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Authors: S A Laybourn

Tags: #Romance Fiction

A Kestrel Rising (23 page)

BOOK: A Kestrel Rising
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“Here you go.” Ilona edged into the bedroom carrying a tray with the tea things.

“We’ll domesticate you yet.” Francis made a bank of pillows against the headboard.

“How do you plan to do that?” She handed him his tea and poured one for herself before climbing back into bed.

“I’m going to teach you to cook. I can’t imagine it could be harder than teaching you to play the piano.”

“You are?”

“Starting today. It’s your turn to make dinner.” He sipped his tea. “We’ll start easy, a cheese omelet. I don’t think even you could mess that up.”

“Don’t be too sure about that.”

He kissed her cheek. “You’ll be fine. You have an excellent teacher.”

She had to admit that his skills in the kitchen were admirable. He had turned their simple rations into good meals and she had watched him work, fascinated as he deftly chopped and stirred and sautéed. His hands, his long, elegant fingers and the simple, easy grace by which he moved even when he was engaged in the most prosaic of chores fascinated her.

“All right, if you say so.” She finished her tea.

“I say so.” He glanced out of the window at the rain. “But, we have plenty of time before your cooking lesson needs to start.” He set his cup down and gathered her up, fitting into her curves as if he’d always belonged there. “There are better things to do.”

 

* * * *

 

“Break these eggs into this bowl,” Francis told her.

It was early evening and they stood in the kitchen. Ilona picked up an egg and tapped it against the edge of the bowl, as she had seen Francis do. To her surprise, it worked and she opened the shell and the egg fell into the bowl, as intended. She did the same with the other three. He handed her a cup with milk in it. “Now pour the milk in with the eggs and beat them with this fork.”

She complied, watching the eggs break apart and leave milky, pale goo that clung in strings to the fork. “Now what?”

He put the frying pan on the range and tossed a generous lump of butter into it. “When the butter melts, pour the mixture into the pan.”

She waited then poured the contents of the bowl into the pan. As instructed, she worked her way around the edges of the eggs with a spatula until everything had solidified. He threw in a handful of cheese and she folded the omelet in half and waited until the melting cheese began to seep through the fold.

“Well done.” He kissed her hair. “Now we can eat.”

They retreated to the front room with their plates and their wine. She watched him, anxiously as he took his first mouthful.

“Very nice,” he said. “I’ll make a cook out of you yet.”

They finished their meal in companionable silence. He took the empty plates away and washed them. When he returned, Ilona had poured more wine. Francis turned on the wireless. She sat down next to him and they held hands listening to the news. It was a brief intrusion before the evening music started.

“I’m going to miss this.” He sighed.

“Me too.”

His fingers drifted to the nape of her neck. “So let’s not think about it. We still have tonight and tomorrow night.”

She smiled at him. “Long may it last.”

 

* * * *

 

“I can’t believe it’s nearly over.” Ilona curled up against Francis, pulling the covers up to her chin. The basket next to the fireplace was full of wood and the rain had finally retreated, leaving a cold, damp, still night, lit by a large moon that turned the pools of water in the surrounding fields to silver.

“Neither can I.” He kissed her. “But it’s been good, hasn’t it, Ilke?”

“It’s been wonderful.” She brushed a lock of hair from his forehead, now as easy and familiar with every part of him as she was with herself. “I don’t want it to end.”

“Really?”

“Yes, really.” Ilona propped herself up on her elbows and looked at him. “Is everything all right?”

He followed the line of her jaw with his thumb, his eyes dark. “I guess so. I watch you sometimes and you have a faraway look in your eyes…as if you’re not entirely here. Has it really been wonderful, Ilke?”

“Yes, it has. I wish we could stay here forever. Are you sure you’re all right?”

“I suppose I’ve just got the blues now, that’s all.”

She wished that, for once, he would let the veil slip. “Save those for tomorrow, please.”

“Oh, don’t worry. I’ll have these blues for a long time, what about you?”

“I’m trying not to think beyond tonight.” She kissed him. “Tomorrow night will be a different story when I’m back on that cot, listening to the girls snore.” She didn’t want to think about being without him. It had been too easy to slip into the luxury of being alone with him.

