Read For Death Comes Softly Online

Authors: Hilary Bonner

For Death Comes Softly (17 page)

BOOK: For Death Comes Softly
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Robin met me at the door. He was wearing washed-out pale blue jeans and a tee shirt. No socks or shoes. His eyes shone. He caught hold of me quite roughly and pushed me against the wall. I could feel that he already had an erection. He began to pull at my clothes. His hands were everywhere, pushing the skirt of my working suit upwards, pulling my tights and pants down, until very quickly his fingers were inside me. His mouth was tight over mine, his tongue almost down my throat. I could barely breath, yet I could feel my troubles floating away. At that time in my life sex with Robin sometimes seemed to be about the only really worthwhile thing there was.
He lifted me slightly off the floor and pushed my legs apart. I heard the sound of his flies being unzipped and in the next second he was somehow inside me. I had been in the flat about thirty seconds and we were already fucking, standing up in the hallway. Robin liked to display that kind of animal eagerness. And I liked it too. By God I did. More than I had ever liked anything in my life. The man was a bull. My back was wedged against the wall and my legs were wrapped around him when I climaxed, and his thrusts became increasingly urgent as he reached a climax too. Sometimes it felt as if our lovemaking became more and more erotic each time. I was overwhelmed by Robin and my passion for him.
When it was over and he pulled away from me I simply sank to the ground and sat there panting. He was also out of breath, leaning against a chair watching me. My skirt was around my waist and my tights and knickers remained wound around one ankle.
‘I must look totally ridiculous,' I said.
‘Not to me you don't,' he said. And his voice was deep and husky. ‘To me you just look inviting.'
He sat down on the floor in front of me, bent his head and buried his face in me and did not stop until I had climaxed again. We still hadn't moved out of the hall.
‘If only Peter Mellor could see me now,' I said absurdly afterwards.
‘There is a part of me that would like the whole world to see you now,' Robin told me, with a wicked grin. ‘To see the state to which Detective Chief Inspector Piper can be reduced by the right touch . . .' He ran a fingernail lightly across my upper lip.
‘Beast,' I said.
He grinned again. ‘I do love you,' he told me, as he did with reassuring frequency nowadays.
‘I know,' I responded.
‘Don't be smug,' he said, tapping me lightly on the nose with one finger.
Abruptly he stood up, just as I was telling him I loved him too.
‘Come on,' he instructed. ‘Put your clothes back on and I'll take you out to dinner.'
‘Don't you think perhaps I should have a shower?' I asked.
‘No, I don't,' he said.
At the restaurant I was distinctly aware that we both still smelt of sex, which I suspected had been Robin's intention.
The meal was somehow almost as erotic as the lovemaking which had proceeded it. We laughed a lot. I could think of nothing except my passion for him. The waiters caught our joy, and they warmed to Robin. He had an easy jovial manner and a lot of charm. It was not difficult to warm to him.
At the end of the dinner Robin passed me a small black box.
‘Open it,' he commanded.
I did so. A door key lay within on a bed of black velvet. I looked at him enquiringly.
‘It's a key to Highpoint House,' he said. ‘You'll need it if you accept what else is in the box. Lift up the velvet.'
By then I suppose I had guessed the second item that the box must contain, but I still could hardly believe it. After all, we had been together for only just over three months – yet I could not imagine my life without Robin Davey, could barely remember even what it had been like before. Already it seemed quite natural that we should be together for ever.
I turned my attention back to the small black box, lifting up the layer of velvet as Robin had instructed. Beneath it was slotted an exquisite diamond ring.
I said nothing. I didn't know what to say.
Robin leaned across the table so that his face was close to mine and I could smell the sex on him stronger than ever. When he spoke his voice was low and caressing, almost hypnotic.
‘Will you marry me?' he asked.
Eleven
I woke up the next morning half delirious. My body was glowing. We had made love through most of the night. And the man I was so passionate about had asked me to marry him.
Of course I had said yes. It was a dream come true, wasn't it? I should have been ecstatically happy. And so I was – almost. I knew that all I had to do was to put the past resolutely behind me, and my future was assured.
Robin's arms were wrapped around me as usual. It was only just after six, but I still had a job to do, a job of such gravity that even this wonderful moment in my life could not entirely overshadow it. I extricated myself as carefully as possible, but he woke at once as I had known that he would. I had already learned that he was a light sleeper.
He smiled at me lazily. ‘Leaving me already, are you?' he enquired.
I felt that now familiar heart-leaping sensation. I was head over heels in love, there was no doubt about it.
‘Only temporarily,' I said. ‘You pledged yourself to a lifelong contract last night. Remember?'
‘Oh yes. I remember. I'm just glad you do.'
I sat down on the bed again, still naked, and gave him one last lingering kiss. He took my hand and put it on his erection.
‘You're insatiable,' I said.
‘Only with you. Come back to bed.'
I could feel the heat of him, sense the pleasure again. With a great effort of will I backed off and headed for the bathroom.
‘Later,' I said. ‘I've still got this nightmare of a case to sort out.'
I was still wearing the engagement ring, but to my shame I slipped it off my finger and into my pocket just before I arrived at Kingswood. My affair with Robin might be common knowledge by now, but I was determined to keep our engagement secret for as long as possible. I knew that was wrong really, but I could so clearly imagine the banter. ‘Watch out, Rosie, his intendeds don't last long.' And somehow, to begin with, I did not want to share the magic with anyone.
