and functions. She even received an invitation
to a Sunday brunch and it was there she encountered Jon Talbot
again. Not that their meeting had been left to chance. Her hostess, a
young married, was Jon's second cousin, and when it was casually
mentioned in passing that 'the Standford girl' when of course she
wasn'thad been invited, Jon had worked things so his name was
taken off the weekend roster at the clinic. Eligible young bachelors
were welcome everywhere and Jon had already privately confided to
his cousin that 'he would sell his mother to the Arabs for a girl like
Fleur!' Of course he wouldn't, being the apple of his mother's eye,
but the point was well taken.
Fleur soon discovered she saw the same faces at the places she was
invited, but she was quite unprepared to see Jon. Indeed, it took her
a few lengthy seconds to place him, a fact which did nothing for
Jon's usually buoyant self-confidence.
'Why, of course, Dr Talbot!' She gave him her hand.
'Jon, please.'
'Fleur,' she responded with a smile.
'I can't think of a name that would suit you more.' With gentle
determination he removed her to a relatively quiet corner. 'And how
is the boy?'
'So well it almost seems like a miracle!' She looked at him with
appeal in her widely spaced green eyes. 'Is this usual?'
'Well' he hesitated, not liking to worry her; on the other hand it
wouldn't be a kindness not to point out the facts'this time of year
we usually see a big reduction in cases. Spring is a bad time ...
'Good heavens, no, darling!' Sheena burst out laughing. 'That's Clive
Ashton of Ashton Associates. We've been very dear friends for
years now.'
And that's all you'll ever be! Jon thought maliciously, but didn't say.
Loaded Ashton might be, but macho he wasn't.
Evidently on the same train of thought, Sheena sighed: 'I wish to
God Julian would come home! Nothing is the same without him.'
'He's expected back tomorrow,' Fleur offered consolingly, when she
felt a vile wave of jealousy. The emotion shocked her so much she
couldn't bear to analyse it.
'Yes, I know.' Sheena's abstracted tone implied that she had heard
from Julian several times a day since he had been gone. 'I think he's
got them where he wants them, don't you?'
'I really wouldn't know,' said Fleur, familiar with the situation,-but
uncertain of its outcome. Sir Charles had been very short-tempered
and harassed, very much against the trade unions' demands, in his
view, at the expense of the economy.
'At least he's not a typical boss,' Jon made the startling observation.
'Julian?' Sheena looked at him sharply as though he had implied a
criticism.
'Yes, of course,' Jon answered simply. 'That's why he's listened to.
He's shown over and over that he's a very reasonable man but plenty
tough enough at the right time. Actually it's a good thing he's around
to put the brakes on Sir Charles there's a boss if you want one!'
'How do you think he's got where he is today?' Sheena asked
aggressively.
'Ah, but it doesn't work any more.' Jon shook his head. 'Anyway,
let's talk about something else, not industrial conflicts.'
'What a good idea!' Fleur stepped between them. 'I'd love another
cup of coffee.'
'Clive!' Sheena put up her hand and waggled her fingers.
Clive Ashton excused himself from his little group and started
towards them.
'Clive's in the rag trade among other things,' Sheena put a friendly
hand on Fleur's arm. 'I'd like you to meet him.'
By now it was a terrible crush and Fleur rather longed tp go home.
Instead she felt obliged to stay on for another hour, chatting a whole
lot about nothing, until at long last Jon walked with her to her car.
''Must you race away?' his attractive, easy-going face looked
crestfallen.
'I promised Matthew I'd give him a game of tennis.'
'You are a devoted sister,' he commented.
'I am.' She looked up and smiled at him. 'If you've nothing better to
do, you might like a game?'
'Yes, ma'am,' he smiled back, dazed she had invited him.
'See you about three, then.' Jon held the door and she got into her
car.
'Just tell me how well you want me to play?'
'I think I can surprise you,' she said, and drove away.
Jon immediately asked a few intelligent questions and Fleur sat back
wondering what it was about Julian that drew her like a magnet. It
wasn't looks alone; not every handsome man had a sexual aura. Was
it the mind behind the face? The brilliance that showed through the
eyes. He had such alive eyes, whether they rested on a woman or
not. She had endured so much because of Julian. He was her enemy,
not her friend.
The men were still talking, unaware of her close regard. Jon was an
attractive man and he appeared to like her, yet it didn't seem at all
possible she could become involved with him. Maybe she should
try; to persuade herself that Julian could be easily expurgated .'Her
emotions were founded on those of a child, an impressionable little
girl. What kind of a man was Julian to love?
He chose that precise moment to turn and address her, and his eyes
narrowed at the expression on her face.
'Snap out of it, darling.' For an instant they sat there assessing one
another like long-time opponents and Jon gave a little embarrassed
cough.
'Well, I've had a very enjoyable afternoon, but I must be gone.' He
wavered a little as though someone would ask him to tea, but it was
clear there was an unexpected current of hostility floating around.
'Come again.' Fleur stood up, very small by Julian's shoulder.
'I'd like that.' It was not the time to ask her out to dinner, but Jon
looked beyond the odd moment to tomorrow. Something about the
situation eluded him and he wanted time to think about it. Clearly
little Fleur and Standford were antagonists. What was wrong?
They both saw Jon to his car and when Fleur went to slip away,
Julian caught her by the wrist.
'Whatever it is,' he released her abruptly, 'just take my word for it,
it's no go with the doctor.'
'Do you really think so?' She deliberately threw him a look of
challenge. 'I found him sort of attractive ... you know ... decent.'
She saw his face change and took instantly to her heels. It was
dangerous to provoke him; why did she do it?'
The trees overhead were a canopy of dense leaves and blossoming
oleanders six feet high all but fenced off the drive. It was a tumult of
perfume and colour, and Fleur had had much too much sun.
Fleeing towards the drive, she didn't even notice the Rolls turn
quietly at the magnificent wrought iron gates and then cruise up the
drive. She was blind to everything, anyone, anything, but Julian. It
wasn't until the powerful, big car was looming on her that she saw it
and tried to skid to a shuddering stop.
She heard the brakes screech, saw Adams' agonised face, then
Julian's arm was around her and he literally threw them both off the
path.
She fell heavily, but stirred quickly, moaning. Julian said nothing at
all. He was lying perfectly still, his eyes closed and his long, lean
body slumped.
'Julian!' she exclaimed, in an excited, frightened voice. She rose on
her knees and stared down at him. So many emotions filled her mind
and an intense anguish. He had deliberately put himself in danger.
'Oh, Julian,' she said, and fell across him, her head pressed against
his heart.
'A strange reaction for a girl who hates me,' he suddenly said above
her, his voice clipped.
'She's O.K.,' Julian told him, doing all the talking. 'Open the door for
us, like a good boy.'
'Honestly, I was scared stiff!' Matthew jumped to obey. 'So was Des.
Considering you only had a minute, Uncle Julian....' he tried to
laugh.
'I'm sorry, Matt.' Fleur began to cry.
'Stop that!' Julian responded by picking her up in his arms.
'I acted like a fool.' Her control was slipping and she turned her head
into Julian's shoulder.
'Brandy is always good for shock,' Matthew announced.
'Where did you learn that?' Julian smiled at him, his calm manner
reassuring.
'Maria. She's always got it handy.'
There was a long silence and Des Adams laughed. 'A secret vice
uncovered!'
'I don't give a damn as long as she always has dinner ready.' Julian,
quite recovered, seemed amused. He put Fleur into the back seat and
got in beside her. 'There's a conspiracy going on to keep us together
in the back seat of a Rolls.'