His hand strayed to her hair. “Would you do this again?”

“In a heartbeat,” she replied, wondering what she could say to erase the doubt from his eyes.

“Ilke,” he whispered, his lips warm against her neck. “Thank you.”

She closed her eyes as he sought to possess her once more, leaving fire in his wake.

 

* * * *

 

Francis pulled the car up in front of the main gates. The morning sun fell through the windows and turned his hair to fire, veiling his eyes in shadow. “Here we are.” He opened the door. “I’ll get your bag.”

Ilona climbed out, shivering in the chill. The brilliant light made her eyes hurt and reality waited beyond the gates in the jumble of buildings, lorries and planes. He stood before her and she watched thoughts move across his face.

He took her face between his hands. “Ilke, you have given me five wonderful days, days that I will never forget, not for as long as I live.” He paused and looked up at the sky for a moment. “I hope that you don’t either.”

“I won’t.” Something in his tone warned her. Made her dread what he was going to say next.

“But you have your ghosts, still. I know you tried and I know you gave everything you could to me, so much more than I ever had a right to expect and, for that, I will always be grateful. You have to let those ghosts go, darling, for both of us.”

She gazed steadily back at him, her eyes swimming. “I thought that I had. I held nothing back, Francis.”

He kissed her, a hard, bruising, breathtaking kiss. The pounding of his heart was like an old, familiar song. When he finally let her go, her tears were cold on her face.

“Take care, Ilke. Look after yourself, for me.”

“I will. Please be careful, Francis.” Ilona touched his face one last time. “You’re wrong. There
are
no ghosts.”

“There are,” he replied. “Your face hides nothing in sleep. I know this because I’ve spent a long time these past few days just watching you. I need some time to myself now. I want to keep all that was so good about these days to myself for a while.”

“Francis.” A sob wrenched from her throat and, as he walked back to the car without looking back, she wanted to call out to him that it was not just that she needed him, or wanted, him. It was that she loved him.

Chapter Nineteen

 

 

 

Ilona stared at the papers with numb disbelief as she sat on her cot.

“Ilke? Are you all right?” Lily sat on the other cot.

It had been a week since Francis had left her at the gate. “No,” she replied, her voice barely above a whisper. “I’ve been given my new posting.”

“Where? Can it be that dreadful? You look awful!”

“Catterick, bloody Catterick of all places.” She wiped her eyes. “I suppose Francis has got his wish. I have no choice but to confront my ghosts, now. Why do we have to hand this place over to the Americans? I would’ve given anything to be able to stay here and of all the bloody places that the RAF has, they send me back to Catterick.”

Lily sat beside her and put her arm around her shoulder. “Oh, I’m so sorry. How dreadful for you. Can you ask for somewhere else? You have a good record and you’ve been offered promotions. Surely they’d send you somewhere else, if you wanted.”

She shook her head. “No, I need to do this. I don’t want to, but I have to go.”

“What happened with you and Francis?”

“Perhaps you were both right that it wasn’t a good idea, this no strings, promises or vows notion. I don’t think it’s possible to spend that much time with someone without something happening. You can’t give away that much without feeling something.” She looked at Lily and sniffed. “It seems that everyone who knows me knows me better than I do myself. I fell in love with him and I didn’t realize it until he walked away from me, having just told me that I have to let my ghosts go. Ghosts that I didn’t even know existed.”

“He said what?”

“He said that I still had ghosts that I needed to let go of. He’s right. I never realized it but he said that he could see it when he watched me sleep, which, apparently, he did for hours. That’s why going to Catterick, as awful as it will be, will be a good thing. I do need to say my goodbyes, because I ran away before I really had the chance.”

“Oh, Ilke. What a strange thing for him to say. I’m not sure that it wasn’t just an excuse.”

“An excuse for what?”

“I don’t know. Maybe he’s in love with you and he doesn’t want to tell you. After all, didn’t you tell us that the no strings was because of the war? Perhaps he doesn’t want to hurt you in case anything happens to him. He doesn’t want you to go through all that heartbreak again.”

