Blair, Kathryn - (HR-1038) - Battle of Love (2009)
Blair, Kathryn - (HR-1038) - Battle of Love (2009)
Blair, Kathryn - (HR-1038) - Battle of Love (2009)
Kathryn Blair
When Catherine's husband was killed in a motor-racing accident,
she and her young son were summoned to France to live with her
domineering father-in-law, Leon Verender, who had never
approved of his son's marriage but was determined to bring up his
grandson in his own way.
"There's not a single garden under three acres," said the young man
who had met Catherine and Timothy at the airport, "and Mr.
Verender has eight acres - the most spectacular garden on the
coast. You'll probably find things a bit roomy after a
Knightsbridge flat."
Catherine smiled. "I like space," she said, "and I was fully
expecting an enormous house and garden."
"And yet you've never met Leon Verender?" Michael Dean's hazel
glance was curious. "I've only been here three years, but I never
heard him speak about you till we had to get the lawyer to contact
you, about ten months ago. Doesn't it feel a bit odd - to be on the
point of meeting your father- in-law for the first time?"
"Of course it does. You must know him rather well. How do you
think he'll like Timothy?"
Catherine kept her gaze on the passing trees. "Ewart had done so
much of it before we married. He missed the tearing excitement
and the crowds, and was drawn back into it. It seems a lot more
than a year since it all happened."
She was twenty-six; he knew that from the copies of birth and
marriage certificates which the lawyer had secured. But somehow
he'd ignored the age and pictured her only through what he knew
of her. At twenty-one she had married Ewart Verender, and a year
later along came Timothy. Two years after that, Ewart had gone
back to motor-racing in a blare of publicity, but the comeback was
a failure and was terminated by that last fatal race.
Michael hadn't been in on the discussions between the lawyer and
old Verender; he had only had to write letters and send money. But
it hadn't been difficult to surmise that Leon Verender had
forbidden his son's marriage to Catherine, that he had ceased
writing to Ewart and apparently not even thought about him till the
news of his death was flashed across the continent. Michael had
often wondered whether the old man had even known of the
existence of his grandson before he had seen it in print: "Ewart
Verender leaves a young wife and son."
And what a wife, thought Michael. She made the glamour girls on
the beach at Nice look like browned potatoes. That hair - it must
be quite long - the exceptionally clear blue- green eyes, the fine
strong bones of her face, the curving lips just nicely tinted, and the
incredibly clear pale skin with its undertone of pink. Not pretty -
the wide forehead opposed prettiness - and not exactly beautiful,
unless you were addicted to fine-boned redheads. She looked quiet
and yet vital.
The little boy turned round, fixed Michael with his wide- set blue
eyes and asked, "Are we nearly there, please?"
"The entrance is just round the next bend. There, you can see it
now - the white posts on the right. Are you glad to be here?"
"Who's Beanie?"
"But he's over it now, darling," said Catherine. "Pick him up and
hold him tight. Look at the garden; you never saw flowers like
those before."
Some of them Catherine herself had never seen, but just now they
appeared as no more than a riot of colour. As they approached the
Villa Chaussy she found it impossible to admire palms and
bougainvillaea, hibiscus and flame creepers; because, in spite of
the calm she had assumed, this was a moment of such tremendous
significance that the whole of her being could not help but be
aware of it. She wasn't afraid; in fact she rather wanted to meet the
rich, successful man who was her father-in-law. But it wasn't
going to be as simple as that. From Leon Verender himself she had
received only one letter - a dozen words of invitation. It was the
lawyer who had made it very plain that as Leon Verender was the
child's guardian he had the right to insist that Mrs. Ewart Verender
and the child, Timothy Verender, become members of his
household.
Actually, the discovery that Ewart had named his father as her co-
guardian of Timothy had come as a blow to Catherine. The man
had been against their marriage, had ignored them completely. He
had many business interests in London and had many times visited
England; she had seen his visits reported in the daily papers. But
not once had he ever telephoned the flat. A few times she had
mentioned that perhaps Ewart should go over to Pontrieux; if his
father was so obstinate it was unlikely he would approach them,
but he might be longing for his son to take the first step.
"You don't know my old man," Ewart had said with his charming
grin. "When I married a kindergarten teacher from Ealing I cooked
my goose. What's more, I don't care; he'd expect too much from
me, anyway. I wouldn't go to him even if we were broke - and
we're not that yet."
Michael Dean slipped out on to the drive. "I'll deal with your
luggage in a minute or two. First, I'd better take you into the small
salon, and tell Mr. Verender you're here."
And he went down the steps and crossed the drive to his car.
Michael then led the way into a long tiled hall. A beautiful hall
with lovely inlaid tables set against the walls and flowers and table
lamps framed by the grey panelling. Opposite the entrance a treble
archway led into a corridor which no doubt gave access to a
staircase and lower rooms.
He had nodded towards a door at the end of the room, and after
seeing them seated he went to it and knocked, before disappearing
and closing the door after him. Catherine stood up again, laid her
bag and gloves on a table, kept Timothy's small moist hand in hers
and wandered round the room. Chinese rugs on highly polished
tiles, a damask sofa and a few chairs on spindly legs with gilding
on the mahogany, fine oils on the walls, and odd medieval trophies
here and there, on cabinets and small pedestals.
"An idol of some sort - a kind of doll, really. Not pretty, is he? But
that's a lovely old clock."
"I expect there's one somewhere. In sunny places you don't bother
much with television. Darling..."
But as she looked back at this man who had been her silent
adversary for so long, her sinews contracted, ready for battle.
Catherine couldn't have agreed more. Relieved, she sank into one
of the damask chairs. The man rang a bell and told the manservant
who answered that he wanted tea for two, quick. Then he too sat
down, squarely facing Catherine.
"You are, a little." He gazed at her intently. "You don't like this
situation, do you?"
"Not very much."
"You had big romantic ideas of earning a living to keep that child
in the way to which his father had been accustomed. It set you
back a bit when I insisted on my rights as his guardian, didn't it?"
"Is this how we get to know each other?" she asked quietly.
Just slightly, his lower lip jutted. "Very well. Tell me about
yourself. I know that you met my son through your brother, who at
that time was also interested in motor-racing. How did you hook
him?" Hastily, as her lips parted, he threw out a hand. "All right, I
know. You have looks and an air of breeding. We'll leave it there.
What sort of marriage was it?"
"It only means," she said abruptly, "that Ewart wasn't cut out for
marriage with someone like me. I wanted to be a wife, not a camp-
follower."
"He was a fool." This statement hung, on the air for a moment,
while the manservant, a middle-aged Frenchman in white jacket
and black trousers, served tea and a variety of sandwiches and
pastries.
"Black with lemon for me. And none of that mess of eatables. The
worst of being old and rich is the food you can't eat, the late hours
you can't keep and the hangers-on you can't get rid of." He took his
cup, watched her set the heavily chased silver teapot back on its
stand and drop a domino of sugar into her own cup. "It's at least
six months since I first proposed that you come out here. Why
have you been so difficult?"
"It doesn't follow. When Ewart was young I was known as the
financial wizard of the City. I had thirty directorships and was
financial adviser to some of the biggest companies in Britain. I had
no time for my wife, poor soul, or for Ewart. He had his first car at
sixteen and drove without a licence. At twenty he was racing and
winning trophies. I was half angry with him and half proud. I
never had time to be his father." A pause, while he sipped the
lemon tea. "Things are different now. I'm more or less retired, and
I can give plenty of time to my grandson. I want him to grow up
tough and self-assured; I want him to be a man who'll make his
mark on the world."
"Power, in fact," she commented. "I don't look too far ahead for
Timothy. A sound education and all the love he needs - they'll get
him through."
Catherine set down her cup with a tiny crash. "And why shouldn't
he? I'm always told he's a fine-looking boy!"
"He's too fine-looking, but he has the beginnings of the one. When
he's hardened off..."
"Well, that might account for it, but he's certainly too old to cuddle
a toy wherever he goes. He ought to be climbing trees and
breaking windows."
"I'll get him to break one of these, first thing tomorrow morning!"
"Not you. You look very capable at this moment of smashing the
whole lot of them yourself, but you'll take care that little Timothy
shows respect for the place. Timothy!" with scathing emphasis.
"Who gave him that name?"
"The law's an ass - but I'm not. It more or less forced me to bring
Timothy here, but it can't force me to change my ideas of how to
look after him. My own father died some time ago, so you're the
only grandfather he has. For Timothy's sake I was rather glad to
come here, because I felt he needed someone to look up to, but if
you're going to make his life wretched by demanding too much of
him, I'll have to do something about it."
"And I won't have him coddled," said Leon Verender. "You're here
as a member of the family; there's a place for you if you care to
take it. The boy is half yours and half mine. You make a good job
of your part and leave my part to me."
"It isn't possible to divide his life. You must know that."
He was gone, and Catherine was left trembling a little and more
angry than she had been for a long time. Somehow, she smiled at
the maid who appeared, and followed her from the room. They
crossed the corridor with the three archways to the hall on the right
and mounted a wide marble staircase Which led up to a large
carpeted upper hall.
"This way, madame," said the maid, as she turned along a spacious
passage that was panelled in the same silver-grey as the hall.
"Monsieur instructed us to prepare this suite at the end. It is the
most private."
"Thank you."
"Please."
"I've been wondering about you. How did you get on?"
"I'm still whole." She looked through into the other room, where
modern furniture and bookshelves were being inspected by a
sleepy Timothy. Quietly, she asked, "Did Mr. Verender make a
point of placing us far apart?"
"I don't know. Thought it a bit rum myself. He had these rooms
refurnished especially for the youngster."
"I'll say you will - I'm not chasing disaster! And take my tip. Let
him have his own way for a bit."
She smiled faintly. "You're afraid of him, and that's his trouble -
too many people have been afraid of him. Gosh, I'm tired. Did you
give Timothy some tea?"
"Good. I'll have his supper served up here. Can you do that for me,
too? Order a three-and-a-half-minute egg, bread and butter, an
apple and a glass of cold milk ... for a quarter to six. Thanks, Mr
Dean."
"Sorry to have kept you over time. Thanks for looking after
Timothy."
"Yes, and you're going to love it. Tomorrow I'll take you down to
look at the sea."
"Mmmm, and paddle your toes. You'll get lovely and brown and
you'll learn to swim."
"All right, my pet. You can sit on the beach while Mummy
swims."
Timothy didn't hear. She bent and kissed his forehead, gazed down
for a moment at the soft light shining over the golden aureole of
his hair, switched off the lamp and went quietly from the room,
leaving the door open about six inches.
The room to the right of Timothy's, she found had been quickly
prepared for her, and the maid was still there, hanging away the
last of Catherine's clothes.
"I'm sorry to have given you all this trouble," she said.
"Louise. If madame wishes for anything the bell near the bed will
call me. Shall I fill the bath?"
Louise went off, and Catherine took off her Jacket and ran her
fingers over the neat fold of hair at the back of her head. She felt
worn, and no wonder. She had known this would be a difficult day
and had prepared herself for it, but the trouble was her conception
of the situation had been rather different from the reality it had
turned out to be. She had seen photographs of Leon Verender,
most of them the image of a magnate who smiled diplomatically at
business conferences, and her mind had created the man behind the
smile. Hard, egotistical, successful and something of a cynic -
which he was. What she hadn't bargained for was utter ruthlessness
in his private life.
A good many men had cast off their sons and been sorry about it
afterwards; but not Leon Verender. Everything he did was right,
for ever. She would probably never know whether his sorrow over
Ewart's death had been deep and painful. What she did know was
that the knowledge of Timothy's existence and his own role as the
child's guardian had set him a new ambition. He'd done everything,
except rear a son. And that was an omission his own particular
providence was about to put right. So he thought.
Legally, she couldn't fight the man; in any case, one would have to
be driven to desperation before dragging one's own child through
the courts. Which left the matter clear-cut; somehow she had to
find a basis of co-operation with the old ramrod.
Catherine took a long time over her bath and getting into a
primrose cotton dress, and while she soaped and dried and
powdered and dressed she thought only lightly about the problem.
It was as she made up her face and looked into her own wide eyes
that she knew again the impact of loneliness, the sudden realisation
that Timothy had no one's love but her own, and that she had no
one to whom she could turn for advice and encouragement. Here,
with Ewart's father, she was more alone than she had been in
London, looking after Timothy and filling in at the nursery school.
She had had plans; she would teach full-time as soon as Timothy
was five and could attend the same school. Mr. Verender's money,
if he continued to be generous, could be set aside for Timothy's
education. And his godfather, Hugh Manning, would eventually
have been free to guide Timothy as only a man could; it was too
bad that Hugh had been transferred to the Far East.
Still, there was no getting away from Ewart's wish that his father
should be a guardian of the child. She understood how he had felt,
poor sweet; despising himself for breaking his promise and
returning to the track, apprehensive that he might have lost his
touch, and determined that Leon Verender should be financially
responsible, at least, if the worst happened. Being Ewart, he had no
doubt patted himself on the back for such selfless thinking, and
gained a terrific fillip from the thought that nothing bad ever
happened to the lucky Verenders.
She paused, lipstick in hand, and thought of the early days of her
marriage which had been so gay and carefree. Then Timothy, and
a subtle change in the atmosphere. Less laughter, less of Ewart
because he'd travelled alone to watch and report on sporting
events; and less money. When he had returned to motor-racing
Catherine had felt that nothing worse could happen to her. And
then he was gone, and she had had to face the stark fact of never
seeing him again, of Timothy's increasing helplessness without a
father. For two months she had felt crippled, and fought against it.
Then the battle of letters with the lawyer had begun, and her spirit
had revived. Who did he think he was this Leon Verender?
But it was a calm and poised young woman who went downstairs
at seven-twenty. It was dusk, and the several lamps in the hall lent
a soft radiance to the gleaming surfaces of tables and tiles. She
hesitated in an archway, to recall where the small salon lay, and at
that moment the main door opened and a man came in.
That's odd, she thought. I've now met him on both sides of the
door and we've never even been introduced.
"I wish you would. I had tea there, but I can't remember where it
is."
His smile showed the edge of white teeth. "Yet I would say that
your memory is normally sound -1 judge merely by the intelligent
eyes. Perhaps you were under some emotional stress this
afternoon?"
"I did get a little heated." As they began to move she gave him a
quick sideways look. "Are you a friend of Mr. Verender?"
He didn't give much away, this Frenchman, but She had the uneasy
conviction that he had already weighed her up and formed a
conclusion. She estimated him to be thirty- seven or eight and
wondered if he was married. There wasn't time to go further than
that before he had opened a door and led her into the small salon.
Leon Verender was already there, with a whisky glass in one hand
and a company prospectus in the other. He dropped the prospectus
on to the table, gave Catherine a brief glance from tinder the heavy
brows.
"Your usual, Philippe? Hope you didn't have to put off someone
else to come here this evening."
His shoulders lifted. "I was asked to join some people at the
Casino, but there was no definite invitation. I was most happy to
come here, though I cannot stay late, I am sorry to say."
"Well, never mind. We three shall be alone for dinner, but there'll
be others here for bridge later on. Do you play bridge, Catherine?"
"Perfect, mon ami." He took another pull at it, leaned back in his
chair and smiled. "You have a very lovely daughter-in-law, Leon. I
congratulate you."
The doctor said pleasantly, "I glimpsed the child this afternoon. He
looks well."
"He looks a mother's pet. He carries a toy animal that she probably
washes and disinfects every night."
"What did you play with when you were four?" Catherine asked
mildly. "Balance sheets?"
"You'll marry again," said the older man bluntly. "Unless you find
it such a soft billet here that single life will suit you better." A
gleam in the keen blue eyes. "How do you like your suite?"
"It's a very beautiful suite," she said evenly, "but I'm afraid I've
moved out into a guest room next to Timothy's."
"And stop calling me Mr. Verender!" Leon's fist came down with a
thud on the arm of his chair. "Anyone would think you still regard
yourself as Catherine Harvey, or whatever you were before
marriage. You have the same name as I, and I'm not going to have
you treat me in my own house as if it's a name you're not proud
of."
"This is my first day here," said Catherine. 'Tm afraid Papa would
stick in my throat a little."
"You'll call me Leon, like everyone else," stated the older man.
"And tomorrow you'll go back to the suite I chose for you."
"Very well. So long as you move Timothy into the room next
door."
"Not always. Sometimes I'd tell him to turn on his side and go to
sleep, and that's what he'd do. Here, he has a very large room in a
strange house, which is enough of a change for the moment."
The older man frowned, but there for a while the matter rested.
They went into a large, beautifully appointed dining- room, ate
hors d'oeuvres, chicken patties, escalopes of veal and salad with
Brie and fruit to follow, and drank an excellent wine.
After coffee in the salon, Catherine asked if the men would excuse
her; she had had a long day. The older man nodded and the doctor
rose to open the door for her. She went along the corridor,
meaning to go up to her room, but as she passed that splendid
arched opening into the hall she had to glance through, and she
saw that the door stood open, with the night beyond. On an
impulse, she went out on to the terrace and walked some yards in
its dimness before halting to stare out across the patio into the
starlit garden.
The air was strange; warm and soft, scented with magnolia and
alive with the shrill ticking of small insects. The stars were
brilliant against a black velvet sky and she fancied she could hear
surf whispering lazily over a distant beach. Arriving this afternoon
in the sunshine, she had noticed so little that now the whole place
was dark and lush and alien, with a peculiar magic of its own. Cote
d'Azur ... she had thought of it as beautiful, sophisticated and
overdone. No doubt it was. But here at the magnificent Villa
Chaussy she would come to know the inside life of it all, the
marrow-filled backbone as it were, of the most opulent and
luscious stretch of the Mediterranean coast.
"Not leaving, are you?" said an oldish, English voice. "I wanted to
see you about that shoulder of mine, Philippe."
Then Dr. Sellier bent over the woman's hand. "Lucille! How good
to see you back. Leon has been missing you this week, I think. Go
in. I will meet you all tomorrow."
The three guests disappeared into the house. Philippe Sellier was
about to descend the steps when the primrose dress caught his
glance and he drew back. Unhesitatingly, he came along the
terrace, and he spoke as he reached her.
"No. I did mean to go to bed, but the night looked inviting through
the front door. This ... this feeling in the air is very strange to me."
"I have heard others from England say the same; you will become
accustomed to it. I hope you will settle happily at the Villa
Chaussy."
"I hope so too." She looked up at him, briefly. "I have to thank you
for smoothing things a little before dinner, though I did have the
feeling that you weren't really on my side. You probably helped
because Fm a stranger and a woman, but I'm grateful just the
same."
"As you say, I am not on your side. Pas du tout. I have known and
respected Leon for several years, and can see no reason why your
coming here should upset him."
"I accepted that. I'm only concerned with the present." She gave
him another fleeting glance. "Did you really prefer to come here,
rather than go to the Casino?"
The practised, aloof smile did not alter. "It happened that I was in
no mood for the Casino."
"No. My sister has friends with her who will leave at eleven. She
does not care to be alone in the house so late." He paused.
"Perhaps when you are more used to Pontrieux you will call and
have tea with my sister. Yvette goes out seldom, but she has a
lively interest in English literature, and other things."
"Is she ailing in some way?"
She thought he would give a stiff bow and depart, but though he
seemed on the point of it, he remained there, looking out at the
dark shapes of shrubs and trees.
"What do you hope for yourself from these new circumstances into
which you are now plunged?" he queried. "Once you are adapted
to this household what then?"
"I disagree - your future is as important as the child's. You did not
contradict Leon when he said you would marry again."
She smiled. "I shall save my contradiction for the more vital
moments. If I appear to disagree with Mr. Verender on only one
subject my opinion should carry more weight, Don't you think so?"
"You are wiser than most young women of your age, but also, I
think, a little more foolishly brave." He allowed fully thirty
seconds to elapse before ending, coolly, "You will certainly find
admirers here, but you would do well to use discretion when
choosing an escort."
She gave a small English shrug. "I didn't come here for social life,
monsieur, but thank you for the advice."
The hint of mockery slipped back into his voice. "It was my
pleasure - one which no doubt will be repeated, for I am afraid
there is a little rashness alongside the strength in your character.
You are tired and should have been in your bed an hour ago. I wish
you bonne nuit."
She undressed, made sure her windows were wide open, slid
between the yielding coolness of the sheets and switched off the
bed-light. Darkness did not shut out the strange atmosphere; in
some ways it became exaggerated. Night insects and perfumes, the
sound of a car climbing the gradient beyond the gates, that distant
murmur which she thought was the sea.
This was her home now, and she must try to fit into it. Leon
Verender, that strong, antagonistic figure who had stood in the
background of her life for five years, had now become a main part
of her universe. Somehow she had to stand between his ambition
for Timothy and the cheerful, unsuspecting little boy she loved
more than anyone in the world. It was going to be hazardous;
Catherine was sure of that.
Michael Dean would not be able to help her very much. He was
easy-going, fond of good times and admittedly scared of his
employer. One could talk to him, get information from him, but to
lean upon he'd be a bending reed.
Catherine slipped her hand under the back of her head and, smiling
vexedly, composed herself for sleep.
CHAPTER TWO
FOR more than a week life at the Villa Chaussy was calm and
quiet. Catherine felt she had armed herself against something that
wasn't going to happen after all, for Leon Verender, when she saw
him each night at dinner, was polite and preoccupied, and only
once, when she and Timothy met him on the staircase, did he
speak to the little boy.
Timothy had given him the big blue stare. "It's nice," he'd
answered artlessly. "I've been paddling every day and this morning
I caught a shrimp. I'll show it to you if you like."
"One of these days you'll dive deep and find an octopus. When you
do, I'd like to see it."
Leon Verender did not smile. "When she's got you used to the
water we'll have a man on the job. He'll get you swimming in no
time. Where are you going now?"
For Catherine, those first eight or nine days at Pontrieux were the
laziest she had ever known. Each morning she took Timothy, by a
charming cliff path that wound downwards among bushy palms
and dwarf cedars, aloes and cacti, to the long stretch of beach that
was held in a rocky cup, where inlets and caves permitted shelter
from the heat of the sun, They bathed, made sand castles and
stretched themselves out happily side by side and told each other
stories. Timothy's stories had scrappy beginnings and no ends, and
it was rarely that he bothered to remember more than a few words
as he went along. His "hero" was always a dog or a cat, which
showed that he'd love to have one of either for a pet. Pets hadn't
been allowed at the flat, and Catherine doubted whether Leon
Verender would take kindly to having a dog in his treasurehouse.
Some time soon she must do what she could about companions for
Timothy, and work out a few simple lessons too. But not till she
had been here for two weeks. This was a holiday she'd needed, her
first since those rather unreal six days of honeymoon. There had
been happy times, but no holidays lasting longer than a week-end;
the money hadn't run to it. Then, she had felt it all very keenly for
Timothy's sake, but none of it seemed to matter very much now.
He had a honey-coloured tan that looked well with the thick fair
hair, and already his first fear of the vast expanse of the
Mediterranean had dissolved in a desire to splash in the warm
buoyant water. The grounds of the Villa Chaussy had also become
more familiar to Timothy than they were to the owner of the place
himself.
Actually, Catherine's peace did not quite last out the hoped-for two
weeks. There came a day when the business meetings were over,
the various directors dispersed to their homes in Paris, Amsterdam,
Berne and Madrid. Leon Verender was free for a while, Michael
Dean could catch up on his sleep and Madame Brulard, the plump
and majestic housekeeper, could leave the kitchen entirely to the
cook, who knew Leon's wants too well to need supervision.
On that day, Timothy had just gone down for his afternoon nap
when the maid, Louise, came to Catherine's bedroom.
"But I've had all the lunch I want, Louise," Catherine protested. "I
couldn't eat another. Will you tell Monsieur..."
There was one thing the whole staff of the Villa Chaussy had in
common - a strong reluctance to irritate their employer.
"Meaning I'd better change? Thank you for the tip, Louise. I shan't
need any help, thanks."
But when she entered the small salon Leon Verender and a very
smart woman in navy and pink were there alone. The woman was
dark, her hair a smooth waved cap which was surmounted by a
small hat of pastel pink feathers. Her face, olive-skinned with a
clever pink tone over the cheekbones, was a long heart shape. The
nose, architecturally Grecian, was the more perfect for the long
pointed chin and the slanted dark eyes and winged brows.
Catherine had never seen such a flawlessly sculptured face; it was
difficult not to stare.
"I've told you about Catherine, Lucille. She's one of the family
now. Catherine, this is Lucille d'Esperez. She's been wanting to
meet you, but this is the first day I've been free for it."
"How do you do, madame," murmured Catherine.
Lucille d'Esperez did not answer in the same words. "So you are
the daughter-in-law," she said in soft, foreign tones. "You and I
have something we share; we are widows. But that is where it
ends, I think!"
"Mon dieu, but it can also be very dull... and even a little lonely."
A small rougish smile was directed towards Leon. "Particularly
when one's bel ami is engrossed day after day with business. I am
so glad you are free of that for a while, Leon!"
"I like it occasionally - keeps me on my toes." He looked at his
thin gold wristwatch. "Shall we go in to lunch?"
"He said he might not get here till two, that we weren't to wait for
him."
commented Lucille. "I have never before known him to break the
arrangement with his sister."
"I hardly think that," said Lucille. "If Philippe wanted a different
life Yvette would not be allowed to stand in the way of it. I would
say that it suits Philippe to live as he does. Yvette is as good a
housekeeper as a wife would be and her demands are easy to meet.