She took a long, deep shuddering breath, but she couldn't answer.
She was blaming herself for having drawn him into danger.
looking, as Sheena put it, mote like a sex symbol than the
representative of big business. That was until he opened his mouth,
Fleur considered. Then he was all mining magnate, highly articulate
and persuasive and a brilliant mining engineer in his own right.
Sir' Charles sat glued to the set for the entire time that Julian was on
and afterwards muttered fiercely as he did when he was moved:
'Richard would be proud of him. Richard, my son!'
In a piercing moment Fleur glimpsed the desolation in the old man's
eyes, and immediately she slipped out of her chair and went to sit at
his feet, grasping his hand.
They looked at one another for a moment in silence, then Sir
Charles stroked her hair. 'You're a good girl, Fleur, and you'll make
a fine woman. Sweet and compassionate, like my Sarah.'
Life went on. With the advent of the festive season entertaining and
being entertained was high on the agenda. As Fleur expected, Jon
Talbot rang and, hell bent on defying Julian, she accepted every one
of his invitations; and not only his. She was young, very pretty, and
she soon came to see she could spend every night of the week out if
she wished. But of course she didn't. Her greatest pleasure was
being with her brother, for she counted his happiness above her
own.
She soon learnt that the whole household loved music, from Sir
Charles down to Maria, so the beautiful Steinway grand got played
frequently. Sometimes the old man came into the room and sat
quietly for an hour. Other times he sat beside her on the long ebony
seat and played a few crashing chords of his own, pleasure and
amusement on his autocratic face. Even Charlotte seemed content,
so it was to be expected her grandfather thought she needed a timely
jolt.
One evening when Fleur and Matthew were playing chess in the
library and Julian was working quietly at his desk, Sir Charles came
to the door, his thick, still black eyebrows working.
'Charlotte is on the phone to that damned gardener feller. From the
sound of her voice I'd say she was going bonkers.'
Julian, intent on his work, looked up with almost total disinterest,
but Fleur was alarmed by the acid tone.
'Please, Grandfather-' it just slipped out when she always called
him Sir Charles'Charlotte really likes him and he cares deeply
about her.'
'Bunkum!' the old man retorted rudely.
'Because it's not what you like to hear?'
Their eyes met knowingly and he made an impatient gesture. 'Now,
now, don't start standing up to me!'
Matthew's hand on the pawn trembled and Fleur caught his fingers,
if you only got to know him, Sir Charles ...'
'Grandfather's fine!' Momentarily the old man seemed nonplussed.
'How's it coming, Julian?'
'It's all in the interpretation.'
'Oh, well, you're the expert there. What about Charlotte, now? What
do you think?'
'Leave well alone.' Julian seemed determined to get back to his
work, his dark face faintly remote and unyielding.
'So you two are in cahoots, then?' For some reason this appeared to
ease the old man's mind. 'You always were,' he maintained, and
stomped away.
It was Matthew's turn to be curious. 'What does cahoots mean?' he
enquired.
'It means,' said Julian, 'we agree about Charlotte, if nothing else.' As
he spoke, there was an ironic twist to his mouth and he looked at
Fleur deliberately, always searching for the gap in her guard.
She wasn't going to allow him that luxury. He knew far too much
about her already. 'Please, Julian, may we have a Christmas tree?'
she asked sweetly.
'Oh, let's!' Matthew begged. 'We haven't had one up since Grandma
died.'
'Then ring up one in the morning,' said Julian, and returned t( his
papers. 'No, hang on, I'm sure there's one up in the attic.'
'Not the one that used to reach to the ceiling?' Fleur's eyes shone as a
vision drifted into her mind, a great tree hung with hundreds of
glittering baubles and a five-pointed star at the top.'
'I think so.' Julian put his arms behind his head, then stretched
languidly like a sleek cat. 'I suppose I won't get any peace until we
see it.'
Recognising the indulgent note in his uncle's voice, Matthew
jumped to his feet. 'Great! Let's go up now.'
'Coming, flower-face?' Julian got up, smiling mockingly.
The most perverse reason made Fleur stay in her chair until he took
her hand,, so it pained her and excited her too the way her fingers
CHAPTER SEVEN
THEY had a very big party on Christmas Eve, more than a hundred
people, and the house was a mass of shifting people. There was
music and laughter and plenty of good conversation and, outside on
the rear terrace and huge informal entertainment area, dancing for
the younger guests.
Fleur wore a long, thin strapped petticoat of green chiffon and its
beautiful clinging cut made her look incredibly slender and fragile.
With it she wore the emerald and diamond earrings, for Julian never
had taken them back, and they looked absolutely perfect.
Of course she had asked Jon, but she was a little wary now of the
depth of his attentions. They danced frequently and each time he
held her a little closer, more possessively, his blue-green eyes telling
her what she didn't want to know. He was in love with her, after all,
so she shouldn't be so surprised.
From the crowd around Julian, he was the most amusing, most
intelligent and easily the best looking man in the place. Whenever
he looked Fleur's way, she looked away. She didn't really care to see
Sheena almost draped over his arm, her scarlet silk jersey dress
worn the wrong way round in Fleur's opinion. It was perfectly in
order for a woman to show off a pretty bosom, but not to that
degree.
Jon's voice said in her ear: 'You look exquisite tonight. No one
could wear a dress like that unless they were young and perfect.'
She smiled at him a little abstractedly and never stopped to question
whether it was wise. Over the moving dancers' heads she saw Julian
and Sheena take the floor, Sheena giving him a brilliant smile.
Knowing looks followed them, nods and smiles.
'What are you thinking about?' Jon asked in surprise.
and every other man. Jon was just a shadow, his seeking mouth
without the power to move.
'I'm a foolyou're not ready.' Jon cursed himself bitterly. 'Forgive
me, Fleur, but it's difficult to treat you like porcelain when you're
such a desirable woman.' But repressed, he diagnosed, desperately
shy and repressed. One didn't encounter it often enough. He had
badly blundered. 'Let's go back,' he said lightly, and let her go. i'll
get you a nice cold drink.' Fleur gave a curious little sigh and he
took her arm as if she were a child. 'Just to be sure of it, I want to
tell you my intentions are entirely honourable.' Probably for the first
time in my life, he thought wryly.
Fortunately she laughed. 'Don't be angry with me. I do really enjoy
your company.'
It would have to do. Jon left her in the scented coolness of the
terrace and went indoors to get them both a drink.
Trailing flowers from a hanging basket brushed her shoulder and
she turned her head to drink in the sweet elusive perfume. Her heart
was beating in a very odd place, somewhere near her throat.
"Come on,' said Julian behind her in a terse voice, and took hold of
her bare arm.
She didn't resist, exultant in having drawn him to her side, for
whatever reason.
'Just as I told you, your doctor friend is becoming deadly serious,' he
told her crisply.
'Yes, he is.' She seized on the fact with a crazy abandon. Don't let
him think he was the only man who could awaken her to life.
'Do you want to hurt him?' he demanded. 'Why?'
'Careful,' he warned, and she could see the tension in his body.
'Remember who you are and where you are.'
'For God's sake, I've had enough of the Stand- fords!' So many
emotions exploded in her head- anger, humiliation, a white-hot,
headlong yearning. She wanted him to pull her into his arms and
crush her. She wanted him to force the very heart from her body.
But he did not. 'Some time, Fleur, these people are going to go
home.' His blue eyes slashed to her trembling mouth. 'Who's going
to protect you then?'