“It’s too late for that.”

“It’s just a thought.” She shrugged. “You don’t spend hours watching someone sleep if you don’t feel something for them.”

“It doesn’t matter. Even if he did, I don’t think he’d tell me, for whatever reason. It’s probably best that I go far away from Debden. I don’t want to spend my Saturday evenings in the pub watching the door and hoping that he’ll wander in. Those five days were wonderful but I suppose there’s a price to be paid and I’m just about to pay it.”

 

* * * *

 

Dear Francis,

I had not intended to write, until I had heard from you, because I guessed that you still want your time to think, but there’s some news I have to share with you.

It seems that you will get your wish. I received word of my new posting a few days ago and, for my sins, I am being sent back to Catterick. How ironic and well timed is that? Now I can confront my ghosts and bid them goodbye. Luckily, I’m spared a long and tedious train journey because I am taking a lorry full of parts with me, and another driver, so at least I shall have company. One of the other girls here is also being transferred, which makes it not quite so bad.

I’m sorry those glorious five days ended the way that they did. It was never my intention to hurt you, far from it. I tried very hard to push the past aside, because it is over and done with. Yes, there is still pain but when you lose someone that you love, in whatever way, the pain can linger for a long time. I don’t regret a single minute of those days that I spent with you, Francis. I hope that, one day, you can dismiss your resentment as surely as I will dismiss my ghosts.

Regards, etc.

Ilke

 

She posted the letter before she had a chance to change her mind and climbed into the waiting lorry. She had not put a forwarding address, deciding that if he wanted to get in touch with her that badly, he would find a way. Nonetheless, in spite of the anger she felt, she was glad that the other girl was taking the first few hours at the wheel because she could not see the road through her silent tears.

 

* * * *

 

Ilona didn’t know how she felt when she drove the lorry through the gates of Catterick. It was a bitterly cold and gray day and the moors and dales were dusted with snow. She was glad of the company because Helen’s chatter stopped her from thinking too much. They were both silent when she pulled up to the gate and reported to the guard. He waved her through and she noticed the Bleinheims parked alongside the runway. She took a deep breath and headed for the depot, wondering if Corporal Harris was still in charge. It seemed so strange to be back after an absence of nearly three years, and she realized that, three years previously, she and Ian had been in the throes of their romance. There were no ghosts lingering along the roadways or between the buildings, just staff going about their everyday business, hunched against the biting wind that swept off the moors. She pulled up in front of the depot and climbed down from the cab, road weary and numb. She climbed the familiar steps, remembering all those other times, the hope and the happiness, Ian and the joy. The fear and the waiting all hurried back and whirled around her as she opened the door and was embraced by the warmth. It seemed right that Corporal Harris would be sitting behind his desk.

He glanced up when she walked in. “Well, I never.” He grinned. “ACW Lowe, I’d heard that you were coming back. I’d really hoped that it was true and here you are. Welcome back.” He rose and shook her hand warmly. “It’s great to have you here again.”

She managed a smile. “Thank you, Corporal Harris, Sir. It’s nice to see you again.”

The Corporal’s smile faded. “How do you feel about being back here, Lowe?”

“I’m not sure, sir. It’s not as bad as I thought it would be. After all, it’s been nearly three years. But I did notice the Blenheims when we drove in.”

He scratched his cheek. “The 219 is here for a little while,” he told her. “But don’t worry. I don’t expect you to drive buses again, not if you don’t want to.”

“I’d rather not, if that’s all right, sir.”

“Good, good. I have another job in mind for you, since you have three years of driving under your belt. We have a few outlying places that we provide bits and pieces for, so it will be a bit like what you were doing at Mildenhall, although the roads might be a bit more challenging at this time of year. Mind you, you did your training in north Wales in the middle of winter, so I reckon you’d be ideal for the job, if that’s all right with you.”

“That would be perfect, sir.”

“Excellent, then that’s sorted. Now, just leave that lorry where you’ve parked it and get yourself and your colleague settled. I should think you’re tired after that long trip.”

BOOK: A Kestrel Rising
7.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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