Read A High Price to Pay Online
Authors: Sara Craven
For starters, Nicholas Bristow was at least twenty-five years her
father's junior. One of the City's boy wonders, she could remember
reading about him somewhere. A whizz-kid financier with the Midas
touch. In his thirties now, of course, but still apparently printing his
own money.It was—heartening to believe that he had thought highly
enough of her father to come to his funeral, even without an
invitation. Only Alison didn't believe it. According to the items about
him in the various gossip columns which appeared with such
monotonous regularity, Nicholas Bristow didn't give a damn about
anything except making money. He wasn't married, but he certainly
wasn't celibate either, seeming to change the ladies in his life as
frequently as his expensive suits.
She might have contempt for his lifestyle, but at the same time Alison
had him mentally filed as someone it could be dangerous to offend,
and she decided it could be wise to intervene before he came face to
face with her mother.
He was in the hall, as Alison came downstairs, in the act of handing
his coat to Mrs Horner, the daily help.
Alison said with a coolness she was far from feeling, 'It's all right,
Mrs Horner. I'll deal with this.'
At the sound of her voice Nicholas Bristow turned, his brows rising
interrogatively as he looked at her. Once again the sheer force of his
attraction struck her like a body blow. How fortunate that his
personality didn't match, Alison thought stonily as she walked down
the last remaining stairs.
She said, 'Good morning, Mr Bristow. I don't suppose you remember
me.'
'Indeed I do, Miss Mortimer.'
She prayed she wouldn't blush like a schoolgirl and ruin everything.
Aloud, she said quietly, 'This is rather embarrassing for us, Mr
Bristow, but it seems there's been a slight misunderstanding. It was
kind of you to come to my father's funeral service, but this lunch is
restricted to family and close friends, and unfortunately . ..'
'Unfortunately, I don't fall within either category,' Nicholas Bristow
supplied calmly. 'I'm aware of that, Miss Mortimer.'
'Then I'm sure you won't wish to intrude,' Alison said, lifting her chin
a little. 'My mother, as you can imagine, is in a very nervous and
distressed condition, and can't be expected to cope with uninvited
guests.'
'Yes, I can well imagine.' His firm mouth twisted slightly. 'But the
misunderstanding is yours. Miss Mortimer. As it happens, I have
been invited here. By Alec Liddell, and also by your uncle, Colonel
Bosworth.'
Alison's lips parted helplessly in a little gasp. 'They—did? But why?'
'I suggest you ask them,' he drawled. 'And while you're conducting
your little interrogation, I'll wait quietly somewhere where the sight
of me won't cause your mother any problems.' As she hesitated he
added quietly, 'I'm no gatecrasher, Miss Mortimer. I do have a reason
to be here.'
She said levelly, 'I don't pretend to understand what's going on, but
perhaps you'd wait in the study while I speak to my uncle.' She led the
way across the hall and opened the door. It was quite a small room,
panelled in oak, the heavy curtains still drawn out of respect. It was
the first time Alison had entered the room since her father's death, and
it seemed at once still so redolent of his personality that she checked
abruptly in the doorway, her whole body tautening.
She was hardly aware of the sharp look from the man beside her, but
she heard him say, 'I think the situation would be improved by some
daylight, don't you?' followed by the rattle of the rings along the poles
as he drew back the curtains, allowing some watery spring sunshine
to permeate the room.
She was back in control again. 'Thank you,' she said huskily.
'There—there's some whisky in the corner cupboard, if you'd like to
help yourself.'
'You're very hospitable.' The dry note in his voice wasn't lost on her.
He walked across the room, and looked down at her, frowning
slightly. 'I'm sorry about your father,' he said at last. 'I liked him.'
'Thank you.' Her voice was firmer this time. 'Now, you'll have to
excuse me. I have to see to our—other guests.'
She closed the study door behind her quietly, and stood for a moment,
forcing herself to think rapidly. It was an awful day, but it seemed to
be getting worse with every moment that passed. She was more than
uneasy now; she was getting frightened. From the chaos of the past
week, some kind of monstrous pattern seemed to be emerging. She
didn't understand it, nor did she want to. She wanted to run away
somewhere and hide.
The atmosphere in the drawing room was inevitably subdued, but as
Alison moved from group to group, thanking people for coming, and
accepting their condolences, it occurred to her that everyone seemed
abnormally gloomy and abstracted. Or was she being stupidly
over-sensitive? she asked herself, making her way towards her uncle.
But before she could reach him, she was grabbed by Melanie.
'Who's the dish?' she hissed. 'And where have you hidden him?'
'I can't think who . . .' Alison began, but Mel gave her a little shake.
'Oh, don't be pompous, Ally! Tall and dark, with eyes like Paul
Newman's. I saw him arrive.'
'You would,' Alison sighed. 'Well, his name's Nicholas Bristow, and
he seems to be here on business.'
Melanie rolled her eyes in mock-lasciviousness. 'Do you think he'd
do a deal with me?' She caught Alison's eye, and subsided. 'I'm sorry,
Ally,' she muttered reluctantly. 'I know I shouldn't be making jokes at
a time like this, but everything's so—so bloody!'
Alison put her arm round her sister's shoulders and gave her a swift
hug. 'Yes, it is,' she said fiercely. 'And you make all the jokes you
want. Now, I've got to talk to Uncle Hugh.'
'Hullo, my dear.' His voice was awkward. 'May I get you a drink?'
She shook her head. 'I'm not thirsty. I just want to know what's going
on. Nicholas Bristow tells me you invited him here.'
'Well, it was Liddell's idea really.' He didn't meet her gaze. 'He felt it
might make things— easier.'
'What things?' Alison's eyes narrowed. 'Uncle Hugh, you can't keep
dropping hints like this. You've got to tell me!'