'Oh, I'll drag in someone,' she promised. 'Sheena.'
'You're quite crazy.' He looked at her with the distaste an adult
shows for a childish tantrum.
'Good grief, she's checking on us now!' Fleur turned and looked
away across the velvety expanse of grass. 'You'd better watch it if
you don't want to lose her.'
'Oh, there you are!' Sheena called. 'Jon's getting so concerned about
you, Fleur.'
Champagne glass still in her long narrow hand, Sheena covered the
distance between them, gazing sharply from one to the other. 'Surely
you're not having an argument?' she asked in a teasing voice that
still held a hint of strain in it.
'More or less,' Fleur answered quite jauntily. Her green eyes were
glittering like emeralds and her white skin was shot through with
pulsating colour.
'Oh.? Sheena's voice changed again, full of concern and apparent
dismay. 'Couldn't I arbitrate?'
It was two o'clock before the last guest went home and eight o'clock
in the morning before Matthew could contain himself no longer. He
padded along to Fleur's room and found her fast asleep, her head
fiery against the lace-trimmed pillow, one arm flung away to the
other side of the huge fourposter bed, the other dangling over the
side towards the new, palest green carpet. It was a lovely room now,
full of light and sensual charm. It had been the greatest joy helping
Fleur change things. Uncle Julian had supplied the painting
Portrait of a Ladyby the French painter Jacques Emile-Blanche,
and its subtle opulence and panache pointed up the delicate luxury
of the room.
Fleur still slept and Matthew hesitated now wondering whether to
wake her. She didn't look particularly happy. She even looked as
though she might have been crying in her sleep. Maybe she had
stayed up dancing until four o'clock in the morning, when he had
had one of the best nights' sleep he had ever had.
'Fleur.' Very gently he pressed a spot behind her ear. He had never
actually found out if this was indeed the best way to wake people
out of a deep sleep.
'Hmmmmm?' She stirred, but her eyes were still tightly closed.
'Do wake up! It's absolutely the most super day and you can hardly
see the tree for the presents.' It took another minute of
blandishments before Fleur opened her eyes. Then she saw her
brother's thin, tanned face and his blue, blue eyes, and her own eyes
stung with sudden tears.
'Hello there. Happy Christmas!'
'Happy Christmas!' Matthew's young voice sounded a little hoarse
with emotion, then he bent down and gave her a resounding kiss on
the cheek. 'Do get up.'
Something started to ache at the base of her throat and she pressed a
hand to it. 'You're not going to fasten that on me!' she protested.
'Aren't I?' He smiled a little tautly at her tone, it's beautiful, isn't it?
It matches your eyes.'
'I'm sure you told me you were keeping it for your wife.''
'I'm equally sure my future wife will approve.'
'Then you don't know your sweet little Sheena!' She swung her
small feet out of the bed. 'She was looking at me last night like a
wild jungle tigress.'
'I noticed that myself.' Julian flickered her a satirical smile. 'Can't we
possibly be friends, Fleur, just for the day?'
'Go away!' Sunlight fell across her hair and it glittered and danced
like segments of living flame.
For answer he slipped the necklace around her throat and secured
the clasp. 'Perhaps you can keep it for a rainy day.'
The mocking indulgence in his face desperately antagonised her.
'Doctors do pretty well, I'm told.'
He moved so swiftly she could scarcely credit she was lying down
again and he was leaning over her.
'What did you expect?' he asked crisply.
'You love flinging me around! It makes you feel good.' She sat up
precipitously, the furious light in her eyes dying abruptly as he put
his hands on her narrow waist.
'Don't, Julian!' she protested.
She was alive as she had never been before and it was an agony,
exquisite. His mouth came back to hers again, warm and beautiful
and so very sure. She pulled him down with her on to the bed,
careless of everything except this living temple of fire.
He broke away from her with soft violence, holding her with one
hand, his voice a little harsh as though he forced himself to say the
single word. 'No! It's impossible, Fleur.'
Of course he was right, and immediately she was ashamed. She
flung herself over so her head was buried in the pillows, her whole
slender body shuddering with frustration. 'Why do you do things
like this?' she accused him.
'Because I want you.' He lifted her bodily then and set her down on
the floor.
'For how long?' She couldn't even stand without his support.
'Until I change.'
'That's the truth!' She choked on his unbearable cynicism.
'Why don't I put you under the shower?' His eyes tested on her
dazed face and quivering limbs.
'Don't try itI'll try to drown you.'
'You have to get dressed, darling. You can leave it though, if you
want.'
'I hope something terrible happens to you, Julian.' She stared up at
him with trancelike concentration.
'It already has.' Mockery touched his cleanly defined mouth. 'Now
would you like me to run the cold water?'
'I'd like you to get out!' Anger whipped strength into her boneless
limbs.
He smiled at her and dropped a final, careless kiss on her outraged
mouth. 'Don't forget to take the necklace off.'
'I won't!' she promised him wrathfully. 'I'm going to leave it there
until Sheena and her dear mother come. I'm going to tell them you
put it there and I'm going to tell them when!'
His blue eyes swept over her like an intolerable stimulant. 'And
don't forget to tell them you've been trying to seduce me since you
were four years old.'
'So what happened to you?' she asked him with passionate
vehemence. 'Cold feet?'
'It won't hurt either of us to bide our time.' He moved to the door, all
arrogant masculinity, and Fleur threw the pillow.
'You're rotten, Julian. Absolutely rotten!'
'But I know you!'
Of course the pillow missed him. He picked it up off the floor with
one graceful movement and threw it with perfect precision towards
the head of the bed.
'Cheer up, darling,' he said dryly. 'You have to get used to dealing
with dishonourable intentions.'
'I can well believe it, living here with you!'
'Touche!' He gave a warm, dry laugh, then disappeared through the
door.
Fleur opened the door with decision and went in. She imagined
Charlotte would be lying crumpled on the bed, but Charlotte had too
much backbone for that. She was packing.
'What are you doing?' Fleur looked her dismay.
'I'm putting clothes in a bag.'
'He didn't mean it, Charlotte.' Fleur sank down on the bed.
'Oh, yes, he did!' Charlotte strode away to the bureau. 'To think I've
given him my life and all it's made him do is despise me!'
'But he's just a terrible little boy.'
'Actually he's eighty years old.' In her haste, Charlotte was dropping
underwear all over the floor.
'You can't do this, Charlotte,' Fleur implored her.
'I should have done it years ago. I've had an unfortunate life.'
'But what about the rest of us?' Fleur tried to appeal to her.
'You don't need me at all. I have no role to play.'
'We all care about you, Charlotte,' Fleur said quietly. 'If you must go
away, why not just take a holiday? The weather is perfect. You
could go up to the islands, anywhere you liked.'
'I'm going to Kurt.'
Fleur permitted herself a shocked gasp. 'You can't do that!'
'Why ever not?' Charlotte asked harshly. 'Plenty of your generation
do it.'
'It seems pretty foolishly romantic, don't you think? You've always
set such a good example.'
'And it's written all over me. I'm an old maid, a lost soul.'
'What's so clever about being married? Or living with someone?
Does living alone make you less of a person?'
'Yes,' said Charlotte with a whole lot of feeling. 'Kurt cares about
me, I know.'
'Don't go to him, all the same,' Fleur warned, in the first place you'd
shock him out of his mind. He sees you as a goddess, and it's
difficult for goddesses to get off their pedestal. Again, he's very
conscious of doing the right thing himself. It would be a mistake,
Charlotte, I know.'
