Read A High Price to Pay Online
Authors: Sara Craven
of a lot lately. I want to have the right to take care of her as soon as it
can be arranged.'
'Of course you do.' Mrs Bristow smiled at them both...'You'll have
some tea before you set off? I'll go and see about it.' She hurried off,
leaving them to follow at their own pace.
The silence between them was almost tangible, and Alison felt it
needed to be broken.
She said, 'What a lovely garden this is. Surely your mother doesn't do
all of it herself?'
'She does as little as I can arrange,' Nick told her. 'I employ a full-time
gardener for her to bully.' At her enquiring look, he explained, 'Her
heart isn't all that strong. She pooh-poohs it, but she needs to avoid
undue exertion. Even having me was something of a risk, which is
why I was an only child.'
'Oh, I'm sorry.'
'You don't need to be,' he said briefly. 'She leads a very full life,
actually, now that she's adjusted to widowhood.'
Alison found herself wondering whether her own mother would
eventually do the same. It was very early to tell, of course. Nick's
mother had had time to recover and rebuild her life. And the two
women were, of course, very different personalities.
Nick's voice cut across her reverie almost prosaically. 'I'm afraid
we're under observation from the drawing room. We'd better not
disappoint her.'
Before she had realised what he meant, he had stopped, drawing her
into his arms.
He said quietly, 'Don't fight me this time, Alison.'
The sun was warm on her upturned face. Somewhere near at hand a
bird sang with piercing sweetness. She could not have moved even if
she'd wanted to do so. And she didn't want to.
That was the last coherent thought she produced before his mouth
came down on hers. He was very gentle, very restrained, acting the
kiss, but in fact barely brushing her lips with his. And suddenly,
shockingly, it wasn't enough.
Suddenly, Alison wanted to be closer. She wanted to press herself
against him, to draw him down to her, to open her mouth to his
intimate exploration. She wanted the kiss to be real, born of a need
which refused to be denied, instead of this cool travesty of an
embrace which hardly even acknowledged the fact that she was a
woman.
She felt her nails dig into the palms of her hands in endurance, and as
if he sensed her sudden tensing, Nick lifted his head.
'Don't panic,' he advised acidly. 'Your ordeal is over.'
Until the next time, Alison thought, walking beside him, her heart
banging against her ribs like a terrified bird. Until the next time.
IT was a very simple dress, Alison thought. Made of crepe in a shade
somewhere between grey and lavender, it relied for its effect on the
elegance of its cut, and details like the full sleeves falling to tightly
buttoned cuffs, and the deep white collar. It certainly didn't look like a
wedding dress. But then she didn't feel like a bride.
She put up a hand and smoothed back a tendril of hair. Melly had
done her proud, she thought with a faint smile, swirling the soft
brown cloud into an elegant topknot, and securing it with the spray of
matching flowers which had come with the dress and which she
hadn't quite known what to do with.
But Melly had known. In fact, Alison thought with a sigh, it was a
pity she was the younger sister. If the positions had been reversed,
Melanie would have coped ebulliently with everything— especially
Nick, with whom she flirted outrageously, considering him as her
future brother- in-law, fair game for her to practise her wiles on.
He encouraged her, of course. With Melanie, Nick was more human
than Alison had ever seen him, except perhaps with his
mother—teasing, affectionate and endlessly indulgent.
And entirely different, she had to admit, from the way he behaved
towards herself.
She grimaced slightly. Well, what did she expect, after all? The
bargain between them was made, and legally signed under the
bewildered aegis of Alec Liddell. And Nick had been generous—that
she could not deny, even if she wanted to. She had been astounded by
the size of the personal allowance he was making her, in addition to
the account he had opened at a local bank for the payment of all the
household bills. He had made it clear such mundane details were to be
left to her. What he had concerned himself with was the redecoration
of the house. Alison found herself spending evening after evening
poring over portfolios of sketches and designs, and swatches of fabric
and wallpaper. Her initial resentment of the clean sweep he was
making in what had been her family home was soon outweighed by
the realisation that refurbishment was badly needed and had been for
some years.
Her mother, however, was not so easy to convince, and there had
been a number of near- clashes between them, with her
sweetly-voiced reproaches on one side, and Nick's scarcely veiled
intolerance on the other. Fortunately, he had produced a
master-stroke by inviting her to choose exactly how she wanted her
own flat, converted from a little-used guest suite overlooking the rose
garden, designed and decorated, and Mrs Mortimer was soon happily
absorbed in her own plans, and less inclined to dwell mournfully on
what she called 'change for change's sake'.
For herself, Alison had found little to quarrel with in Nick's taste, and
they had achieved a reasonable harmony. The only awkwardness had
arisen when he had shown her the designs for their respective
bedrooms. She had not realised until then that he intended to use the
master bedroom and the adjoining room for their accommodation,
and had protested instinctively.
Nick looked at her, his brows lifting coldly. 'I realise, of course,' he
said, 'that you'd like me banished to the other end of the house, or
even to a separate building for preference, but I'm afraid the next
room is as much concession as I'm prepared to make. I've already told
you—as far as outsiders are concerned, this is a normal marriage.'
She swallowed weakly. 'But there's a communicating door ...' she
began, intending to tell him that the adjoining room was intended
principally as a dressing room.
