Read HIGH TIDE AT MIDNIGHT Online
Authors: Sara Craven,Mineko Yamada
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
'Right,' he said. 'And it might not be the only thing.' He winked at her and
went off whistling.
Dinner that evening was not the easiest of meals, although Karen was
exerting herself to be charming. She had even managed to smile her
agreement and murmur something complimentary when Nick had bestowed
lavish praise on Morwenna's efforts with the Christmas tree. Dominic had
merely slanted a sardonic glance at it and made no comment at all.
Nor did he make any remark when Mark announced at the end of the meal
that he was taking Morwenna for a drive.
'Mind how you go,' Nick bade him sharply. 'The roads are icy, according to
the weather forecast.'
'Oh, I'll take care,' Mark smiled easily. 'After all, why take risks just when
I've so much to live for?'
The silence which greeted the laughing remark was suddenly electric and
Morwenna felt her face flush as she rose hurriedly to her feet, murmuring
that she would get her coat. Everyone round the table naturally assumed that
Mark was alluding to his relationship with her. And the allusion, she could
see, had been received with enthusiasm by no one. Karen's face wore
fleetingly a mixture of surprise and hostility. Nick looked thoroughly
displeased, and although Dominic's face was enigmatic, when he raised his
eyes and looked at her she almost recoiled from the expression of cold anger
she saw in them.
When they were in the car, she said angrily to Mark, 'What on earth
possessed you to say such a thing? Now they think it's me…'
He grinned unrepentantly. 'Yes, I rather think they did. Let them stew for a
bit. It will do them good. And they'll soon know differently, anyway.'
'Maybe, but you don't make life very easy for me with remarks like that,' she
said unhappily. 'Dominic thinks badly of me as it is, and…'
He gave her a sideways look. 'Tell you what, my sweet, I think you're
altogether too sensitive about Brother Dominic and his opinions. You're as
bad as Biddy. Just play it cool and wait for Christmas Eve.'
'And what's going to happen then?' she asked wearily, her mind flinching
from the possibility that Mark had already suggested.
He gave her an enigmatic grin. 'Wait and see.' And she was too dispirited to
press him further.
At Biddy's there was hot punch to sample, and the first mince pies to make a
wish over. Morwenna only pretended to wish. She couldn't fix her mind on
the sort of festive trivialities required, and she knew at the same time that no
traditional ritual could work the magic necessary to bring her her heart's
desire.
Mark, however, had no such inhibitions. He made his wish aloud.
'I wish, Biddy my love, that you and Greg would come to Trevennon to dine
on Christmas Eve.'
'Now that's plain silly," Biddy said flatly.
'On the contrary.' He took her hand. 'I think the time is more than ripe to
apprise the family of my intentions. And what better opportunity than
Christmas, the time of goodwill. Especially as Dom will probably be
announcing his own engagement at the same time. We can wish each other
joy." He grimaced. 'Seriously, love, he couldn't possibly make a scene, even
if he wanted to, at such a time. And there's no reason why he should want to.
He's doing what he wants to do. He can't hope to deny me the same
privilege."
Biddy's mouth set obstinately. 'I'm not going to Trevennon on
sufferance—on a wave of possibly non-existent Christmas spirit,' she said
blightingly. 'If your brother accepts the fact that we're going to be married,
and. invites us himself, that's a different matter. But I refuse to be produced
at the family dinner table like a—rabbit out of a hat.'
And none of Mark's arguments that attack was the best form of defence, and
that shock tactics were the best way of dealing with Dominic, affected her
attitude one jot. By the time that Mark and Morwenna left, well after
midnight, there was still deadlock. Mark was insisting stubbornly that he
would be over to fetch them willy-nilly on Christmas Eve, and Biddy
reiterating that there was no way she could be persuaded to cross the
threshold at Trevennon without a proper invitation from the master of the
house.
'I just don't understand her,' Mark fumed as they drove away. 'I thought she'd
be delighted that I was taking the bull by the horns at last.'
'Not if she suspects that she'll be impaled on them first,' Morwenna said
drily. 'Don't forget I have first-hand experience of your brother's treatment
of unwelcome guests, and it isn't pleasant.'
'That's true,' Mark admitted. 'On the other hand, he wouldn't treat Biddy like
that. In fact I can never remember him being quite so hostile towards anyone
as he has been to you.'
'Thank you,' Morwenna said bitterly. 'Am I supposed to be flattered because
I'm the exception to the rule?'
He gave her an anxious look. 'I didn't mean to upset you. I mean, sparks do
tend to fly when you're near each other. In fact I've sometimes wondered…'
His voice broke off abruptly.
'Wondered what?' Morwenna prompted.
'Oh, nothing,' he said vaguely. 'Forget it. It's not important. Do you think
we're going to have snow for Christmas? It's certainly cold enough.'
They talked stiltedly about impersonal matters until they Arrived back at the
house. Morwenna waited while he put the car away, then they walked
together round the house to the front door. The air was clear and frosty and
the stars looked very close.
'Huge, aren't they?' Mark took her arm companionably. 'I used to wonder
when I was a kid how the Wise Men knew which one to follow.' He was
silent for a moment. Then he said abruptly, 'If Biddy feels so strongly about
Christmas Eve, I'll have to respect her wishes. I'll see Dominic tomorrow
and tell him that I've invited both her and Greg to dinner, and the reason.
And if he says one wrong word about either of them, then I'll pack my things
and go to St Enna, not just for Christmas but until Biddy and I are married.
After that we'll find somewhere in Port Vennor to live.'
Morwenna smiled at him. 'I'm sure that's the right decision. Don't delay the
wedding too long, either. I—I shall be leaving here early in the New
Year—in fact next week, probably-—but I would like to be one of the
guests.'
