Meet Me Under The Ombu Tree (46 page)

Read Meet Me Under The Ombu Tree Online

Authors: Santa Montefiore

‘Get out of your wet things before you catch your death of cold. I’ve run you a bath,’ he said, making for the door. Sofia recognized his jealousy and she smiled softly.

‘I can’t do it by myself,’ she said feebly. He turned around and Sofia thought his angry face looked adorable; she wanted to kiss his fury away.

‘I’ll call Zaza,’ he said stiffly.

‘I don’t want Zaza. I don’t want Gonzalo, either. I want you,’ she said slowly

and looked straight into his dejected eyes.

‘You were gone for hours. I was worried,’ he burst out. ‘What was I to think?’

‘You can’t think very much of me if you imagine me hopping from one man to the next. Don’t you trust me?’

‘I’m sorry.'

‘It’s because he’s Argentine, isn’t it?’ she said.

‘And handsome and young. I’m over twenty years older than you,’ he protested miserably.

‘So?’

‘I’m old.’

‘And I love you. I’d love you however old you were. It makes no difference to me,’ she said, struggling out of her clothes.

‘Let me help you with this,’ he said, walking over. He knelt in front of her and took her face in his hands and kissed her. His mouth was soft and warm and Sofia wanted to curl up against him, but he eased her away. ‘You’re like a sodden dog,’ he laughed, looking down at the wet patch that now discoloured his shirt.

He pulled her jersey and T-shirt over her head in one swift movement. She shivered. Her hair fell limply about her naked neck and shoulders in long, dripping tentacles. He kissed her again in an attempt to put some life back into her purple lips, but they trembled in spite of him. She unbuttoned her jeans and allowed him to gently remove them, taking care to pull the leg cautiously over her bad ankle. They were soggy and splattered with mud. ‘My darling, you’re freezing. Let’s get you into the bath,’ he said solicitously.

‘What - in my underwear?’ She laughed and unhooked her brassfre. Her breasts were surprisingly plump for her slight body and covered in goose-bumps, and her blood-red nipples stood out rigidly in protest at the cold. She wriggled out of her panties and extended her arms to him. He lifted her cold body off the bed and into the bathroom.

‘You’re beautiful,’ he said and kissed her temple.

‘And cold.’ She pressed her face against his rough jawbone. ‘Bubbles,’ she sighed as he lowered her through the thick foam into the hot water below.

David sat on the chair and watched as the colour returned to her lips and cheeks, and her shoulders relaxed and sank into the water. Her swollen ankle throbbed as the blood pumped into it with renewed energy. She began to feel herself again. After wrapping her up in a large white towel, David laid her down

on the bed and made to leave the room. But she stopped him.

‘I want you to make love to me, David.' she said, tightening her grip about his neck.

‘What about the others?’ he said, smoothing his hand over her damp hair.

They can look after themselves. I’m poorly, remember.’

‘Exactly - and sex isn’t good for your ankle,’ he said.

‘I don’t make love with my ankle,’ she giggled into his neck. He laughed too and kissed her again. Then he was making love to her, caressing her, touching her, enjoying her. To her delight she found that when she closed her eyes, David was all she saw.

Chapter 28

‘I knew something was up that weekend we were down with Gonzalo,’ Zaza said a month later. ‘I could see it in your eyes, David. You are a hopeless actor.’ She laughed throatily. He had called her that morning to invite her out to lunch as he was to be in town for a few days on business. ‘I can barely tear myself away from Sofia,’ he had said and then he had told her about their relationship. ‘Poor Gonzalo was smitten,’ she added from across the small table at the Ivy, putting the wineglass to her scarlet lips.

‘I thought she would fall in love with him,’ he said sheepishly.

‘So did I, that’s why I suggested you invite him in the first place. If I’d had a clue about your feelings for her, I would never have been so tactless. Will you forgive me?’

‘You’re wicked, Zaza, but I can’t help liking you,’ he chuckled and opened the menu.

‘So what are you going to do?’ she asked. ‘Do you mind if I smoke?’

‘Go ahead.’