Philippe is mostly there for lunch, if his patients permit it, but for
the rest he is as free as a bachelor. Yvette's friends visit her
continually for tea or dinner." Lucille sent him the knowledgeable
smile. "When Philippe dines at home you may be sure Marcelle
Latour has been invited. That is the only match Yvette would
tolerate."
The luncheon table had been set near the french window, a
rectangular table with Leon at one short side and Lucille at the
other, while Catherine sat facing the garden with an empty chair
beside her. Perhaps it was fortunate that Leon Verender was not
himself very hungry, and that Lucille d'Esperez found this a
subject for comment. It allowed Catherine to murmur that she
wanted just a little salad, and to pick a morsel only when one of
them happened to be looking at her.
"I'm fine," he said gruffly. "You know I never eat much lunch. In
any case, I'd go mad in some small out-of-the-way place. I like
plenty of people round me."
"Ah, the child," remarked Lucille, laying down her fork and
turning an interested smile towards Catherine. "You are very lucky
to have a small son. Where is he now?"
"I adore children." It seemed to be her favourite verb. "I must meet
this small Leon!"
"His name is Timothy."
"Just Timothy."
Catherine was fairly certain that the woman had already known
what Timothy was called; if Leon had told her of the child's arrival
at the Villa Chaussy he had no doubt also implied that he didn't
care for his name. Lucille d'Esperez was grinding her own little
gilt axe at anyone's expense.
"No," said Catherine firmly. "He's named after his father, Ewart."
"He's fine. The sun and sea are doing him lots of good."
"In my opinion," declared Leon, "it's time the boy could swim. I
learned to swim in a cold English river before I was three."
"It isn't necessary. I'm quite a good swimmer and I can teach
Timothy myself, in the sea."
Catherine answered him in the mild tones she had schooled herself
to use. "I'm afraid you don't know women. I detest spiders,
thunderstorms and height, but you'll find that none of those things
makes the least impression on Timothy, simply because I've never
let him see my own fears. He'll swim, in good time."
She lifted her head. "Riding lessons are out of the question, of
course. We can discuss it some other time."
"No reason would be good enough. I rode a pony over the South
Downs when I was his age - did it every day!"
Leon Verender sat back in his chair and thrust one big fist on to
the table with a bang. His eyes were small and brilliant, his mouth
a distorted line. "Afraid of horses - a grandson of mine?" he said
harshly. "I don't believe it. You've frightened him - you and your
woman's cleverness in keeping your fears from him! How dare you
accept such a weakness in him..."
There was a brief silence. Then Leon Verender said heavily, "You
drive him out there each day - keep at it till he likes horses. I want
him riding before he's five!"
Catherine felt too shaken to answer this, and it was Lucille who
spoke next.
"I think you are right, Leon. A boy needs the outdoors and a man
who will guide him to become strong and fearless."
Had any other man spoken those words Leon Verender would
have ignored them, but for Philippe Sellier the man felt not only a
warm regard but a profound respect, even when they were in
disagreement. The sharp blue glance rested a trifle vindictively
upon Catherine before it moved to the dark, half-smiling doctor,
who was unconcernedly making a good lunch.
"You have good judgment, Philippe, and you're the best doctor I
know. I want you to give the child a check-up and tell me what
he's capable of, physically. And you," swinging the glance back
towards Catherine, "had better co-operate. I'm as much the boy's
guardian as you are."
"That's one thing I'll never accept," she said, with her fingers on
the edge of the table. "Will you excuse me?"
Philippe turned abruptly towards her. "You cannot bear to wait till
the guests have finished their lunch?" he demanded.
Imperceptibly, her tongue ran along the inside of her lips, to
moisten them. "I'm sorry. I thought it would be better if I left you
to enjoy it."
"Soyez tranquille. Drink your wine." He turned from her and spoke
to Leon. "This morning I met an old friend of yours at the hospital
in Nice. He is living now at Menton, and gave me his card to pass
on to you. Also, there were some visitors from Paris who knew
both you and Lucille; they sent warm wishes. I must remember the
names for you..."
Lucille put on an "I thought not" expression and led the way to the
wrought-iron upholstered chairs in the terrace. To Catherine's
relief, she was able to take the chair at the end, slightly to the left
of Lucille and removed by several feet from the men.
Away to the right Monsieur Brulard, the rather ancient husband of
the middle-aged housekeeper, was hobbling slowly round a
flower-bed and pointing out to a small thin gardener the
deficiencies in his gardening. Brulard was in charge outdoors, and
a wonderful job he made of it, but he was merciless towards his
underlings. Even with a cracked knee joint he was on the job,
planning and criticising and watching developments. Several times
Catherine had wondered whether Leon Verender knew how
tyrannically his head gardener ruled the eight acres of lawns and
trees and flower gardens; now she decided that he had probably
trained Brulard himself!
"So you, my poor Philippe, have to mix with the bohemians for an
evening!"
"I doubt whether the child would enjoy it, but if there is no one
you would care to trust with him ..."
"The maid will look after the boy," said Leon Verender flatly.
"That's part of her job. Good for him, too. You go with Philippe,
Catherine."
"I'm not pandering to her mood," growled Leon. "Take her with
you, Philippe, and on the way you might give her a lecture on the
rights of a male guardian."
Lucille gave a gentle laugh. "You are expecting too much, Leon.
Philippe may be invulnerable where women are concerned, but he
is not insensitive to his opportunities. He will not waste time on
lectures. And who knows, he may admire pale skin and red hair!"
Philippe smiled. "I shall have little time for lectures or anything
else. I'm due to join a colleague for consultation at a quarter to
four. I must leave you almost at once.'*
Catherine stood up. "I'll go and see Louise - it won't take long."
She walked quickly into the house, felt her head spinning slightly
and a strange nervous tension in her body. She found Louise in the
servants' sitting-room, gained her assurance that Timothy would be
looked after, and hurriedly washed her hands, touched up her face
and slicked her hair. When she returned to the terrace all three
were moving along towards the steps; there they passed and she
joined them. Philippe, looking tall and rather intriguing in his
immaculate grey suit, made his usual adieux. Fleetingly, Catherine
wondered how Lucille qualified for a touch of his lips on her wrist
while she herself received a spare nod. Not that she wanted the
flowery salute, she told herself swiftly; it would have made her
feel an idiot.
She got into the car, which was French and fairly new, Philippe
slipped in beside her and with a wave of his hand they turned on to
the drive and rolled down towards the gates. They swung out on to
the road and down the steep gradient towards the spires, turrets
and pink roofs of the town of Pontrieux.
"I've only seen it like this, at a distance," she answered, glad that
he had chosen a mundane subject for conversation. "It's beautifully
set, with the rocky headlands at each side and the Corniche
winding through it."
"All the towns on the various Corniches have personality. You will
get to know them very well. Have you driven here yet?"
"You are not accustomed to driving on the right side of the road,
and at certain points the Corniches have dangerous bends. For your
first few drives it would be best to have a companion."
"I thought of that myself. I'll ask Michael Dean to go with me."
"Oh, yes. Dean." Philippe took a steep bend before adding the cool
query, "No doubt you find it helpful to have the young Englishman
in the house?"
"He did help the first day, but I've hardly seen him since. Oh, look!
Is that an old fortress?"
There was an odd little coldness in his voice, and Catherine had
the curious conviction that she ought to be careful; she must
remember that this man was really on Leon's side. So she spoke
casually. "Yes. You see, we never had much money, but Ewart
was keen that Timothy should be educated as he was himself. I
thought we'd save for it - take out an insurance policy, perhaps, but
... well, we hadn't got round to it when Ewart went back to motor-
racing. So, without my knowledge, he made a will. He'd nothing to
leave, but... but Timothy."
There was silence between them as they dipped down into the
narrow main street of the old town. The shops, Catherine decided,
could not have changed much during the last hundred years. They
were converted houses, some of them prettied up with paint, but
most of them dark and inconvenient but somehow characteristic of
the ageless background of Pontrieux. The tarmac road looked out
of place between those cobbled pavements and old shops, where
bakers and pharmacists, novelty-vendors, aproned cobblers and
hardware merchants, waited benignly with cheroot or coffee-cup in
hand for the thin flow of women with string bags who had not yet
done their day's shopping. The inn was a semi-basement bistro
with half a dozen shuttered windows overhead, but a few doors
from it a pension made a brave show of potted palms flanking a
brightly polished entrance hall. A delightful old hodge-podge of a
town which tried only half-heartedly to halt the touring motorist.
At the moment it was still drowsy from the lunch break.
"I do not see how you could have been suited. You, and the kind of
man who was not content unless risking his life. I know he gave up
racing for your sake, but he was still that kind of man; you could
not alter that."
"Are you sure of that? Some day, as Leon has said, you will marry
again, and I will wager that the man you choose will not resemble
Ewart Verender in any way."
He sounded a bit sharp about it, and she thought she had better
wait a minute before saying anything more. But there was one
thing she wanted to ask him, and after he had taken a left turn into
a narrow street which climbed towards a wider thoroughfare, she
said:
"As a woman?" A deep shrug. "You feel I know you well enough
to answer that?"
"So?" He lifted a thick dark brow. "I had no wish to make you
angry. Perhaps I judged you merely on what I know of you. You
married young - a man who had no real depths. The man who has
no depths cannot pierce deeply into the life of another; therefore
there is much of love you cannot know. Each of us loves as our
character permits - no more and no less."
"And you, monsieur," she said quite calmly, though there was an
unusual sensation at the base of her throat. "Do you make it a
practice never to love at all?"
"You think so?" Philippe gave his home a cursory glance, "It is not
nearly so magnificent as the Villa Chaussy and we have only one
acre of garden - which is as well. I have little time for the garden
and Yvette cares nothing at all for it. But I grant you, it is lovely.
My mother planted the cedars when she was married, forty years
ago."
"On this coast, everything grows well. Come, I will find my sister
and leave you with her. It becomes late."
They went into a rather dim tiled hall and then into a large sitting-
room furnished in the French provincial style; very pleasing, with
its air of slight antique and great comfort. Philippe turned his head,
as though about to summon his sister, but at that moment she came
into the room behind them.
" 'Allo," she said in soft, oddly provocative tones. "I heard you
arrive."
He was gone, and Yvette Sellier was darting her bright dark glance
over Catherine.
"I am glad you came," she said. "I am always anxious to meet the
women Philippe knows socially. Shall we go outside?"
There was no need to answer this, for Yvette had already walked
towards the french windows and opened one of the doors.
Catherine went with her, followed her to the tree- shaded patio and
sank into one of the chairs. Yvette dropped into another, keeping
the low tiled table between them, and leaned forward to offer the
box of cigarettes which stood there. Catherine took a cigarette and
used the gnome-shaped lighter, and as she blew smoke she looked
at this woman who was the doctor's sister. And again she knew a
slight shock of amazement. Apart from the line of her nose and
something about the way her brows grew, Yvette was totally
unlike her brother. Perhaps it was the perpetual gleam in the eye,
the restless movements of thin fingers, the soft probing voice that
helped to set them far apart. Their natures must be completely
opposed to each other.
"So you are the rich Verender's daughter-in-law," said Yvette. "I
thought you would be older. Philippe says you have a small son."
"Yes, I have."
"Yet you're not as old as I." Without bending her head she looked
down at the tip of the cigarette she was holding, showing a
rounded eyelid and short thick lashes. "You are very good-
looking."
"You think that because I'm different. A few years ago I longed to
look as you do; one has these phases." Catherine had never felt so
awkward with another woman. "I seem to remember the doctor
mentioning that you're interested in English literature."
"I am interested in all the arts, but I like your English poets. We
have many English writers and artists living on the Cote d'Azur,
and most of them have been up here to see me at some time. I do
not myself go visiting very much."
"That attitude is too English. You have provided the old man with
a grandson; why should you not - what is the expression? - cash in
on it! Besides, there is the possibility that here on the Cote d'Azur
you may find a rich husband." Her lips thinned, but were smiling.
"I have heard it said in Nice that a true titian is snapped up at her
first public appearance."
"You have the wrong character for your colouring." She laughed at
her own joke, rested a long, enigmatically smiling glance upon
Catherine, and added, "I suppose you have guessed why I wanted
to inspect you at close quarters? It was to make sure that you are
not Philippe's type. I have done it before when women guests have
been staying at houses he has to visit. It was nothing personal."
"Of course." But Catherine's jaw had tightened. She tried a change
of subject. "This is an ideal spot. Old gardens can be the most
restful places in the world."
The other shrugged, and seemed to sink deeper into her chair. "The
son of our maid tends the garden and cuts all the flowers we need.
It is seldom that I even walk out there, across the grass."
The other's expression lost its pleasantness, but she didn't move.
"In the mornings I am lazy, and sometimes read. In the afternoons
I have people for tea and in the evenings for dinner. I am the
housekeeper here, but Martha knows our habits so well that I do
not have much to do." Another of those swift, large-eyed,
gleaming glances. "Have you heard anything about me?"
"Almost nothing."
"Not even from Lucille d'Esperez? Lucille knows all the gossip
here."
"She will tell you, some time - so I may as well tell you myself, the
truth. I was once engaged to be married."
"Yes, I was engaged," she said after a moment. "It was one of
those understood things. We grew up together, I was told we were
suited, he was told we were suited - so he proposed and we were
engaged. It lasted three years - that engagement, and when I was
twenty-two the marriage was arranged. And then, on the night
before the wedding, I knew I could not marry Armand. Imagine!
He a young lawyer, very correct, very stupid - spending one's
whole life with that face, those foolish mannerisms, that
pomposity! I could not do it."
"My father was dead some years, but my mother, who wanted the
match, was very much alive - she had hysteria. It was Philippe
who managed it all. At first he tried to persuade me it was
ridiculous to change my mind - that it was just nerves. Then he
saw I was determined not to go through with it, that I found the
idea of marriage with Armand revolting and unthinkable. I told
him I wanted to marry for love, not for convenience. So he
smoothed everything, and I was free."
"Never!"
"You were very brave," she said inadequately. "At that stage most
women would have gone through with it."
"I said I was ill, and remained in my room for two weeks. By that
time, Armand had accepted my decision."
"Your brother must have had a difficult time."
Catherine did not query the final remark. Once more she could
find nothing at all to say, and it was with great relief that she saw
the middle-aged maid wheel out a tea trolley.
"You expect other guests for tea, mademoiselle?" the maid asked.
"No, Marthe. They will all be here this evening. That will leave
you free to prepare the buffet."
Yvette talked of this artist and that sculptor - names Catherine and
the rest of the world had never heard of. She had a light, feverish
way of speaking which some people might have found amusing.
She was probably exhilarating company at her own parties, and
she didn't look as if she were prone to fits of depression. Quite a
puzzle, Philippe's sister.
After the tea things had been wheeled away an important piece of
the puzzle slipped into place. Yvette, swinging her leg over the
arm of the chair, asked carelessly:
"Is it true that one's love for a small son is greater than the love for
the husband?"
"Oh, yes, he married - and I did not mind at all. She was second-
best and as stupid as he." The pause that followed seemed, to
Catherine, to pulse audibly. Then: "They have two children."
The topic carried them through the next half-hour, and shortly after
that Philippe drove up. He got out of the car and came across to
them, smiling a rather set smile and waving away the suggestion
that he might like some refreshment.
"You have enjoyed this afternoon?" he asked them both.
"I liked it," Yvette conceded. "She is different, this young Madame
Verender. She does not talk of herself, but one gains the
impression that she could tell much. Sometimes I wish I were
English; it would be good to sail through troubles as though they
did not exist."
"We don't have that, I assure you," Catherine said. "We may
pretend to, because it helps."
"Philippe, you have not forgotten that you promised to call for
Marcelle at six?"
"It has occurred to me that this Catherine might like to join our
party tonight."
"Thank you, but no," said Catherine quickly. "I have things I must
do."
But Yvette was looking with those provocative eyes at her brother.
"Persuade her, Philippe. Perhaps she will come if you ask."
"I think not," he said briefly. "We will leave you now. And Yvette
- no slacks this evening, please!"
FOR the first five minutes they drove without speaking, Catherine
was smarting a little from Philippe's obvious determination that
she should not attend Yvette's party. Had he mentioned that she
might feel out of place among the bohemian crowd she would have
minded less. But he had merely said a decisive, "I think not," and
that was the end of it. He had realised, of course, that as the only
man who knew Catherine Verender he would have to be her
official companion for the evening, and no doubt he had other
plans, Marcelle Latour, for instance.
Catherine didn't mind that. Why should she? She hadn't intended
to go to the party, anyway. It was merely that his abruptness had
made her wince a bit; it was unlike what she knew of him. Perhaps
he was regretting that she had entered his family circle; well, that
was one thing they might agree upon, because she wasn't too
happy about it either.
The little town was busy now. The shops were all wide open and
doing quite a trade, people strolled in the late golden sunshine and
a few tourists were climbing Mont Ste. Agnes for the sunset view
of the sea and the rocky coastline. Fishermen were putting out
from the beach and the usual retinue of boys hindered the
procedure and generally had a good time. Even though she felt
somewhat depressed, Catherine could feel the faint air of festivity
which seemed inseparable from this district as day was ending and
the scented, balmy evening approached.
Philippe said, at last, "I had no idea you had been so alone this last
year, in England. In France, a woman placed as you were would
have lived with her family, or very close to them, but it seems you
were in London while your mother lived with the married brother
in the country."
Catherine nodded. "My brother is a resident master at a big school
in Hampshire, and my mother seems to fit in there."
"It was rather more than that, I'm afraid. They started off disliking
each other - they were such completely different personalities, you
see - and eventually they could hardly meet without exchanging
insults. Ewart did it almost good- humouredly, because he didn't
care enough about people to get heated, but Diana ... well, she
simply doesn't possess a sense of humour, and the only remedy
was to keep them apart. When .,. when Ewart died, Diana was very
kind, but I couldn't possibly make my home there with them. There
wasn't room and I wasn't really wanted. I'd have felt stifled."
She made a small gesture with her hands. "She's sweet, but she's
their kind - Bernard's and Diana's. I couldn't take her away from
them. I did have lots of friends in London, and if I could have
taken a job where Timothy..."
She stopped, and let a shrug complete the sentence, and for a
minute or two they went on in silence. They were on the road up to
the villa when he said formally:
"At Leon's request I have made an appointment for the child. My
usual consulting hours are from eleven till lunch- time, but
tomorrow I should be free at ten-thirty. I would like you to bring
him to my consulting room at that time,"
"Very well."
And it was on that distant note, more or less, that they parted. He
touched her elbow lightly as he helped her from the car, bowed
coolly, waited just long enough to see her enter the hall, and drove
away. To pick up Marcelle Latour, she remembered.
"He stomped, and didn't look back. It wasn't my fault, was it,
Louise? It was too high."
Catherine gave her a quick enquiring look, but the maid turned
firmly towards the huge electric range and switched on a hotplate.
The kitchen-maid, who stood at a work-table in the corner, began
to weigh ingredients and tip them into the bowl of an electric
mixer, and Catherine found she was gazing at two stiff backs. So
she turned to Timothy.
"Not much." He came round the table and slipped a hot little hand
into hers. "You been a long time."
"We'll go upstairs and you can have supper after you've undressed.
Would you like that?"
"It was so high, you see," he told her. "And Grandfather .,. I mean
Grandpa... he said I must call him Grandpa ..."
He had wandered and she prompted him gently, "What was high,
Timothy?"
"The tree, of course. Did you climb trees when you were little?"
He nodded. "There was Grandpa and Louise, but the climbing was
all by myself. I didn't try 'cos it was a big tree and Grandpa said
Louise mustn't help."
"Grandpa was cross. He lifted me up into the tree and said I must
come down again on my own."
Catherine felt perspiration starting across her "brow. She saw big
tears in Timothy's eyes, and drew him into her arms. "And when
you couldn't do it, Grandpa went away, and Louise got you down?
That's good." She steadied her voice. "No harm's done, chicken. I'll
teach you how to climb trees myself - little ones. I'm afraid
Grandpa doesn't know much about little boys - not yet. And now
let's play one of our own games, shall we? What about making
some words with your bricks? And after supper we'll have one of
the stories from the rabbit book. We'll pretend we're back in the
flat, and Beanie shall be a bunny."
"Come in," said Leon Vender's heavy voice, but as she entered he
looked at her as though he might have said other words had he
known who was knocking. "Well, what can I do for you?" he
asked.
"I think you know why I'm here. You're well aware that you scared
Timothy half to death this afternoon. Was that why you insisted on
my going with the doctor - so that you could try out some of those
rough tactics on the child?"
"Don't be a fool if you can help it." He walked round his desk,
clipped a cigar with a small silver instrument. "The boy has less
pluck than a girl of his age, and that's a condition I won't tolerate
in anyone belonging to me. I sent you off with the doctor because I
thought it would be good for the boy to wake up and find someone
else at his bedside. You're with him too much."
"That's true - he needs young companions. But I didn't come to
you about that."
"I know why you came." He gazed at her piercingly from under
the ridge of his brow. "You regard everything from your own
womanish viewpoint, but you're intelligent for all that, and should
be able to see my way of looking at this thing. I'll tell you exactly
what happened this afternoon." He dropped the cigar clipper into a
slot on the massive inkstand, passed a hand over the grey hair at
the back of his head and again gave her a long straight stare. "I saw
the boy walking in the garden with the maid and strolled after
them. I caught them up near a fig tree and told him to try and
climb it. He didn't even move forward - just stood there looking at
me with those great wide-set eyes and saying he couldn't do it.
Ever had a good look at a fig tree?" he suddenly barked.
"Yes, I have. I should say they're easy to climb - but that's not the
point. If you'd encouraged him - helped him a little - he might have
thought it fun. But your way of approaching things has made him
frightened of you. To you he's always the boy or the child. You
never use his name..
"Don't flash your eyes at me, young woman. It's a pity you haven't
tried to put some of that fire of yours into the child. You know
what?" with the typical jut of his lower lip and a cynical note in his
voice. "That boy was no more than five feet from the grass .,. and
he cried. Sat there and cried."
She drew a quick breath. "I'm not surprised. Children do cry with
fright, you know. If you try anything of that kind again..."
"So it's threats now, is it?" He sounded interested rather than put
out. "You make a milksop of the child, and I'm to blame for not
liking milksops! That's rather rich."
She looked down at the thick Chinese rug. "You could talk to him,
for one thing. Action isn't everything - that's just physical, and
most boys come to it in time. What he'll need more and more from
now on is ordinary masculine talk from someone who cares for
him. I know ifs something you've never done in your life; if you'd
talked to Ewart instead of giving him every expensive toy he ever
asked for, he might have grown up with a different set of values.
Little boys don't particularly want ponies and little motor cars with
all the gadgets, and gliders and swimming pools. They want
freedom and companionship ... and whether you like my saying it
or not, they need a background of parental love. You've said you
want the experience of educating a son, but I honestly don't think
you can make a success of it till you love him."
For nearly a minute there was complete quiet. Even the outdoor
noises, caused by roosting birds and the breeze, failed to penetrate
the charged atmosphere of the room. Then, suddenly, Leon
Verender struck a match and set the flame to the tip of his cigar.
He took his time about getting the thing lit and, disposing of the
match, blew smoke from his Finnish lips and said, looking at her
averted face:
"You're young and emotional. I'm nearly forty years older and
hard-bitten. We shall never see eye to eye about this because
whatever happens we shall remain strangers. You're not only the
girl my son married - you're the girl he married without my
consent. You cheated me of the kind of daughter-in-law I wanted.
All right - that's forgiven and almost forgotten now; it has to be.
But you're still the stranger that I didn't want it in my family."
She lifted her head and gazed back at him. "If you cast off Ewart
and don't want me, how can you want Timothy?"
"I had reason. I knew you were going to tolerate having me here
for Timothy's sake."
"And you'd always hated Ewart's father for more or less disowning
him?"
"I didn't hate you. You don't hate someone you can get along quite
easily without."
He shoved the cigar back into his mouth, drew on it hard, and took
it between his fingers. "A few of the things you've said I've asked
for - I know that. But I've been up against problems all my life,
and I don't intend to be bested over this one. If I have to row with
you every step of the way, I'll make a man of that boy!"
"I don't want rows - and there needn't be any if you'll only realise
that you can't train a boy by frightening him stiff. You simply have
to give him time." The breath quivered in Catherine's throat, and
she waited a second to get over it, before saying, "Children react
best to people who love them, and they're particularly good with
grandparents. My own mother ..."
"I don't want to hear it," he growled. "I want that child's habits
changed, his whole outlook sharpened up and made boyish. Get
that hair cut off, and let him play in briefs and nothing else. I want
to see him nut-brown and healthy, fighting fit. I want there to be
nothing in the physical line that he can't do quicker and better than
any other boy. Because it's physical perfection that prepares a boy
for mental gymnastics later on. With a grandfather like me," giving
her a swordlike glance, "and a mother who may be a fool over him
but can acquit herself fairly well in a battle of words, he could
have a brilliant future. That's what I want for him, and what I mean
to have!"