Charlotte ceased packing and sat on the bed. 'Does he really see me
as a goddess?'
'His very words,' Fleur assured her earnestly. 'How do you think he'd
feel if you arrived on his doorstep with a nightie and a toothbrush?'
'It is pretty laughable,' Charlotte admitted, but she looked very sad.
'All right, what you do,' said Fleur, 'is not revolt at all, not so anyone
would notice. You plan. I think of you as a great plannerlook how
you arrange the parties! You can even loosen up a little with Kurt
the human touch. Ring him up and ask him about a book or
something. If you think things are moving too slowly* ask him out.
I can tell you it's deep and serious with him, but he's a little worried
about your money.'
'Not again!' groaned Charlotte, sick to the heart, it's more difficult to
have money than not to have it at all. It has, I've found, an identity
of its own. I've been wooed for my fortune, which incidentally I
CHAPTER EIGHT
FOR the entire holiday period Matthew kept well and happy, then the
day before he was due to go back to school he started to wheeze.
'Oh, where's that damned ventilator!' Charlotte in her anxiety
smashed a bottle of mouthwash on the bathroom floor. 'Look at
that!' she exclaimed exasperatedly.
'I'll fix it,' offered Fleur.
'No, you go back to him,' Charlotte put her hand on the ventilator at
last. 'To think this had to happen, and he's been so blessedly well.'
'I hate school,' Matthew confided after his second puff.
'Why? You're so clever.' Fleur was dismayed by the pallor of his
skin. White under tan made for a curious green.
'It's a bore.'
'It's what we make of things, Matthew, that counts. School doesn't
have to be boring unless you approach it with that attitude of mind.
It's what is known as being negative.'
'You don't really think I'm that?' Matthew rasped.
'I think you have it in you to make us all very proud.'
'I don't want to be an engineer,' Matthew said doggedly.
'You don't have to think about it yet.' Fleur took his hand. It was
faintly trembling from the drug.
'But I do. Grandfather's such a difficult man to live with.'
'He's all right.' Handled the right way, he was. 'Anyway, I give you
my solemn word you'll be what you want to be. If you want to be an
architect, that's it!'
'Anyway, he might be dead.'
Fleur was shocked. 'Heavens, Matt, what a terrible thing to say!'
'Yes, I'm sorry. He's so much nicer since you've been here.
Everyone and everything is so much nicer. I don't want to go to
school at all. I want to stay home.'
'Well, you can't, and that's final.' She slapped his hand. 'I'm going to
drive you jn the morning and I'm going to pick you up in the
afternoon and you're going to tell me all that's happened in between.'
'Will you really?' Matthew looked pathetically grateful. 'I can go in
the bus.'
'The car needs running,' she told him in a matter-of-fact voice.
'Besides, it would be a pleasure.'
By nightfall the wheeze was gone, but Julian didn't seem at all
pleased with Fleur's plan.
'You can't become the boy's crutch,' he told her firmly.
They were inside the study and the door was shut.
'Won't you simply listen! He needs me.'
'I'm aware of that, Fleur.' He sounded as though he didn't think it
any good thing.
The ring of the phone whirred into the silence and he picked it up.
'Standford,' he said, short and very formidable. 'Oh, how are you?' A
slightly warmer tone, but not the least encouraging. 'No, I'm sorry,
she's not at home ... yes, I will.... Goodbye.'
'Who was that?' Fleur looked straight at him suspiciously.
'No one.'
'I think it was someone for me.'
'It can't be helped. You're not at home.'
She was struck dumb by his tyranny. He was just the kind of man to
act first and ask laterif he ever bothered to ask at all.
'Next time Sheena rings, I'll tell her you're not at home,' she
snapped.
'O.K. with me.' He stepped around the desk and leaned against it.
'You can't make Matthew too dependent on you, Fleur. I think it
would be better if he went to and fro on the bus.'
'Too late now. I've already promised him.'
'You can see that you're becoming overly important to him.'
'It's a natural reaction.' She hung her head. 'Just give him a little
time. He's not used to having me home yet.'
'Who Is?'
They were on shaky ground now, so she decided to stand up. 'Please
let me take him for a while, Julian, just to ease him in. I think he
fears if he turns his back I'll go away again.' She gave him an
appealing look.
'You know I'm not going, to let that happen.' His eyes travelled over
her face and throat, and so great was their impact she shivered.
'Who was it really on the phone?' she asked.
'Run along,' he said, quite equably.
'You brute!'
'Stay then if you like,' he said softly. 'This room can be our refuge.
I'll lock the windows and doors.'
'All I'd need to do is scream.' Despite the bravado in her voice she
backed hurriedly to the door.
'You haven't been doing much of that lately.' His blue eyes sparkled
like the sun on water.
'Oh well, I'm becoming quite used to being made love to.'
It was an outrageous lie, but it made her feel quite happy as she
slipped out of the room.
With Matthew off to school, the routine changed. Julian went away
again and Fleur began to think seriously what she should do in life.
She had always wanted to go on to university, and now she had the
money to do it. She would become a high school teacher. The
teaching profession had always appealed to her.
Jon, when she told him, burst into tolerant, chauvinistic laughter.
'But, little girl, you were born to get married.'
'I was born to improve my mind. And go on improving it,' she
retorted, incensed. Dictator or no, Julian was all for upgrading the
status of women. He had even told her she had better think about
enrolling.
So she did. Fleur's real nature, though buoyant and vivacious, was
far from being frivolous. She had to have a purpose in life. She had
to accomplish somethingfor herself, for others. She was going to
be a teacher, a good one.
The weeks slipped away and because Fleur wasn't home for much of
the day, she didn't realise Charlotte wasn't either. These days
Charlotte was looking much more relaxed and womanly, so it didn't
come as any great surprise when she announced that she was going
to become an Easter bride.
'God in heaven!' Sir Charles spoke up without the slightest
hesitation. 'Not the gardener feller?'
'Indeed, yes!' Charlotte, for once, wasn't at all affected. 'I wear his
ring.'
'I don't suppose we can see it?' Sir Charles asked waspishly.
'You can.' Charlotte took it out of her pocket and put it on her hand.
'Every happiness, my dear.' Julian lifted his wine, glass.
'I can't see how he paid for it.' Sir Charles leaned across the table.. It
was a remarkably fine stone, a sapphire surrounded by diamonds.
'May I see?' Fleur jumped up and ran around the table.
Ah, the accomplice!' said Sir Charles dryly.
'It's beautiful, Lottie. Really beautiful!' Fleur kissed the older
woman on the cheek.
'So you're going to think about getting married in your forties?' the
old man asked.
'I'm thirty-eight, Grandfather, as you very well know.'
'You have to excuse me for forgetting a couple of years,' he grunted.
'I think we'd better have Kurt to dinner, don't you?' Julian spoke to
Fleur more than to anyone else.
'I shan't be here.' Sir Charles seemed determined on starting
something.
'Oh yes, you will!' Julian looked at the old man and away again. 'We
Standfords stick together. Of course, Lottie, you'll be married from
the house?'
Charlotte waited for her grandfather to speak, but he didn't, so she
blushed and said, 'That would be lovely.'
'You could find someone twice as good if you tried,' Sir Charles
nibbled furiously on his lip.
'You'll have reason yet to be proud of Kurt, Grandfather. He's only
been in this country a short time, yet already he has a very
successful business and great plans to expand.'
'No doubt with the help of your money.'