There was a silence, then he sighed heavily. 'Perhaps you have the
right. I just don't know any more. And together, we might be able to
cushion your mother . ..' He paused again. 'Did your father ever talk to
you about money?'
She shook her head. 'I used to ask him, from time to time, especially
about the works—if the company was being affected by the
recession, but he always said everything was fine.'
He pulled her into a corner. 'Well, it wasn't fine,' he muttered. 'In fact,
Ally, it was just about as bad as it could be. For the last two years he
was pouring every penny he could raise into the firm, but it was never
enough. Oh, he could have cut back, I suppose, but it would have
meant laying men off, and he wouldn't do that. Said it was a bad sign,
and reduced public confidence. Said he felt—responsible.'
Alison nodded. 'He did. Mortimers has always been a family
company. Daddy hated the idea of redundancies. He felt it was a
betrayal of people who trusted him.' She smiled sadly. 'A rather
patriarchal attitude, I'm afraid.'
'A rather naive one in this economic climate,' her uncle said grimly.
'And there was this house, of course, and your mother's—expenses.'
Alison hands clenched into fists at her side and she looked at him
levelly. 'Uncle Hugh, are you trying to tell me that Daddy was broke?'
Unwillingly, he nodded. 'There's your mother's annuity, of course,
that's safe. But as for the rest of it...'
'Oh, God!' Alison felt dazed, but she made herself think. 'But there are
his shares in Mortimers, they must be worth something.'
'Only if the company itself has any value,' Colonel Bosworth said
gloomily. 'And there's every chance of a receiver being put in.'
She bit her lip. 'Well—there's this house. I know it's big, and
inconvenient, but Daddy had it valued not long ago, and if we sold it,
and found somewhere smaller ...'
He. was shaking his head. 'That's what I'm trying to tell you, my dear.'
His voice was awkward with compassion. 'The house, I'm afraid, he
used as security for a considerable loan. Mortimers needed new
machinery for a potential order from China—engineering
components, I understand. It could have been the salvation of the
place, and Anthony gambled everything on getting it.' He looked very
old suddenly. 'Only he didn't. He got the news just before—just
before . ..'
'His attack,' Alison said. She felt very cold, her body trembling
uncontrollably. 'I—see. So— Ladymead doesn't belong to us any
more. I—I can't quite believe it.' She closed her eyes for a moment.
'Poor Mummy? Where can she go? What can she do?'
'That is something we all have to discuss. But there need be no hasty
decisions. I'm sure she'll be treated with every consideration by
the—er—new owner.'
'New owner?' Her bewildered eyes searched his face. 'But you said
the house had been used as security. It belongs to a bank, doesn't it?'
'Not as such.' Uncle Hugh looked more uncomfortable than ever.
'Your father had trouble in raising the money he wanted. It was felt, I
think, that his proposition wasn't a good risk—as indeed it proved.
The eventual loan was a— private arrangement, although perfectly
legal, of course,' he added hastily.
Alison's nails scored the palms of her hands. She said unsteadily,
'It's—Nicholas Bristow, isn't it?'
Uncle Hugh nodded wretchedly, 'Yes.'
She whispered, 'Oh, God. So that's why . ..'
She couldn't say any more. She turned away, fighting her emotions,
struggling to retain some rags of self-control as the full force of
everything that had happened broke on her.
Crazily, a line from Shakespeare kept echoing and re-echoing in her
head: 'One woe doth tread upon another's heels, so fast they follow.'
And the upshot was that Ophelia was drowned, and she was drowning
too, in anger and outrage and bewilderment.
At last she said brokenly, 'How could Daddy? How could
he—mortgage our home to a stranger?'
'Because he was a gambler,' her uncle returned sombrely. 'Oh, not
with cards or horses—that might have been easier to deal with. But he
liked to take risks in business—unnecessary risks, like investing in
these new machines without any guarantees from the Chinese that
they'd ever be needed. I don't think the possibility of losing his
gamble ever occurred to him. And give him his due, if Mortimers had
won that contract, it would have been just the boost the works needed.
He'd have been able to pay off the loan too, and neither your mother
nor you and Melanie would ever have been any the wiser.'
'Only it didn't work out like that,' said Alison with a small mirthless
smile. 'The problem now is—how do we break the news to Mother?
How do we tell her she's not only penniless, but homeless too? And at
the hands of a man she doesn't like. Or has Mr Bristow come to serve
his notice to quit in person?'
'On the contrary.' Uncle Hugh looked almost affronted. 'You're doing
him an injustice, Ally. He is most concerned.'
'How kind of him!' She pushed her hair back from her face with a
shaking hand. 'But it doesn't change anything. He's not going to give
us back our home," is he?'
'You have to be realistic, my dear.' Her uncle looked horrified. 'No
one could be expected simply to write off a debt of that magnitude.
No, I'm afraid your poor father knew what he was risking when he
entered into the arrangement— much against Alec Liddell's advice, I
may say.'
'Bravo, Mr Liddell,' Alison said wearily. 'He'll be here soon, I
suppose.'
'In about half an hour.' He nodded in affirmation. 'The others should
be leaving by then. I thought we could all have a quiet chat—a family
conclave, to decide what's best to be done.'
'And do you now count Nicholas Bristow as part of the family?'
There was an edge to her voice, and her uncle frowned rather
reprovingly as he answered, 'No, of course not, child. But I'm sure it
would be better for all concerned if matters were conducted on
as—amicable a basis as possible. I know he's anxious to reassure your
mother that he has no immediate plans to take possession.'
She winced. 'Don't!'
He shook his head. 'I'm sorry, Ally, but it's something you're going to
have to come to terms with. Ladymead belongs to Nicholas Bristow
now.'