Read HIGH TIDE AT MIDNIGHT Online
Authors: Sara Craven,Mineko Yamada
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
'Going out, then? That's right. If you're anywhere up near Jacky Herrick's
you could bring me back a dozen eggs and tell Jacky I'll see him for the
money.'
Outside the house, Morwenna stood irresolute for a moment or two,
wondering which way to go. But the lure of the sea was irresistible and
eventually she turned up the track which led away from the house towards
the cliffs.
The wind was fresher and stronger up on the exposed headland, dragging at
her hair and whipping it across her face. She raked it back with impatient
fingers and looked about her. The tide was at its height, sucking and roaring
at the cliff-face below her and sending up damp fingers of spray which
seemed to hang in the sunlight. Away to her right, she saw the deep gracious
curve of the bay with the huddle of roofs that was Port Vennor almost at its
centre. A few feet ahead of the spot where she stood, the ground fell away
almost sheer into Spanish Cove where generations ago Trevennon men had
scrabbled after the wreckage of a proud galleon driven on to its rocks by the
storms that had scattered the Armada fleet. Its beach could be reached by
means of steep and precarious steps cut into the face of the cliff, but few
people ever went there now, Nick had told, her. Instead it had become a
haunt for seals who used it in the early autumn as a breeding ground.
Morwenna's eyes keenly scanned the tumbling waves and foam-capped
rocks, but she could see no sign of sleek, grey bodies, somewhat to her
disappointment. The seals would be back, she knew, to moult early in the
new year, but would she still be at Trevennon to see them? It seemed
unlikely.
She began to walk along the edge of the cliff, skirting the massive granite
boulders with which it was Uttered and keeping a wary eye open for old
mine workings. Although she had spent most of her life living in the
country, she felt an alien in this wild, desolate-looking world. There was an
untamed, brooding quality about the landscape that disturbed and
exhilarated her.
She found a convenient rock, at last large enough to give her shelter from the
ubiquitous wind and with a shelf which she could perch on. She sketched in
the contour of the bay with clean swift strokes and merely suggested the
houses and breakwater at Port Vennor. An inquisitive gull came and perched
on the rock beside her, but it soon flew away when there were no titbits
forthcoming. Morwenna wriggled her shoulders inside her sheepskin jacket.
It wasn't ideal weather for sketching out of doors. The wind seized at her
sketchbook pages as if it was trying to tear them and there was no real
power'in the winter sun. The year was running down, she thought. It had
been a melancholy time for her and she was glad to see it go. But the
prospect held out by the coming months did not seem any too bright in
comparison. Moodily, she added some shading to a rock in the foreground of
her drawing. Would she still be here at Trevennon, taking refuge in the past
lives of other-people, living the life of a semi-recluse, ignored by one part of
the household altogether?
With a sudden burst of irritability, she snatched the page out of her
sketchbook, crumpled it up and let the wind take it, whirling out of sight
over the cliff. If only things could be wiped out as speedily and completely,
she thought wryly as she got to her feet. She thrust her pencils into her
pocket and tucked her book under her arm. She felt chilled and out of sorts.
The virtue had gone out of the morning for her. She might as well find her
way to Herricks' farm, collect the eggs that Inez wanted and get back to the
house.
She wasn't completely sure how to get to the farm, but guessed she would
have to walk up to the main road first. She was about halfway up the lane she
had trudged down that first stormy night when she heard the sound of a car
engine behind her and a horn tooting a warning. Deliberately, she did not
look round. She was keeping close to the hedge, not blocking the road at all,
and the unknown motorist had plenty of room to pass, she told herself, trying
to regain some control over suddenly hammering pulses.
But when the car drew level with her, its horn tooting again rather
plaintively, she saw with an odd feeling of deflation that it was Mark's Mini.
'Hullo.' He leaned across and opened the passenger door. 'Have you been
given time off for good conduct? Hop in and I'll give you a lift.'
After a brief hesitation she complied. 'I'm only going to Herricks' farm to
collect some eggs for Inez,' she told him as she settled herself in the seat.
'Is that all?' He sounded unimpressed. 'I'll drop you there."
There was still a slight awkwardness between them, but she thought she was
probably as much to blame for this as he was. Whenever she encountered
either of the Trevennon brothers, her guard rose instinctively.
'How's the great history going?' Mark asked lightly after a few minutes.
'Slowly,' she admitted. 'There's a lot of sorting out to do."
He sighed and pursed his lips. 'That's not so good.'
She gave him a long level look. 'Why? Because it will mean my remaining at
the house for longer than your brother thought?'
'Good God, no.' Mark's eyebrows shot up. 'You are touchy, aren't you? No,
my anxieties are purely for Nick's sake. He's been a very sick man—you
know that, don't you? We tried to keep from him how strong the possibility
of another stroke was, but I think he guesses. At first, he used to try and push
himself to get better. At least now he seems to take each day as it comes.' He
gave her an uncomfortable glance. 'If you can help in that, I don't need to say
we would be very grateful.'
'We?' She gave a brittle little smile.
He sighed rather wearily. 'Yes—even Dom. One of the main objections to
your arrival in the first place was that he thought it would upset Nick and
perhaps precipitate another attack. Now, of course, he knows differently.'
'But it hasn't altered his attitude one iota,' she said.
Mark sighed again. 'Have a heart! Did you really think the prejudices of a
lifetime were going to be swept away in a few hours or even days? Don't
forget that all the main burden of our financial struggles in recent years has
fallen on Dominic.'