"Maybe I shan't be here to see what he does with his life, and I
certainly shan't care which career he chooses. But whether it's
science or the law, medicine or finance - he has to have the right
preparation for it in childhood. To be fearless in thought he has to
be fearless physically while young. And that boy will never be
brave while you're pampering and coddling him and getting
between him and danger. I learnt to swim by being thrown into a
river, and I climbed my first tree because I was intensely curious
about what lay on the other side of our garden wall. When I was
seven I ran away to London and somehow kept myself going for
four days before I was picked up and carted home again."
"You will. The first couple of times out you can take Dean with
you, if you like."
"Thank you."
Catherine was glad when the guests arrived. They were an ageing
French count and his wife and a banker from Paris; typical of this
house.
Yes, after eight or nine days the holiday feeling was gone.
Catherine knew that now she had to plan ahead, for Timothy's
immediate, future. At precisely ten-thirty next morning she entered
the comfortable waiting-room which adjoined Philippe Sellier's
consulting rooms. At twenty-five minutes to eleven a thin, thirtyish
receptionist asked that Madame Verender and the child would
please go in to see the doctor.
A shrug. "You look pale this morning - but I think there is little
wrong with your health. I would say there has been another sance
with Leon."
"That's clever of you. Thanks for the offer, but I don't think you
can help me in any way - in your report about Timothy, I mean -
except perhaps to mention once more that Leon will have to be
patient."
Philippe bent towards the little boy. "I forgot to ask about your
Beanie. How is he?"
"He cried."
"I also have common sense," he clipped out in alien tones, "and
perhaps I have had even more experience with children than you
have. The first adventure of any kind is always a terror, but the
body has reserves to deal with such things. You see how the child
plays there on the staircase? He is no different from others of his
age. He is built to withstand the sudden frights - childhood is a
succession of them. In trying to shield him you are doing him an
injury!"
"I won't have him meet any more dangers than necessary till he's
fit to deal with them," she said quickly. "I knew a long time ago
that Leon was soulless, but I did think that you understood a little."
"I understand very well. You are making the child your whole life,
and that is wrong - for him and for you. You are still very young."
"I think you do," he said coldly. "There will be another man in
your life; in spite of that independent outlook you have acquired
you are of a kind to need a man - his love and protection. Have
you thought how this man will feel about the child?"
"Certainly not."
"You should, mon amie. When the time comes you will think that
he should love the boy because he is yours. But," with soft and
deadly emphasis, "he will find it almost impossible even to tolerate
a child who demands most of your affection and care. Because if
you continue placing the interests of Timothy before everything
else that is what will happen - he will expect and demand the first
place in your affections - always."
Catherine's head was still bent and the pretty curve of her mouth
had compressed slightly.
"I know that," he said offhandedly, and moved towards the open
door. "Au revoir."
She murmured a reply and passed him, went down the three wide
steps with Timothy and smiled mechanically at Michael Dean,
who stood beside the open door of the primrose yellow car,
bowing theatrically. As she settled herself she looked towards the
doorway of the medical centre. Philippe had gone.
"What's the matter with our doctor friend?" asked Michael as he
got in beside her. "He looked at me as if I were something that had
crawled out of a drain."
"He's not very pleased with me." She looked over her shoulder.
"All right, Timothy?"
"Well, don't..." She had been about to warn him, against smearing
his Shirt. Darn that interfering, charming, barricaded, masterful
doctor; he had no right to influence her like this. "Yes, eat it," she
said. "You'll have some lemonade when we get to Nice."
Michael turned and looked at him. "Never knew such a polite kid
in my life. What sort of chocolate is it, youngster? All right, I'll
have a bite. Daren't smoke in this mobile boudoir."
"Well, it's a place where ladies ,.. no, I guess you're a bit too
young. Look out, there, don't put your mucky fingers on the
leather!"
Catherine laughed suddenly. It was a relief to find someone as
carefree as Michael uttering the sort of warning she had been about
to administer herself. She slipped a hanky from the pocket of her
short cream coat and held it over the back of the seat, felt Timothy
take it and heard him settle back into the soft upholstery.
"How did the medical exam go off?" asked Michael, when he had
disposed of his mouthful.
"Very well. Dr. Sellier did it for Leon, and will send him a report."
"I don't suppose he has time to escort all his patients to the front
door. You were special." Michael grinned. "He's a cool customer,
isn't he? Once, when he was at the villa, I showed him a lump on
my wrist. He said it was a ganglion and gave it a terrific whack
with the side of his hand. For about an hour it ached like mad, but
next day the thing was no more. I didn't get a bill for it."
"There are so many villages in the district, and many of them have
no doctors, so the people come into Pontrieux. The medical centre
building was a large old mansion that had been empty for some
time. Philippe suggested to the other medicos that it would benefit
them and the community if it was bought and transformed into
consulting suites. They formed a company to foot the cost and they
pay a small rental to cover upkeep. It was already established
before I came to Pontrieux, but it's quite famous along the coast.
Philippe has been asked to take a fashionable practice in Nice, but
he won't go. He's a rum type - very sure of himself, charming, but
with a layer of cold steel somewhere. Met his sister yet?"
She nodded. "I had tea with her yesterday. She's not much like
him."
"Bit of an enigma, I believe, and very possessive." With a
deprecating gesture he added, "I only know what I hear fall from
the lips of the mighty, but it seems the girl intends to cling along
with Philippe for ever and ever. But she's canny; she knows darned
well that her brother won't remain a bachelor all his life, so she
vets all the women he meets. That's probably why she had you
there yesterday."
"Maybe, but she could make herself mighty unpleasant. For her
sake, everyone is hoping he'll marry Marcelle Latour."
"I believe she's clever at it, but not dedicated. She's not a local. I
first heard of her about six months ago. I met the Sellier group at a
carnival affair, and Marcelle was partnering Philippe. She belongs
to an old Provencal family. She was left some money by an aunt,
and decided to use some of it on a stay among the bohemians of
the Cote d'Azur. She lives with a married couple at Beausolais -
never comes to Pontrieux except to see the Selliers. Yvette's made
a buddy of her."
"Is she good-looking?"
"In my opinion - yes. She hasn't the classic French looks. Her
colouring is mid-brown and she has masses of rather untidy hair,
but on her it looks good. You know the present- day French film
star - full mouth, high cheekbones, and a look about the eyes that
couldn't be anything but continental - that's how Marcelle Latour
strikes you. But she has his air of belonging on an old family, and
the money, of course, is the sort of dowry no Frenchman would
sneer at. You know, Catherine, that's where we English fall flat on
our faces. Our girls sail into marriage without a bean."
She smiled. "They can be sure they've been married for love."
"But, darn it, if you're broke love can take an awful beating."
"Lord, no - that is, not unless she'd give up her family, and they
seldom do." He went a little gloomy. "I doubt if I'll ever marry. I
couldn't bear to live with a woman who was dissatisfied half the
time, and that's how she'd be if I had to be the provider. I think
every father should give his daughter a dress allowance for the first
ten years of her marriage."
"Yes, for perfume. This is the second crop - the season is nearly
over. Between Menton and Hyeres they produce almost every
essence you can think of - they even use mountain herbs and
flowers. We're getting close now. Want me to take over?"
"Perhaps you'd better. I'd rather know the streets before I drive
along them."
They changed places, and moved off again. Past palatial entrances
to invisible villas, through a tunnel created by umbrella pines past
a cliffside hotel and down between walled gardens into the most
exciting city of the Mediterranean seaboard. The endless
Promenade de la Mediterranee, its palms and holiday throngs in
gay and scanty dress, its edging of golden sand and the wide sweep
of the azure bay - Catherine knew it was one of the most famous
thoroughfares in the world. And rightly so; there was some extra
magic in the warmth and joy of that lovely esplanade in Nice, with
its strange and distant background panorama of mountains and
capes.
"You've got the rest of your life for that," he said easily. "I'll take
you through to the shops. Over here," waving towards a public
garden, "is the Musee Massena. You must go there some time. We
turn up here ... and turn again towards the Avenue de la Victoire.
Anything in particular you want to get?"
"You can buy anything here. What about those dress shops? You'll
be a fool if you don't get all you can out of the old man." He lifted
a hasty hand from the wheel. "All right, all right. I don't mean it
the way it sounds. It would please him and it wouldn't harm you at
all. You know, you should have a definite plan for dealing with
Leon. Be submissive in every way you possibly can, so that when
you do stick out for something he's brought up sharp, and has to
consider it."
"It's an awfully good plan, Michael, but I doubt if I could keep to
it. Could you let me off here?"
"Just you?" He slowed and looked a wee bit chagrined. "Aren't you
taking Little Eric with you?"
"Don't call him that! As a matter of fact you're going to look after
him - you're to take him to get his hair cut." She paused. "Did you
have a plan of your own for 'the next hour?"
"Well, I do know a girl in a travel agency back there, but I'll get
the kid shorn for you. An inch off all round?"
They arranged to meet at that exact spot in one hour, and the
yellow car slid away, leaving Catherine a little dazed by the noise
and gaiety of the crowded street. For half an hour she window-
gazed absorbedly, but then found her bookshop and browsed
among French novels and children's books. She bought some
readers and picture books, a couple of English periodicals, and
soon discovered, regretfully, that it was time she returned to the
spot where she had left the car.
With his hair trimmed short Timothy looked sweet, but he reeked
of violets. Blissfully he hung over the back of the seat between
Catherine and Michael, and said:
"I smell sheek. The man said so. I had lemonade, and Michael
drank something that..."
He laughed. "No. We went to a cafe near the sea, and who should
roll by in her pink auto but Lucille d'Esperez. She recognised this
car and stopped. Seems she's been invited to the Villa Chaussy for
lunch, and she thought we might take her back with us."
"Afraid so. I didn't want her any more than you do, but she has
power up at the villa."
"I rather gathered that. Have they been friendly for long -she and
Leon?"
"What else do you think she wants? Our Lucille leads an expensive
life and owns only the car and some jewellery that seems to be
dropping away bit by bit. And why shouldn't the old boy marry
again? He's not senile."
"But ... but to be married for your money. Does Leon deserve
that?"
"I don't know, but it's what he'll get. After all, she's twenty-five
years younger than he, and she looks pretty marvellous in what she
can afford herself. When Leon's money provides the gilt she'll be
the most talked-of woman in Nice.
"He's always had to have the best," she commented, "but his best
isn't the genuine thing. He's never lived a cosy family life, never
wanted people for what they are - only for a sort of added glory to
himself. He's a narcissist."
"I'm not quite sure what that is, but for a bankroll of a million I'd
be one myself," said Michael blithely. "Actually, I think you've got
him wrong. Believe it or not, there's a generous streak in the man,
and he takes no one at face value. If he decides to marry Lucille
it'll be because she has some fundamental thing that he needs. This
is where she stays, by the way," as he pulled in outside one of the
discreet hotels facing the sea. "And there she is, talking with
Colonel Verlaine. As companions, they suit each other - I believe
he's looking for a rich wife!"
Lucille d'Esperez saw them and waved gloved fingers while she
finished what she had to say to the man. Michael stood near the
open car door till she gathered her purse from the near-by table
made her adieux and came down to them.
"Please do."
As the car gathered speed, Lucille touched the pale blue leather
with long white fingers. "It is feminine, no? You like the car?"
"It's a beauty."
"I helped Leon to choose it, you know. He thought cream both
exterior and inside would be more suitable, but I had the feeling
that the pastel blue with primrose would suit your colouring,
though I did say that you should be consulted."
"Oh, yes. It was bought last week, before I had seen you. Leon
mentioned your hair was red and that your skin was pale - too pale,
he said! However, I decided a little colour would be better than the
cream. Every rich woman in Nice has a cream car."
Lucille sat back in her corner, rested her slanting glance upon
Catherine. "You can be, if you wish. You cannot change the fact
that your son is a rich little boy."
"Far better to let him grow up with the knowledge," she said in her
foreign tones. "At school, he will mix with the sons of the rich and
aristocratic; he must know himself to be just as they are, and he
cannot know too soon."
"But that is absurd! We have nursery schools here just as you have
them in England. A few English children attend them, and for
those who live at a distance there are excellent hostels at which the
children can stay from Monday till Friday. That would be an ideal
arrangement for the child."
"I believe the summer here is very hot," said Catherine firmly. "I
shan't send Timothy to school till it's well over, and then it will be
to a day school, mornings only, to begin with. In any case, I can
teach him a good deal myself."
"We'll talk about it some other time," she said. "It's a beautiful
drive from Pontrieux to Nice, isn't it?"
It was about five minutes past one when they arrived at the Villa
Chaussy. Lucille did not go into the house. She sank into a chair
on the patio just outside the terrace and called for Antoine. She
ordered a drink and mentioned that Monsieur should be told of her
arrival. Michael drove the car away, and Catherine took Timothy's
hand in hers and, with a murmured excuse, went into the house.
But in the hall she met Leon. In a light tropical suit, his hair
immaculately brushed so that the white wings looked pronounced
and distinguished, he bent his penetrating glance first upon
Catherine and then upon Timothy.
"Well, and what do you think of Nice?" he asked gruffly.
"Beautifully."
Catherine drew in her lip. A little thinly she said, "Well.,, that's all
right, so long as he's watched."
"I told you Lucille will be there! She'll look out for him." That
unpleasant gleam which always seemed to be hovering when he
spoke to Catherine shone from the hard blue eyes. "Philippe Sellier
phoned his report after he'd seen you this morning. He's perfectly
satisfied with the boy's condition and says it would be a mistake to
pamper him. Do you know what I asked him?" She didn't answer,
so he went on, "I asked him whether he considered your way of
raising the child was the right one. You'll never guess his reply. He
said it would be good for you both if you saw a good deal less of
each other!"
"In that," said Catherine with an effort, "I have to agree with him.
Will you excuse me?"
Afterwards she took him upstairs for his rest, and was glad to see
him close his eyes as soon as he lay down. For a long moment she
looked at his sunny little face, with the brown lashes lying against
the clear skin of his cheek. His mouth, still babyish in outline, was
pink and healthy, and as she watched, his lips parted slightly,
showing the tiny white teeth. She wanted to gather him close,
chase every small fear out of his life.
She moved to the door and looked back. At this distance he looked
a wee bit tougher - that haircut, of course. That had been a small
offering to Leon, and a lot he'd cared. He'd only gloated over
another victory - Philippe's reply to his question. Philippe...
Quickly, Catherine took off her jacket, washed and made up her
face. She decided the cream dress would do and went downstairs
just as Louise was ascending, to tell her that Monsieur was
demanding that she come at once for lunch.
CHAPTER FOUR
LIFE did settle at last into a sort of routine, but for Catherine the
painful moments were recurrent and they always came at the same
time, around six o'clock, when Leon returned with Timothy from
some excursion or other. He didn't take the boy out every day, but
perhaps three times a week he would say, round lunch-time: "I'm
going out to see an old friend of mine who breeds horses", or
"Lucille and I are taking a drive down to Cannes, to look up a few
friends," or "I'm still not satisfied with the new. radio in the yacht -
may as well look it over again this afternoon." And each time
Timothy would go along, looking a little keyed up but not daring
to make a scene.
But in effect all he said was, "Yes, it was nice. Tante Lucille gave
me some milk and a biscuit, and Grandpa told everyone that I'm
Tim Ewart Verender. Is Tim more grownup than Timothy?"
Once she'd casually asked him how close he'd been to the horses.
He'd answered, "I didn't go near them." Which showed that he
hadn't been unduly frightened, anyway.
Every morning she gave him a reading lesson before the mid-
morning break and a writing lesson after it. Later, when they
played, she taught him to make furniture with matchboxes, and
gave him pictures to fill in; he was quick with his fingers, and the
dexterity games gave him self-confidence. Catherine wished his
swimming would progress at the same rate, but perhaps because
the sea still seemed awfully big to a small boy, he glued his feet to
the sand in eighteen inches of water and told her, companionably,
that he'd stay just here and be safe while she had a swim. He did
try while she held him, but at the slightest slackening he would
flail and sink.
The weather grew warmer and flowers scarcer, and the umbrella
pines which shaded many of the residential roads were a boon to
the stroller. There was no rain, though occasionally the sky hazed
over and the sirocco blew from the east. Climbing up from the
beach became such an effort that Catherine began to use the car
even for the short trip to sea- level. Had the swimming pool been
shallower she would have given Timothy his dip right there at the
villa. But at its shallowest end it was three feet deep, and when she
asked Monsieur Brulard if some of the water could be let out fie
almost fainted with shock. Did Madame not know that Monsieur
Verender swam every morning at six o'clock? She ought to have
known, of course; it was just what he would do. She got into the
habit of taking a dip herself while Timothy rested or was out with
his grandfather.
One afternoon she went down to the pool at two-thirty. It was too
soon after lunch for a swim, but it was good to take off the brief
white beach jacket and lie on the grass close to the marble edge of
the pool, in the shade of a huge old evergreen oak. A hot breeze
was blowing, and a dappling of muted light played over her naked
back, but her head was in complete shade, and the mass of light
titian hair spread over the foam rubber pillow and her crossed
arms. At first she dozed, but then she began to wonder how
Timothy would like the trip with his grandfather down to the
Cannes observation tower. Fortunately, he liked heights, and Leon
had mentioned that he proposed having tea with some English
friends of his who had three children; they were older than
Timothy, he'd said, and Catherine hoped the girl of the three would
take the little boy in tow.
She ought to stir and have her swim. Then tea and a cigarette and
perhaps a talk with Michael. Lucky Michael, living way up the
garden in his guest cottage. She and Ewart might have been crazily
happily in such a place, but they had never progressed beyond the
tiny flat. Sometimes it seemed as though they had been two people
whose emotional paths had crossed accidentally; he had never
developed into the man who mends the lock or fixes the rickety
card table or gets the baby's glucose water. Ewart had grown up
among servants and had gone on living that way, without them.
Occasionally she thought that instead of her husband he should
have fen a sweetheart along the way, one of her sudden passions
during those magic years of being absolutely young' and carefree.
They had been deliriously in love for a while, and if some vital
aspect of love had been missing it hadn't mattered to her very
much once Timothy was there.
A pain ran through her body, a sensation that was partly a poignant
looking back, partly a wistful glance into a veiled future. And then
her thoughts became stilled; she could hear footsteps on the marble
tiling which ran along the side of the blue pool and curved out here
and there to accommodate loungers and deck chairs. Instinctively,
she knew that stride, and without being aware of it she curled her
fingers into fists on the cushion under her head; almost
desperately, she willed him not to see her.
He did, of course. She felt him come to a halt beside her, heard
him say quietly, "You are not sleeping, but I will go away if you
wish it."
She turned over casually, and looked up into Philippe's grey eyes.
They were some way away, but she could see that he had masked
them; it was second nature with him - that cool dropping of a
shutter between himself and any woman who was not
conventionally clothed. She sat up slowly, adjusted the neck strap
of the blue swim-suit.
"Hallo," she said. "I suppose you came to see Leon. He's taken
Timothy to Cannes and will probably be late back."
"No, I had a patient near and looked in for a moment, to invite you
for tea; as you were not here I came back this afternoon. There will
be several other guests for tea - friends of my sister."
She gestured. "I was going to have a swim. I can't ask you to wait
while I dress."
"I shall be happy to wait." He extended a hand, gave her a gentle
pull to her feet. "Unless you very much prefer to stay and swim
alone?"
She felt him drop her beach coat across her shoulders and, oddly,
was vexed. She began to walk beside him, her espadrilles
whispering through the cropped grass. "Not at all. How is your
sister?"
"Quite well. Both she and I were sorry that you could not come for
dinner last Saturday. Your excuse,"' with slightly emphasised
consonants, "was what you English call a little thin, no?"
She watched her moving feet, "I had had a tiring day, and I did go
to bed early. In any case, I'd have been in the way. I'm not an
artist."
She almost stopped. "Is this something else you're doing for Leon?
How do you think...?"
"Du calme, s'il vous plait!" Something sharp and angry flashed
across his eyes and was gone, though his voice remained crisp.
"Let us be frank with each other for a moment, and then I leave the
subject. For Leon, I examined his grandson and made a report. In
answer to an enquiry I told him what I had already told you - that
the boy would benefit from being parted from you for a few hours
each day. To you, only, I said that you also would benefit. It was a
considered opinion which I refuse to withdraw." He paused, but
held up a peremptory finger to prevent her speaking. "It is also my
considered opinion that you should meet others of your own age.
Leon agrees; he may be hard and careless of the feelings of others,
but he does not wish you to be lonely. Of course," with a narrow-
eyed smile, "you can always call upon the young Englishman,
Michael Dean, but I hardly think you will find him a completely
satisfactory companion. It is well known in Pontrieux that he flits
from one flame to another."
"I know that too," she said, "and it suits me very well. Michael has
no pretensions - that's why I find him so easy to talk to." She
pushed back the shoulder-length hair with a hand that shook a
little. "Are you sure you want me to go with you for tea? I don't
want to be a duty to ... to anyone."
"You are not a duty," he said in flat tones. "I will wait here on the
terrace."
She turned from him quickly, too quickly. The beach jacket
slipped from her shoulders, and in a reflex action she swung about
and down to pick it up - just as Philippe did the same. Her hair
brushed across his face, a scented mass of shining silk, which she
hurriedly flicked back,'
"I'm sorry," she said abruptly, took the coat and went quickly into
the house.
"You are three women," he said, "and this one, on the whole, is the
most dangerous."
"Not to you, I'm sure," she returned, as she got into his car. "I dare
say a good many men envy you. It must be rather wonderful to be
woman-proof."
She smiled. "In a way, yes. I'd seen it work wonders. But I'm
afraid in practice I found it most difficult to fence myself off.
When I first started teaching, a child had only to come into the
classroom looking doleful and the fence came down with a bang
that could be heard right away in the principal's office!"
"After which," he said with a trace of acid, "you were faced with
jealousy from the rest of the class."
She nodded. "I had to change my tactics. Eventually I got the right
attitude, though I still worried if a child was sullen or tearful."
"So she told you of that," he said calmly. "Quite simply, I was
ragingly angry. It was a long-standing engagement, the new home
was furnished, we could not move in the house for wedding
presents, and relatives from many parts of France were already
gathered at a small hotel in Nice, which we had taken over for the
occasion. But somehow I saw to it that by next morning everyone
knew there would be no wedding. After that, the gifts had to be
returned and the house made normal again. Naturally, the business
must coincide with an outbreak of virus influenza, so that for a
week or two I hardly saw my bed. However, tout passe."
"I had no time to do more than tell him how matters stood. He was
a sensible young man - he went away for the month that should
have been his honeymoon and returned to his office in Cannes.
Within a year he was engaged to someone else. But Yvette," he
shrugged impatiently. "Instead of being sane like that, she began to
wear ultra-smart jeans and ridiculous sweaters that would have
been loose on an overweight fisherman. She became friendly with
women who seldom combed their hair and with men who had to
wear beards and jackets with hoods in order to be different from
everyone else! You would be amazed at the drab sameness of this
so-called artistic gang."
A shrug. "At first it was for Yvette's sake. She needed an interest
and I thought these people to whom she was drawn would more
quickly soothe her than her own kind. But as in everything else,
there are good struggling artists and bad ones,- the bad ones are
parasites who will flatter and fawn in order to be sure of a good
meal two or three times a week. No doubt that sounds very cold
and unfeeling to you."
"No, I think you have a legitimate grouse. It's been going on for a
long time, hasn't it?"
She couldn't help asking, "Doesn't your sister realise that the life
she's chosen makes things difficult for you? And what of the nights
when you've had a hard day and need all the sleep you can get, in
case you're called out again?" ,
Another shrug, a small slightly cynical smile. "I am not too old to
bear a few nights with scant sleep, though when I am operating
early next morning I insist on a quiet house. That is when I throw
out the visitors! Yvette's way of life does not disturb me for
myself, but for her."
"Yet you wouldn't have had her marry a man she didn't love."
"I have told her that many times. However, she is not in low spirits
at the moment. She has been lively and a little impatient with the
long-haired ones since Marcelle Latour came to live with these
cousins of hers in Beausolais. You will meet Marcelle this
afternoon."
Catherine was silent. They had passed through the town and were
now winding up towards the terraces of villas.
They ran along a short drive and came to a halt behind a tipsy-
looking red bubble-car, which Philippe glanced at as though it
were a dead wasp on a window-sill. With a light hand at her elbow
he led her into the house, which was noisy with conversation.
Today, it seemed, tea was being served in the long sitting-room.
Here and there someone sat in an armchair, but at least a dozen
guests had seated themselves on the floor and were casting cake
crumbs over the beautiful old rugs.
"Oh, yes." Her voice was rich and hesitant. "My English is bad,
but I try very hard. I had not accomplished so much - the figurine
was jolie but not good art. These people.. ." with a wave of fine
long fingers, "they consider I am good enough only for the
boutique! I think they are right.'*
"Moi aussi," said Marcelle with a lift of her slim shoulders. "I do
not like modern art." This sentence seemed to leave her high and
dry for a long moment. Then she queried, "You come here only
once before, no? That is why Philippe must bring you today?"
Catherine wasn't quite sure what the young Frenchwoman was
getting at. Presumably, all the guests had got here under their own
steam and the fact that Catherine, who lived nearest, had had to be
collected was not under consideration.
"Yes, I've been here only once," she replied cautiously. "I'm not
sure I could have found my way here again. It was very good of
the doctor to find time to bring me."
