Authors: Margaret Pemberton
The plea in her soft, smokey voice was unmistakeable. He halted in the act of putting on his jacket, his muscles tense, a dark eyebrow rising slightly. Since the night he had discovered she had been secretly meeting Luke, he had cut her out of his heart and mind as if with a surgeon's knife. The New York model who had been his mistress ever since Jacqueline had left for France had been rapturous at discovering he was contemplating divorce, and disbelieving when he had told her he had absolutely no intentions of marrying again.
âI think you would find the lake inhospitable at this time of year,' he said, his voice so oddly abrupt that Dominic stared at him in astonishment.
âOh!' She turned her head quickly away from him, wiping Lucy's mouth with a napkin, not wanting him to see her hurt. They had lived as strangers for so long that he had become a stranger. A tall, powerfully built stranger with thick brown curly hair and brandy-coloured eyes. A stranger whose masculinity confounded her. A stranger she was desperately and hopelessly in love with.
He shrugged on his jacket, picking up his briefcase, eyeing her curiously. She was wearing a raspberry-pink sweater and a white, exquisitely cut tailored skirt. Her hair had fallen forward glossily at either side of her face and he resisted the urge to reach out and touch it; to tilt her face to his and to kiss the ruby red richness of her mouth.
He wondered if she had suggested accompanying him to Lake Tahoe in order that Melanie would feel part of a secure family unit, or in order to please Dominic. A frown furrowed his brow. Certainly Dominic was beginning to notice their estrangement, and to suffer because of it. A wave of love, fierce and protective, swept over him. No matter what happened, he would be damned to hell before he saw either of his children hurt. He looked across at Dominic's pinched white face and said tersely, âIf you really want to come with us to Tahoe, Lisette, you'd better buy yourself a new parka, and buy one for Melanie as well. I doubt if she'll be bringing one with her from London.'
Her eyes flashed up to his but he wasn't looking at her any longer. He was ruffling Dominic's hair, wiping Lucy's sticky kiss from his cheek, promising them he would be home early to greet Melanie.
As his silver-blue Cadillac limousine swept away down the drive, she stood at the windows watching. His days were now as much a mystery to her as hers were to him. The gossip columns told her more about his life than he did. How he had staunchly supported Eisenhower in his successful bid for the White House; how it was rumoured that he, himself, was thinking of running for Congress.
The Cadillac disappeared from view and she wondered if he would be seeing Jacqueline Pleydall at lunchtime. If he really would come home early that evening. If she would ever, ever have the courage to talk to him as she knew she must.
Early morning fog hung thick and heavy across the bay and she shivered, hoping that it would clear before Melanie's flight was due, turning away as the slow hoot of fog horns echoed over the invisible water.
âCan I come with you to meet Melanie?' Dominic asked as Lucy excused herself from the table and began to gather up her school books.
âNo,
chéri
, you must go to school.'
Dominic stared at her, appalled. âThat isn't fair! She'll be expecting me to be there when she lands! Please, Maman.'
His use of his baby name for her was an indication of how distressed he was by her refusal. She hugged him tight.
âAlors!
Is it so important,
ma petit?'
Dieter's eyes, grey and black-lashed, held hers. âYes, Maman. We're friends,' he explained.
She ruffled his dark gold hair. âThen you must come with me,' she said, with a catch in her throat. âI'll tell Simonette that only Lucy is going to school today.'
âMerci, Maman,'
he said, his eyes shining.
As she checked that Lucy had all her school books with her, Lisette wondered why it was that Dominic should so happily speak to her in her own language when Lucy never did. In three years' time his school syllabus would offer him the choice of German or Spanish. She wondered which he would choose. It would be strange to hear him speaking his father's language. Her eyes were pensive as she kissed Lucy goodbye. The German language was his birthright. She hoped passionately that it would be his choice, but knew she would say nothing to sway his decision, for she was quite sure that Greg would be as appalled if he chose it, as she would be pleased.
âCan we take Mel to Chinatown and to the zoo?' Dominic asked eagerly as they waited at the children's collection desk at the airport.