'And these in turn are blamed exclusively on my family,' Morwenna said
coldly. 'I haven't forgotten.'
The road to Port Vennor wound along the edge of the coast, affording
frequent glimpses of the sea and occasional views of rubble and fallen
chimneys where former mine- workings had stood.
'The Trevenonns mined tin once upon a time,' Mark commented at her side.
'Made a lot of money from it too. But it didn't last, of course. I reckon we
probably made more out of smuggling and such ventures than we ever did
out of our respectable business endeavours. The boatyard is a case in point."
He hesitated. 'But perhaps the tide is going to turn for us at last, even there.'
Morwenna longed to ask him what he meant, but she knew that under the
circumstances this was quite impossible.
He brought the car to rest at the side of the road. 'Her-ricks' place is down
there. Just follow the track down. And there's a short cut back if you don't
want to go round by road—ask Molly Herrick to show you.'
Morwenna found the farmhouse without difficulty, and the negotiations
over the eggs were accomplished without delay. Mrs Herrick was friendly,
but with an obvious penchant for gossip, and when her questions about
Morwenna's unexpected presence at Trevennon became too pointed,
Morwenna made an excuse that Inez was needing the eggs and said a hasty
goodbye.
Following the directions Mrs Herrick had given her, she walked across a
field, avoiding the more obvious patches of mud, then went through a gate
into a copse of trees. On the other side of the copse, she had been assured,
she would find the yard at the back of Trevennon.
When she emerged from the trees, she was confronted by the high wall at the
back of the house. The catch on the tall white gate was stiff, and the creaking
of the hinges as she pushed it open indicated how little it was used. She
turned to push it shut, and as she did so she heard the dogs barking excitedly
quite close at hand. Her heart sank. This was something she hadn't bargained
for. She had not seen them since that first day and Inez had assured her that
they were usually kept outside. Clutching the boxes of eggs awkwardly
against her chest, she managed to latch the gate securely. There were a
number of outbuildings all around the yard, including a former barn and a
disused stable block, so Morwenna began to pick her way cautiously round
the edge of the yard, keeping a wary eye open for the dogs. All was silent for
a moment or two, then suddenly the barking broke out again with renewed
frenzy and coming in the direction of the yard.
Forgetting everything she had ever been told about standing her ground,
Morwenna fled into the nearest shelter. This was where Zack kept his
gardening tools and other implements, and she picked her way hurriedly
between forks and rakes and a rusty-looking lawnmower, seeking a dark
corner. There was a ladder leaning rather precariously against one wall and
when she glanced up she saw that it led to some kind of loft. Still clutching
the eggs against her, she scrambled uneasily up the rungs and swung herself
into the loft. It smelled musty and unpleasant, and there were vague rustlings
that Morwenna decided it might be better to pretend she had not heard. She
peered cautiously down, just as one of the dogs reached the bottom of the
ladder and began to jump up and down barking uproariously.
Morwenna sat down on the dusty floor, carefully depositing the eggs beside
her, and considered her predicament. She felt incredibly foolish. She liked
dogs, for heaven's sake, and "they had always liked her. She was just letting
this terrible unwelcoming atmosphere at Trevennon get to her. After all,
even Dominic Trevennon was unlikely to have trained his dogs to actually
bite her. She giggled weakly at the thought, and glanced down over the edge
of the loft, only to be greeted by renewed and even more furious barking and
growls. Both dogs were there now. Having cornered their quarry, they were
now apparently prepared to wait for as long as it took.
Morwenna groaned inwardly. The obvious course was to climb back down
the ladder and risk being bitten, but she didn't like the way they kept jumping
at the ladder and shaking it. And the floor below her was far too littered with
prongs and sharp edges for her to risk any kind of fall.
The best she could do would be to sit out her vigil and hope it would not be
too long before she was missed.
She shifted herself into a more comfortable position on the hard wooden
floor and looked at her watch. Her mouth felt parched, but there was still a
good hour and a half to go before lunchtime which was the first time that any
enquiries as to her whereabouts would be made. And even then no one
would have any idea where to look unless curiosity led them to find out why
the dogs were making such a row.
And of course, out of sheer contrariness, they had gone quiet. She peeped
out again and Whisky leaped up at the ladder, snarling. Well, not all that
quiet.
'Stupid animals,' she muttered crossly, and paused listening intently as she
caught the sound of footsteps approaching over the cobbles outside. Her
heart lifted. Ideally, it would be Inez, but she could even tolerate Zack's
undoubted malicious enjoyment of her plight just as long as she got out of
this loft before the horrors that she was sharing it with actually manifested
themselves.
The dogs had heard the approach too and were off like greyhounds with
eager whines. But they'd be back if the new arrival was simply passing
through the yard on the way elsewhere.
'I say,' she shouted, 'can you hang on to those dogs while I get down from
here?'
There was a silence, then she heard the footsteps gingerly picking their way
across the floor below with the dogs snuffling excitedly in attendance. She
peered over the edge and her eyes met Dominic Trevennon's.
Her lips moved but no sound came out as her brain searched feverishly for
some totally reasonable explanation for her presence in a disused loft at the
top of a rickety ladder when his question came as it inevitably would. And
did.
'What the hell are you doing up there?'
'Escaping from your damned dogs!' Morwenna glared down at him, silently
daring him to be amused. One glimmer of a smile, one twitch of the lips and