Which was a thrifty, if not a romantic way, of looking at it. But she
appeared to be a charming person and was surprisingly modest,
considering that she was probably the only person in the room
whose art had reached exhibition standard. As she talked,
Marcelle's English improved, or Catherine became so accustomed
to it that she could watch the girl. Marcelle Latour had that
atmosphere of sophistication that French women seem to be born
with, but there was also the practised air of beguilement, the
obvious desire to please the male.
"She is a sweet thing, Marcelle. I have much affection for her, and
she is so different from me that we are the best of friends." She
sipped her tea, and lifted her heart-shaped face, looking sharp and
elfin. "It is so seldom that one finds a woman with whom one can
be friendly and uncompetitive. And Marcelle is a wise person too.
She would make an excellent doctor's wife."
"Yes, I do. Marcelle is suitable and she likes Philippe very much.
And Philippe ... for some time I have noticed that he will
occasionally become sharp-tempered, but he is always sweet and
reasonable when Marcelle is here." She shook back the short dark
hair. "You think I am selfish, do you not? You think I consider
only myself! It is not true. I am most anxious that Philippe shall
have a loving wife."
"It will depend on your brother, won't it? He may decide not to
marry at all."
"Oh, no." Yvette's smile was knowledgeable. "He has been much
engrossed with his profession, but he is a man of strong feelings.
Recently, I have teased him about Marcelle, and I can assure you
he has not objected. It has occurred to me," with another of those
direct glances which gave nothing away, "that you might help me a
little."
"How?"
"You are wrong. I can do much.' I did not bring Marcelle here to
the villa merely to make Philippe aware of his needs, so that he
would look elsewhere. She is the only woman I could bear to have
live in this house with me, and that is why I must ask you, who are
almost a stranger, to help me a little." Her lower lip trembled with
the sudden angry force of her emotions. "Will you do this trifle -
invite Marcelle when Philippe is asked for dinner?"
"I'll ... suggest it." Catherine paused. "Is that why you got me here
this afternoon - to ask me this favour?"
The smile was back, half petulant, half merry. "I intended to plead
with you, but I also think you are an ornament to a party. See how
these men look at you! Even these idiots who splash angles of
paint all over a canvas and call it art are bewitched by Titian, who
could paint a woman as she looks, and not as an eye and a big toe
and a dish of langouste!" She laughed and was about to add more,
when the telephone rang in the hall. "For Philippe, of course. You
will excuse me?"
Catherine nodded, turned away and placed her cup on a table. She
looked cool and composed, but inwardly she was quivering from
Yvette's merciless honesty. First, there had been Philippe's titbit of
information - that she was to be helped, at Leon's request, to meet
more young people. And now it was Yvette, confessing that
Catherine Verender had been invited to her tea-party for the sole
purpose of extracting a promise that Marcelle Latour should be
included in any social events at the Villa Chaussy to which
Philippe Sellier had been bidden. Catherine wasn't wanted here for
herself, apparently. In which case, it might be as well if she got
away as quickly as possible. She only wished she had come in her
own car!
"Within an hour, I hope, and no doubt you will all still be here."
He turned towards Catherine, spoke across three feet of space. "I
beg that you will stay till I come."
"I'm ready to go now," she said quickly. "Perhaps you could drop
me off on your way to St. Calare."
Yvette said fretfully, "St. Calare is inland. Someone here will take
you home."
"Bien, Philippe."
Catherine said a hurried, collective goodbye and went out with him
to the car. He backed from the bubble-car and they shot away past
other variegated vehicles towards the road. There was only one
way from the villa to the main Corniche, and he took it fast.
"They will not be expecting you at the Villa Chaussy for some
time," he said. "Perhaps you would like to accompany me to St.
Calare?" As she did not make an immediate reply he added, "I saw
that something had upset you. I could not have you leave us early,
and disturbed. Can you not tell me what has happened?"
Tell him that his sister was arranging that he see more of the
woman she wanted him to marry?"It wasn't important. I don't
really fit in with your sister's friends."
"She does not fit too well herself; most of them she despises
because they use her." A pause. "You did not say whether you
wish to go with me to St. Calare."
Catherine only knew that if she didn't have to leave him at once
she she didn't want to. "I'd like it," she said. "I don't mind how
fast you go. It's been so hot today and speed will blow away the
miasma."
He knew these roads so well that his driving, even at speed, was
automatic. They zipped along the Corniche for about three miles,
then turned off towards the mountains. In the valley, a few farms
lay sweltering in the late sun, but villages perched on the hillsides
looked fresh among the cypresses and palms. Along the verges the
ubiquitous umbrella pines leaned lazily towards the road, and here
and there a clump of Barbary fig or fleshy-leaved aloe fought with
the grey-green of wild olives and the wilting emerald of almond
trees.
He spoke distantly. "I am sorry you came for tea with that crowd. I
hoped you would find Marcelle a good companion. She is not like
the others."
"I did like her," she said, "and I hardly spoke to the rest."
"And you will not tell me what it was that distressed you?"
From his expression he wasn't entirely put off the subject he had
begun himself, but he answered casually, "Yes. It is a graceful
study of a girl among reeds, intended to remind one of a swan, I
think. Marcelle has talent, but no spark of genius - for which she
may be most thankful."
"I think one might say it is typical. She has tried abstract subjects,
but she is essentially a nice person, without pretensions; when she
fails she is the first to admit it. Her studio shelves are almost
empty, because she will not keep her failures. When I was there
last she was working on the head of an old man, but not very
seriously. She is not one of this bohemian colony. Marcelle is what
you English call the marrying kind."
"But yes! Paris is the most wonderful city in the world, but not the
most amusing."
"We will not argue because comparisons are foolish in this case.
Over there, in the shadow of the hill, is St. Calare. This house I am
to visit is behind the church. There is a newspaper in the pocket of
the door. I suggest you read it while I make my call."
He turned off the mountain road and along a rough track which
seemed to be the main road to the village. He took a narrow lane
beside a church, drove about half a mile and came to a halt in front
of an old stone cottage. With a smile at Catherine, he took his bag
and left her alone in the car.
She didn't get out the newspaper. Instead, she watched the sun
disappear behind a crag, and chickens taking their last peck of grit
and corn before fluttering into their runs and springing up on to the
perches. Goats were bleating somewhere, but as dusk fell their
cries petered out, and the whole hillside became quiet and still.
Catherine almost dozed.
Philippe came suddenly. He opened the car door and sat in with
her, leaving the door wide. He spoke quickly. "It is the little girl -
enteritis. She will be all right, but there is something else. They
have a son who farms a few acres at a place called Milaise, which
is about twenty-five miles away. Several days ago they heard he
had had an accident - a crushed foot - and since then there has
been no news. They are most worried; he is far from a doctor and
they have no means of getting to him. Besides, there was this sick
child. As usual, they waited almost too long before calling me.
However, I must go and see this young man, but first I will take
you home."
He nodded. "But it will take some time - the road is no more than a
cart track. I can return you to the Villa Chaussy in twenty
minutes."
"But you have to come back by the same road!" She turned her
head towards the lights of the village, "Can't we telephone the
villa?"
"You will go with me?" There was an odd look in his eyes, one she
couldn't decipher in the near-darkness. "Very well. I will tell these
people to telephone for us." He paused. "You will not mind if we
return too late for you to say good night to the child."
She would mind. It would be the very first time; but there was a
young man lying ill somewhere in the darkness, and she knew a
compulsion to stay with Philippe as long as she could. There
would never Be another time like this, and she had to grasp it.
"Tell them to ask for the maid, Louise, and give her the message,
and if it's not too difficult you might pass on a sort of 'Good night,
Timothy'."
Catherine became aware of heat rising to her cheeks, and was glad
of the darkness. For several minutes she felt quite wretched and
the victim of a muddle of thoughts. She shouldn't have come with
Philippe; it was grasping at something that didn't belong to her,
something she could never have, because Philippe was strong and
individual, and more than half in love with Marcelle Latour. He
didn't mind the old man's error as she did, of course; it meant little
to him that Timothy had been mistaken for his own son, and
Catherine for his wife. By the look of him, staring through the
windshield at the last gold light of the sun on the edge of the dark
sky, he was already some way away.
It was a dreadful road, no more than two narrow tracks with grass
between them, and a scattering of loose cobbles which beat up at
the car as they spurted from beneath the wheels. Taken slowly, it
would have been a nightmare, and even at speed they were jolted
unmercifully. There were narrow hairpin bends, sudden gradients,
a long valley with lights twinkling here and there, and then more
climbing with the recurring hazard of wandering cows whenever
the ground flattened out.
"Go back to the car," Philippe ordered. "I will take a quick look
and join you. The young man must have left this place."
"Keep away," he bit out. "Go to the car; you should not even be
here."
He took her shoulders in a grip that sent pain right down to her
elbows; his jaw worked. "You will do as you are told. This is no
place for you -1 can manage alone. Get away from this. Vite!"
She was breathing rather fast. "I won't. Two of us can do it in half
the time. Just tell me what I have to do. Philippe!" as his grip
tightened. "That hurts!"
"I will hurt you more if you do not obey," he said swiftly through
thinned lips. "Stand clear of this place!"
He gave her a push and, taking it for granted she would do as he
said, he again flicked on his light and moved into the alcove. For
an undecided moment of astonishment and pain Catherine stood
where he had left her. She saw him crouch over the youth and feel
his pulse, bend up the left leg, so that he could examine the blood-
soaked makeshift bandage which swathed the foot.
She turned and ran back to the car, brought Philippe's bag, opened
it and slid forward over the stones, to place it near him.
Mechanically he flipped up the inner lid and chose a hypo.
Catherine eased nearer, leant over and pushed up the young man's
shirt-sleeve. Philippe plunged the needle into the upper arm, gave
her a brief blazing glance and said violently.
"Is this not enough - that I must worry about you too? Go and sit in
the car. Va-t'en!"
White faced, her blue-green eyes large and clear, she gazed back at
him. "I'm not Dresden china," she whispered. "You can beat me
afterwards, if you like, but I'm going to help. I'll take his legs."
Philippe Sellier, the suave doctor who had never been known to
become even slightly ruffled in the presence of sickness or
accident, was now a taut and glittering stranger. For a moment she
thought he would thrust her out bodily; then, as though he could
not trust himself to speak, he bent and slipped his arms under the
dead weight of the youth. Catherine cradled the legs, taking care to
keep the foetid, filthy bundle which was the injured foot away
from contact with anything else. Slowly they moved.
She winced. "Don't do that. I'm all right. We're nearly out."
He was still too angry to speak. Their burden was set down close
to the car, he opened the front door and nodded sharply that she
must get in. There was that in his manner that made her obey him
this time, quickly. She sat very still, looking down at her hands,
while he manoeuvred the young man into the back of the car. He
came beside her and set the car in motion. But they had moved
scarcely a yard when a deafening crack followed by a tumble of
stones signified that what was left of the cottage was not far from
complete disintegration. Philippe trod hard on the accelerator.
They must have covered twenty miles before Catherine found the
courage to say, "He's terribly ill, isn't he?"
"What about the man who took the message to his parents?"
"A beam had crashed, that was all. The rest has happened since
then." He glanced at her, and back at the road. "You do not feel
sick or faint?"
"No. Only desperately sorry for him. Will you take him straight to
hospital?"
"Yes."
"I have arranged that you shall be taken straight home from here."
By now he was putting her into another car. She looked up at him
through the open window space, saw smouldering grey eyes and a
set mouth which forbade her to say anything more. In some way
she had badly jolted something deep within him; he had a tight, icy
look, and without another word he turned away as if he didn't want
to see her again. Looking sternly ahead, he drove off.
The garage owner started his own car, gave Catherine a breezy,
"Ce jeune homme - peut-etre que deja il est mart!" and drove her
out towards Pontrieux.
Feeling a little ill from reaction and the jarring pain in her back,
she came softly from Timothy's room and opened the door into her
own bedroom. She walked in with a weary hand over her eyes,
closed the door... and only then became aware that the light was
on. And that Lucille d'Esperez was comfortably and gracefully
seated in the deep chair beside the richly curtained window.
CHAPTER FIVE
LUCILLE was smiling, and she looked very lovely in a scarlet crepe
dress. The narrow diamante buckles on her slim black shoes
scintillated in the glow of the reading lamp which also cast raven
lights over the silky dark hair. If she had posed herself for a colour
photograph she could not have chosen a more vivid dress or a
better foil than the gold curtain at the back of her silver-grey
damask chair. But it was very unlikely that she was posing at this
moment; she had no need or desire to impress her beauty upon
Catherine.
"Ah, so you have returned," she said, not moving. "It must be
nearly two hours since we had word that you were detained
amongst the mountains with the fascinating doctor." Curiously, she
inspected the green and white print dress which had looked so
springlike when Catherine had got into it this afternoon. "You have
been exploring... in the dark?"
"Did you think I knew nothing about this house? I know it very
well. When Leon gave a house party at Christmas time I was his
guest here for two weeks."
"With me?" Catherine's brain had gone slightly foggy. "I can't
imagine what it could be. Won't tomorrow do?"
"An understanding with you," said Lucille, sliding back behind the
bland smile. "Before you came, everything was clear between
Leon and me. We are great friends, and it was accepted that some
time..." she lifted her shoulders. "One does not have to paint it in
black and white for a woman of your shrewdness. I will simply say
that I had no doubts, no doubts at all."
Catherine came further into the room, stepped out of her shoes,
bent to pick them up and straightened painfully. "And now you do
have them?" she asked. "Not because of me, surely?"
"He said very little, but when he learned of the existence of your
child and of the will naming him as guardian, the boy became the
focus of his life. I did not mind that, because Leon is not the sort of
man to spoil a grandson, and it would have given him a deep
interest. He is a man who cannot live without tremendous interests
and a degree of importance."
Catherine lowered herself into the other chair, dropped the shoes
again and leaned back gratefully. "It's not easy to see what you're
driving at," she said. "Under the circumstances, you couldn't part
Leon from his grandson, anyway. No one could. How has it
affected you?"
"Things that concern Leon also concern me. I saw some of the
correspondence, and I formed an opinion of you, which I have not
changed." Her nostrils slightly dilated, she added, "It was clever of
you to appear uninterested in Leon's money, and really most
inspired to use a proportion of it in England, just for the boy. It
made Leon feel you were genuine, at least."
"You will be less pleased when you have heard all I have to say."
Lucille noticed that her own hands were tight, and she relaxed
them deliberately. "I am going to demand that you stop this
ridiculous opposition to everything Leon suggests for the child."
Catherine's mouth was dry and she was beginning to feel empty.
She really wasn't up to coping with this woman tonight; but Lucille
sat there, like a sleek and watchful animal - a very beautiful animal
- and it seemed that Catherine would have to deal with the
situation somehow.
She made a careful attempt. "I don't oppose everything. Leon takes
Timothy out two or three times a week, and I don't even know
what happens on those days."
"You know very well," Lucille contradicted flatly. "If Leon put
into practice the ideas he has for the child there would be babyish
weeping and appeals to Maman! He has no wish to be harsh or to
be regarded as a tyrant, but more than anything in the world he
wants the boy to grow up brave and strong. At present that is an
impossibility because of your resistance."
The final words were spoken with a sort of deadly quietness, but
they echoed into the silence that followed. Catherine leaned
forward with one arm along her knee; her glance traced the carpet
patterning with unnecessary intensity.
"I've been over most of this with Leon," she said at last, tiredly,
"and he accepts the fact that nothing in the world would make me
give up Timothy. He's been good enough to say that he feels
responsible for me as well as for Timothy, which was comforting,
even though I don't need it. I do realise how you're placed,
madame, but if your trouble is only financial, why not tell Leon?
I'm sure he ..
"You are mad!" For the first time the vixen showed through in
Lucille's expression. "Do you know so little of the world - or are
you being insulting? I have accepted gifts from Leon - an evening
bag, gloves, perfume, a case of Paris cosmetics - but I am not an
ingnue, to tell him my troubles through tears. What would be his
opinion of a woman who gathers debts in order to preserve a
facade? I could not possibly let him know the state of my affairs!"
Catherine sighed. "I honestly fail to see how I can help you!"
Lucille stood up, abruptly for her. She looked tall and
commanding, very sure of herself. "You can stop being
obstructive. Take the boy to the riding master, have him taught
gymnastics, insist that he go off to school every day. Soothe Leon
into knowing that he is having his own way, and very soon the boy
will become less important. Leon enjoys this war with you. Do you
know that?"
"I don't enjoy it myself, but I'm certainly not going to throw
Timothy to the wolves simply because he's an obstacle to your
ambitions. I intend to go on teaching him myself, and to give him
all the exercise he needs either in the garden or down on the beach.
As for the riding, if it takes him ten years to become friendly with
horses I shan't care; I won't have him forced into a nightmarish
horror of such an ordinary animal as a pony!"
Lucille's mouth was a thin red line, her long, pointed face was pale
and controlled. "Before you came," she said, her accent
pronounced, "I intended to make a friend of you. I imagined we
would be a household - the four of us - that the child would always
be there, but that you, being young, would go off to house parties
in other towns and eventually find a husband. I would have had no
enmity for the child, and it would have pleased me that Leon
should find great satisfaction in his education." She gestured.
"That is what I would have offered you; a home for the boy, any
assistance you might need in finding a husband, and a grand,
sophisticated background."
Catherine eased back into her chair and then stood up. "I'm sorry. I
just don't happen to be the sort of person you expected. I do
appreciate how you feel, though. You were here long before I was,
and we've turned up at a rather crucial time in your affairs and
more or less caused a halt in them. There's nothing I can do about
it now, though."
Catherine shook her head. "No, there's nothing. I can't change the
way I feel about everything, and I certainly can't allow people who
have no knowledge or experience of how we lived in England to
dictate how Timothy shall be treated now. He's not just a small
piece of humanity who can be moulded into any shape one fancies.
He's sensitive and very much an individual, and it's quite possible
that he'll never take to the tough things that Leon's so keen on."
Perhaps Catherine was too weary, by now, to care very much what
she said. She shrugged. "If you and Leon are fond of each other,
our coming shouldn't make much difference, should it? In any
case, I dare say you're very well able to take care of yourself. I'm
sorry, madame."
There was a heavy pause. Then Lucille nodded her head, jerkily.
"In making an enemy of me you are much less wise than you
think. I will see to it that you become even more sorry!"
She went out swiftly, the door thudded behind her. Catherine
pushed a hand round the back of her neck and massaged gently,
with her eyes closed. Her head ached from her nape to the crown,
and the burning pain in her back had spread as far as the spine.
There was nothing that time wouldn't heal, but the nagging pain
was a little hard to bear, alongside Lucille's chill selfishness. But
the scene with Madame d'Esperez would have to wait till
tomorrow for dissection. All Catherine wanted now was her bed.
She was lying between the sheets in the darkness when the
telephone rang. She leant out and picked up the receiver, prepared
to tell Antoine that she would be needing nothing tonight, thank
you. But the voice that spoke was Philippe's, cool and impersonal.
"I telephoned earlier to ensure that you had reached the villa
safely. Leon said Lucille had seen you and you were well, but I
have naturally been a little anxious."
"I, too." He drew an audible breath. "I must offer you an apology
for losing my temper. I am accustomed, in such circumstances, to
being obeyed."
"I understand you are in your room. Please go early to bed with a
warm drink. Bonne nuit."
Feeling bleak, she put down tile telephone. He'd sounded cold as
the Alps, and it was just as well. She had better keep clear of
Philippe Sellier.
*
Catherine had no option but to spend the next few days very
quietly. Almost any kind of movement made her wince, and rather
than have others notice the awkward way she sat or the effort it
needed to get up and walk, she remained upstairs a good deal of
the time, giving Timothy more than his usual number of lessons in
his sitting-room and reading to him when other things palled. She
got Louise to take him for walks, but occasionally sat outside with
him herself. Leon made only one attempt to take Timothy out with
him, and it failed because the little boy, for the first time since he
had come to the villa, had gone up to have lunch with Michael
Dean, and inadvertently gone to sleep afterwards on Michael's
porch. Leon had sent Louise to find him.
To Catherine, who sat in the patio, he said, "In my mail there was
an invitation for the boy to spend a day with those friends of mine
in Cannes. Their children are several years older than Tim, and
they have a small yacht of their own; he can go out with them."
"The real thing - not a sprog. They're pretty good with it too. It
won't hurt the boy to get the feel of a slanting deck."
"Almost nothing, but I've watched them. It's not much use going
on one unless you're strong and have your wits about you. I'd say
Timothy will be ready when he's about nine or ten."
"We'll send him down to Cannes and see how he makes out."
Catherine was tempted to say "You heard!" But she resisted it, and
tried the usual form of reasoning. "Can't you please be a little
patient? Timothy's already doing lots of things he's never done
before. You've seen him riding his bicycle round the house..."
"He's started climbing a bit, and the other day he even cracked one
of those big stone pineapples down by the lily-pond."
She smiled. "He couldn't help it - the bike got out of hand. I
thought you'd approve.
Leon didn't smile back, but his tones lowered. "Thought you'd put
one over on me then, didn't you? I'll bet you broke the thing
yourself." He threw out a hand impatiently. "It's your outlook I
quarrel with - it's niggling and womanish, and no good to a
growing boy. Can he read yet?"
"Monsieur has decided not to take the child with him?" asked
Louise apprehensively.
"He looked very angry. We of the staff take care not to displease
him."
"I can't say I'll give in without doing so. Timothy's happiness
depends on my handling of his grandfather, so I have to do what I
think is best."
Louise lifted her shoulders. "As you wish, madame. In France the
father or grandfather makes decisions about the children, but then
we French women use our influence in other ways. None of us are
like the English in these things. May I bring you some coffee?"
"No, thank you. I'll have tea at four. Do you know if there are to be
guests for dinner tonight?"
Catherine nodded her thanks for the information and Louise went
into the house. Timothy slept on for an hour, and watching him
Catherine knew a sad-sweet pang. He was so small and
unknowing. Arguments raged about him, he was at the centre of
Lucille's intrigues, and she herself was bound, for all his minor
years, to live wherever Leon decreed. One delightful small boy
was shaping the course of the lives of three people. Whatever
happened, he must never know.
"Mmmm." He suddenly lifted his head and looked at her, "I didn't
say thank you and goodbye!"
"I believe you went to sleep instead. You can thank Michael next
time you see him. Like to go indoors for a wash?"
"I'm going for a ride on my bike," he said, and slid sideways from
the long chair.
It was only to Catherine, who had known how quiet and obedient
he had been in England, that his small new independence was
obvious. Very gradually, he was feeling his feet Here, becoming
accustomed to the freedom of eight acres of garden, the possession
of the new bicycle, the power of the muscles in his legs when he
climbed a paling or scrambled over a steep rockery.
"Be careful on the corners, darling," she said, and decided not to
watch him closely; it was apt to bring her heart into her throat.
When tea arrived, Michael Dean came with it. "Mind if I have a
cup with you?" he asked, lowering himself to a wrought-iron chair
beside the table. "How do you like our heat?"
"It's bearable, but hard on the gardens. Leon must spend a fortune
on water alone." She poured tea for him, pushed the cup across the
table and followed it with the sugar bowl. "Thanks for having
Timothy to lunch. Whose idea was it?"
"His, of course. I met him up the garden and he made the
proposition, so I sent down a message, Do I strike you as a type to
spend my leisure hours with kids? For your information, he called
me a clot."
"Probably because I called him one the other day and he took a
fancy to the word. He's blossoming."
"For heaven's sake don't teach him any swear words. He may use
them on Leon."
Michael laughed. "The old boy would love it. I should think you
get a bit bored with it all, though. I mean, seeing Leon every day,
and having to dine with those bankers and aristocrats every night.
What I'm getting at is, if you'd like a gay evening I'd be happy to
escort you. Leon wouldn't make anything of it, and I'd be grateful."
"What a sweet way of putting it, Michael. I'll let you know."
"Not quite. Even Leon slacks off a bit in the hot season. By the
way, there's an item I think you ought to know. He's ordering a
diamond necklace for the d'Esperez. So it looks as if it won't be
long before you have a stepmother-in- law."
Catherine dropped the biscuit she had started to nibble, flicked a
crumb from the beige pleated skirt. "Are you sure about that - the
necklace?"
"Sure I'm sure. It's what she's been waiting for. What's the betting
she won't have it copied and sell the original to pay her bills?
Seriously, though, it's going to mean a few changes round here.
Fortunately, I have very little to do with the house, but you're
going to feel it. Lucille doesn't like you, I'm afraid. Jealous
because you got right in first go, and she's been angling for a
couple of years."
"He's considering designs, so the official order may not go out till
next week, but the jeweller gave delivery time as a few days." He
drank some tea and levered a currant biscuit from under a
macaroon. "Well, it had to come, I suppose. The wonder is that he
hasn't married before. I'll bet there have been plenty after his lolly.
Lucille will look pretty good in diamonds and chinchilla, and that's
probably all the old chap wants - someone to smother with
Verender cash, and display to the goggling eyes of his pals."
She said, a little thinly, "I knew some sort of relationship existed
between Leon and Lucille, but I thought our coming here had put
him off it, a bit."
Catherine did not have to answer. Timothy rode up, pink- cheeked,
wild-haired and hungry for biscuits and milk. He sat at the low
table and stared with a faraway look in his blue eyes at Michael.
Timothy blinked, finished his milk and lifted his little bicycle up
on to its tyres. "One of your eyes is bigger than the other," he said,
and rode away.
"I asked for that," Michael muttered. "I don't get kids at all. Other
men can frighten them, but they treat me as if I were the radio or a
garden bench."