'I don't' think he's particularly interested in it,' said Julian, in fact,
Grandfather, in that respect he's beyond criticism.'
'He must be mad!' Sir Charles stood up stiffly. 'Marry him if you
must, but don't ever say I didn't warn you.' Charlotte's wedding
turned out to be a grand social occasion. Of course there were
people there who were quite insincere in their smiles and
congratulations, but for the most part everyone wished Charlotte and
her new husband a lifetime of happiness. At least there would be
enough money to cushion the blows, and Charlotte looked radiant.
To love and be loved is the greatest blessing on earth, and its effect
on Charlotte was . a revelation. No one had ever seen her in better
looks, nor heard her so mellow-tongued.
Before they drove away, she kissed Fleur, her only attendant,
emotionally. 'Thank you for everything. I'd never have found the
courage but for you.'
'I will add my thanks to that.' Kurt, too, kissed her. 'It seems to me,
little Fleur, you stage-managed the whole affair, and I am very, very
happy.'
No one seemed to want to leave Waverley. The catering was superb
and there was plenty more left to drink.
Sheena found Fleur momentarily alone and pulled her down beside
her on the sofa.
'A perfect day! Didn't Lottie look a picture? Of course she's really
good-looking, but until recently she didn't seem to know how to
make the most of herself:-'
'She does now,' Fleur was still smiling dreamily, misty-eyed. 'I
shouldn't be surprised if she blossomed into a stunning woman.
She's never really found herself until now, nor even known her own
type.'
'It's common knowledge you had a hand in the match,' commented
Sheena.
'Not really!' A little acid was dribbling through Sheena's pleasant
manner and finally Fleur heard it. 'I like Kurt. I'm sure he'll make
Charlotte very happy.'
She didn't have to wait long for this to take effect. Fleur's legs
buckled under her. 'What are you saying?'
'What everyone knows. Your mother married one brother while she
was crazy about the other.'
'But she was years older.' Fleur's green eyes looked dazed.
'What, a handful? What does that matter? If one can believe what
one's told she was incredibly beautiful and seductive, and she caused
so much trouble! Lottie had her boy-friend taken off her. David, to a
lot of people's minds, killed himself and she tormented the young
Julian no end. Finally she had to gothere was no other way.
Needless to say, with a pay-out.'
'I don't believe this,' Fleur murmured.
'Are you O.K.?' Sheena cast her a sharp look. Fleur had gone whiter
than white. 'Who could blame you if you were shocked? You're in
love with Julian yourself.'
'And you wanted to warn me?' Fleur gave an odd little smile.
' I'm concerned for you,' Sheena corrected. 'I mean, it just Wouldn't
do, would it, and you'd only get hurt. He must loathe the memory of
your mother.'
'I thought you said he loved her.'
'Oh, he did.' Sheena picked up the advantage quickly. She had never
said that at all, nor thought it, but so much the better.
'How terrible!' muttered Fleur.
'Not very pleasant,' Sheena agreed, i didn't want to be the one to tell
you, but you were certain to hear it some time.'
'Uncle David never took his own life,' Fleur said in a deadly quiet
voice. 'And if you ever spread that rumour or cause it to come to my
brother's ears I promise you I'll find a way to make you very, very
sorry.'
'How?' Despite herself Sheena felt chilled by the seriousness of the
younger girl's expression.
'Your father's business, I understand, depends almost directly on
Standford good will. My brother is a Standford even if I'm not.'
'Why, I'd never, ever -'So presented, Sheena was lost for words.
'How are the mighty fallen!' said Fleur, looking as though she were
about to faint.
Nothing was the same after that. She couldn't be alone with Julian
for an instant. It was as she had always been told; Julian was the
cause of her mother's eternal misery and her expulsion from the
house. It must have been a terrible situation, not new but shameful, a
triangle that could and did end in tragedy.
All that there was to gratify her, and it was a great deal, was the
beautiful and touching serenity Matthew was achieving in his daily
life. Urged on by Fleur's own study habits, he did extremely well in
the end-of-term exams and though he would never be an athlete, a
continued swimming programme had brought him to a peak of
physical fitness he had never achieved before. These days he walked
with his shoulders held back and the development of his torso was
clearly visible. Fleur never watched him without a lump in her
throat, but mindful of Julian's warning she encouraged him to bring
home his friends and make more. Waverley was ideal for
entertaining and the youngsters loved the pool and the tennis court
and the billiard room and Maria's informal barbecues when they
were given the responsibility for cooking the steaks and sausages
and rissoles for the hamburgers. It all worked out so immensely
enjoyable, Sir Charles himself had taken to joining in.
'The improvement in that boy is remarkable,' he told Fleur. Matthew
was sitting with his friends, hungrily hoeing into a feast. 'I've never
seemed to be able to enjoy him until now. He's always been such a
quiet, self-effacing child. Like David, of course. Thank God there
was Julian to take my place. I've been waiting on a phone call from
him all morning.'
Julian was on another business trip and it wasn't until the end of the
month that he came home. At least the hectic life he led let Fleur
forget him for whole minutes at a time. She would never accept
what he had done, never forgive or forget it.
Her friendship with several young men continued and she also made
many friends of her own sex. She had lived such a lonely lifeher
mother had never permitted anyone to come to the housenow all
that had changed. Waverley was continually full of young people,
and if anyone had thought Sir Charles would object they had badly
miscalculated. He enjoyed young people enormously, their energy
and enthusiasm and their easygoing approach to him made a nice
change from a lifetime of deference and servility in business. One
young friend of Matthew's had even called him Granddad, but,
while Fleur and Matthew had held their breath he had only said
comfortably:
'Sir Charles to you, young feller.'
Jon Talbot still kept up his determined courtship even though Fleur
had told him she had no intention of becoming serious about
anyone. He seemed to accept it until inevitably he lost control.
They were on their way home from a party, but instead of driving
straight to Waverley, he sought a secluded spot where he could at
least kiss her.
'When is Standford coming home?' he asked abruptly. Julian was in
Japan.
'Why?' Fleur looked away from the moon shimmering on the river
and towards his darkened face.
'I want to know. What's between you two?'
'What the devil has it got to do with you?' Unexpectedly his question
made her blaze into anger.
'A lot,' he said determinedly. 'I'm in love with you, Fleur.'
'So I don't see what that has to do with Julian.'
'No?' He put out a hand and kept her small, creamy face turned to
him.
' No!
'I think you love himhate him. What does it matter? Such
extremes in your case seem pretty close together.'
'You're mad!' she gasped.
'You can confide in me, you know.' He let her chin go, fully aware
that he had upset her, but it was necessary. 'I've seen you both
together. I've seen the way you look at him, the hurt and the anger
mingled up with longing. You don't think I like it, do you? I want
you for my own.'
'But I've told you, Jon...'
'Faint heart never won fair lady.' He dropped his hand on to her
shoulder. 'I know you want time, but I'm prepared to wait. Besides,
if you've got a crush on Standford I feel the need to give you a
sympathetic ear and a strong word of advice. He's already spoken
forI don't need to mention the lady's name. Personally I think they
were made for each other. That kind of life would destroy a
sensitive little creature like you.'
'Your warning really isn't necessary, Jon,' she said, too quietly.
'I'm glad, sweetheart. He's simply not worth it.' He glanced at her
downbent head and pure profile. 'Do you realise what life would be
like with a man like that? Why, he's never home and. he's so
damned attractive a woman would forever be left wondering if he
was having affairs all over the world.'