‘Well?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘You’ll marry her, of course,’ she said and felt her throat stiffen.

‘I don’t know. Now, what are you going to have?’ he asked, calling over the waiter. But Zaza wasn’t so easily deterred when she had a mission. She ordered with haste and resumed her line of questioning.

‘She’ll want to get married. All girls do. What about Ariella?’

‘What about her? We’ve been divorced for seven years.’

‘Have you told Sofia about her? She’ll want to know.’

‘What is there to know about Ariella? She was my wife, a good gardener.’

‘A bitch, an exasperatingly beautiful bitch,’ said Zaza, spitting out the word ‘bitch’ with relish. ‘She’ll be furious when she finds out.’

‘No, she won’t. She’s safely tucked away in France with her lover,’ he said. Once he would have smarted at the memory of that smooth Frenchman who had lured his wife from him. It had nearly broken him. But now it was all in the past and he had Sofia whom he loved more than he had ever loved Ariella.

‘She’ll come back to stir up trouble, I bet. She’ll start wanting you again now you love someone else. That’s the funny thing about Ariella, she always wants what she can’t have, and David, you’ll be irresistible to her now.’

‘You don’t understand Ariella at all,’ David said dismissively.

‘Neither do you. It takes a woman to understand a woman. I understand her in a way that you never could. You see, she’s devious. She likes a challenge. She likes to shock, do the unexpected. She likes to ripple the waters.’ Zaza narrowed her eyes. ‘She was always very good at rippling the waters. Of course, she could never ripple mine. No, I was someone she was always unable to crack. But she’ll be back, mark my words.’

‘Okay, enough about Ariella, how’s Tony?’ said David, moving to one side to allow the waiter to slide a plate of steaming sea bass in front of him.

‘Your mother - has she met your mother?’ said Zaza, ignoring him. She bent over to sniff the parsnip soup.

‘No, she hasn’t met my mother.’

‘But she will, won’t she?’

‘There’s absolutely no reason to subject her to Mother.’

‘Well, I suppose she loved Ariella, didn’t she? The right breed, the right parentage. Oxford-educated, bright and classy. She won’t like an Argentine, she won’t be able to say. “How nice, the Norfolk Solanas.” She’ll know nothing about her, won’t be able to pigeonhole her. God, darling, is she Catholic?’

‘I don’t know. I’ve never asked her,’ admitted David patiently.

‘God forbid - a Catholic! Not really much hope then, is there? Still, you’re her only son. You’d imagine she’d enjoy your happiness, wouldn’t you?’

‘I haven’t told her about Sofia, and I don’t intend to. It’s none of her business. She’d only be unpleasant. Why give her the opportunity?’

‘It always amazes me that a dragon like Elizabeth Harrison could have produced someone as adorable as you, David. Amazes me, really.’ She waved her spoon in the air as if it were a cigarette.

‘So, now the inquisition is over, how’s Tony?’ he repeated with a smile.

As David walked back to his office through the cold November streets, he buried his gloved hands in his pockets and hunched his shoulders against the wind. He thought of Sofia and smiled. She hadn’t wanted to come up to London, she preferred to stay with the dogs and horses in the country. Since the dreaded Gonzalo episode they had been blissfully happy, just the two of them. Friends had come and gone but they had relished their time alone together, riding out on the hills, walking through the woods, making love on the sofa in front of the crackling fire.

He loved the way she’d wander into his office while he was working and put her arms around him from behind, pressing her smooth face against his. In the evenings she’d curl up in front of the television, pulling both dogs onto the sofa with her, sipping a steaming cup of hot chocolate and nibbling biscuits while he read in the little green sitting room next door. At night she’d wrap her limbs around his until he got so hot he’d be forced to gently pull away without waking her. If he did wake her he’d have to resume his position until she had fallen asleep again. She needed to be close and secure.

Sofia hadn’t spoken to Maggie and Anton for a few months. Daisy had kept in touch and had even visited a couple of times. She still worked in the salon and kept Sofia up to date with the gossip. Daisy had urged her to call Maggie. ‘She’ll think you’ve become too grand if you don’t,’ she had said. Maggie wasn’t in the least bit surprised when Sofia told her about David.