"I'll have to go; I've a few things to finish before five. Don't forget
about tomorrow night."
"Can't resist it," he groaned. "Cleans me out every time, but I love
it. So long."
A maid came for the tea things and Catherine stirred herself to take
a walk. Perhaps her back did feel a little easier this afternoon.
Next morning she came down rather earlier than usual, and she
found Leon strolling along the paved path that led to the pool.
Distinguished-looking in light slacks and a flawless white shirt
with a blue scarf knotted at the throat, he was moving quite slowly
with his head bent as though he were preoccupied. When he saw
her he did not stop and wait for her, but as she joined him, he said:
She smiled, a little vexedly. "It's your own fault if I come to you
only when I want something. You've never yet encouraged me to
be friendly. You say it's what you want, but you don't do anything
about it."
"Yes, but I mean, you don't ask Philippe to bring Yvette or ... or
some other woman?"
Her throat felt a bit strained as she answered brightly, "Yes ...
Marcelle Latour. Philippe is a bit sweet on her, I think - so his
sister says - and I thought it might be a ... a helpful gesture if you
asked them here together sometimes. With Yvette there, they can't
be alone at Philippe's house."
"Nothing at all."
"Thank you." She kept surprise from her voice. " I haven't made
any English friends yet. We seem a little cut off from the English
colony."
"The younger set, perhaps. I'll see what I can do about it." In the
growl he invariably assumed sooner or later when speaking to her,
he added, "You don't look so bright as you used to. I know it's hot,
but you're young enough to stand any amount of heat, especially
when there's a pool and the sea to cool off in. Even the boy sticks
it fairly well, though I must say I don't care for that pinky-brown
colour of his. A boy should tan the colour of mahogany."
"He's fair-skinned."
"Well, we won't go into that. It's you we're talking about now. You
lie about and let the heat get at you, and it's no good to you."
"Rubbish. I only ever give away what I've got too much of. About
tonight - you can't go out alone, you know."
"Oh, Dean," disparagingly. "Well, he's all right for the first time,
but don't you encourage him. He's a good secretary, but he's no
imagination and will never have a penny in the bank. Champagne
and chemin-de-fer; that's all he's good for away from a desk, and
he doesn't make much of a showing at either." He looked at his
watch. "I've a man coming to see me at nine-thirty and I want to
look into his file before he arrives. Go on and take your walk - and
don't dawdle. I can't stand the sight of a woman who moves like a
sick hen."
Catherine would have liked to reply to that one, but instead She
smiled and walked on. But the smile faded, and not only because
her back was still stiff. She was beginning to feel low-spirited and
discouraged. Her own future was a grey blank.
The day passed in its usual way. Evening came, Timothy did
somersaults on his bed and eventually lay down for sleep.
Catherine put on a flowered silk dress, and at seven-fifteen she
went down to meet Michael at the front door. In a white dinner
jacket he looked breezy and cocksure, and when she told him he
could drive It was all he needed to complete the atmosphere;
himself and a good-looking young woman on their way to high
jinks in the gayest city on the Cote.
They were halfway along the short drive when another car
appeared between the tall posts. Michael slowed, so did the other
driver, and as they drew abreast they almost stopped. Philippe
inclined his head and smiled distantly; his companion was more
forthcoming - she leaned forward and lifted her hand to Catherine,
her smile wide and secure.
"Well, well," said Michael, as they slipped out on to the road.
"She's quite a dream, that girl. There's something about youngish
French women that gets me like a biff in the ribs. They settle down
marvellously and make superb wives, I believe. I imagine the fact
that Philippe is coming out into the open with the girl means he's
on the point of popping the question. Why do you suppose he's
waited so long?"
"But, good lord, a man like Philippe would know how he felt about
her before this." He pondered the subject. "I reckon he's been
letting her get the art out of her system. She's reached her goal -
one of her little knick-knacks in an exhibition - and now she's
ready to be a wife. That was a funny smile she gave you - sort of
superior. Have you ever spoken to her?"
Catherine recalled that moment, as she had left the villa with
Philippe; something hard in Marcelle's expression, even though
she was smilingly assuring Philippe that she would ring her cousin
and tell her not to expect her home till late. Philippe had not gone
home for dinner that night - a common enough happening in the
life of a bachelor doctor. Perhaps Marcelle had heard that Philippe
had not been alone on his excursion into the mountains. Not that it
mattered. She had what she wanted now.
But for Catherine the evening was not a success. She had no
instinct for gambling or watching others gamble, but in other
circumstances she might have loved the strangeness and opulence,
the pulsing feel of the place, the imperative, "Mesdames et
messieurs, faites vos jeux!" Tonight she just wasn't in the mood for
it, but she didn't spoil Michael's pleasure by telling him so. Still, it
was rather a relief, at something after one, to be on her way back
to the villa. She drove herself, while Michael, a wee bit sozzled
and consequently loose about the joints, lolled in his corner and
deplored the erratic turn of the roulette wheel.
For two days all was quiet. Catherine gingerly tested her back
muscles in the swimming pool and found them almost recovered,
so that she could give Timothy a brief swimming lesson there. But
he disliked the pool because his feet could not touch bottom,
though he liked using the wide marble surround as a bicycle track.
"He's not afraid," said Catherine quickly. "He just hasn't got the
knack yet. Timothy, go into the kitchen and ask Louise for
lemonade. You may as well stay there for lunch."
"Why shouldn't he have lunch with us, for once? You can stay,
can't you, Philippe?"
"I don't care for the idea - never have." The piercing blue gaze
rested once more on the round little face and the fair curly hair.
"Like to go out with me this afternoon, Tim?"
"Yes, but..."
She ignored him, took Timothy's hand and went with him into the
house. The little boy drank cold lemonade thirstily, pouted wet lips
as he looked up at her.
"Don't you worry. I'll speak to him about it. Louise will give you
your lunch and take you upstairs afterwards. Everything's all right,
darling. I'll see you later."
She gave him a quick kiss on the brow, a reassuring pat, and went
back to the others. She leant back in the chair, picked up her glass
and looked at Leon.
But before she could speak he said, "All right, I've heard it ten
thousand times before! There's one thing you'd better get straight,
young lady. When I give an order I expect it to be obeyed. That
child will never grow up if you're going to smooth every awkward
moment for him. Afraid of horses, afraid to swim! He's as finicky
and timid as a girl!"
"He's improving," she said, "and you shouldn't expect more. You
can say what you like to me, but I won't have you speak to
Timothy as you do. That's why he doesn't want to go out with you
- because you expect far more than he can hope to give."
"When he's out with me I take very little notice of him. Do you
think I want people to notice that my grandson, my grandson, is
scared of every new thing he sees? Each time I hope he'll behave
like a boy, but not he! And I've come to the conclusion that he'll
have to have the fright knocked out of him."
"My friend," said Philippe in level tones, "you are dealing with an
ordinary sensitive child, not with a young animal."
"She is older and has built up her defence. And do not be so sure
that her courage is of your kind. Sheer physical and mental
strength are necessary to a man like you - but a woman's courage
rests in her character."
"She's obstinate," said Leon. "To look at her, you wouldn't think
she had the stubbornness and kick of a mule, would you? Too
delicate, you'd say, and you'd be wrong! Where that child's
concerned, she's got a ridiculous set of values and a cast-iron will."
"I wasn't going to take him myself - he was going with Lucille and
some of her friends to a boys' boxing tournament. But forget it,"
violently. "He'd probably have nightmares after it. Play ring-o'-
roses with him in the garden, gather shells with him on the beach,
stuff him with ice-cream and television! But I'm telling you now,"
as he leaned forward and tapped a hard finger on the table between
them, "that I'll make a man of him if I have to lock you up in your
room while I do it!"
"You have made your point, Leon," said Philippe. "Guard your
blood pressure."
Fortunately, the luncheon trolley was wheeled out just then, and
they had to transfer to a dining table which had been set nearby.
By the time they had been served with chilled consomm and the
meats and salads had been set within easy reach, Leon had
regained his normal composure. But in spite of an appearance of
determined serenity, Catherine felt more than a little sick, and not
only because this was the first time in ten or twelve days that Leon
had broken into a tirade against her handling of Timothy.
Philippe had put in his reasonable comments, had helped all three
of them past the incendiary moments and suavely guided Leon into
a discussion about the new trends in Chinese art. But an icy
reserve was obvious in his attitude towards her. He was polite,
charmingly anxious that she should eat well and try the wine, and
when her fingers quivered slightly on the stem of the glass she saw
him look at her face critically, with concern. But it was
professional concern. For him, their slight advance towards
friendship had halted, and the knowledge caused a hollow ache of
loneliness in Catherine.
The meal ended and they moved back to the other chairs.
Catherine poured coffee, accepted a cigarette.
Philippe said, "So you tried the Casino the other night. What did
you think of it?"
"No, but Michael did. He thought I might bring him luck, but I
didn't."
"Do not be despondent about that. There is a superstition that the
woman who brings luck at the tables is unlucky herself. Dean is a
good companion in such a place, no?"
"Oh, Hugh," she said huskily. "You don't know how much I've
needed you!"
"But..."
Then she heard the car start up at the side of the house, and it
appeared on the drive. Philippe raised a hand and was gone.
CHAPTER SIX
"I came here to see Catherine, not to land myself on you," he said
in his blunt fashion. "I'm on leave, actually, and the inn will be a
good centre for touring the district. Thank you for the thought,
though."
Leon gave him a long measuring look, took a pull at his cigar and
said, "Any relation of Catherine's is welcome here. But don't
believe everything she tells you. And don't lose sight of the fact
that a godfather has no pull whatsoever in a court of law." He
nodded and went into the house.
"I had to come," he said. "The tone of your letter was too light,
Catherine; it made me horribly uneasy. And the very thought of
your coming here to Leon Verender .., well, I just couldn't take it.
You must have had trouble or he wouldn't have spoken as he did to
me just now. And you don't look all right to me. What in the world
has been going on?"
"Don't let's talk about it for a bit; it's so lovely to have you here
that I simply want to soak it in. Wait till Timothy sees you! He
may not remember you, but we've often talked about Uncle Hugh.
It's so good to have you here."
"I'm darned glad to be here." He eased his collar. "Do you know
that it's hotter in France than in Hong Kong? We get it more
steamy, but this is grilling."
Darling Hugh, with his prosaic speech and rare smile. "You said
you're on leave," she demanded urgently. "Is that true? How long
do you have?"
"I had some overseas leave mounting up, but I heard that they'll be
transferring me back to England in about a year, so I was quite
happy to take three months' leave now."
"Three months! That's wonderful. Hugh ... I still can't believe it's
you."
"It's me, all right. Old Faithful, who couldn't set the Thames on fire
if they covered it with benzine and handed me a match factory. I'm
still managing Hewitt & Smith's agency and I shall probably stay
with the firm for ever."
"You're the one stable thing in my world. I've missed you more
even than I knew myself. You were always such a help when..."
The words halted and he said gently, "I wanted to come to you
when I heard about Ewart, but I don't suppose I could have done
much more for you than your family did. It was something you had
to get through on your own. Your letters from England sounded so
sensible, and it wasn't till I had the one you wrote from here that I
began to feel really disturbed. It was what you didn't say that -
worried me. There was almost nothing in it about Leon Verender,
and I knew how he'd treated Ewart when you two were married.
The very thought of your being at the mercy of some iron-hearted
old millionaire who wanted his pound of flesh - meaning
Timothy..." He sighed. "I had a couple of sleepless nights and then
put in for leave. They wouldn't release me till last week-end. I flew
over."
"I'm so grateful. It has been a bit wearing. Leon's a very hard man,
and he says abominable things to me in front of anyone who
happens to be around. Sometimes it's for show, but he's pretty
ruthless. And yet there are isolated moments when I don't mind
him at all."
Catherine tried to tell him, but when his brows came together she
found herself excusing Leon. "To him, I dare say, Timothy does
seem too good-looking and rather reluctant to try things out for
himself. You know how we lived in London, Hugh. He had to be
quiet indoors, to be taught care in crossing the roads, to keep off
the grass in certain parks, to take off wet shoes ... oh, a hundred
things that made him into a careful, polite little boy. Leon hoped
for a tough little delinquent who'd look exactly like himself."
"It's not. I hadn't been in the house five minutes before Leon began
talking about the marvellous future he wanted for Timothy, and the
merciless way he intended to prepare him for it. If Timothy cries
he takes it as a personal insult.- He doesn't know a thing about
boys."
"Because he never knew Ewart," Hugh said. "In a way I feel sorry
for him."
"That's what I keep telling him, but it seems that he himself could
ride, swim, climb tall trees and sail a yacht before he was
Timothy's age. Somehow I've managed to scotch his more deadly
plans, but only this lunch-time he started again. He'd arranged for
Timothy to go to a boys' boxing tournament this afternoon and the
poor pet didn't want to go out with Grandpa." She was smiling a
little, but not happily, "I hate all this trouble about him, Hugh. I
want him to be just a happy little boy, half forgotten, so that he
feels free and can develop naturally."
"We'll have to see what we can do." He eased his collar again, and
went on carefully, "Of course, you know that there is one way you
could end all this. I know you were very fond of Ewart, even after
he let you down so badly and went back to the racing game, but,"
he adjusted his tie, "well, it's over a year now, and for a year or so
before that you and he..." He hesitated, and started a new sentence,
a little hurriedly. "Leon Verender would have to pipe down
somewhat if you married again."
"It needn't be." He was looking at her now. "Since you were a
schoolgirl you've meant a lot to me, and I'd love to look after you
and Timothy. I'm one of those chaps who regularly save a
proportion of their salary, so I've plenty to set us up in a place of
our own. There's nothing hasty about this."
She took his hand and gripped it tightly. "You're the sweetest man
I know," she said unsteadily, "but that's not the answer. We do
love each other, but not in a marrying way. We're the sort of
couple who can part and meet again a year later and still feel the
same. Lovers aren't like that;
"Hugh, please," she said, distressed for him. "I don't even want to
think about it. I'd love you to get married - I remember writing it to
you in one of my early letters to Hong Kong - but I... well, I
wouldn't do for you. We just don't feel that way."
"I do."
She shook her head jerkily. "No, you only think you do because
I'm in a muddle and marriage might get me out of it. If I'd stayed
on in England near my family you wouldn't have come home and
proposed like this."
"There, you see?" She smiled at him a little mistily. "When you're
in love you don't hang about waiting for leave before you tie a
woman down. You put it in a letter, a telegram, anything - so long
as you get it said. In that sort of love there's a terrible urgency, a
compulsion to make sure of the other person. Don't you see?"
He sighed and said slowly, "I can see one thing very clearly.
You're still nearly twelve years younger than I am, and nothing
less than a terrific love affair would induce you to marry again. I
thought what I had to offer might be enough, but I ought to have
known better." He managed a smile. "I think it's because you're
different from any girl I've ever known that I've cared about you so
much. You had those lovely features and startling hair, and you
seemed such a gay and intelligent person to have as a cousin. I
suppose I'm really the sort of chap who should have married some
nice nondescript girl who'd happily drown in domesticity. Trouble
is, I'm too much that way myself. I never even look at a woman
unless she's quite different from others. You know," ruefully, "a
confirmed bachelor isn't always one by choice; often they've
passed through a period when they wanted marriage very much,
but the sort of woman who gravitated towards them didn't bear
comparison with her ideal."
"Ideals seldom exist," she said softly, "and they're a bit cold and
out of reach. If I were choosing a wife for you she wouldn't be
dull; she'd sparkle and know how to keep you guessing, and she
wouldn't be perfect by a long way. And because you're you, you'd
love her all the more for her imperfections ..." She stopped and
laughed a little. "I'm running away with myself because I've been
dammed up. Please don't let's talk about it any more - not for a
while, anyway. Tell me about Hong Kong."
But he hadn't much to tell her about his life in the East. Hugh
Manning was one of those Englishmen who lead the same routine
life however exotic their surroundings. Yes Hong Kong was very
interesting - rather crowded and busy, but there was plenty to do if
you were the sociable sort. Yes, he did belong to a club, but didn't
go there much; the firm's house was on the Peak, and he liked the
evenings up there. He had a few friends, of course. No, he hadn't
bothered about seeing the sights - saw enough on the daily ferry to
and from Kowloon. Catherine was trying to make him remember
more when Timothy came out. Eagerly, she watched him wander
towards them, a small boy in a clean white shirt and dark shorts,
his hair brushed over in a curl at one side.
"You're Uncle Hugh," Timothy said. "We looked at your photo too
one day."
Timothy looked bored. "It's tea-time. I'll go and ask Louise for my
milk and biscuits."
"We'll have to do something about it. Have you been battling quite
alone with old Verender?"
"I don't know. He says I'm with Timothy too much, and it's true.
He also feels that it's wrong for my life to revolve round the boy."
"He should stick to his pills and injections. Timothy's all you've
got, and why shouldn't you be wrapped up in him? I'd better speak
to Leon Verender - as Timothy's godfather, I mean."
"Not yet, Hugh," she said quickly. "We'd better leave it for a few
days. Oh, here's the tea. After we've had it we'll all go down to the
beach for an hour. You'll love Pontrieux, Hugh. It hasn't changed
in the last two or three hundred years."
"It's not like you to accept such a situation. Surely if you consulted
a lawyer.. ."
"No, I won't do that." She gave him a half smile. "I've thought
about it endlessly, and come to the conclusion that Ewart was
probably more right than he knew when he appointed his father as
Timothy's guardian. If he hadn't done that, Timothy would never
have known another Verender, and he'd have missed, a good deal.
It's not the rightness of the situation that bothers me - only Leon's
impatient handling of it. Well, let's forget it all for a while. Look,
there's our beach!"
But a minute later the beach was forgotten again, for Lucille
d'Esperez swept past them in her pink car, inclining her head
gracefully for a second as she did so.
"That," said Catherine drily, "is probably the second Mrs. Leon
Verender."
"She does, but she's probably forty. Leon doesn't drool, however;
he knows he'll be married for his money, but no doubt feels even
that is better than a companionless old age. Actually, she's not
good enough for him."
After that, they did forget the Villa Chaussy and its inmates for a
while. Hugh, terribly English and out of place in his lounge suit,
insisted on walking down to the water's edge and showing
Timothy how to play ducks and drakes. He looked happy and
absorbed, but a trifle yellow, Catherine thought.
It was almost dusk when they returned to the car, but Timothy
didn't look particularly tired. Perhaps he was getting a little old for
the afternoon sleep?
When the car was moving again, Hugh said, "I'll have to ask you
to drop me off at the inn. I haven't even unpacked yet. Shall I see
you this evening?"
"You'll want to be quiet. Let's meet tomorrow - I'll call for you at
ten in the morning."
"There's Timothy."
"A very quick one," he urged. "Won't hurt him to stay in the car
for two minutes." He turned and spoke to the little boy. "You'll be
good if we leave you alone for a minute or two, won't you?"
There was not much parking space in front of the small auberge,
but Catherine was able to avoid the mass of scooters and tiny old
cars and run alongside the building, where she switched off. She
turned and gave Timothy a pat and a smile, told him she'd be back
in a shake and went inside the auberge with Hugh.
"Lord, no," he said fervently. "We'll take our drinks outside. Wait
here while I get them."
It was while Hugh stood at the bar that Catherine saw Yvette. She
was sitting sideways on a bench against the wall, her legs drawn
up and clasped by her long bare arms, her small pointed chin
resting on one knee while she gazed with her almond-shaped
enigmatic eyes at her noisy, impecunious companions. She looked
like a mature and knowledgeable elf, and even when she saw
Catherine her expression changed very little. But she swung down
her legs, gave her straight black hair a shake and stood up, a
slender figure in black jeans and a black string-knit blouse.
Casually she pushed her way through the crowd.
"So. This is not a place for you, surely? You look for someone?"
Yvette lifted her shoulders and sent a dispassionate glance over the
people who were drinking and laughing behind them. "They talk
too much, about nothing. I was bored an hour ago, but I have to
wait for one of them to take me home and they are not anxious to
break up their grave discussions of each other's jingles and
illustrations." She gave Catherine the benefit of a long oblique
glance. "Thank you for dealing so promptly with my request.
Marcelle said she and Philippe had a perfect evening together at
the Villa Chaussy."
Yvette flicked her fingers. "No more drink for me, merci! I was
wondering, Catherine, whether you would be good enough to drive
me home?"
"I'd love to. Hugh is staying here at the inn, and I must leave him
to it."
"We can still have our drink outside," he said, as he opened the
way for them. "The inn looked so quiet when I booked in; I can't
stand these bohemian lounging types."
When they had reached the half-lit darkness, Yvette said smiling,
"I am one of these lounging types myself, and I am beginning to
feel that I cannot endure us, either."
"I do beg your pardon." Hugh floundered a little. "I thought, as you
were a friend of Catherine's..." He let it tail off.
"I didn't say that! I'm the drab one, and maybe you've too much
colour for me. I do beg your pardon."
"You have already said that. You were excused!" Yvette peered
through the car window. "So this is the small son! He is like you,
Catherine."
"But why afraid? For you, it is a good thing. He cannot remind you
too forcibly of the husband you lost, and he will not remind the
next man you marry that he is not the first. But Mr. Manning no
doubt knew the child's father."
"That is traditional, no? The best man comforts ..." She stopped,
and said more quietly, "I apologise. I drank in there because
suddenly I was bored, bored, bored! I had just a little too much.
May I sit in the car, please?"
She slid into the front seat, and when the door was closed she sat
looking down at her fingers. Quickly, Catherine emptied her glass
and let Hugh take it.
Catherine said, "It's rather late for Timothy. If you don't mind, I'll
take him to the villa and drive you home afterwards. Can you wind
down your window? The air will make you feel better." Or make
you pass out, she thought anxiously.
Yvette managed the window. Thinly, she said, "This is not a habit
of mine, to take three or four drinks. Some of them came to the
house for tea and we drove them to the auberge. Sitting there, I
thought of the futility of my life, of my uselessness."
Yvette's tones hardened. "You are very brave, of course, but you
are not temperamental. When one feels everything as sharply as I
do one must find an outlet."
"I think you're very lucky. You live in a charming villa and as the
doctor's sister you have chances every day of helping people who
may be sad because of illness in the family. Just a word or two
over the telephone and you've done your good deed. And I dare
say that crowd you move with could be fun, if you saw them less
often and didn't take them too seriously."
There the conversation had to break off, because they had reached
the Villa Chaussy. Catherine took Timothy into the house, told
Louise he must have supper and go straight to bed and that she
would be back in time to say good night to him.
"Say the good night now, madame," said the calm Louise, "then
you need not hurry."
So Catherine kissed him and left him. She loved the half- hour
before bed with Timothy and hated to be cheated of it, but she
knew he would be all right with Louise, and she did feel rather
worried about Yvette Sellier. What was the matter with the
woman? She wasn't weak-willed, and in spite of the company she
kept she did have a strict moral code. Yet there she was, miserable
and a little disgusted with herself, and almost in a state bordering
on the neurotic. She was too much a Sellier to give way
completely.
Catherine started up the car and turned back towards the road.
Yvette sat huddled in her corner, a small withdrawn figure with a
certain arrogance in the way she held her head, even now. They
drove through the half-lit streets of the little town, turned off
towards the terraces of villas.
"Please don't feel you have to. We all have peculiar patterns of
behaviour when we're upset or sad."
"So you guess." Yvette's tones were dull and flat. She asked the
question Catherine had put to herself. "What is wrong with me? I
am more fond of Philippe than of anyone in the world, yet when it
becomes obvious that he is going to marry someone we both love,
I am sick to the depths. I think I must be a little mad."
Catherine's throat had gone dry and her fingers were tense on the
wheel. "When did it become obvious that Philippe is going to
marry?" she queried. "Only today?"
"I told you I have been hoping," said Yvette. "I care a great deal
for Marcelle - she is not a grubby dilettante but a sweet person
who wishes to develop her talent. Perhaps, in her pursuit of
Philippe, she is rather selfish, but one can forgive her that. Today
she came for lunch with us both. Philippe was late and said he
needed only some coffee in his study. Marcelle carried the tray to
him and stayed with him for some time. When she came back to
the dining-room she looked pleasantly disturbed. I teased her, and
she said Philippe was in a strange mood, a trifle angry about
something, though he had assured Marcelle he could never be
angry with her. He told her that she was a most soothing antidote
to the sort of morning he had had. I was ... quite pleaded."
There was a silence, while Catherine swung the car towards the
last lap. Eventually she was able to say, "I seem to remember it's
what you wanted - an engagement between your brother and
Marcelle."
Her voice had gone small and hollow, and for a long moment
Catherine was wrung with compassion for this woman who was
older than she in years but very young in her emotional reactions.
She tried to infuse comfort into her tones,
"I think you're probably imagining a great, deal. When she's more
accustomed to her own feelings, and .., and of Philippe's, Marcelle
will be just as she was before'. A woman doesn't change towards
her friends when she marries."
"But this is different, no?" Yvette threw out a small pale hand. "I
am Philippe's sister and somewhat in the way. When Marcelle
becomes mistress of the villa I will be the tolerated demoiselle, the
old maid! That will happen to me, Yvette Sellier, who encouraged
Marcelle's friendship with Philippe because I felt she and I could
live companionably together. She will resent me, and make
remarks about her age and mine. She will become more important
to Philippe than I - and yet I have more brains in my toes than she
has in her head!"