'How incredibly suggestive,' Nick drawled, giving her a
contemptuous look. 'Would you like me to have it bricked up? Or
would a bolt on your side only be adequate?'
Her face had burned with mortification, and she'd mumbled,
'Perfectly adequate,' before turning away and picking up some
samples of curtain fabric with hands that shook, and studying them as
if her life depended on it.
In the circumstances, she had decided ruefully, it would be downright
dangerous to query why Nick had opted to install a king-sized bed in
her room instead of something more appropriate and conventional.
Mrs Mortimer was going to stay with the Bosworths, after the
wedding, and the decorators would be moving in during the month
that Nick and Alison would be away on honeymoon.
Alison sighed. The honeymoon had proved to be another bone of
contention. She had considered it an unnecessary refinement, until
Nick's mother had raised the subject.
'Where are you taking Alison, darling?' she had asked cheerfully.
'Somewhere glamorous and exciting, or quiet and restful?'
'A little of both, I hope,' Nick had returned lightly. 'I've chartered
Greg Parsons' yacht to cruise the Greek Islands.'
At the small surprised sound he had startled out of her, he had turned
to Alison solicitously. 'What's the matter, sweetheart? You don't
suffer from seasickness, do you?'
If she'd had her wits about her, she would have replied firmly,
'Terribly', and that would probably have been the end of the matter.
But she was too astonished and indignant to be able to think clearly.
As he drove her back to Ladymead later, she had rounded on him
furiously. 'You didn't tell me we were going on honeymoon!'
'It's the usual course of action after one's married,' he returned
casually. 'What's the matter? Do you have some objection?'
'Any number,' she retorted, isn't it carrying things rather to farcical
extremes?'
'On the contrary, it's a perfectly conventional thing to do,' Nick
drawled. 'And as I'm tired of telling you, on the surface at least, this is
going to be a very conventional marriage. But if you have some
rooted aversion to the Greek Islands, then I'll tell Greg we don't want
his boat after all.'
'I think my rooted aversion is rather closer to home,' Alison said
clearly and coldly.
He smiled thinly. 'I'd rather managed to work that out for myself. I'm
afraid you'll just have to grit -your teeth, darling, and keep reminding
yourself that nothing lasts for ever in this uncertain world. Once the
honeymoon's over, I'll do my best not to intrude too much on your
halcyon little world down here. For whole periods at a time you
should be able to forget that I exist at all.'
If only she could believe that! Alison thought bitterly, as she stood on
the steps at Ladymead and watched the tail-lights of the car vanish.
One of the most disturbing facets of her brief, hectic engagement had
been how completely Nicholas Bristow had managed to brand
himself across her consciousness. She supposed it had been
unavoidable in the circumstances. There were so many arrangements
to be made, so many details to be agreed, even on a mundane level.
And, once she was legally his wife, would things really be any
different? And now that her quiet existence had been turned
irrevocably upside down, would she be content to stay at Ladymead
waiting for his visits, like—like some dreary Mariana of the Moated
Grange?
She looked restlessly round her room. It was odd to think she would
never sleep here again. The next time she came to Ladymead she
would have to use the enormous room which Nick was having
decorated for her in shades of ivory and aquamarine, and sleep in that
bed—as wide as the Gobi Desert, and as barren, she thought with
sudden bitterness.
Oh God, how had she allowed herself to get involved in this wretched
mess? She wanted to hide. She wanted to crawl back into her own
narrow bed, and pull the covers over her head, and say she was ill, say
she was—anything, as long as it meant she wouldn't have to drive
with Uncle Hugh to the Parish Church and become Nicholas
Bristow's unwanted bride.
And at that moment heard a tap on the door, and her uncle asking
anxiously, 'Are you ready, my dear? It's time we were leaving.'
'Coming!' she made herself say. Then she pickedup the prayer-book
her father had given her at her confirmation, and went to the door.
His face lightened at the sight of her. 'You look lovely, child,' he
declared with false heartiness.
She smiled at him, knowing that neither he nor Aunt Beth could
comprehend why she was taking this step. They'd been stunned when
she first told them the news, then overtly disapproving, then resigned.
In fact, Aunt Beth had thawed sufficiently to make her niece a private
gift, in addition to the exquisite Georgian writing desk which had
been their official wedding present.
Alison hadn't known what to expect when she untied the ribbons on
the silver and white striped box, and hadn't known whether to laugh
or cry as she had inspected the contents—several sets of the most
exquisite handmade lingerie she had ever seen—satin and
crepe-de-chine trimmed with lace in shades of ivory, oyster and
coffee—a tacit acknowledgement, she thought drily, that Aunt Beth
considered she would need every weapon in the armoury to hold her
husband's interest. But what Aunt Beth never would—never could
know was that it was a battle which would never be fought. She'd left
the lovely things in their box in her wardrobe.
She was surprised to find how crowded the church was as she moved
up the aisle to the voluntary. She supposed the announcement of her
marriage had been something of a nine-day wonder locally. She was
glad to see a number of familiar faces from Mortimers. It still wasn't
certain what was going to happen to the works, but it looked as if it
was going to be saved, or so Nick had told her rather curtly when she
had timidly enquired. His intervention seemed to have been
successful.
But Simon wasn't there. His reception of the news that she was to be