'You don't know Julian,' she said. 'He's a very disciplined man, not
the sort to litter his life with involvements. Women tend to cling and
he would want to be rid of them. His real joy in life is businessnot
the money it brings in, but the excitement of big business itself. He's
also tremendously far-sighted. Visions of the future fill his life. You
don't know him at all.'
Jon didn't answer but stared thoughtfully ahead. He couldn't face
losing her, yet every intuition told him she was breaking her heart
over Standford.
'It's getting late, Jon,' she said gently. 'Shall we go?'
Normally he would have said, of course, but a pent-up frustration
disturbed his normal calm.
'Why do you come out with me, Fleur?' he asked accusingly.
'Because I like you.' She looked at him uncertainly.
'I see.' He gave a savage little laugh. 'You go out with others, of
course.'
'Yes, I do.' Her green eyes watched him closely, aware of his change
in mood.
'Do you allow them to kiss you, caress you?'
'Oh, heavens, Jon!' she sighed crossly.
'Why don't you answer?'
Her laugh held a decided edge of tension. 'Actually, Jon, I'm not
answerable to you for anything.'
'No, you just use me.'
'Damn it, that's not fair!'
'Who's to say?' he asked a little bitterly. 'Has Standford ever kissed
you, held you in his arms?'
'I honestly don't remember!' The colour surged into her creamy skin,
and Jon suddenly leant forward and switched on the interior light.
'Ah!' he said as though he was making a very specific diagnosis.
'YOU must take me for an awful fool.'
'I took you for a friend,' she said tonelessly, and looked away.
'Please let's go home, Jon.'
His face contorted in an angry, jealous grimace. 'How did you react
when he kissed you? Like the cool little virgin I've always found
you?'
'My God!' she muttered in disgust, and shook her shining head.
It was too much for Jon. He jerked her sharply towards him and
pressed his mouth down hard on her own. It was a grinding kiss and
she felt her bottom lip spurt with blood.
When he finally let her go, she drew a jagged little breath, and
touched her fingertip to her aching mouth. She drew it away and
there was a smear of blood on her finger.
'God, I'm sorry!' There was a stunning change in Jon. He turned
from brutal lover to the concerned medical man. 'Here, let me.' He
took out a freshly laundered handkerchief and dabbed it to her
mouth. 'Forgive me, Fleur. It was inexcusable of me.'
Her small face looked curiously unmoved, enigmatic. 'It might be
best, Jon, if we don't see one another again. I do like you and I want
you for a friend, but I can offer nothing more.'
'Yes, you can!' he said briefly. It was his opinion she could do with a
little counselling, and he knew just the man. 'I'll ring you later on in
the week. I feel so deeply about you, I suppose you find it hard to
understand. I promise I'll never hurt you again, but you must allow
me to keep on seeing you.'
She didn't answer, so he started up the car. No woman was truly
frigid. He just knew he could bring her alive.
Somehow they were home and she said goodnight and ran away up
the steps. The lamps were still on in the garden and the exterior wall
brackets on either side of the front door. She let herself in quietly
and touched the switches that controlled the outside lights. They
were always left on until the last member of the household was
home.
There was no sound from within the big house, yet Fleur had the
startled notion that someone was watching her.
She shut her eyes tightly and relaxed in his arms, an emotional
reaction from exhaustion and strain.
'You're not going to sleep, are you?' His voice came to her from a
haze and this time it sounded incredibly gentle.
'Only for a moment. I'm so tired.' She tightened her arms around his
neck.
'Who could blame the poor devil?' said Julian tightly.
She was being carried somewhere, but she didn't care. Her life was
long pretence, a great battle against Julian. 'St .. a .. y with me,' she
whispered, slurring her words now.
'Bravely spoken, flower-face.' He wasn't in the least shocked.
She felt terribly lightheaded, her limbs made of cotton wool. The
next moment she felt the softness of a bed beneath her, the scent of
sunlight and roses. She opened her eyes and glanced upwards
instinctively.'
Julian was bending over her, the dull golden gleam from the table
lamp falling over the side of his face. His brilliant eyes were crystal
clear, but their expression inscrutable.
'It's almost two o'clock,' he said quietly, and touched his fingertips to
her cheek.
'I won't see Jon again.' She found herself promising him as though
he controlled her.
'Tonight proved that, didn't it?' His eyes dropped to her sweet,
vulnerable mouth.
''He's good reallykind and reliable and honest.' There was a note
of ineffable sadness in her voice.
'All the things you think I'm not.'
'We know too much about each other, Julian,' she said, and sighed
painfully.
'Forgive me, but you don't know me at all.' A flicker of bitterness
surged into his voice.
'And shall never know,' she whispered as though it was a sacred
vow. it never takes us long to quarrel, does it?' She drew a deep,
anguished breath. 'I would go only Matthew needs me.'
'Are you sure?'
'That Matthew, needs me?' She gave him a frightened, confused
look.
'That you'd go.' His voice had the cynical note that always made her
feel crushed.
'You like to hurt me, don't you?' She turned her golden-red head lest
he see the glitter of tears.
'Are you sure I'm the only one to do that? You've been treating me
like a leper for months.'
'To preserve my soul,' she said clearly. 'Sheena told me everything.'
'Surely you could survive it,' Julian replied with mocking arrogance.
'There've been other women besides Sheenaquite a few. Nothing
desperately wicked about it.'
'Oh, God!' she sighed in such a wretched voice, he put out his hands
and held her tightly by the shoulders.
'What else did you talk about?' he demanded.
'Things I never wanted to know.'
'Tell me!' He shook her.
'It never ever occurred to menever.'
'Fleur!' His hands tightened to pain.
'She told me,' she brokenly, 'you were passionately in love with my
mother.'
'And you believed her, considering she was nowhere around at the
time?'
'A lot of people knew of your dangerous love. One of them was
waiting to tell me.'
'You little fool!' His voice was empty of all emotion. Empty and
drained.
'You don't deny it?' She was pleading with him for a full confession,
a willingness to do penance.
'Why should I?' His handsome face hardened into an imperious cast.
'My life's work is based on trusttrust and respect. Once you were
living and full of faith.'
'I was barely twelve at the time!' she exclaimed.
He put his fingertips against her mouth to forestall any argument, it's
strange to think though Helena is dead she can still wreck lives,' he
said harshly.
'Don't, Julian. Don't let's discuss it,' she said with a sudden
sickening. Her mother had been a selfish, clinging, neurotic woman,
but she had been her mother all the same.
'I suppose Sheena also told you my brother ran his car deliberately
into a tree?'
Fleur turned her head away and he caught her chin. 'Answer me,' he
said with hard authority.
'I never believed it.'
'She has been busy!' Julian's mouth twisted in a grimace of
contempt. 'David might have been very unhappy, but he would
never have sacrificed his son's happiness. Besides, he had too much
quiet strength. It was an accident. We were all very sure of it, even
Helena, who lived to drive people to the brink.'
'Then why did you love her?' She sat up very quickly, thinking she
was shouting.
'I despised her,' he said coldly.
'As I despise you!' She was mad with confusion, careless he might
strike her.
Instead he stood up as though the less he had to do with her the
better.
'I'm sorry, Julian.' She almost recoiled from the expression on his
face. 'Please try to understand how I feel.'
'Whatever for?' His brilliant eyes moved over her with cold
indifference. 'Maybe the doctor will suit you after all. All you ever
seem to need is comfort.'
She couldn't argue with that; she was in no fit state to. He walked
away to the door and a little later she dragged herself off the bed.
