Authors: Anne Hampson
‘I suppose so.’
‘You seem doubtful.’
‘It isn’t that,’ he said rather flatly. ‘It’s just the idea that, once away from here, you’ll never see me again.’
She bit her lip.
‘I’m asking you to help me and yet not giving anything in return.’ Her eyes were shadowed as she added, ‘It isn’t fair of me, is it? You’d have to take me to
‘You said you weren’t sure you would go back to your fiancé.’
‘I know what you’re thinking, Nico, but I must be honest, I could never feel anything for you—not anything deep.’
‘You can’t say a thing like that. We haven’t had a chance of getting to know one another. Yet even so there’s already this bond we have both felt. Surely that’s a basis for something stronger?’
She gave a small sigh. It would seem that Nico had an affection for her, which seemed absurd in the face of the fact that the Greek male was notorious for his lack of deep feeling.
‘I really don’t think I could fall in love with you, Nico,’ she said. ‘Besides, if I got away from here I should naturally go back to my own country.’
He nodded his head.
‘That is what I was saying a moment ago. You’d never see me again.’ He lifted his glass and stared at the cloudy liquid contained in it, then put it to his lips, regarding
‘I don’t know.’ Her heart had been throbbing with hope and excitement and now it felt like lead within her. ‘Is there no possible way I can leave within the next couple of days, Nico? I mean—is there not another boat I could get?’
‘I’ve a friend who has a motor launch, but I would not care to trust him to keep quiet—or even to take you in fact, because he’s a business associate of Leon’s. He’s in the wine business and I understand he buys grapes from
‘
‘Yes, on the mainland.
‘I knew he must be wealthy,’ returned
‘If any of these damned servants thinks fit to carry tales to
‘But, when I’ve escaped,
‘I don’t really care. If he cuts up rough I shall tell him he had better watch his step because of what I know.’
After he had left
And yet why should she care about her husband’s feelings? He certainly had not cared about hers when he callously parted her from her fiancé on their wedding day, nor since, when he had forced his will upon her.
CHAPTER TEN
FROM high on the hillside came the tinkle of goat bells, then from lower down the hoarse bray of a donkey as it brought its rider up the cobblestoned path towards a steep flight of steps that had been painted white by the owners of the house to which they led.
Seeing her standing there,
‘How nice to have my wife waiting for me,’ he commented with mocking amusement as he came up to her at last. ‘Missed me, obviously.’
She glared at him, teeth gritting. Why did he have to rile her like this?
‘It was nothing more than sheer boredom that brought me out here,’ she snipped, turning abruptly away in the direction of the house.
He fell into step beside her and took her hand.
‘What have you been doing with yourself?’ he asked casually, ignoring her peevishly-spoken complaint.
‘
‘I had meals in between, and sometimes I was diverted by watching my jailers and wondering what they would do were I to make a run for it.’
‘They can run swifter than you,’ he said.
‘I don’t know.... I believe I’d give them a few breathless moments.’
‘And you, my child,’ he returned cheerfully, ‘will be having a few painful moments if you don’t change your mood. I’ve been expecting an eager welcome, but instead I’ve a little vixen awaiting me with snapping teeth.’
She fell silent, trying to divert her mind to more pleasant things—the Judas and arbutus trees gilded by sunshine, the oleanders by the fountain’s edge, the poinsettias and the lavender hedge, with butterflies gleaming iridescent as they hovered above the flowers, like humming-birds. The goatherd on the hillside, the duff paths down to the sleepy harbour where fishermen sat mending their nets or slapping octopus to a frothy lather on the stones. In the olive trees cicadas trilled, their music slightly distorted by the sough of the wind in the foliage. She wandered along at her husband’s side, glad that he was silent. She would hear his voice soon enough!
‘Come up and unpack for me,’ commanded
She obeyed, saying as they mounted the wide, balustraded staircase,
‘I’ve told you what I’ve been doing.’
‘Nothing else?’ He stood for a moment, his hand on the door knob, his eyes regarding her intently. ‘You should have given me that promise, you know. You’ll have to give it in the end.’
She lowered her lashes, avoiding that close scrutiny, for she was thinking about Nico and his promise to get her away from here the next time
In the bedroom
‘Come to me,’ he ordered in a soft tone of voice.