âWe shall take Melanie wherever she wants to go,' Lisette promised, wondering what Dieter would have said to the friendship between his son and Luke Brandon's daughter. She had begun to think of him more and more, trying to imagine what his advice to her would have been. He had been a man who had hated deceit. A man who had valued courage. As an air hostess approached, a shining-eyed Melanie holding on to her hand, she knew very well what his advice to her would have been: to tell Greg the truth and to live with the consequences. The worst thing that could happen was that he would leave her, but in every way that mattered he had left her already.
âAuntie Lisette! Dominic!'
Melanie cried, tearing herself free of the air hostess's restraining hand and hurtling to meet them.
As her arms opened wide and she hugged Melanie tight, Lisette knew that her decision was made and that she would not go back on it. She would do nothing while Melanie was with them. The risk of Melanie overhearing when she confessed to her affair with Luke was too great. But the instant Melanie returned to London she would drive down to Carmel and remove her possessions from the cottage. She would terminate the affair she should never have embarked upon. And she would tell Greg the truth.
âI was on the aeroplane for ages and ages,' Melanie said rapturously to Dominic as they climbed into the Lincoln. âI had breakfast and lunch and dinner on the plane, and I never fell asleep once, even though Daddy said I would!'
âWell, don't fall asleep now,' Dominic said; grinning. âWe're going to show you the Golden Gate Bridge.'
âGosh!' Melanie said, leaning forward to look out of the windows as they swept out onto the freeway. âWhat a huge road! I'm going to enjoy America, Dominic. I know I am!'
Dering Advertising soared five floors above street level. Greg strode through his deeply carpeted private entrance, bypassing the glamorously dramatic reception area with its wall of bronze-tinted mirrors and twenty-foot semi-circular desk. His elevator sped upwards. The top floor was his private domain. It was there that the wheeling and dealing took place. There, that all major decisions were taken. He ran a mental eye over the appointments ahead of him that day.
A meeting with Nick to see the first visuals for the âCosmetics
á la Carte'
campaign. A nine-thirty meeting with Hal Green to finalise the details of Bering's takeover of Hal's agency. A meeting with his financial director. An eleven o'clock meeting with Nick, the media, and board directors; lunch with the chairman of United Oil. Then Acapulco to meet with the chairman of Wainwrights to discuss a possible future merger. He had intended piloting himself to the Acapulco meeting and maybe staying over a day. If he did so, he would be unable to keep his promise to Dominic.
He strode out of the elevator. The decor was all white, beige and grey, the walls covered in oatmeal cream linen. âCancel the Acapulco meeting,' he said to his secretary, pulling down the knot of his tie and undoing the top button of his shirt as he slid his briefcase onto the massive surface of his white oak desk. âRefix it for Monday. Tell Russell I want to see Mr Fox of United Airlines for ten minutes before he takes him into their meeting, and tell Grant that the position of our Chrysler ad in this morning's
New York Times
was bad and that the client was right. The Chrysler logo needs to be bigger.'
âYes Mr Dering,' she said, running her eyes down his page of appointments. She would have laid down and died for him if he had asked her. Her predecessor had warned her not to fall in love with him, but it had been easier said than done. He reminded her of a riverboat gambler with his rumpled hair and easy assurance. There were rumours that he was squiring one of New York's top models whenever business took him to the east coast, which was two or three times a month. She didn't know if the rumours were true or not. The silver-framed photograph of his French wife still stood on his desk.
âIs everything ready for the eleven o'clock meeting?' he asked, taking off his jacket and sliding it around the back of his leather and chrome chair.
âYes Mr Dering,' she said, going mentally over the check list for the conference room. Ashtrays, pencils, carafes of iced water, the thick, white notepads that Mr Dering doodled on whenever a strategy meeting was in progress.
âGood.' He settled back in his chair and reached for the phone. As she left the room she was sure that the number he asked for was a New York number.
By nine-fifteen Greg knew that his usual concentration had deserted him. He couldn't keep his mind on Nick's layout for the âCosmetics
á la Carte'
campaign, and he couldn't care less about the Hal Green takeover bid. He kept thinking of the way Lisette had spoken to him across the breakfast table; the naked plea in the low, husky tones of her voice; the feeling he had had that she was trying to reach out to him; trying to narrow the distance between them.
