Read HIGH TIDE AT MIDNIGHT Online
Authors: Sara Craven,Mineko Yamada
Tags: #Comics & Graphic Novels, #Graphic Novels, #Romance
Dominic. She'd left him nothing—not a note, nor even a card, and she found
herself regretting this with all her heart. Nothing could change the way
things were between them, but it was suddenly, very painful to know that he
would always imagine she had gone away hating him. She was never going
to see him again, but it was strangely important that he should know that she
had not been lying when she had confessed her love for him. Even if he was
sardonically amused by the knowledge, at least she would no longer be
around to be hurt by his mockery.
She got up and walked restlessly round the room. But it was too late, much
too late to do anything about it now. There was no chance of getting a gift for
him. All the shops had been shut for hours—and besides, that wasn't the sort
of thing she meant.
As she returned to her chair, her hand caught the sketch pad which was
balanced on the arm and sent it flying to the floor. She knelt down to retrieve
it and saw that it had opened at the page where she had made the drawing of
Morwenna Trevennon on the beach in Spanish Cove. She looked down at it,
her lip caught between her teeth. At the time, the brooding self-revelation of
the drawing had frightened her. Now, she felt its impact anew. Her face, her
eyes, all her helpless, hopeless longing for the man she loved who did not
return her love. Not Morwenna Trevennon, who had loved triumphantly and
died for her love without regret.
She tore the page out of her book very carefully, then went over to the big
roll-topped desk in the corner of the room which Greg and Biddy regarded
as their office, and found a large square envelope. She would send him this,
she thought. Post it from London after Christmas.
She wrote his name on the envelope, then paused. But that wasn't what she
wanted. She wanted his present to be with the others under the tree, not some
kind of afterthought. She got up and went to the window, pulling back the
curtain and staring out into the darkness. It had been snowing again and
most of the evening too if the light covering on the ground was anything to
go by.
She turned away, telling herself that what she was contemplating was
complete and utter madness. It was at least two miles to Trevennon from
here, if not more, along unlit lanes. And if she managed to get there, what
then? If she simply posted the letter through the box, it would tell everyone
that she was still in the neighbourhood and could embarrass Biddy and Greg.
The only alternative was to get into the house without being seen and put the
envelope under the tree with the other presents. She looked -at her watch.
The meal, she knew, was one of Inez's most festive spreads and would
probably still be going on. If only she could get there before they moved into
the sitting room for coffee.
She felt almost light-headed as she reached for the phone and dialled the
number of the local taxi service in Port Vennor. The owner was not eager to
turn out, but when Morwenna persisted, he grudgingly agreed, and told her
at her request what the fare would be. She had enough in her purse to cover
it, but hardly anything left over once it was paid, and again she told herself
that this whole idea was madness.
Yet she had to do it. It was as simple as that. She put on her boots and wound
her long scarf round her head and neck. She couldn't afford to have the taxi
bring her back as well. She would have to walk, and as an afterthought she
armed herself with Greg's powerful flashlight from the kitchen mantelpiece.
She made the taxi-driver drop her well out of earshot of the house in case
anyone with sharp ears wondered who was driving up at that time of night.
She approached the front door cautiously. It had occurred to her that it might
be locked and that her whole errand could be fruitless, but it swung open
when she tried it and she tiptoed noiselessly into the dimly lit hall. The
dining room door was closed, she saw with relief, and she could hear the
murmur of voices and the clatter of cutlery coming from behind it. One of
the lamps had been left on in the empty sitting room, and this and the
firelight provided all the illumination that was necessary as she crept across
the room and slipped the envelope in among the other gifts.
' As she crossed the hall, back towards the front door, she heard movements
from the dining room—the sound of chairs being moved back—and realised
she was only just in time. She had left the door slightly open to facilitate her
retreat, and she was through it in a second and back in the cold white world
beyond.
All that was left now was the long trudge back to St Enna. She looked up at
the house whose strange gaunt shape had become so dear and familiar and
thought how she would miss it. There were other things too. She would miss
the cry of the gulls early in the morning and the touch of spray on her face as
she walked along the cliffs. And she would never see Spanish Cove when
the seals came in the spring, or later in the year when the brightness of the
summer sun would dance on the rocks and the restless sea.
Almost without knowing it, she began to walk away from the house and the
lane which led back to the road, towards the cliffs. One last time, she
thought, to sniff the salt in the air and see the sea breaking on the shore at her
feet. Then she could carry its sound in her ears like a shell to alleviate the
long city days ahead.
As she came out on to the cliffs, she moved carefully, shining the flashlight
ahead of her at every step. It was very calm, and very cold, and the snow
which had been coming down fast had now dwindled to a few desultory
flakes. Below her in the cove, the sea murmured like a siren.
She transferred the flashlight into her other hand, and gripping the handrail
tightly began to pick her way down the steps. It had been bad enough the
previous time when the steps had been frosty. Now, the thin covering of
snow had made them treacherous in the extreme. Halfway down she paused,
wondering whether it would be more sensible 'to retrace her steps, but that
seemed a defeatist attitude so she pressed on.