Anger surged, but she obeyed, accepting the fact that there was no escape anyway, so it was far less painful to go to him willingly than to have him leap across the room to grip her wrist in a bruising hold. ‘Kiss me.’ Again she obeyed, giving him a tight-lipped peck. She was caught roughly to him, caught in a brutal embrace that made her gasp with sudden pain. ‘I’ll teach you yet, my girl! I thought you had come to realise that I’m your master!’
‘I hate you,’ she gasped, ‘hate you, do you hear!’
‘I daresay all the household can-hear,’ he responded darkly. ‘As to your assertion that you hate me—repetition makes it less convincing. You know in your heart of hearts that you don’t hate me, Tara.’ So confident he was! What a lesson he would learn if she did make her escape! She looked at his face above her, dark and satanic, the eyes burning with desire. A hand came up to trace the curve of her shoulder from her throat and then to the lobe of her ear. ‘You might hate the idea of obeying me, of accepting my word as law, but you don’t hate
me
. On the contrary, I firmly believe that you’ve reached the stage where you’re realising that there can be no real hate where the physical pleasures we give each other are so great.’
She looked away, sure that she hated him in spite of the argument he had produced against it.
‘It’s only desires of the flesh,’ she managed to say at length. ‘And that’s only effective at the time—’ She broke off, blushing, but brought her gaze back to his. ‘You know what I mean,’ she ended, fully expecting a smile of mocking amusement to curve his lips, and not being disappointed.
‘Yes,
‘As I said, it’s effective at the time, but not afterwards.’
‘What you’re trying to say is that lovemaking impairs judgment, is that it?’ She merely nodded and he added with some amusement, ‘But it’s bound to, isn’t it? No one can be clear-headed when in the throes of a violent passion——‘
‘Oh, be quiet!’ She twisted out of his hold and ran to the other side of the room. ‘Don’t you ever think of anything but
that
!’
‘I thought we were merely discussing the question of whether one could be capable of rational thought at a time like that.’
She sighed impatiently.
‘We were talking about my hatred for you, Leon! I suppose that ‘I don’t hate you then—but I do afterwards, all the time.’ She looked directly into his eyes. ‘Don’t fool yourself,’ she advised, ‘because no matter how you try to, you’ll know in the end that you were wrong.’
His eyes were suddenly alert.
What exactly do you mean?’ he demanded tautly. ‘If you’re up to something, Tara, then I recommend strongly that you remember what I once said to you: I have never been taken unawares in the whole of my life.’
Well, there was always a first time, she thought. However, she realised that she had almost made a slip; she resolved to practise caution, all the time from now on.
‘I don’t know what you’re talking about,’ she returned with well-feigned innocence. ‘What can I be up to, with all these jailers watching my every move?’
He opened his mouth, then closed it again, much to her relief. He went to his own room and she did not see him again until much later in the day.
It was the following morning that
‘You might just as well give it,’ he advised with a hint of asperity. ‘Because if you don’t I shall keep you prisoner here until our child is born—which will be an inconvenience to me as well as to you.’
‘It will inconvenience you?’ She looked at him questioningly.
‘I want to take you to
‘I can understand that,’ she returned.
‘But not sympathise,’ he said evenly.
‘Why should I sympathise with you?’
‘Are you going to give me the promise?’ he repeated with growing impatience.
‘No, I am not. I can’t make a promise which I have no intention of keeping.’ She was troubled lest he should defer his next visit to the capital indefinitely. He had once said that it was his usual practice to go over about once a fortnight and stay for several days, but from what he had just said it was plain that he was reluctant to go without his wife. As he had mentioned, his friends and business associates would consider it very strange, to leave his new wife alone at home.
So you’re still hoping you will find a way of running from me?’ His eyes were narrowed, and a trifle anxious, she thought. She had come to breakfast a quarter of an hour later than he, and he had waited for her, drawing out her chair and remarking at the same time on her appearance. She looked charming, he told her with a smile. She was in a pretty long-sleeved blouse of wild silk and a pair of sapphire blue slacks. Her hair shone and even her eyes had lost their sadness. He remarked on that, too, but she had merely shrugged and made no comment. But it had naturally crossed her mind that it must be the hope in her heart that had taken the shadows from her eyes. If only