"Please. Oh, I can walk well enough, but please go in with me.
There is no car, you see, so Philippe is still out. Please... I feel I
must talk!"
"I am so very sorry about those too many drinks," she said, "Please
do not tell Philippe."
"Of course not. Why don't you get into bed and sleep them off?"
"Yes, I will do that." But she did not move. "Your cousin will be
disgusted with French women. He looked most collet monte. What
is the English for that?"
"Strait-laced? He isn't, really. In a way he's quite adventurous,
though he doesn't think so. He's working in Hong Kong."
"These English!" She smiled slightly. "They are always the same -
in England, on the Riviera or away in the China Seas. He will have
a dreadful opinion of us here. You must explain,. no, do not
explain. Just say to him I am sorry."
"I'll do that. Perhaps next time you two meet you'll get a more
reasonable slant on each other. Don't you think you should go to
bed now? I can ask your maid to bring you some supper."
"Very well. Tell her - no, I will make my little mensonges myself!
I am a good liar, you know." She sighed. "Your idea of me now
will be very bad, and that hurts me. I would so much like you to
come and see me sometimes. I am always here."
"You shouldn't be. What about your family friends - don't you go
out to see them?"
"They gave me up long ago, but they do come here for dinner
about twice a year. They are fond of Philippe." The large eyes
flashed wide open. "I am very grateful to you, but I think you must
go, before Philippe returns. Please come for tea soon - tomorrow?
And bring that big clumsy cousin, so that I can show him I am not
always tipsy." In one swift graceful movement, which made her
sway and close her eyes for a second, she stood up. "Yes, my bed.
Au revoir, Catherine, and thank you. I think you are the sweetest
person I know."
Catherine made some sort of answer and slipped out of the room,
closing the door behind her. She paused and listened, heard an
unmistakable stride in the hall, the sound of feet on the carpeted
staircase. A faint sweat started at her temples, and she looked
about her in the corridor, hurriedly and without definite thought.
There were doors, all of them dosed except one, which stood wide,
its entrance a black rectangle. She crossed the corridor and was
swallowed in the gloom. With a fist pressed against her thudding
heart, she edged behind the door and listened.
Yes, he'd gone into Yvette's room. Catherine stole out into the
corridor, began to run soundlessly towards the staircase. Two
flights, she recalled, with a wide Turkey-red landing halfway. A
door opened behind her and, foolishly, she put on speed, reaching
the stairs before she was quite ready for them. She pitched
forward, hit a couple of carpeted edges on the way and fell in a
heap on to the landing.
"No." She swallowed, found herself staring into his dark leaping
eyes. "No, I'm quite whole. I'm terribly sorry. You see, I..."
"I know!"
She closed her eyes against his anger, and with vision shut out, her
other senses came excruciatingly alive. His maleness blanketed
her, his arms, his warm breath across her brow, the vibrant
strength of the fingers which, no doubt professionally, felt her
shoulder and the bones of her arm.
Still seated on the carpet, she leaned forward, away from his arm,
and put a shaky hand to her face. "You've had enough of this kind
of thing all day," she said huskily. "I'm ashamed of myself."
His hands took her elbows and lifted her to her feet, steadied her.
In an icicle voice which had a peculiar undertone he said,
"Running away was not such a good idea, hein? We will take the
next staircase sedately."
They reached the hall, and Catherine, to her mortification, felt her
hair tumbling about her face. Her head still bent, she sought for the
pins and twisted the usual pleat into a knot. She dropped her arms,
and let her glance slide over his face before she averted it. He
looked taut, and rather more sallow than usual. There was a
compression at his mouth, his nostrils had thinned, and the grey
eyes had a blue steeliness about them.
She hesitated, then sank into an old tooled leather chair beside the
hall table. There were flowers on the table, white rosebuds with a
few speckled carnations, arranged neatly and without love, no
doubt by the maid. The clove smell of the carnations was
overpowering, and idiotically, Catherine recollected old Brulard
telling her that flowers took longer to wilt in hot sunshine if they
happened to have a strong protective perfume.
"I'd better explain," she said, wondering how in the world she was
going to. "Did Yvette tell you why I'm here?"
"She told me nothing. I saw the car; you were not in the salon and
I concluded you had gone with my sister to her room. Yvette was
alone, but I had the feeling you were still in the house. I came from
the room in time to see you hurry and fall." A pause, then a
metallic enquiry: "It was I who caused you to stumble, was it not?"
Her reply sounded a little feverish. "Of course not. I wasn't paying
enough attention. I was silly to hurry down a strange staircase, and
I'm thankful you have carpet, and not marble as we have at the
Villa Chaussy. I've quite recovered, and I certainly must go now."
"We met in the town. I had the car, so I gave her a lift home."
"I'm sorry you didn't stay to meet my cousin at lunch- time," she
said conventionally.
"I didn't. My letter telling him that Timothy and I had come to
Pontrieux worried him. He felt I needed a ... a man, so he put in for
leave. He'd go to any trouble, for us."
She looked up, then, stung by his tone. "Hugh has been my
favourite cousin since I was a child. He's helped me enormously, at
different times, and if it hadn't been for Hugh, a couple of years
ago ..." She broke off abruptly, then said, "I know him better than I
know any other man."
"Yes, he has."
Before she could say more he had plunged his hands into his
pockets and taken a few paces, saying rapidly as he did so, "It was
inevitable. He is so unlike the first man in your life. He is slow and
thoughtful and blessedly free from imagination. It would not hurt
him that you once loved another man more than you love him; he
is so grateful that you love him at all! And you. You think you
have had enough of living on a dangerous emotional plane; you
wish to vegetate with this man because the idea presents a picture
of peace. Or perhaps," swinging round and fastening upon her a
glittering glance, "it is for the child that you submerge your own
feelings? He would make an admirable parent, this cousin, and an
ally against whom even Leon would find himself in difficulties. Is
that how you think?"
"Yes," in low tones, "I'm afraid I do. Don't think I haven't been
very grateful for your help with Leon. It's only because you've
pointed out to him his errors a few times that I've been able to get
my own way in certain directions. But you're not Timothy's
godfather and you have no duty of any kind towards me. Hugh and
I ... we've known each other so long that we understand almost
without speaking; and I might tell you," with a quivering in her
voice, "that it's a vast relief to me to have him here. As Leon is at
the moment I can deal with him, but when he marries Lucille
d'Esperez things will change. I doubt if I shall be able to go on
living at the Villa Chaussy."
"Is that something else you resent?" he asked crisply. "Do you
grudge Lucille the admiration and affection of Leon? Or do you
have the modern idea that a man past sixty should crawl decently
into oblivion?"
"So for the child's sake you will reinforce your own parenthood
with this Hugh Manning! That is contemptible - not worthy of you.
Before you go further you must realise that Leon has rights that
neither Lucille nor your cousin can alter."
That seemed to be that. Catherine could Have argued with him, she
could have told him that she had turned down Hugh's proposal and
was really a little frightened of what Lucille might contrive. But
she remembered the way he had left the villa after lunch, and
Yvette's description of how he had been alone with Marcelle in his
study and later wafted her off with him. Well, he could have his
Marcelle; but nothing had ever entitled him to take Catherine
Verender to task for the way she ran her own life.
She got to her feet. "I'm expected home for dinner. I really must
go."
He was quite close. '"You had a chat with my sister in her room?"
"Yes."
"It was arranged between you that you should leave before I
arrived home?"
"Not exactly."
He looked at her bent head, saw the curly wisps she had been
unable to secure, the pale skin of her neck, the fine curve of her
cheek. "Yes," he said offhandedly, "we do. I will take you to the
car."
She went first, and he reached behind her to open the car door.
She got into the car and started the engine, barely looked at him
before pressing down the accelerator. She heard his sharp shout:
"Switch on your lights!" and did so, swerving to avoid the rocky
border of a flower bed.
Then she was out on the road, with a blinding heat at the back of
her eyes and a lead casing round her heart.
CHAPTER SEVEN
HUGH was delighted with Pontrieux, its main streets and haphazard
terraces, the fort at Mont Ste. Agnes, the lazy- looking palms
which graced almost every garden, the tumbling masses of
bougainvillaea that produced striking patches of colour in spite of
the heat, and, of course, the beach. Glorious golden sand with a
rocky outcrop here and there for shade and cliffs confining the bay
and forming romantic-looking caverns. He bathed with Catherine
and took an uneasy Timothy into deep water, lounged and smoked
a cigarette and talked, in his dry fashion, about old times and
people they'd known. The few strangers on the beach no doubt
took them for a happy little family, and Catherine, still desperate
from that last moment with Philippe, wondered if it could possibly
work. No, their relationship was all wrong for it. They were too
comfortable together, knew too much about each other. And they
had never been even remotely in love.
"You'll find the place closed till three. They're at their most wide
awake here about six in the evening."
"I'll phone then. I want to be able to come and see you whenever I
feel like it - which will be often!"
She touched his hand. "It's lovely having you here, but I'm going to
be awfully frank. Please don't come to the villa unless you're
invited. I mean that, Hugh. We can be together every day - I'll
bring picnics and we can tour, if you like - but I don't want you to
have any clashes with Leon. He's probably already had a session
with his lawyer, to find out just how important you are to his
schemes. If he can't get at you it will take the wind out of his
sails."
"I do, but you don't have to assert yourself unless it becomes
necessary. I don't think it's possible to hurt Leon, but why should
we even try? I've found it's much easier to deal with each grouse of
his as it turns up. Will you let me decide when it's right for you to
come to the villa?"
"Well, all right." But he wasn't too pleased about it. "What time
shall I see you this afternoon? Three-ish? What about leaving
Timothy with me for lunch?"
Catherine looked doubtfully at the sandy little boy in the back seat.
"He needs a shower and fresh clothes."
"I'll sluice him down. Like to have lunch with me, Timothy?"
"Michael says bread and cheese and beer in a pub is his idea of.,."
He lost himself and ended, "He likes it."
"Of course not, but you should tell the chap to be a bit careful.
Come on, Timothy. I'll let you have first go in the bath."
She stopped the car on the drive and left the keys dangling from
the ignition lock. She was hardly at the front door before the
chauffeur had taken possession of the car; it would be sparkling
next time she used it, not a grain of sand in sight. Well, it was a
pleasant life, but only for a while. When Timothy eventually
started school she would feel superfluous; she simply wasn't made
for a life of idle luxury.
She slipped out of the beach dress and washed, put on a white
pleated skirt and a smart navy blouse. Taking a long look at herself
in the mirror, she thought that easily attained good clothes might
have an insidiously warping effect on one's character. It was too
easy to slide into the mood they engendered, an indolent take-me-
or-leave-me attitude. And on the whole there was more fun in
wearing something you had worked and saved for. She now owned
a large exclusive wardrobe which had cost Leon a packet. Not that
she minded his paying for her clothes; if he wanted her to look
every inch a Verender why shouldn't he pay for the privilege?
Deep inside, she had never quite admitted to having changed from
a Harvey into a Verender. During the first couple of years it had
been delightful to be a Mrs. instead of a Miss, but after that, in
moments of disillusionment, she had found that in some things she
and Ewart were strangers to each other - she all Harvey, he all
Verender. He'd chafed at the restrictions of marriage, been proud
of Timothy and jealous of him. She'd tried to laugh him out of the
jealousy, and each time he'd made the same complaint. "I don't
really know you. There's a part of yourself you keep right away
from me." In vain, she'd told him it wasn't true. Privately she had
thought he needed that little stick to beat her with because he knew
that every time he entered a racing car he let her down all over
again.
Now she was not so sure. Perhaps in those days she had kept some
part of herself from him simply because he hadn't awakened it.
They'd both been young and ebullient, and not too curious about
what lay beneath the gaiety, and she had eventually found Timothy
an absorbing little personality; he had made up for other lack. But
Catherine had a small, haunting conviction that all the secret
compartments were wide open now. She felt different in a most
painful way.
"Like a drink?"
She found the Telegraph, came back and sat down. For a few
minutes only the crackle of newsprint punctuated the silence.
There was no world-shaking news any more, thought Catherine.
Even when half a continent fell apart, killing thousands, the rest of
the world read the headlines and passed on. The reflection was
sobering.
"It's getting very hot here," said Leon abruptly. "I always take a
cruise in the hot weather. I'm arranging to have three weeks aboard
the yacht."
"Oh." Catherine looked at his face and learned nothing, "Do you
fix up a party of guests?"
"It takes a week or so to provision and get ready. Haven't seen the
yacht, have you?"
"I'm proud of her; she's carried some famous people." He gave her
the long, penetrating look. "You don't seem ecstatic about it."
"I was just thinking it wouldn't really be very good for Timothy - a
sophisticated adult cruise."
"There'll be another boy - and partly for your sake I'm inviting
mostly English people who aren't in their dotage."
"I'm afraid you never will be, because he's not your sort."
It wasn't Catherine's business, but she had to ask, "Are you going
to marry Lucille?"
"Let me see now. I'd say it would hardly affect him at all. He'd still
be scared of trees and ponies, and talk like a sloppy little girl. I
doubt if Lucille could toughen him any more than you can. She'd
try harder, but I'm afraid it's a man's job."
"Very much."
"You must please yourself whether you invite Hugh," she said. "In
any case, he might prefer to go touring by car while I'm away, It's
ten minutes since Antoine rang the lunch bell. Shall we go in?"
While they ate, Leon said very little. He had the morose expression
of a man deep in his own slightly unpleasant reflections, and it
occurred to her that though he often bullied her and occasionally
even ranted and smashed his fists on the table, he had never before
looked like this. Dourness suggested thoughts kept back and
mulled over, and that wasn't like Leon. If anything, he was over-
keen on saying exactly what was in his mind with a ruthless
economy of words.
She thought quickly. This was the first time he had suggested
taking the two of them out for the afternoon, and Timothy, drat it,
was with Hugh. As well, she had promised to take Hugh to have
tea with Yvette. At the back of her mind had lurked a
determination not to stay at the Selliers' villa; she would persuade
Yvette to come out with them.
"I'd like that," she said, still thinking, "but Timothy's out to lunch.
We could pick him up, though."
"Out where?"
Leon scowled. "That's quick work, isn't it? I suppose they get on
famously together!"
"Hugh is an uncle to Timothy." She pushed her cup away. "It just
happens that I'd made arrangements for the afternoon, but I'll be
most happy to call them off. Just give me half an hour."
Unsmilingly she said, "I'll be back before then, you old tyrant."
And she hurried out to the car.
"I don't think so. He's difficult, but he's not small-minded. Bear
with me just this once, Hugh."
"I bear with you all right, bless you. But Verender..." He shook his
head. "Go along, then. Don't speed."
They drove into the old town, past narrow streets which were all
steps and cobbles, flapping shutters and communal clothes-lines,
and out on to one of the jetties towards the outer harbour. And
there she saw the yacht, Francette, lying off the jetty. It was white
with a blue trim, the size of a small liner and very smart.
"I didn't think it would be so big," she said. "It looks as if it would
take a hundred people!"
Leon braked. "There are eight double cabins and four single. All
the rest is given over to dining-room and lounges. The kitchens
and seamen's quarters are forward. There's a swimming-pool on
the afterdeck, but we only use it when we're at sea for a couple of
days. It's covered by a movable dance floor. What sort of sailor are
you?"
"Pretty good."
"You'd better be, both you and the child. Let's go aboard."
Leon was proud of his yacht, and he had reason to be. Catherine
had expected luxury, but not this polished magnificence. The
cabins were large, air-conditioned and beautifully appointed, some
in soft grey and pastel pink and others in white and sapphire. All
had private bathrooms, radio, intercom and small built-in cocktail
cabinet with its own freezing-unit. The dining-room was spacious
and lofty with portholes on two sides and a dais opposite the main
entrance.
Leon said, "We don't take along any entertainers because it's a bore
to have them around during the day. I mostly engage a dance band
or local celebrities wherever we put in, just for the evening. Get a
change of amusement that way."
Then there were the lounges: one long main one furnished -in rose,
black and turquoise which looked out over the decks on three
sides, and a slightly smaller one which was soft gold and midnight
blue. In this second, Leon explained, they had television in port
and film shows at sea. A third, with a bamboo bar and multi-
coloured stools, was the cocktail lounge.
"A rich man's floating playground," said Leon. "That's what you're
thinking, isn't it?"
"Let him roam," said Leon impatiently. "He's been here before."
"We can go out on deck ourselves and walk round. This way,"
Catherine stepped out into the air, was blinded for a moment by
the haze over the sea. She looked both ways, walked quickly ahead
of Leon towards the foredeck and round to the port side.
"I doubt it," with heavy sarcasm. "He took a real dislike to the
companionway."
"Yes, miss ... ma'am," with a surprised stare at the titian hair. "He's
chattering away in there like a magpie."
"Leave him there. He got himself in, he must get himself out."
"Where is it?"
"Along here. But I forbid you to speak to him. You can watch, if
you insist, but let him find his own way of getting out!"
The tarpaulin-covered lifeboat hung about two feet from the deck,
but its side was nearer five feet above deck-level. By standing on
tiptoe Catherine could see moving bumps in the tarpaulin and
Timothy was grunting, as though he were pacing, bent double. He
began to speak, in small raucous tones.
"That's one up on you," she said. "He's giving you a piece of his
mind, under cover. You should be proud; in his own baby way he's
beginning to revolt. He's a bit late - you probably told your father
where to get off when you were two - but better late than not at all.
I think it's funny."
"You would. But if that boy had been properly brought up he
wouldn't have to suffocate for his half-baked principles. Come
back to the lounge. I'll tell someone to get him out!"
They sat in the lounge, but Catherine watched the opening while
Leon talked with the Captain. And presently Timothy sidled in,
pretending he'd been close all the time. He was slightly flushed
and the fair bang of hair had slipped forward over his brow, but he
looked very sweet and wholly innocent as he edged towards
Catherine and landed on a chair. She saw him peer surreptitiously
at red weals on both hands, and in a startled second she knew that
he had insisted on getting himself out of the boat. Her own blue-
green eyes were large and expressive as she caught Leon's glance
and held it. He looked very much as if he'd have liked to turn
Timothy over and spank him.
Tea was served by one of the French waiters, and after it the
launch took the three of them to the jetty. They got into the car and
drove back the way they had come.
They were halfway home when Leon said, "Enjoy yourself, Tim?"
"No, Grandpa."
Which Catherine thought was clever of him. They reached the villa
at a little after six, and by seven Timothy, having forgone his
afternoon nap, was under his cellular blanket, ready for sleep.
Catherine changed quickly, looked at her watch and decided she
ought to call Yvette. She picked up her telephone, asked the
manservant for a line, and dialled. The voice that answered was
not Marthe's or Yvette's.
"Dr. Sellier."
"'It is most unlikely. Last night she said she had finished with
them." A pause. "It is a little disturbing that she should go out
without speaking first with the maid, but almost certainly she is
with Marcelle. Did you have something important to say to her?"
"Just an apology."
"I will convey it for you."
She dropped the receiver on to its stand. The brittle, happy mood
she had contrived with Leon was smashed. She crossed to the
dressing-table for a tissue, to wipe fingers which had gripped the
telephone so tightly that they had perspired, and stood there
looking at her tense features in the mirror. What was to be done
about this feeling she had for Philippe Sellier? Just his voice, and
she felt like this.
Here at the villa she was too close to him, and yet it was
impossible to get away. There was the projected cruise ahead, but
it was likely to prove no more than a respite; she would have to
come back, meet him again, often, with Marcelle as his promised
wife, then as his wife in reality.
There had been moments when Catherine had been sure that he felt
some pull of attraction towards her; vice-like fingers on her
shoulders, a sharp-drawn breath, a tightish, watchful smile. Well,
he was a man; very much so. And She was probably a little
different from other women he knew. A man is attracted to many
women, but he marries only one. And the woman whom Philippe
Sellier chose would certainly not be a widow with a son. She knew
enough about him to be sure it was something he couldn't possibly
live with - the knowledge of a previous marriage and the child to
prove it. That small stirring of his emotions had been easily
controlled; it might even have been the reason that he had become
more overtly interested in Marcelle Latour.
It was only since knowing Philippe that she had become aware of
the superficiality of her marriage with Ewart. Given the chance,
her own love could have deepened, because of Timothy. But Ewart
- he'd loved speed and publicity, and using his undoubted charm
wherever it could get him what he wanted. His nature simply
hadn't been big enough to encompass racing cars and marriage as
well.
Lucille was at the villa for dinner that night, expansive in manner
and very beautiful in jade matt silk. As Leon would be occupied all
day tomorrow, she commented over coffee in the salon, would it
not be a good idea if Catherine came to Nice for shopping?
"These clothes for the cruise, of course. I will telephone two of the
fashion houses from my hotel early tomorrow morning, and have
them arrange special parades for you at about noon and again at
three-thirty. For Leon, they will concoct a trousseau within a few
days!"
"It would be best to leave the little boy with a maid," Lucille stated
calmly. "Unless he would be happier with your fianc?" She
snapped her fingers, looked confused. "How foolish! I meant your
cousin. You must forgive me, Catherine. I saw you two, laughing
together as you drove, and you presented such a delightful picture
that I quite forgot you are related. But it is second cousins, no?"
"It won't hurt the boy to stay at home. Dean can watch him."
Quite early next morning she drove Timothy down to the auberge.
Only one of the doors was open, and inside, looking benignly
drowsy, the proprietor was rearranging his bottles and washed
glasses after the night's trade. He disappeared behind a curtain and
called, "Monsieur! You 'ave a veesee-tor!" and came back to smile
again and continue his operations, a thumb swathed in a rather
grubby teacloth contriving with lightning efficiency to put a shine
on the glassware.
"What happened?"
"I hate to think about it. She's a menace - Yvette Sellier."
Hugh rubbed a hand round the back of his neck. "I telephoned her
as you asked. She seemed to be in a mischievous sort of mood, so I
was careful. First of all she asked me to go there alone for tea -
tried to be funny by saying I could bring the aubergiste as a
chaperon, if I liked. I said I hadn't a car, so she told me of a man
who hired his out occasionally." He shook his head, bewilderedly.
"Well, the outcome was that I arrived there in this borrowed car."
"Oh, dear. She was getting at you because she was bored."
"I know that. I went there because she'd taken the mickey, and I
intended to drink one cup of tea and firmly say goodbye. But she'd
dressed herself up in a pink thing and said she would rather go out
to tea. After that," with a shake of his head, "I seemed to be in her
hands."
"You should have tried to enjoy it. Yvette does sometimes behave
like a precocious girl, but she's also an intelligent woman."
"At about a quarter to eight. She made me drop her outside their
gate because she could see her brother in the porch. He came down
to her - sounded hipped. And she had the nerve to say, 'I have been
shopping in Cannes, cheri. Met some old friends and found it was
so late that I came home by taxi.' Taxi!" he repeated explosively.
"I found her unsettling," Hugh said uncomfortably. "I'm too set in
my ways to handle a woman like her. I know I told you I like them
different and perhaps exciting, but I don't care for them as different
as she is. I must say she looked pretty marvellous, though - the
dress was a great improvement on the jeans."
"I did not! It'll take me two or three days to get over the last lot,
and by then she'll have forgotten I exist." He dismissed the subject
on a long gusty breath. "What are we doing today?"
"Nothing, I'm sorry to say, I'm booked till this evening, and Leon
said that Timothy must stay at the Villa Chaussy. Tomorrow we'll
take a picnic and explore. By the way, how would you like a three-
weeks' cruise on a fabulous yacht?"
"Not much," he said flatly. "I'm a rotten sailor and even if I weren't
I'd be happier on a tugboat. Like a cold drink?"
She couldn't stay long with him, but he seemed fairly happy to be
left; he had some letters to write and had promised himself a climb
up the nearest mountain. Catherine drove back to the villa, left
Timothy with Michael Dean and set out for Nice.
All day Catherine had felt dull and uninterested, but as the parade
of slim women in sportswear and casual suits, summer cottons and
light coats petered out, she began to revive. It was almost over.
"Blacks and white and vivid blues, madame! You will look
exquisite!" Ugh.
She wandered away from the artificially lighted half of the salon
towards a window, and looked down upon the busy street. It was
cool in here but hot out there, where shirt- sleeved messengers
dodged among men and women in light suits and gay sleeveless
dresses. Taxis zigzagged, a gendarme berated a careless
pedestrian, two middle-aged Frenchmen talked fast into each
other's faces, and a plump woman was nervously going through
her handbag to find a coin for a newspaper.
Catherine flicked over the three sheets of writing. "Did I buy all
these? I'm sure I shan't need so much."
Idly, Catherine watched her float across to the dapper little man
who had raved so unselfconsciously about his own creations. Their
heads went together, conspiratorially, but Catherine thought
nothing of it till something swiftly changed hands between them -
a small piece of paper . . . a cheque?
They went out into the late afternoon heat, found that Raoul's
chauffeur had brought the primrose car from wherever it had been
parked, and gratefully sank into its comfortable privacy. Catherine
drove down towards the Boulevard des Anglais. Within sight of
her hotel, Lucille said:
"No, thank you. I shall be glad to get home and take a bath."
"But I wish the matter to be quite clear. I was naturally upset when
you came into my life and Leon's nearly a year ago, and it took
much self-discipline before I could accept you. For the last two or
three years I have lived on my jewels, but they are almost gone
and I have been anxious and apprehensive. All I asked of you was
that you should not obstruct Leon's plans for the child. I was most
pleased, last night, to hear that you three had gone together to the
yacht. Thank you very much, Catherine."