‘Didn’t I say he’d seduce you?’ she said and Sofia heard her inhale sharply. She always lit a cigarette the minute she knew she was going to be on the telephone long enough to smoke it.

‘Yes, you did,’ laughed Sofia.

‘Dirty old man.’

‘He’s not an old man, Maggie, he’s only forty-two.’

‘Dirty man, then, sweetie.’ She chuckled thickly. ‘Have you met his ex yet?’

‘The infamous Ariella. No, not yet.’

‘You will. Exes always appear to put a spanner in the works,’ she said and inhaled loudly again.

‘I don’t care. I’m so happy, Maggie. I never thought I’d love again.’

‘One always loves again. It’s a myth that there’s only one man out there for every woman. I’ve loved several, sweetie. Several and they’ve all been a delight.’

‘Even Viv?’ asked Sofia archly, recalling Tony’s second cousin.

‘Even Viv. He was a big man - if you know what I mean. He never failed to satisfy me even when we hated each other. I hope David satisfies you,’ she said.

‘Oh, Maggie!’

‘You’re such an innocent, sweetie - well, I suppose that’s all part of your charm. One of the reasons he loves you, no doubt. Don’t lose that innocence, it’s rare these days,’ she said dryly. ‘Are we going to see you sometime? Anton is pining like a dog.’

‘I’ll be up soon, I’m sure. Things are rather busy around here.’

‘Before Christmas would be nice.’

‘I’ll try.’

Sofia lit the fire in the little green sitting room. When they were alone in the house the sitting room was cosier than the larger drawing room which really only came to life when filled with people. David had called twice while she had been out on the hills so she had called him back, feeding the dogs with her spare hand. She missed him. He had only been away for a night and a day but she was used to him now and the bed seemed large and cold without him.

The fire began to flicker merrily. She played a CD. David liked classical music so she chose one of his; it would give the impression that he was about the house and fill the silence. The evening was closing in, the light fading slowly into the winter mist. She closed the heavy green curtains and thought of Ariella. The house had obviously been decorated by her. It reflected a woman’s taste. David wasn’t the sort of man to take an interest in decoration.

Sofia wondered what she looked like. David hadn’t told her much about his ex-wife, except that she had exquisite taste, an eye for art and a love of music. She was cultured and clever. They had met in their last year at Oxford. He

hadn’t ever been pursued by a woman before; in his world men had always done the chasing. But Ariella wasn’t a woman to sit back and wait to be courted - she went out and got what she wanted. He hadn’t been interested at first, he was quite keen on a girl on his literature course. But she persisted and finally they fell into bed. Ariella wasn’t a virgin; she behaved more like a man when it came to sex, David had explained. They had married after about a year and divorced seven years later. That was ten years ago. Another life, he had said. No children, Ariella hadn’t wanted a family. That was it.

Sofia hadn’t asked any questions. It wasn’t relevant and David didn’t hound her with questions about her past. But now she was alone in the house she suddenly felt Ariella’s presence in the chair covers and wallpaper. There were no photographs in picture frames as one might expect, but then the divorce had been acrimonious. After all, she had left him, not the other way around.

Sofia found herself opening drawers and searching through David’s cluttered papers and books for photographs of his past. She didn’t think he’d mind, he’d probably show them to her if he were there anyway. But she didn’t want to ask him, she didn’t want to look too interested. There’s nothing worse than a jealous girlfriend, she thought. Anyhow she wasn’t jealous, just curious.

Finally, at the bottom of a cupboard in his study she saw what looked like a dusty photo album. She pulled it out. It was heavy, bound in leather, chewed in one corner by a dog, no doubt. She opened it in the middle to make sure it was what she was looking for. When she saw a smiling David with his arm casually draped over the shoulders of a pretty blonde she closed the book, carried it into the sitting room, curled up on the sofa with a plate of biscuits and a glass of cold milk and started again from the beginning. Sam and Quid lay on the floor in front of the fire, their thick tails thumping onto the carpet contentedly, one eye on the plate of biscuits.

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