Her face in the bathroom mirror looked pale and tragic. She lifted a
hand and touched the little sore spot on her mouth. She felt drunk
with misery and exhaustion, yet she turned away and ran the
shower. It was impossible to go to bed without washing away the
effects of the night.
CHAPTER NINE
CHARLOTTE and Kurt were away for six months and immediately
they got home Charlotte confided her news.
They were seated on the sun-porch of Charlotte and Kurt's new
home with Matthew and the collies clearly visible to them through
the huge picture window.
'I'm pregnant, Fleur,' Charlotte said gruffly, and pushed Fleur's
coffee towards her so hurriedly some of the liquid spilt into the
saucer.
'But that's wonderful news!' Fleur's face lit up with pleasure.
'Do you really think so?' said Charlotte.
'Don't you?' Fleur looked up into Charlotte's face. It was suffused
with colour and plainly agitated.
'I don't know. I don't know what to think,' Charlotte confessed. 'I
know I sound like a fool, but I never thought it would happen.'
'Why ever not?' Fleur looked her astonishment.
'My age,' said Charlotte, and sat down heavily. It was true she had
put on weight, but it was extremely becoming and gave her a much
softer, womanly image.
'But you're still a young woman.'
'Too old to have a baby.'
'Plenty of women have babies at your age.' Because Charlotte didn't
seem capable, Fleur poured the tea and set it down carefully in front
of the older woman. 'Drink up.'
'Thanks.' Charlotte stared down at the teacup. 'I feel as if I'm in the
worst quandary of my life. Since I found out I scarcely know what
I'm doing.'
'I imagine lots of women feel overcome when they start a new life,'
Fleur offered soothingly. 'How does Kurt feel?'
Charlotte's blush deepened. 'He's thrilled, dazzled by the news. I've
never seen him 'so happy.'
'Nor I.' Fleur caught hold of Charlotte's hand and squeezed it hard.
'You'll come through this beautifully, Charlotteand think what it
will mean to you both to have a child.'
'If only I weren't so old!' Charlotte moaned. 'It's not a good time of
life to have a first baby.'
'Gosh, you're not that old,' Fleur said firmly. 'You have a good
doctor?'
'The best.'
'Then let him do the worrying. You enjoy yourself. You're not sick
or anything, are you?'
'Extraordinarily enough, no.' Charlotte began to drink her tea. 'A
tiny bit queasy in the morning, but Kurt waits on me hand and foot.
Honestly, you'd think I was the most precious little thing in the
world instead of a big, tall woman.'
'I've never seen you look better,' Fleur said softly, and waved to
Matthew through the window. 'You know yourself how you've
blossomed. I think it's wonderful news, Charlotte.
You're a very lucky woman.'
It was a nine-day wonder Julian and Sheena had broken up, and
even more of a wonder when she wasn't replaced. Though Julian
was far from being a playboy, at thirty-four, he had had a stream of
glamorous women in his life. Now, to the society crowd's
consternation, there were none. Some said he was having a bad time
recovering from Sheena, others laughed that to scorn, but none
seemed able to accept that he wasn't paying any attention to the
dozen or so young women who were doing everything in their
power to attract him short of leaping beneath his car. And even this
had been discussed. It was unthinkable that a wealthy bachelor
should be allowed to go free, and when he was devastatingly
handsome a shocking reflection on the women themselves. Gossip
raged and plans were made, and Sheena, to no one's surprise, flew
quietly out of the country. She might have let one rich man slip
through her fingers, but it was certain in Europe she would pick up
another.
'I'm glad Sheena's gone,' Matthew told Fleur confidentially. 'She was
good-looking, I guess, but not half good enough for Uncle Julian.
Boy, wasn't she huffy the last time we saw her!'
'Revolting,' agreed Fleur. Sheena had spotted them at a shopping
centre and when Matthew had turned away she managed to let Fleur
know exactly what she thought of her.
'Do you mind if we have Stephen over for the weekend?' Matthew
asked idlymore a courtesy than anything else.
'Of course not,' Fleur put another disc on the record player. 'He's a
very interesting boy.'
'He hopes to make a mark in the world of big business. I shouldn't
be surprised if he comes to Uncle Julian for a job. And speaking of
Uncle Julian,' Matthew added too casually, 'what's wrong between
the two of you?'
'Nothing,' Fleur said firmly.
'Well, if you won't tell me -' Matthew answered with calm.
'I suppose I ought to,' Fleur murmured, hurting inside. 'As a matter
of fact I might have to....'
'I suppose you're in love with him?' Matthew roused himself off the
floor to ask.
'Now why should you think that?' Fleur caught her breath. Though
she was supposed to be the one full of grief and grievances it was
Julian who was acting totally disgusted.
'I may be just a simple kid,' Matthew said cheerfully, 'but I'm not
stupid. Actually I think there's no better man in the world for you.'
'You can be sure Julian thinks differently.' Fleur got out of her
armchair, restlessly. 'What about taking the dogs for a walk?'
'Sure thing!' Matthew hopped up agreeably. 'I suppose you know
Sholto ate half the paper this morning. Grandfather was furious!'
'Oh, I don't think so,' Fleur said mildly. 'He just likes to make a lot
of noise.' In actual fact Sir Charles loved the dogs and often let them
'As I recall, one of them was sick the last time.' Julian leaned in the
car and picked up his jacket.
'They're trained now,' said Matthew. 'That's what matters. They're
quite used to the car. Fleur takes them everywhere.'
'In that case, they can go.' Julian shot Fleur a quick look, impossible
to define. She was wearing jeans and a T-shirt, yet she still managed
to look very feminine and fragile.
'What car are we taking?' Matthew asked.
'The best car on the road!' Julian patted the bonnet of the. DoubleSix with real affection. 'Come on, jump to it!'
Fleur behaved herself all the way down. So did the collies. Matthew
was so excited and pleased he practically talked non-stop, so it
wasn't terribly noticeable that Fleur and Julian had practically
nothing to say to each other.
It was still a little too chilly to swim, so they walked for miles along
the glistening white sand, the collies racing and chasing the seagulls
in ecstasy. If this was a dog's life, they looked magnificently happy,
particularly when whenever they stopped they were petted and
patted and somehow given to understand that no human in their
right mind would be without a dog or two.
As the afternoon shadows lengthened, a lone fisherman came out,
and Matthew with his jeans rolled up struck up a conversation. He
was much more outgoing now, taking his cue from Fleur, who was
naturally friendly. To everyone except Julian and now they were
alone.
'Here, put this under your head.' Julian rolled up his expensive
sweater and put it behind her head.
It had been ages, ages, since he had used the casual endearment, and
she shivered. 'Too bad!'
'You look so tragic,' he said.
'I am perfectly all right.' She shut her eyes.
'If I lie down beside you what will happen?'
'You'll get sand in your hair.' She had been almost relaxed, now she
was very aware of her own body and the warm heat that was moving
over her in waves. Being with Julian was like doing exquisite
violence to herself. If she only moved a fraction, she could turn right
into his arms. No one had ever held her like Julian, touched her so
intimately. She had thought she had made herself strong, now he
was peeling away every protective skin. She felt naked and
vulnerable.
It was altogether very strange. Both of them lay quietly, thinking
their own thoughts, and after a while Matthew ran back to them.
'He caught a fish. A beauty! What about if we get some fish and
chips on the way home?'
When they eventually arrived back at Waverley it was dark and
Julian drove straight into the garage.