They were at the hotel, and Catherine braked. The woman must
think her influence mighty strong, but there was no point in
denying it.
Lucille must have noticed the phrasing, but her outsize ego ignored
it. She gathered her purse and gloves, said au revoir, and got out of
the car. Catherine pushed over the gear lever and drew out into the
coastal traffic.
She didn't think much on the way home. The sky had hazed again
and there was a golden glow over the trees and cliffs. The sea
looked incredibly far away, an expanse of opaque blue glass
stretching into infinity. Catherine wondered if it ever roared and
tumbled; she had only seen it calm and dotted with red and white
sails with an occasional liner on the horizon.
At the villa she met Antoine, who told her that Timothy was up the
garden with Michael Dean. After a moment's hesitation she made
her way to the cottage, and found the two of them, Michael in a
deck-chair with his eyes closed and Timothy chopping harmlessly
at a massive oak with his toy axe. She kissed the top of the little
fair head. Michael opened a bleary hazel eye and sat up.
She raised an eyebrow. "A day among the fashion types with
Lucille. Your guess would be right."
"Trust Lucille. The jewellers were on the phone about it only this
morning - they were anxious to know if the old man wanted
Lucille's initials on the under-side of the platinum setting of the
clasp. They do it sometimes for identification in case of theft. I've
got to ask Leon about it. Wouldn't you think he'd have more sense
than to marry that harpy?"
"I don't know. You see lots of women of Lucille's age in Nice, but
none so beautiful and poised as she is. Everywhere she goes
people look at her."
"You were there too. How do you know they weren't looking at
you?" With his espadrille he hooked the deckchair back under the
sloping roof of the cottage, and then sauntered with her to where
Timothy sat sharpening his axe with a stone. "I suppose she thinks
the old man will propose on the cruise?"
Catherine nodded. "He must know she'll marry him for his money,
and I dare say it's true that he wouldn't mind very much. She'd be a
companion as. well as a model for mink and jewels, and very
likely that's all he wants. I just wish she were honest, that's all."
"You want too much. Lucille was born predatory and devious. But
to give her her due, she's never taken anything but the most
innocuous gifts from Leon."
Catherine drew in her lips. "That's her line, but who's to know
what she does on the quiet? You know, I'm quite certain she
accepted a rake-off from those dressmakers today. While I was
there I daren't even ask the price of the things, and..."
"That's funny," Michael broke in. "I have to handle your accounts
and I noticed that some of the shops don't send the detailed slips -
only a statement for the total. I mentioned it to Leon and he said I
wasn't to question anything you bought - just to pay for it."
"I'm darned sure of it! She's probably made a new evening gown, a
cruising outfit and a fat cheque out of you today. Well, what do
you know? She's rooking the old man before she's hooked him!"
"Forget it, for heaven's sake. It makes me feel a bit sick." She
smiled at him wanly. "Thanks again for looking after Timothy.
Come on, darling. Poor Michael's had enough."
The odd thing was that, instead of being serene about the whole
thing, as he usually was, Leon seemed almost to wish he hadn't set
the plan in motion. For a couple of nights he had no guests at all
and went to bed at the outlandish hour, for him, of ten-fifteen. The
following day, Philippe arrived with Marcelle Latour for lunch.
"I trust you are well, madame?" she said, gently stressing the last
word. "And your little son?"
"He's very fit, thank you." And to Philippe, politely, "I hope Yvette
is not missing her former companions too much?"
"She will survive," he said, appraising her coolly. "You will have
wine?"
They went indoors for lunch: consomm, langouste, veal pie, cold
chicken, salad, fruit and several cheeses. Philippe served Marcelle
and persuaded her to eat plenty. To Catherine he remarked with a
trace of acid:
Leon took this up at once. "Have you been out with that Manning
fellow again?"
"A lot you'd care if I did. Why don't you bring him here?"
"Well, that's something. But I don't want you building up a case for
yourself, against me. The fellow can- come here if he wants to."
"I cannot be away for three weeks, my friend - two weeks at the
most."
"You could fly back after a couple of weeks, or join us a week late.
Do your best, Philippe!"
He shook his head. "I plan to see friends in Paris and Lille. Also, I
have promised to drive Marcelle up to her home at Aix-en-
Provence if it can be managed. Another year, perhaps, Leon."
"Very well."
"Detest it."
But Leon said abruptly, "It's the plodding, dependable type you
have to watch. They're like bulldogs - they fasten on to something
and won't let go. I don't like the chap."
"You don't have to," Catherine remarked mildly, and she looked at
Philippe. "After all this, is Hugh still invited to your house?"
As soon as they had drunk coffee the two guests departed. Philippe
put Marcelle into the front seat of his car, smiled some comment to
which she returned one of her own, and they both waved with the
correct degree of enthusiasm and charm.
"Nice girl," grunted Leon as he returned to his chair. "I'm glad you
reminded me of her existence. I've never thought of asking
Philippe to bring a woman companion with him, but I shan't forget
from now on. Did he say he's taking her to her home at Aix?"
"Yes."
Leon smiled sourly. "Very correct, these French. They always like
to meet the parents early on in the relationship. The minute they've
kissed the girl they go right along and weigh up the prospective in-
laws." He gave her a glare from under the brows. "That would play
the devil with your independence, wouldn't it? You wouldn't do for
a Frenchman!"
She felt tight about the chest. "Only over Timothy," she said. "But
now you seem to have it in for me personally. When we were on
the yacht yesterday I thought..."
"I know what you thought." He took a cigar from his top pocket
and inspected the tip of it. "I've got plans and I don't want you
spoiling them with that damned cousin of yours. You needn't think
I'll let you take the boy to Hong Kong!"
"So that's it. You needn't worry, though if I did take Timothy away
it would relieve you of quite a burden. I'm sure you haven't been so
happy since we've been here." . .
He gave her a sharp look. "You're smart, but not quite smart
enough, or you might have got at the reason I'm fed up with myself
and everyone else." He made a rare concession, in savage tones. "I
don't mind having you here. I like spirit in a woman; if I'd had a
wife with spirit I might have been a better husband. And it does
me good to have the boy around; he's cissified and much too
pretty, but hidden away under the curls and fancy shirts he's got
just a faint spark of the old man. It'll never fan into a blaze, but it
might smoulder a bit. No, I haven't got much against you. or Tim.
But you're right. I'm not too happy about the two of you, either. Or
about myself." He glared at her and stood up. "I'll have my cigar
on my own. I want to enjoy it."
Catherine let out a long breath as she watched him go. Intuitively,
she knew that something was eating at him quite badly, and it
didn't need intuition to know that he was a man who had felt very
little inside himself and in any case could not talk about it. It was
strange to think that a man of his age, who had handled
tremendous companies and millions of pounds of investors'
money, should be inept at deal- ling with his own personal
problems. He had neglected his wife, shed Ewart as if he were a
tight glove and generally ignored the gentler things of life because,
to his way of thinking, they showed no dividend. She wished there
were something she could do about it, but knew there was nothing.
The cruise would be a help, the cruise and Lucille. Perhaps that
was it; he'd come to the point of wanting Lucille as his wife and
was considering the whole matter closely.
And what he saw left him with an unpleasant taste in his mouth.
Perhaps he even wished himself penniless, so that he could assess
just how much he did mean to his friends.
Oh, no, she was letting her imagination take over. Leon Verender
might regret a few things, but he could never be other than the man
he was: powerful, moneyed, generous and fond of battle. Maybe
there was a very simple reason for his mood; like indigestion or
twinges of rheumatism, reminding him of his age!
Catherine found a book and began to read, but she couldn't
concentrate. It was worrying, the way the days and weeks passed,
unsettled, nagging, frustrating. Before coming to Pontrieux she had
expected some trouble with Leon, but all the rest had been
unknown territory. Now she knew it all too well. Lucille d'Esperez,
who was as potent as a courtesan; Hugh's arrival, which had not
been the unalloyed joy it should have been. And Philippe, of
course. It made her ache just to see his name behind her eyelids.
She ought to have declined, very politely, that invitation to dinner.
An evening of his chilling smile for herself and warm glances for
Marcelle was hardly likely to induce a sound night's sleep, to say
the least.
But when she went indoors a little later she telephoned Hugh to
tell him of the date. He expressed foreboding but willingness to try
it out.
"That should help. Shall I pick you up in this bus I've got? It's been
bucking a bit."
"I'll call for you - it's almost on the way. And, Hugh .., I don't think
I'll go out again today, and I may not be able to get down during
the day tomorrow. So shall we say seven tomorrow evening?
Right. Goodbye."
Slackly, she went upstairs. For perhaps five minutes she stood in
Timothy's room, looking out of the window or at his untroubled
little face. She longed to waken him, to hold his warm body close
and feel his arms tighten round her neck. Instead, she went into her
own room and looked through her clothes. Not one of the select
models from Nice; a plain white with slim-fitting top and pencil
skirt that she had bought in London.
The following evening, when she had got into the dress and was
fastening an amber necklace about her throat, Catherine felt more
herself.
After a day at the villa it was good to be driving away into the
warm darkness. She wouldn't think ahead too far - not beyond
Hugh, at the inn. The air was sweet after the heavy heat of the day,
and the sea, with a moon cutting a silver path through it, had an
allure she could not yet take for granted. The magic of warm
sensuous nights, distant music, wine on a terrace above palms; it
was inseparable from the Cote d'Azur.
Hugh was waiting just outside the lamplit inn, and as he slipped
into the car beside her he patted her hand. In a grey lounge suit he
looked slimmer and he appeared to be undismayed.
"I've missed you today," he said, as they moved on, "but I took the
opportunity of timing up the engine of the old jalopy. I had a
mechanic helping me - believe it or not, I knew more about the
thing than he did. Anyway, it should do a few hundred miles
without more trouble." He gazed at her again. "You look fit to eat."
"Thank you. I've had a restful day. Before I forget it, you're invited
to a jollification at the Villa Chaussy next Tuesday. A big affair -
did you bring a dinner jacket?"
"Leon hadn't retired then." She didn't say anything more about him
because somehow Hugh seemed to have developed a few blind
spots out East. "Are you braced to meet your charmer?"
"In a way it was. But since she's turned away from that side of life
she's felt wasted, redundant. She's twenty-nine."
"Is she?" He sounded relieved. "I thought she was about twenty-
five. Does she always make fun of men?"
" 'Allo!" she said cordially, and took both of Catherine's hands.
Then she turned those exasperating eyes towards Hugh. "Good
evening, Mr. Manning, how nice that you could come. I have been
practising that sentence just for you."
Yvette put a warning finger to her lips. "No one knows about that
little escapade. If Philippe heard ..." She lifted both hands and her
shoulders in horror. "He is out just now, but Marcelle would tell
him if she knew. I promise to behave impeccably this evening. Let
us go in."
She went into the dining-room behind Yvette, took the chair that
was indicated as hers. Hugh was at her left and the old lawyer at
her right. The centrepiece, she thought detachedly, had been
arranged with some care; a long wooden leaf covered by camellia
heads. Yvette's work, not the maid's. But the maid had no doubt
accomplished the cooking, and very good cooking it was. An
excellent soup, tiny fish rolls, filet mignon, chicken braised in
wine with tender asparagus tips, small peas, french beans and
scalloped potatoes. Then a most delectable mixture of chopped
fresh fruits in a flan, with the usual cheeses to follow.
"I trust you will have a most enjoyable holiday here at Pontrieux.
If you wish to know more of the district I have a large library on
the subject. Please consider it at your disposal."
Yvette remained lively. "You see?" she said to Catherine, "I can be
a model doctor's sister. This is not just what you call a flash in the
saucepan. I am like this much of the time. It happened that you
came to Pontrieux when I had become ennuyee, and had sought
out the old friends who daub and write bad poetry. This," with a
flick of her hand over her skirt, "is the real Yvette Sellier."
"So there will be a next time! Thank you, mon brave. I do not
deserve it."
"No, you don't," said the practical Hugh. "If you came to England
for the first time you wouldn't find people leading you up the
garden path."
"I like London, and your Lakes if they were not so cold."
"Oh, yes - they're not like yours, either. Are you interested in the
Far East?"
"I like oriental art, so possibly I should like the oriental people.
Some day I shall travel, and when I come to Hong Kong I shall
visit you. By then I shall be grey with two chins."
"I leave there next year," he said, "and you'll never have a double
chin. You're much too thin."
She laughed. "You are the most serious man I ever met. You are
too old!"
"I suppose I am," he said gloomily. "Soon I'll be thirty- eight, with
one foot in the grave."
"But it is a very good tune. Come, we will dance to it, With your
permission, Catherine?"
Hugh and Yvette? It was hardly likely. Yvette was using him as a
foothold on her way out of boredom, and Hugh was merely
enjoying a Frenchwoman in her own country. He was trying very
hard to pick up the steps she insisted on teaching him.
Another couple joined them - the olive-oil king with Marcelle. She
moved languidly, had that infuriating faraway smile on her lips as
though she were looking into a future that was all roses, with never
a thorn. She'd find out that marriage wasn't like that, but with
Philippe ...
"I haven't danced for a long time - at least, I did try it out once
with Michael Dean, in Nice, but we didn't have time to get going. I
used to love dancing."
"He was with friends when I left this evening, and seemed quite
happy. But there is something wrong, isn't there? Is it physical?"
"I realise that." She watched her fingers Aids ash from her
cigarette. "So what do we do - wait and see?"
"The cruise will help." He put a firm finger under her chin and
turned her head, so that She must meet his eyes. "Till then, be
good to him. No arguments, and if he is ill-humoured bear with
him as you would bear with your own father."
She drew back from his touch. "I'm fond of Leon," she said.
"But you still find it easy to fight with him about the child." His
voice changed. "I like children; the smaller my patients, the more
rewarding my work. If it were not for the fact of my affection for
the people of my own district I would transfer to Nice and
specialise as a children's doctor, because there is nothing finer than
a thoroughly healthy child. At the same time, there is nothing more
nauseating than the kind of maternal love that pampers and
coddles and places the child on a pedestal. Do not protest," with
sudden hard lights in his eyes. "I am not Leon!"
He snapped his fingers irritably. "You say one thing and act
another. You are no more in love with this cousin of yours than
you are with Michael Dean, yet you are contemplating marrying
him in order that Timothy shall have a father who will permit you
to continue the child's education in your own way. To me, that is
the most despicable reason for marriage - to take a man ..." He
stopped abruptly, drew an audible breath. "I beg your pardon. It
was unforgivable of me to speak to you like that here, when you
are my guest. When 1 came over to you I had no intention of it, I
assure you." He ground out his cigarette. "They have finished
dancing. I will send your cousin to you."
He almost clicked his heels as he half bowed, and Catherine, her
nerves taut, watched him move away towards the group which
Marcelle had joined. He was with them hardly a moment. The
maid was there, with a message-in one hand and his bag in
another. Philippe shrugged, took the bag and said something which
drew nods of understanding. He took Marcelle's elbow, and
together they went down to his car, got in and drove away.
Starkly, Catherine was reminded of the night she had gone with
him into the mountains, the half-ruined hovel, the boy with the
gangrenous foot. Philippe's fingers bruising her shoulders, the
violence of his reaction when She had disobeyed him. Would there
be an experience like that for Marcelle? Catherine didn't think so.
As a wife Marcelle would be good and obedient, and when he was
away for long hours she'd make graceful pieces of sculpture for the
house.
Catherine nodded, as though she had heard. "I must have lain too
long in the sun today; I'm a bit headachey. I think I'll leave soon,
but you don't have to. One of these couples will be only too happy
to give you a lift to town."
Too bad indeed, thought Catherine dully as she went into the
house for -her scarf.
There was much activity at the Villa Chaussy during the next few
days. The party was in the capable hands of Antoine, but though
his discreetness kept the details of preparation very much in the
background there were certain items which had to be attended to
more or less in public. The draping of coloured lanterns among the
trees, for instance, and the new floodlamps to replace the not-so-
new ones at the swimming pool. Old Brulard set his men to
summer pruning, so that stray branches would not catch the ladies'
skirts, and the lawns were shorn close and watered to give just the
right degree of thickness, though the old man murmured darkly
about spike heels and careless smokers.
Chandeliers in the large, rarely used salon sparkled from soap and
water, furniture gleamed more lustrously than ever and every day
new flower arrangements appeared on the dining table and on the
wall tables in the beautiful entrance hall. Catherine was asked her
opinion of these.
Catherine was also consulted about the guest rooms. They had sent
out sixty invitations which meant roughly a hundred and twenty
guests. Of these, several would come from Monte Carlo, others
from Cannes and Nice. Those from long distances would be
accommodated for the night in the guest suites, and Madame
Brulard had set the housemaids to work upstairs, airing and
polishing and making up the beds. Ten rooms, twenty beds, and a
divan in each private sitting-room in case it should be needed. That
meant there might be thirty staying overnight.
"I come back to find everyone talking of your party, Leon! They
are still recalling the magnificence of your house party at
Christmas. We had such good times then, you remember? And this
one will be memorable also. Myself, I am torn between this affair
and anticipation of the cruise." She helped herself to a spoonful of
curried lamb, chose chutney and grated coconut from the
condiment dish and went on, with an agreeable smile, "You have
seen the clothes Catherine chose last week? Chic, non? Marguerite
says she would rather dress your daughter-in-law than any other
woman in Nice, and Raoul is ecstatic about her colouring. I tell
you, Catherine, you are a lucky young woman. Tres fortunee!"
"I want to know nothing about it," said Leon. "They've called in
Catherine. That should be enough."
"Ah ... I had almost forgotten." Lucille turned her most charming
smile upon Leon. "I wonder if I could stay here that night? I have
promised to lend my car to a friend for a month - while we are
away on the cruise - and I said it would be available from
Wednesday. My friend finds she now has to leave Nice on
Tuesday. I will take a taxi here that evening ..."
"Thank you, cheri. But the party will end late and your cars may
be needed for others. A divan in a corner somewhere?"
"It's not only because of the cruise," he said. "It's time Catherine
met my friends properly ... and it's partly for you too, Lucille."
"For ... me?" For just a second it looked as if she wouldn't be able
to control the swift triumphant smile. She managed it, though.
"But how extraordinarily sweet of you, Leon! I am intensely
grateful."
But by now Leon had had more than enough of the subject. He ate
little, without speaking, and after they had had coffee he said he
hoped they wouldn't mind if he went to his study. He had to go
through a lot of papers which must be posted to London tomorrow.
After he had left them, Lucille lingered in the small salon. She
walked round touching the curios and running a finger over the
canvases on the walls. Catherine wished she would go; the very
sight of the long possessive hands gliding over rich old porcelain
and bronzes set her teeth on edge. But Lucille was enjoying
herself.
"They are worth much, these things, yet they are only a trifle of the
value of the house and its other contents. It has been Leon's
passion - the surrounding himself with rare and beautiful things."
She laughed softly. "That is why he wants to marry me - the most
beautiful woman he could find. It is also," with an amiable smile at
Catherine, "why he has come to like you, though you are not of the
type he most admires. Tell me," very casually, "has he offered you
a settlement?"
"How very stupid," Lucille said mildly. "And the little boy - is he
officially provided for, or simply the heir?"
"I've no idea. It may interest you to know that -Dr. Sellier told me
only the other day that Leon has an iron constitution."
"I know Leon. He has not the ways of other men, but I have come
to know them. He would not have told me that the party was partly
for me without a sound reason. And 1 can guess that reason."
Catherine was tired and rather upset. "I thought you'd decided he
would propose to you on the cruise. I must say that for a woman
who professes to be awfully sure of a man, you're a bit vague."
"It is here - do you know that? Here in this house. I have naturally
been interested in it, and this morning I telephoned my contact...
my friend at the jewellers. He said it had been delivered to Leon.
And he told me something more. My initials have been engraved
on the platinum setting of the clasp."
"I prefer not to face east; I have a horror of the sun in the early
morning." She paused and smiled. "Perhaps on the cruise you and I
will come to appreciate and understand each other. So long as you
do not become avaricious there will be plenty for both of us.
Adieu!"
The sound of Lucille's car had faded away before Catherine was
able to take the long breath her lungs needed. When she went
upstairs her knees were trembling and her vision blurred. For the
first time since coming to Pontrieux she felt utterly defeated.
CHAPTER NINE
After he was in bed, Catherine had her bath and dressed. Tonight
she had to wear one of the Nice models, and because Leon had
once said, "White suits you," she put on a white lace which had a
silver thread in it. It was the sort of dress you dream about when
you're young and romantic, and as Catherine examined its flowing
lines in the mirror she felt a pang of sadness; for just that moment
she would have given anything to be Catherine Harvey. Not any
younger, but,.. but just Catherine Harvey.
The next second she chided herself for disloyalty to Leon. She was
doing this for him, and for him she would be bright and gay and as
good-looking as she could make herself. As far as she was
concerned there was only one thing against her wearing white; it
made tier hair look alarmingly red. A plain row of pearls, or
nothing at all? Bare shoulders needed something at the throat; yes,
the pearls.
The double doors from the hall, which were usually closed with
one of the inlaid tables against them, were wide open, and the
chandeliers shed a brilliance over the long, grey- panelled room.
The chairs, gold and blue striped silk and green damask, were set
in fours round low tables all along the edges of the Aubusson
carpet, and extra chairs and stools lined the walls. Flowers and
trailing plants decorated the panelling, and between them hung
landscapes and a still life or two.
The magnet in the salon was the buffet, set against the far wall.
Catherine approached it almost fearfully, in case even her small
vibrations might jar something out of place. Heavens, what a
scene! The three-foot model of the Francette in the centre
background, and arranged below and in front of it a vastly
interesting and amusing collection of shapes in delicious foods.
Each was labelled in spidery script on a narrow card. The Leaning
Tower of Pisa, the Mont Chevalier tower at Cannes, the Chateau at
Antibes, the Palais Long- champs at Marseilles. There were many
of the intricate structures, and between them stood pairs of dressed
puppetlike figures made from sponge fingers and buns, pistachio
and cherries, almonds and olives and cocktail sticks. Each pair,
being French, represented a youth and a maid, sightseeing, and
small bubbles of laughter escaped from Catherine as she studied
them. They were cute and almost human; she wished Timothy
could see them.
Stretching away on each side of this lavish display were the dozens
of dishes of savouries of every imaginable kind, whole chickens
and hams, a glazed sucking pig flanked by ox-tongues, plates and
cutlery, napkins and finger-bowls. The bar had been set up in the
small salon, which opened into this one, and the big arched alcove
between the french windows was already furnished with the chairs,
piano and drums of the orchestra who had practised here
yesterday.
"You look fine," he said, "but that flight of fancy has a bilious look
to me. Thank God I only have to provide it, not to eat any of it.
Have you met the Baron?"
"They're upstairs. They got here an hour ago and the Baroness had
to change from the suit she'd travelled in from Monte Carlo.
Apparently she doesn't sit down in this thing she's wearing tonight.
She's going to get tired."
"Do you really like these parties? she asked him.
"They're simulated," she admitted, "but very good ones. I'd rather
keep them on."
"Suit yourself." He opened the door and waved her into the other
room. "Let's fortify ourselves. I'll mix you an ordinary gin and
vermouth, without frills. The boy sleeping all right?"
"You mentioned you were tired." She took her drink from him,
waited till he had lifted his own and raised her glass towards him.
"Here's to you."
He made no answer but let her sip first, before tasting his own
drink. After that she admired the bar which had been erected - or
rather wheeled in from some room where it was normally stored -
to hide the wall between the two windows. By now Catherine was
beyond being surprised at lavish party appointments, but her eyes
did widen at the array of its dishes of canaps and ice buckets and
other impedimenta of the barman's trade.
Lucille was not one of the first arrivals, after all. She had had to
wait for the Cadillac and share it with two others who were picked
up on the way back to the villa. But she was among the first
twenty, and by far the most eye-catching of them.
"Your English cousin," said Lucille, very sweetly. "You have done
your duty here, Catherine. Go with him and mingle."
"Why a suitcase?"
Like half the women here, Yvette wore black, but it was relieved
by a cerise sash which formed a stiff bow and streamers at the
back. Marcelle wore soft green in a style which reminded
Catherine that she was a sculptor; there was something faintly
Greek about it, but it suited her long neck and swathed hair-style.
Philippe, of course ,., Catherine didn't quite look at him, but she
knew exactly how he looked. Suave, smiling, well turned out, the
courteous Frenchman to the fingertips. He drank one whisky, took
a long time over it, and talked, from the edge of their group, to an
older man who had driven in from Villefranche.
The drift towards the buffet began, the exclamations and chatter, a
call for the chef. He arrived in his tall white hat, a grey little man
who accepted their toast as he had no doubt been accepting toasts
for thirty years, with smiles and nods. He disappeared, and
Antoine and his regiment of waiters were in charge. The orchestra
had been playing for some time, but it was only now that Catherine
noticed it. They had chosen popular light classics for this part of
the evening, and though they were hardly listened to, the scene
would not have been complete without them.
She ran upstairs and looked in on Timothy. It was quiet and cool in
his room, and she knew an odd sense of detachment from the
revelry downstairs, though with the detachment there was a
loneliness that she knew could become acute. In her own room she
mended her make-up. She was halfway towards the head of the
stairs when Lucille appeared.