She was about three steps from the beach when the handrail snapped. She
cried out, losing her balance, and the flashlight flew out of her hand and
landed on the sand below with Morwenna after it. She landed awkwardly,
her left foot catching on a stone and turning under her so painfully that for a
moment she felt sick and faint and the world swung dizzily about her. She
bent her head and gritted her teeth until the spasm passed. She did not think
she had broken her ankle, but she had almost certainly sprained it. Slowly
and gingerly she tried to stand up, but her foot would not take her weight and
with a little groan she collapsed back on the sand. She had only the dimmest
notion of first aid, but it seemed a sensible idea to get her boot off before her
ankle swelled too badly. It might be sensible, but it was also difficult and
extremely unpleasant, and she was almost in tears by the time it was
concluded. She got slowly and painfully on to her knees and felt all around
her in the sand for the flashlight. She found it almost at once, but it was
broken, and at the same time Morwenna became aware of several things.
One of them was that no one knew where she was, and the second was that
the area of beach on which she was crouching was small, and becoming ever
smaller by the minute. The tide, she thought desperately, all Nick's warnings
about its perilous swift advance returning to chill her. Oh, God, the tide.
Why hadn't it occurred to her that it might be high tide tonight?
She pushed the broken flashlight into her pocket and crawled on her hands
and knees back towards the steps. She dragged herself up on to the first one,
then paused. There was no handrail to assist her now, and as well as being
steep and slippery the steps sloped a little, so that she found she was sliding
backwards towards the beach again. This isn't happening, she thought. It
can't be happening. She was beginning to panic and she knew it, and she
forced herself to calm down. Her fingers scrabbled round the stone steps,
seeking some kind of hold, but her hands were numb with cold and wouldn't
obey her. Besides, the steps were worn smooth with age. There were no
convenient ledges or other projections to grasp.
She glanced back over her shoulder and saw that the incoming waves
seemed to have made further advances even in the past few minutes. She
wondered what time the tide would reach its height. The lower steps were
covered in seaweed, which indicated the final limits of the rising water, but
this was not her main concern. Her chief enemy was the intense cold, and
she knew it.
Teeth gritted, she tried again to stand and collapsed down on the steps with a
cry of pain, grazing her elbows as she fell. On a flat co-operative surface she
might have been able to hobble a few feet, but the steps defeated her.
Coming down to the cove, she thought with a kind of icy finality, would be
the last and most disastrous of her impulses. She looked back to see where
the water had reached and saw her discarded boot, bobbing away on the ebb.
Before long, she knew, the freezing water would be lapping round her feet.
She was shivering violently, light-headed with cold and fear, her mind a
whirling jumble of confused thoughts and images. The sea was coming to
take her, she thought, as it had taken the other Morwenna centuries before,
and it would be much easier not to struggle any more but simply close her
eyes and let herself go on the high tide at midnight. There were coloured
lights flashing behind her closed eyelids and the sea was murmuring to her
with the voice of a lover. She found herself wondering how long it had been
before the sea had carried Morwenna and Esteban away from each other, or
had her arms clung fast to him even in death? Nothing would seem so bad,
she thought remotely, with your lover's arms around you.
The voice of the sea was louder now and more insistent, calling her name
over and over again, and she gave a little soft groan in response. And the
arms which held her were strong, just as she had imagined, but they could
not overcome the fear that gripped her and she began to struggle weakly.
Dominic's voice said urgently, 'My darling, I've got you. You're safe, but
you mustn't fight me. Try and relax and put your arms round my neck.'
And she thought, 'So it's a dream, all a dream,' and allowed an overwhelming
darkness to swallow her up.
There were other dreams as well. Strange dreams of the hall at Trevennon
and Nick, white-faced, standing hand in hand with Barbie Inglis. There was
warmth and unimaginable softness and comfort and a liquid which trickled
fire down the back of her throat. And oddly there was Dr Warner's genial
figure. 'A fine Christmas present this is for us all, young lady.' His touch on
her ankle was magically comforting and she tried to tell him so, but his face
kept receding and it was much easier instead just to take the two small white
tablets that he was offering her. Somewhere close at hand, he was telling
someone, 'Yes, a bad sprain, but she's young and resilient, so we'll have to
hope there are no ill effects. Rest and quiet and plenty of warmth is what she
needs, but call me at once if…' His voice faded and the darkness returned,
but it was a friendly darkness now.
When she opened her eyes again, a cold grey light was filling the room, and
she knew that she wasn't dreaming. She turned her head slightly and looked
up at the slightly ironic gaze of Morwenna Trevennon, until a more homely
countenance interposed itself.
'Merry Christmas,' Inez said somewhat tartly. 'And a nice fright you give us
all, I must say!'
Morwenna gave her a wan smile. 'I'm sorry.' Tisn't me you have to apologise
to, my lover. Here's some soup I've been keeping hot for when you woke up.
Sit up a little bit and I'll arrange your pillows.'
Morwenna complied, wincing a little as she moved her injured foot.
'What happened?' she asked. 'I was on the beach and I fell—I can remember
that. I couldn't get back up the steps.'
Inez looked austere. 'And what were you doin' down there, I'd like to know,
when you'd gone off from your home without a word to anyone?'
'It would take too long to explain,' Morwenna said wearily, beginning to eat
her soup, and Inez's face softened.
'And I shouldn't be going on at you when you need rest,' she said. 'You eat
the soup, my pretty, and then I'll brush your hair because Mr Dom's
downstairs waiting to have a word with you.'
Morwenna laid the spoon back in the bowl. Her eyes sought Inez's
apprehensively. 'I—I don't want to see anyone.'
'That's no way to talk.' Inez put the spoon imperiously back into her hand.