'You shall,' he promised. 'In fact you can probably be a witness along with
Greg.'
'I should like that.' She smiled up at him as he closed and bolted the door,
and he smiled back and bent to kiss her lightly on the lips.
'Bless you, love,' he said quietly. 'Bless you for everything.'
She was going to protest that she'd done nothing, but there was a noise just
behind them and she turned to see what it was, as Mark's arm fell from her
waist. The door to the study stood open and Dominic's dark figure stood
directly in the shaft of light that spread into the hall. Morwenna couldn't see
his face, but anyway it was unnecessary. She could feel his anger as if it
were a tangible thing spreading across the intervening space to crush her.
Mark" said easily, 'Oh, hello, Dom. I didn't realise you were still up."
'Obviously,' Dominic said icily. 'I'm 'sorry if I've intruded on one of your
love scenes.'
He turned on his heel and walked back into the study, slamming the door
shut behind him. Morwenna felt the colour rush into her face.
Mark said, 'Oh, hell,' in a tone between resignation and exasperation. He
took a step forward. 'Look—I'll go and explain now…'
'No.' Morwenna was adamant. 'He's in a temper now. It isn't a good moment.
Wait until the morning when he's had time to cool down.'
Mark gave a short sigh. 'I suppose so. Damnation, why did he have to come
out just then? If I'd caught him in a clinch with Karen—or anyone else for
that matter—I would tiptoe tactfully away. But no, he has to make a big deal
out of it. But why? That's what I don't understand.' He looked down at
Morwenna's unhappy face and his own eyes were suddenly reflective. Yet
all he said was, 'I think we'd better remove ourselves. Maybe we'll all see
things in a clearer and calmer light in the morning.'
Lying sleepless in her bed, Morwenna doubted it. She rolled over and
switched on the bedside lamp and looked at the small gilt clock on the table
beside the bed. Nearly two in the morning and she hadn't closed her eyes.
Shegave a slight groan and buried her face in the pillow. She had never
needed sleeping pills in her young healthy life, but she would have given a
great deal for one to have materialised by her bedside now. Perhaps a drink
would help, she thought. Something warm and milky.
She got out of bed and put on her housecoat, tying the sash securely round
her slim waist, then trod barefoot over to the door. She listened intently for a
moment or two, but the house was completely still. She was the only person
wakeful, it seemed. She went lightly along the landing and felt her way
down the stairs into the dark of the hall. She gave a hasty glance in the
direction of the study door, but although it was still shut, no thread of light
showed beneath it and she gave a silent sigh of relief as she made her way to
the kitchen.
The door creaked slightly as she opened it and she heard the dogs, who slept
on the mat in front of the Aga in winter, stir and growl slightly. She spoke to
them quietly as she switched on the light, and they subsided. She had to
admit that they had given her no trouble at all since that day in the bam.
Dominic's solution to her problem might have been ruthless, and had
certainly contributed to her current sleeplessness, but as far as the dogs were
concerned it had been a success.
She found a jug of milk in the pantry and a tin of drinking chocolate, and
began to heat her drink. The dogs watched her efforts, wagging their tails
and grinning sheepishly at her, as if bemused by this early start to their day.
She poured the hot milk into a beaker and stirred the chocolate into it. The
dogs were really restless now and she heard Whisky whine softly, and
scolded, 'Lie down, you idiots.' it was then, and only then, that she realised
she was no longer alone. Dominic was lounging in the doorway. One of his
hands was thrust negligently into his pants' pocket. The other held a glass.
She went on stirring the chocolate although the powder had already
dissolved by that time.
'Oh, hello,' she said awkwardly. 'I'm sorry if I disturbed you. I couldn't sleep.
Would—would you like some chocolate?"
'Thank you—no.' He held up the glass so that she could see the level of
amber liquid it still contained. 'I prefer to seek my oblivion in other ways.'
There was a strange glitter in his eyes as they met hers and she found herself
wondering rather uneasily how much he had drunk. Yet he seemed steady on
his feet and his speech wasn't slurred in the slightest, so perhaps she was
doing him an injustice.
She went on rather desperately, 'I—I thought everyone had gone to bed. All
the lights were off and…'
'There's a fire in the study,' he interrupted. 'I had some thinking to do and
firelight is as good a medium as any to do it by. Come and join me.'
'No, thanks.' She picked up the beaker rather unsteadily, praying that she
would not actually spill any of it on the floor. 'I must be getting back to my
room. It's late and I'm tired.'
'You said you couldn't sleep,' he reminded her. He reached out and took her
arm. His fingers were firm and bruising on her flesh and he meant it. 'Come
and join me.'
She lifted her chin defiantly. 'Couldn't you choose a slightly more civilised
hour to torment me?'
He smiled grimly. 'No doubt I could, but I'm not feeling too civilised at the
moment, and anyway it occurs to me that one of these days you may vanish
as suddenly as you arrived before I've had the chance so say any of the things
I mean to say to you. So I'll say them now, while you're here, under my
hand.'
An uncontrollable shiver went through her as the significance of his words
came home to her. For a moment she toyed with the idea of flinging the hot
chocolate all over him, but even as the idea crossed her mind, he said quite
gently, as if her thoughts were an open book to him, 'I wouldn't, Morwenna.
I really wouldn't.' She trailed mutinously behind him across the dark hall to
the study. He kicked the door shut behind them and led her over to the sofa
in front of the fire.
Releasing her, 'Sit down,' he ordered, and knelt down beside the hearth,
adding fresh logs to the glowing embers and stirring them to a blaze.
Morwenna clamped her hands round the warmth of the beaker, and stared at
the dancing flames. They might take away the chill which had invaded her