'I'll get the dogs out,' said Matthew, and jumped out. 'They've been
so good, but they'll be pleased to get out and have their dinner. Here,
Sholto! Here, Mac!' The dogs scampered out of the back seat and
dashed away. 'I don't want any dinner,' Matthew called, not
surprisingly.
'All right.' Fleur smiled. She and Julian, apparently not hungry, had
sat and watched him polish off two large pieces of ocean mullet and
a great pile of chips.
She still had Julian's blue sweater tied around her neck and she slid
out of the car and stretched. All that sea air had made her feel
sleepy.
'Coming?' Julian called to her, his hand on the light switch.
'Ummm!' All at once she felt peculiar, excited and alarmed.
She heard Julian switch the light off and now she couldn't see.
'Julian?' Her voice shook.
He said dryly: 'Over here.'
'Couldn't you have waited until I got there?' She tried for a cool
tone, only it wasn't coming out that way.
The next thing his hands were hard on her shoulders, his dark face
above her. Her heart rocked crazily and she moved right into his
arms, pressing herself against him, in the grip of an emotion so
powerful she didn't even know how to protect herself.
'Kiss me, Julian,' she begged him, and offered him her mouth.
'I don't understand you, Fleur,' he sighed. 'I don't understand you at
all.'
'But you do!' Her arms came up to encircle his neck and suddenly it
was he who was crushing her, embracing her with an intensity that
outstripped her own. It was astonishingly violent and passionate, but
both of them seemed to welcome the pain.
Whatever Julian was, whatever he had done, she loved him. She
couldn't alter it by the smallest part. 'What is written, is written. She
remembered his words.
'You know I love you,' she said in a broken whisper, and lifted her
head so he could kiss along her throat.
'Yes.' There was no mockery in his voice, but the truth at last.
'Don't use it as a weapon. Please, Julian.'
'I'll beat you, Fleur!' He spoke with some violence.
'Whatever you want.' She covered his face with small, desperate
kisses.
'Don't say that!' He grasped her head in his two hands. 'Remember
who I am. Remember you think I made you suffer.'
'I only know I love you. I've loved you all my life.'
He seemed to give an agonised groan, then he covered her mouth
again, kissing her with a dark, frightening passion he could never
again deny. 'I want you,' he muttered blindly. 'I want you so much
I've even been thinking about rape.'
'Except ... except ...' she teased his sculptured mouth with small
kisses, 'you don't have to.'
He seemed to catch his breath and his lean body went rigid.
'Would you come with me now?' His hand stilled on her breast.
'Yes. What else can I do?'
'It's your mind I want, Fleur,' he said in a furiously sincere voice.
'Not just your sweet, flawless body. I want your trust and your pride
and your deep abiding affection. I guess I want everything.'
And that was the terrible part. Old griefs were stubborn, outlasting
the fury of passion. Some could never be erased. Fleur sighed
deeply and in an instant he became totally unreachable.
There were voices outside the garage; Charlotte's calling urgently:
'Julian, Fleur? Come quickly! Grandfather has had a stroke!'
CHAPTER TEN
IT was already dark outside; Fleur had not realised it was so late.
She got up off her bed and moved slowly through to the adjoining
bathroom. She had an appalling headache.
The bright overhead light made her wince. She shook tablets out
into her hand, then swallowed them down with a glass of water. She
had never been sure of her real feelings towards Sir Charles
Standford, but she was very, very sorry he was dead.
I must lie down again, until the tablets take effect, she thought. She
moved back on her stockinged feet towards her bed. It had been a
very large funeral, but just as terrible and chilling as her mother's
less than a year before. At least the old man had gone quickly, when
her mother had taken months to die.
As she reached the bed, she lurched forward and fell on it. All she
wanted to do was forget; forget everything.
An hour passed, then there was a tap on her door.
'Fleur?' Charlotte came in very slowly, staring at the small figure on
the bed.
'It's all right, Lottie, I'm awake.'
'We were worried about you.' Charlotte dragged herself into a chair.
All her strength and vitality seemed quenched.
It was this more than anything
together.
that
'Has everyone gone home?' she asked, and brought herself upright.
'Yes.' Charlotte's lips parted in a profound sigh. 'I can't believe he's
dead.'
'It was just the way he would have wanted it,' Fleur told her.
'Julian. My God, Julian, what a burden he has to bear!' Charlotte
lifted her hands, then put them over her face.
'Don't upset yourself, Charlotte,' Fleur begged. 'Especially not now.
Julian is strong. You needn't be afraid for him.'
'Yes,' said Charlotte, 'he's an extraordinary man. I used to be jealous
of his brilliance once, for David's sake. The ability he has to draw
people to him; men and women. It never occurred to me that that
left Julian very much alone. He was the youngest. Our parents were
dead. I've always been very hard on Julian because he was somehow
everything David and I were not. I blamed Julian for many things,
his popularity and extraordinary talents, the way my grandparents
idolised himbecause they did. I even blamed him for what
happened to David, though no one could have been less guilty.'
Charlotte's blue eyes had a bruised look and Fleur got up and came
to her side. 'He couldn't have planned to lov$ my mother,' she said.
'What?' Charlotte fought out of her exhaustion. 'What are you
saying, child?'
'After all,' Fleur bit her lip, 'a lot of people seem to know.'
'Dear God!' Charlotte looked at the girl with compassionate eyes.
'Who has so unsettled you?'
'Sheena told me everything.' Fleur dashed the tears from her eyes.
'And she told you,' Charlotte said abruptly, 'Julian was in love with
your mother.'
'I don't think,' Fleur said miserably, 'I can ever make things come
right.'
Charlotte held out her hand to her and said in a quiet voice: 'You can
try.'
After Charlotte and Kurt had gone home and Matthew was tucked
up in bed, Fleur went to stand in the open doorway of the library.
She had changed out of her black dress into a green velvet
housegown, but Julian didn't even look up at her. He was sitting at
the big mahogany desk with his face in his hands.
'May I come in, Julian?' she asked gently, conscious that he was
unutterably weary.
He straightened and made an obvious attempt at normality. 'Yes,
Fleur. I'm sorry if I didn't notice you.'
'Are you all right?' she asked anxiously. There was a pallor under
his deep tan and his face was set in lines of strain. 'Can 1 get you
anything?'
'No, no, I'll be all right. It's been a terrible day.'
She went to the cabinet, poured out a Scotch, added a little water
and handed it to him. 'Here, drink this.'
'Thank you. Don't look so worried, Fleur, I'm all right.'
She shrugged and leaned forward to throw another log on the tire. 'I
have to worry, Julian, because you're all I've got.' There was a long
silence and she went to sit on the chesterfield tucking her feet under
her. it's not exactly the right time to tell youyou've got so many
other things on your mindbut I love you, Julian, and I'm very,
'Hush!' He tightened his hold on her. 'No matter who tried to come
between us, we're still here. Together. At first I loved you as the
sweetest little girl child this family had ever produced, now I want
you, need you as a lover, my joy, my other self, my dearest, closest
friend. I really want you for my wife.'
He was speaking into her silky hair and she began to weep softly.
'What a terrible time to cry!' He tipped up her expressive face. 'Don't
you want to marry me?'
'Nobody else.' Fleur's constant, loving heart was reflected in her
green eyes. 'There never was and there never will be anyone but
you.'
'Fleur!'
Such a torrent of tenderness and passion was in his voice, she closed
her lovely eyes and offered him her mouth. She had waited so long
to re-find him, now the long agony was over.
They faced the future together, which was all she would ever want.