Catherine led the way, opened a door and switched on the light,
"Your case is in there already. It's the usual single guest-room,"
she said. "And I told Madame Brulard not to put an extra bed in
the room. It faces south."
"Thank you." She paused on the threshold of the room, smiled
commiseratingly. "You must not feel neglected, my dear. I am sure
your cousin would prefer your company to Yvette Sellier's. Go
down and assert yourself."
The smile did not change. "Almost everything," came the studied
reply. "And you? You have travelled a long way from the
kindergarten teacher, non? If I were you I would not test my luck
too severely."
"Perfectly sure."
He let half a minute elapse before saying, coolly, ""Eh, bien, I will
tell you some news. Last night your cousin came to have dinner
with us. There were others there, but he was Yvette's guest. When
all had gone I spoke with Yvette. At first she was flippant, but
soon she said she found Manning attractive. In her own words, he
was like Armand grown up with the added attraction of a
somewhat droll sense of humour. Armand, you may remember,
was her fianc."
Catherine tried to absorb this, but it wasn't easy. At last she said,
"They'll work it out, I suppose. I wouldn't want Yvette to hurt him.
I don't think he's ever had a really serious love affair."
There was a brief silence before he said, "I guessed you must have
refused to marry him, but I was still uncertain when I grew angry
with you at my house the other night."
"Please don't let's have any sort of scene tonight," she said at once,
not very steadily. "In different ways you've made your point many
times. From now on ... please ... no mention of anything personal.
You're Leon's friend and Timothy's doctor. Tonight, you're a guest
here, with Marcelle, and I happen to be playing hostess."
He stopped and looked at her. His tones were slightly harsh but
accompanied by a smile that looked formidable in the half-
darkness. "We are not friends, you and I? How long is this? Since
that evening when you tried to escape unnoticed from my house
and fell to the landing? You feel I know too much about you... that
as a doctor I would, at that moment, have become aware of your
needs and desires"
To the left of them came the swift glare of floodlights over the
pool. It stopped him. He took a few breaths and said, in a different
voice, "Let us walk to the pool and back to the house. I left
Marcelle with an old friend of mine, but I am afraid she will tire of
him."
"They are preparing the floor for dancing," said Yvette. "If I can
make this cousin of yours dance properly I will die happy!"
"He was with this connoisseur from the Musee des Beaux Arts.
Poor Marcelle had to listen while Philippe took you for your
walk." Yvette smiled and shrugged. "That is one reason why
Marcelle will never be a true sculptor. She is bored by the other
arts!"
Hugh put in, "It's just as well. It must be hell to marry an artist."
The orchestra struck up then, and the three of them moved back
towards the open french windows of the salon. Catherine told the
other two to go ahead and dance, and she herself went in search of
Leon. But he was missing, and eventually she had to dance with
Marcelle and with the tight- robed Baroness; she saw him go out
with Marcelle, no doubt towards the pool.
The dancing continued, but one by one the couples dropped away,
till only a few were left. Hugh had not worn too badly, and
Catherine had noticed a decided improvement in his way of
holding his partner; he didn't clutch as though he might lose her,
but controlled her more with his wrist, which was all to the good in
hot weather.
"He and Madame d'Esperez with others went out some time ago."
"I think you'd better tell the orchestra to take a breather, then the
rest of the dancers will go out."
She nodded, and went out into the bright night. Alone, she took
one of the side paths to the pool. There, the people seated along the
marble verges looked crowded and rather garish in the merciless
light of the floodlamps. Leon was sitting with his group at the end
of the pool, and he must have been watching for Catherine, for he
stood up and said clearly,
She wondered if he'd drunk a little more than usual, but when she
reached him she could tell he hadn't. He had merely set his mind to
something and meant the guests to know it. Lucille's smile was
like the smile of a devil; set, fiendishly contented - a waiting,
watching smile.
"I agree with you," Leon said. "But when she came here several
weeks ago it wasn't Catherine I wanted, only her son. And now,
my friends, the laugh is on me."
"Hear that?" Leon asked his audience. "That's the way she speaks
to me, and believe it or not that's the way I like to be spoken to, by
man or woman. No pretence, no buttering, no eye to the future -
just plain, honest words that mean exactly what they say. She's
hating every minute of this, but she's darned well got to listen, just
as you have to listen because you're my guests!" More laughter.
Leon let it fade right away before he went on, "I'm not a
sentimentalist; I don't have to tell you that. I like facts ... so I'll
stick to facts, now. Before Catherine came here I'd expected some
flibbertigibbet who had her eye on my possessions. Mind you, she
sent some snorting letters to my lawyer - he hasn't recovered from
them yet, have you, Henri?" A little man nearby squirmed and
smiled. "Anyway, I was ready for anything- she might try on, and I
told her so, within ten minutes of her arrival here."
His large hand was heavy on her naked Shoulder. She could have
ducked away and fled, but dimly she realised this public
laundering of old linen was something Leon had to do. Those faces
out there, the strained necks, the dummylike smiles in the
unfriendly light. The only way to get through it was to bend her
head and not listen too intently. If only he would get it over!
His other hand patted the shoulder nearest him. "There's not much
more I have to say - you can see that. She's here, I'm proud of her -
in fact I hope you'll forgive me for saying that she's the loveliest
woman here tonight." He didn't let the cheers grow. "I want this
evening to be an occasion she'll remember - her introduction to all
you people who are my friends and colleagues. And as a sort of
material memento of the occasion..."
It was then that Catherine felt the chill of apprehension grow into
icy conviction. His voice seemed to recede and but for his hold she
would have swayed. But by the time his hand did leave her
shoulder she was tense and expectant. She felt the pearls slip away
from her throat, the sudden cold of something taking their place
and being clasped at the back of her neck.
She lifted her head swiftly, her fingertips touched the diamonds
and sprang away from them.
She turned blindly towards the chair someone had set for her, and
in the turning saw Lucille's face, a dead, smiling mask. She sank
down and somehow kept her head lifted, her hands in her lap. The
diamonds felt like a necklace of lead-shot; she didn't even know
what they looked like.
Leon took a glass from a waiter, tossed down the contents neat, in
one gulp. Talk and laughter grew from a murmur to its normal roar
and a loudspeaker relayed music from the record-player in the
patio. The party was back on its own legs, with an hour or two to
go. Catherine wondered how she would endure it. People kept
shaking her hand for some reason; Hugh and Yvette laughed and
she said she was lucky, and passed on. Then there was Philippe.
Leon said, "I wanted a word with you, Philippe. Will you come as
soon as you've finished at the hospital in the morning?"
"Of course."
He was gone, out of the circle of light and along a path towards
where his car was parked privately, for a quick departure.
She stood with Leon to say good night and receive thanks, did the
polite thing by those who were remaining in the house and at last
said a distant good night to Leon. She had begun to mount the
staircase when his voice behind her said:
"Come back here, Catherine!"
Without even pausing, she shook her head and went on. At the top
of the staircase she unfastened the necklace with quivering fingers,
went into his room and, in the darkness, dropped the handful of
diamonds on to the top of his dressing chest. She came out, looked
into Timothy's room, then closed herself in her own bedroom.
And then she was alone with her thoughts. Lucille, so thoroughly
humiliated that she had had to creep away to her bed. The woman
was greedy, self-assured, vain and dishonest, and perhaps she
deserved that terrible snub of Leon's at the pool. "The loveliest
woman here tonight..." Catherine's flesh crept. It had been so ... so
rehearsed. He'd known exactly what he was going to say.
But Lucille ... and the diamonds which were to have been hers.
He'd meant them for her all right, but somehow he must have
discovered something that had roused him to a fury of contempt,
and he'd taken it out on Lucille. Perhaps Michael had been unwise
enough to query those accounts. It didn't matter how Leon had
found out. The fact was that he knew.
Leon didn't like anyone. He had wanted Lucille for her looks and
the cachet of possessing such a woman, but in the background
there must always have been a cynical knowledge that she would
marry him for his money. He didn't realise that Lucille was all he
deserved.
Catherine pressed her face into her pillow. Her lips moved,
"Philippe," she whispered. "Philippe!"
CHAPTER TEN
THE house was late stirring next morning. At nine, coffee and
croissants were served in the bedrooms, and half an hour later two
or three of the men ventured downstairs, looking as though
convinced the floors were hinged. The happiest member of the
household was Timothy, who found much interest in the fact that
the Villa Chaussy suddenly held a large number of odd-looking
inmates, most of whom jumped alarmingly and held their heads
when he ran along a passage indoors or rang his bicycle bell in the
garden.
Catherine had never felt so slack in her life, nor so hopeless. She
was relieved to see that the hall was back to normal, the doors of
the large salon closed and the half-moon table firmly against them
with an urn of flowers to add weight to its authority. The servants
had also cleaned up the patio and old Brulard's assistants were
doing their best with the lawns. Leon, she guessed, would remain
upstairs till lunch-time, when all traces of last night's function were
likely to have been obliterated. He would have lunch with the
guests, and they would gradually thin out, towards Monte Carlo,
Cannes and elsewhere.
She wondered what was expected of her. Not much, before mid-
morning refreshment, surely. She would have liked to bathe in the
sea, but from the beach one always returned sandy and ruffled, and
these people would probably take untidiness in a hostess as an
insult. In any case, bathing was too much trouble. For the present,
she would sit in the shade and watch Timothy cutting figure eights
round the magnolias. He handled the little bike as if it were part of
him.
Philippe arrived, bowed to her across the patio and went into the
house. She felt the familiar ache, and ignored it. She ought to go
for a walk, or set herself to the task of enlivening the morning for
the old Baron and his svelte Baron- ness, who were sitting mutely
under the tree over there. But it was much effort to move.
Then, without haste, Lucille came out of the house. Strangely, she
looked no different from usual as she called, in French, "Brulard,
ask the chauffeur to bring a car to the drive!" The old man
delegated the task to an underling. A maid had come out, carrying
Lucille's case, and she was told to wait there till the car arrived,
and see that the case was securely placed in the luggage
compartment.
"I have to say goodbye to my friends," Lucille said, and she turned
towards the garden at a leisurely pace.
"Lucille..."
But the other had passed on, and Catherine hadn't the energy or the
inclination to pursue her. The thing was done, and Lucille, perhaps
after a night of torment, was. haughtily resigned.
The other woman crossed the grass to speak to the Baroness, there
was a small ceremonial leave-taking and then Lucille looked
about, saw someone else and angled towards them, disappearing
down one of the paths. Catherine sat down again and closed her
eyes. She was deathly tired of all these people who reminded her
of the party, but she supposed she ought to wait here and make
some show of waving Lucille away from the premises. It was
Leon's job, but he was taking good care to stay clear of it. Some
time he would ask whether Madame d'Esperez had left, and an
affirmative reply would be the signal for him to think about
coming down to join his house guests.
Catherine didn't want to face him; she didn't want to face anyone.
She hardly even wondered what they were talking about up in the
bedroom, Leon and Philippe. They had found things to talk about
long before she had known either of them. It was a strange
friendship, but a solid one. Those two - so different, yet how could
they hurt. No use thinking about them, though .-,, not yet.
It was going to be very hot today. Hardly any breeze and a sun that
beat down relentlessly through a thin haze. Even in the shade the
air was narcotic and devitalising. It would be cooler on the sea, but
could she face the cruise now? The very thought of it made her
shiver; yet Timothy, against all her expectations, was looking
forward to it. He'd met the little boy who was to be his companion,
and strangely, for both were only children, they had taken to each
other. For his sake, she might have to endure three weeks of party
spirit, of false gaiety and unavoidable propinquity with Leon and
his friends. At first it had been for Leon's sake; now it was for
Timothy's. It seemed a long, long time since she had done anything
just to please herself.
She heard the voice which could always quicken her pulses, and
opened her eyes. He was talking to an old man, talking soothingly
in his own tongue. Catherine caught a word here and there and
gathered that the old one was a little worried about a crick in his
back which seemed to have settled there for good. Catherine didn't
catch what Philippe said because his back was towards her, but she
saw a smile dawn upon the older man's features and the slow
nodding of his head. That bedside manner, she thought a little
bitterly; reassuring and friendly for the men, and for the women
cheering and charming, with a layer of ice between the cheer and
the charm.
She heard a distant scream; then another, not so distant. Suddenly,
several things happened at once. A gardener shouting and
gesticulating, Philippe sprinting towards the increasing noises and
the hurrying of guests after him. After a moment of paralysis
Catherine swiftly scanned the view. Timothy!
In one leap her heart had reached her throat and was pounding
there with choking force. She was running faster than she had ever
run before, thrusting people aside, almost knocking Lucille flat;
Lucille, she spared a split second to notice, was the only one
coming away from the scene. All the rest were hurrying towards
the swimming pool. They were streaming over the grass, urged on
by Brulard's cohort. And Brulard himself was shouting at her:
And there was the pool, pink and white blossoms agitating all over
its surface, and Philippe, lifting the child high with one arm and
striking out for the side, where a dozen hands were already
outstretched to seize his burden. She staggered sickeningly and ran
on, would have plunged straight into the water if they hadn't
caught her fast and held her back.
There was Timothy's small pale face, white and dead- looking, his
hair grotesquely plastered to his brow. She wrenched from
someone's grasp, slid down on to the marble and reached to
receive him. He was heavy and lifeless, and frantically she beat off
hands that tried to take him. But she relinquished him to Philippe,
and hazily she heard him say:
"Let her lie still. I have to work on the child. You can help, Leon,
by sending your guests back to the house."
She couldn't watch. Flat on her face, tight fists pressing against her
temples, she tried not even to listen. Her mind was a chaos of
incoherent prayers. And then she could bear it no longer, and
turned on her side.
Timothy's shirt had been stripped off and Philippe's hands were
working over the small honey-coloured bade. A tight muscle in his
jaw caused a faint hollow under his cheekbone and there was a
fanatical determination in the compression of his mouth, the
thinning of his nostrils. He turned the child on to his back and at
once began a light massage at the base of the ribs.
She tried to sit up, but a hand pressed her back and Philippe said,
almost lightly, "His lungs sound stronger for the wash, no? He will
be all right now. The maid can take care of him."
But it was Leon who carried the little boy to the house. Leon,
gaunt and grey and wordless, with Louise bobbing at his side and
holding on to Timothy's feet as if no part of him must be left
unsupported.
Catherine did not at once struggle to rise; she was too spent. She
hadn't wept, but now her eyes filled as she looked at Philippe. He
wasn't Philippe as she knew him; he was white and tousled, his
eyes very dark as he leaned over her. With an almost unconscious
movement he had put a hand to his top pocket for his
handkerchief, but he drew it back with a small shrug. He had
thrown off his jacket and the shirt was pasted, half dry, to his
body.
So, with a fingertip, he wiped a tear from under each of her eyes.
Then his hand slipped under her head and he bent and kissed her,
gently, on the mouth.
"You have had a great shock," he said, "and you must rest in your
room. My case is in my car -1 will leave a sedative for the child,
but for you, I think, the English remedy will be sufficient. Strong
sweet tea."
He had pulled on his shoes, pushed his arms into his jacket, and
was helping her to her feet. A combination of heaven and hell, she
thought dazedly as she moved with him. Philippe's arm about her,
but it wouldn't be there if Timothy hadn't almost drowned. And the
kiss? Did he know he had kissed her? Or had he felt he was kissing
a terrified child?
"Someone else would have saved him; the garden was full of
people."
"But you were on the spot to treat him. If you hadn't been"
"You are torturing yourself uselessly. When he has slept there will
be nothing wrong with the child. The pool must be emptied,
cleaned and refilled, the bicycle dried and polished. He must have
the same bicycle, and find it where it is usually kept. I will tell
Brulard."
They had reached the patio where several guests were talking
concernedly in a group. A man came forward.
She nodded weakly. "Thank you, Philippe. Thank you ... with all
my heart."
Catherine didn't need the maid's help. She felt peculiar, but the
weakness had passed. She told the maid she would like some tea
and went upstairs alone, to Timothy's room.
She took a tablet and the glass from him. And it was only then that
she became aware that Leon had been standing at the foot of the
bed all the time. He came to the other side of the bed, leaned over
and lifted Timothy into a sitting position, so that Catherine could
pop the tablet into the small mouth and place the glass to
Timothy's lips. Then he lowered the small body and pulled the
sheet back into position.
"He won't need more than the one tablet," she said. "We'd better
leave him alone now."
Louise, who had been hovering, whispered urgently, "I will come
in every ten minutes, madame. Monsieur le Docteur ..."
"That dress is wet - you'd better get it off. I'll wait for you through
here."
He went through the archway into the adjoining sitting- room and
took a chair that faced the balcony. Catherine slipped out of the
dress and put on a blue silk wrap. A maid brought tea.
"A tray for two, madame," she said. "Monsieur le Docteur said that
Monsieur Verender also needed a stimulant, and I must tell him to
drink tea here with you. They were his words, madame."
Catherine carried the tray through herself and set it down on a low
table close to Leon's chair. He was pulling up a chair for her, on
the other side of the table but also facing the trees and blue sky.
"I don't need treatment for shock," he said. "Not now. But I'll have
a cup with lemon." He was silent while she poured, took his cup
and set it down. "You and I have got to have a talk."
"Nor do I. But there are things we have to say, just once, I believe
in getting past the unpleasant things as soon as one can. What do
you suppose happened out there this morning?"
"I really don't know. Timothy never goes near the edge of the pool
- he's too scared. All he does down there is to cycle near the curved
edges of the marble, near the grass - the curves are no nearer than
fifteen feet to the edge of the pool itself. But he never does even
that unless I'm there. I've told him he must never go near the pool
alone, but perhaps this morning he felt there were lots of people
about, and that somehow made it safe."
Leon shook his head. "No, that wasn't it. You heard him mention
Lucille."
"Oh, yes, Lucille." A chill ran along Catherine's spine. "I met her
as I ran down to the pool. She was ,., coming away, I believe I
thought it peculiar - if I thought at all." She drank tea in quick sips.
"Did ... did Lucille have something to do with it?"
He pushed a hand across his eyes. "They met on a path that leads
to the pool. Lucille talked to him for a moment, and then they went
together down towards the pool. They were quite close to it when
She gave the bicycle a shove. She didn't touch the boy, only the
back of the saddle. He bounced over the grass, wobbling
alarmingly - that was probably what made him forget to jam on the
brakes until the last moment, when it was too late."
Her hands were so unsteady that she had to put down the cup.
"How do you know all this?"
Catherine was ashen. "I can't believe it. She might have ...killed
him."
He shook his head tiredly. "I suppose she's capable of it, but she
did know that the boy's shriek would draw attention and that
Philippe was here. At best, she hoped to hurt me badly - and you,
of course. If it hadn't been for the boy you wouldn't have come
here. As a matter of fact, it's a logical sort of sequel to what
happened last night - to anyone who knows Lucille."
"You mean... the necklace?"
"Yes, the necklace." He leaned an elbow on his knee and stared out
at the shining emerald frond of a palm. "Who told you I was
having a necklace made - Dean?"
"Maybe you're right. I won't go into too many details, but I found
out she'd been getting a commission on orders I'd placed with a
certain large store in Nice. She'd recommended this store to me
and apparently had the arrangement with the manager. I was
shaken, I can tell you, and immediately made enquiries about other
things that looked suspicious. Perhaps you can imagine how I felt
when I discovered she was actually living on credit at her hotel,
because it was common knowledge among the staff there that she
was going to marry me."
"Yes, we do." The belligerent note was back in his voice. "And
you needn't have slung it back at me, whatever you thought! I had
that thing specially made for you, and you're darned well going to
accept it. Make it an heirloom if you like - pass it on to your .,. oh,
what's the use of talking to a woman who has to have reasons for
everything? It's yours!"
"That's where you're wrong. I had a big party in mind for you, and
the necklace as a gift. When I first spoke to the jeweller he
mentioned Madame d'Esperez, and I knew at once that anything I
bought would be the subject of a telephone conversation the
moment I'd left the shop. So I thought I'd get back at her a bit - let
them think the necklace was for Lucille, so that they could give her
the exciting news when my back was turned. Then she'd have a
shock in store. She deserved it, and she had it."
Catherine hated the subject, but she felt compelled to say, "Lucille
told me the necklace was for her - that you'd had her initials put on
the clasp."
"She did, did she? If you hadn't been in such a blazing hurry to get
rid of it last night you'd have seen that Lucille's initials are
missing. There's one word on that clasp - Catherine, in tiny script."
"Then how did she...?"
"Thanks."
"Though, mind you, if that boy had been able to swim we wouldn't
all have been on the point of collapse an hour ago. That's one thing
I'm going to insist on right away - swimming lessons every day till
he's as slick in the water as he is on the bike. And another thing.,."
This time his smile was unmistakable, but he kept his eyes
narrowed under the thick brows. "You thought I'd gone soft, didn't
you? You saw me panting and gibbering down there at the pool
and thought you'd got me where you want me at last! Well, you
haven't. I heard this morning that you're not at all keen to go on the
cruise. Never mind who told me. You needn't go. I'll take Tim and
the maid, Louise. He'll have a young companion."
"He's much too young himself to go off on a cruise like that
without me."
"That's What you think. We'll try it and see. We stop nearly every
day at some port or other, and if he wants you you can drive down
and come aboard. If you insist, I'll telephone you each day."
"All right, I'll leave you." He stood up at once. "I'll be glad to get
rid of that bunch downstairs straight after lunch. I've forgotten
what it's like here when it's peaceful."
She said quickly, "I hate harking back, but you're not aiming to do
anything about Lucille, are you?"
"It's my guess she's already taken steps herself. Her next stop will
be a long way up the coast. She's best forgotten."
"I agree. Thank you for having tea with me, Leon."
"You lie down for a couple of hours. I'll tell them you're not fit to
go down for lunch.''
"I felt a bit groggy a while ago, but now I feel better than I've felt
for years." He was at the door when he added, "You know all that
guff I put over about you last night?"
"Yes?"
Feeling empty and tremulous, she let her head slip right back, and
she dozed. She was half aware of the maid who took away the tray,
half aware of the brilliant noonday sun, and of its sliding towards
the west.
She roused herself at last, saw that it was nearly one and hurried
into Timothy's room. Pink-cheeked, his hair rough and curly on the
pillow, he was blandly asleep. Louise sat in the balcony, sewing,
and birds were trilling outside and winging across the
Mediterranean blue of the sky.
"Ah, you are up," he said, quite smoothly. "I have just been in to
see the child."
"So have I." Her voice sounded strained, "He's all right, isn't he?"
"Fine. We will waken him at about four, but keep him in bed until
tomorrow." He appraised her, "You look better. Did you sleep?"
"A little."
He pushed his hands into his pockets and walked to the window, "I
believe you spoke with Leon."
"Partly."
"It was what he and I spoke of this morning. He said it had made
him ,., what he called edgy, for several days, but he was
determined on it. He had mentioned it to no one, and felt he must
now deal with Lucille frankly. He had intended to see her before
she left this morning."
There was a short silence, and now the birds beyond the window
seemed to mock. He was still half turned towards the window
when he said, "Yvette was most concerned about you - she wished
to come here with me. I dissuaded her, and she sent you her love
and says she hopes to see you soon."
"Thank you."
He turned to face her across the room. With the strong light behind
him his expression was not too clear, but what She saw of it
caused a swift, stabbing sensation at her heart, a choking fullness
in her throat. She made a tiny, almost imperceptible gesture, but it
was enough.
He crossed to her in a couple of strides and took her into his arms.
For perhaps ten seconds she kept her hands locked inside the girdle
of her wrap, hardly daring to breathe or think. Then she freed her
fingers and curved her arms about his neck. Their mouths found
each other and clung with hungry intensity, till at last his lips
moved to her cheek and down to the curve of her neck.
"I do love you, Philippe ... terribly. I've felt dreadful since you
kissed me this morning."
"I know," in quivering tones, "but I was afraid you were only
comforting me. I so much wanted to believe it was more than that.
Philippe, I wish you'd told me before. I've needed it, and you were
so cold. And there was Marcelle."
"Yvette! I think we shall have to marry her to your cousin and send
her away with him to Hong Kong; it would be good medicine for
them both. Yvette is improved, but a nuisance!"
"Well, I did feel that Marcelle was more right for you than I. She's
French."
For an endless minute she wished she could recall those words.
His hand dropped from her shoulder and he moved slightly away.
A breeze lifted the curtain and sent a breath of garden perfume into
the room.
"I will remind you again! That was when I knew that you had
learned only a trifle about love between a man and a woman; when
I knew that no one else could give you what I can give, because no
one else had ever loved you so much."
"I'm very glad," she said shakily, "You did resent Timothy a bit."
"It seems I'm going to have trouble with you too. But you don't
know how much I'm looking forward to it."
"Perhaps, but he said little." His smile teased as he added, "I think
Leon will approve of this marriage; he will not want to lose you
now, and I am sure he will enjoy being grandfather a second time.
You must be prepared for that!"
A little pink, she said, "I want it, Philippe, more than anything in
the world."
The final words were said close to her hair, and it was a very long
time before habit dragged him back to look at his watch.
For a few seconds after he had gone she stood staring at the door
in ecstatic surprise. Yet the action was like Philippe. ... Just like
him. She slipped into a blue and white figured dress, made up her
face and ran a comb over her hair. Then, feeling as though the
whole world had been created anew just for the two of them, she
joined Philippe.