âThe main decision we have to make is whether we are going to go for purity or sophistication,' Nick was saying, laying a half dozen glossy photographs on Greg's desk. âThis girl has enormous vitality. She'd look great on the posters, but there's a lack of sophistication about her that worries me. Cosmetics
á la Carte
is an up-market product. We need a girl with the kind of sensuality that other women will want to emulate. Someone with style and panache and inner warmth.'
âThen forget this little lot,' Greg said, sifting dismissively through the photographs that Nick had laid on his desk, âAll you have here is veneer. Surface glamour with no depth. We want a flesh-and-blood woman to promote Cosmetics
á la Carte.
Someone with the kind of femininity that is timeless.' His eyes fell on his photograph of Lisette. It had been taken on a sunny day, in the beech woods at Valmy. She was laughing, her head tilted slightly to one side, her hair falling in a long, smooth wave to her shoulders, a scarf knotted with careless elegance at her throat. âSomeone whose face will stay in the memory for a lifetime,' he said, a pulse throbbing at the corner of his jaw.
âJeez,' Nick said expressively, scooping up the photographs. âWhere am I going to find a woman like that?'
Greg didn't tell him. He was no longer listening to him. Twenty-four hours ago he had been contemplating divorce. Now he was no longer so sure.
âMr Green is waiting to see you,' his secretary was saying.
Greg continued to stare at the photograph. She had said that she wanted to talk to him and he had denied her the opportunity. Had she guessed that he was contemplating a final break between them? Was she distressed at the prospect? Indifferent?
He rose abruptly to his feet. âCancel the eleven o'clock conference,' he said, swinging his jacket over his shoulder. âTell Green I'll see him tomorrow.'
âBut Mr Dering â¦' his secretary gasped, running after him as he strode from the room. âMr Green has flown all the way from Houston for this morning's meeting!'
âReschedule it. If he doesn't like it, tell him the deal is off.'
âBut Mr Dering â¦'
The elevator doors closed behind him. She turned wide-eyed to Nick. âThe Hal Green takeover is worth hundreds of thousands of dollars! What's come up that's more important?'
Nick shrugged. âGod knows,' he said, staring dismally at the rejected photographs in his hand. âI don't.'
Greg slammed the Cadillac into first gear, speeding up the ramp of the underground garage and out into the brilliant winter sunlight that had followed hard on the heels of the morning fog. He felt exactly as he had done on that far off day in Normandy, when he had driven from the carnage of St Lo, hurtling back through the high-hedged lanes to Valmy, knowing that he had to see her again, if only for a moment.
He careened out into the main street, glancing down at his watch. Ten o'clock. She would be at the airport, meeting Melanie. He overtook a trailer, showing scant regard for the municipal speed limit. The first sight anyone wanted to see when they arrived in 'Frisco was the bridge, and the best place to view the bridge was from the âTop of the Mark'on Nob Hill.
He sped up to the forecourt of the Mark Hopkins hotel, slewing in behind half a dozen parked cars, seeing with relief the unmistakeable midnight-blue of her Lincoln Zephyr convertible. He swung in behind it, his sense of
déjá vu
stronger than ever. He had returned from St Lo to Valmy on gut instinct and he was following that instinct now. He sprang out of the car, slamming the door behind him, shielding his eyes against the sun. He could see the rich cornflower blue of her sweater and the pristine white of her slacks easily. She was standing fifty or sixty yards away, pointing something out to Melanie, her hair no longer falling unrestrainedly to her shoulders, but tied in the nape of her neck with a ribbon as it had been when she had first entered his arms, so many years ago.
He made no move towards her. He leaned against the Cadillac's door, his hands in his pockets, his stance as negligent and confident as it had been when he had waited for her against the gateway that led from Valmy's drive into the sun-warmed courtyard.
Dominic was talking to Melanie now, pointing out a ship that was making its way into the bay. Lisette stood straight, turning round to check on the Lincoln, freezing into immobility as their eyes met.