In spite of my work pressure things seemed to get better and better between Robin and I – who knows maybe it was partly because of it, we were not together much. The magic not only seemed to hold, it increased.
He made few demands on my time but did push for me to take a Sunday off to meet his mother. I must confess it wasn't only my workload which made me stall. Meeting your future mother-in-law is always going to be a little daunting – when you are a thirty-five-year-old cop and you're marrying a man like Robin Davey, the prospect is quite overwhelming.
Robin's father had died when he was thirteen and his brother James just eleven. Their mother, Maude, remarried two years later – an Exmoor farmer called Roger Croft-Maple – and that frightened the life out of me too. There is something about double-barrelled names which has always thrown me off my guard.
The Croft-Maples farmed upwards of 1000 acres, much of it the wildest part of the moor between Simonsbath and the sea. Robin wanted to take me there for Sunday lunch where we would be joined by brother James, a painter, who lived in a converted barn on the farm.
‘I've told Mother all about you and if she doesn't meet you soon she'll go potty,' he said. ‘You don't know what she's like.'
‘No I don't,' I said. ‘And I wish you'd tell me – at least I might be better prepared.'
‘I have told you, she defies description,' he said unhelpfully. And that made me all the more nervous.
Ultimately, just over three weeks after Robin had proposed I caved in. Even though at the time I was going in to the nick every day of the week including weekends, even if only for a few hours, Sunday lunch was duly agreed upon, for the first Sunday in November, which turned out to be a thoroughly awful cold, wet and windy day. We compromised on the arrangements – I got to Kingswood just after seven and spent three hours or so at my desk satisfying myself that the Stephen Jeffries investigation would be able to proceed for the rest of the day without my presence. Robin picked me up in the black BMW he now kept in Bristol just before 10.30, and we ploughed down the motorway through a continuous heavy downpour in terrible visibility which grew even worse when we turned off across the moor, but we still arrived at Northgate Farm in time for lunch – plenty of time as it happened.
Maude Croft-Maple was not at all what I had expected. I knew that she was seventy-seven years old and that she was Robin's mother. That was about all I knew – and from it I had conjured up a stereotyped image of a blue-rinsed aristocratic lady with a face like a horse, an accent you could cut yourself on and a penchant for well-tailored tweed suits and sensible shoes.
My first sight of Maude knocked me sideways. In a sheep pen just off the lane which led to the house a skinny young man, his hair and clothes soaked by the rain which continued to fall relentlessly, appeared to be losing the battle to hoist a reluctant ewe into a sheep dip. As Robin pulled the BMW to a halt, across the yard, determinedly splashing through the puddles, a strapping six-foot-plus farmworker of undetermined age – wearing an Australian bush hat, a full-length riding Barbour and mud-encrusted Wellington boots – waved a disinterested greeting at us and proceeded to berate the skinny young man.
‘For God's sake, Colin lad, get a hold of the bitch, can't you.'
The voice was the first surprise – the accent was broad flat Yorkshire, and the speaker was undoubtedly a woman, who with smooth agility half-vaulted half-climbed the fence to the sheep pen, unceremoniously grabbed the ewe at both ends and, with Colin only going through the motions of helping, tossed the struggling beast into the dip.
I got out of the car and stood by it staring. I was not wearing a coat but I hardly noticed the rain. The job done the woman turned towards us.
‘Sorry 'bout that,' she said. ‘Half the farm's down with flu. We're all behind. Don't normally do this kind of work on a Sunday.'
Without apparent effort she propelled herself over the fence once again and walked towards us. Her face broke into a wide smile. I was mesmerised. It was Robin's smile.
‘You must be Rose,' she said. ‘I'm Maude. Welcome to Northgate. Lunch in an hour. Roger's not back from church yet. James is on his way. Right. Let's get a drink, shall we?'
Without giving either of us chance to speak she headed for the house, gesturing for us to follow. I glanced at Robin in amazement. He had been quietly watching his mother's performance and my reaction. He came to my side to offer me the protection of the multi-coloured golfing umbrella he always kept in his car. His lips were twitching at the corners and he looked quite smug.
‘I thought you said she was seventy-seven,' I whispered, still getting used to the spectacle of a fence-vaulting future mother-in-law.
‘She is,' he said into my ear. ‘You wait. You ain't seen nothing yet.'
Maude took us through the back door into the kitchen. The floor was slate-tiled and higgledy-piggledy – in common I was later to discover, with the whole house, which did not seem to have a straight line anywhere. The smell of roast beef wafted enticingly from a big cream Aga.
‘Take a pew,' invited Maude, waving vaguely at an ill-assorted selection of wooden chairs arranged haphazardly around a huge kitchen table.
We obediently sat while she threw off her bush hat – flamboyantly tossing it at a hook on the wall in a manner vaguely reminiscent of James Bond. An abundance of blonde hair cascaded over her shoulders. I stared. At her age the colour had to come out of a bottle, surely, but it was pretty damn impressive nonetheless.
She kicked off her boots and removed the dripping wet waxed coat. Underneath she was wearing a cream cashmere sweater and tan slacks. She slipped her stockinged feet into a pair of black suede loafers and looked every bit ready for lunch at Claridges, let alone in an Exmoor farmhouse. The transformation was remarkable. I studied her face. Her skin was tanned and weathered but remarkably unlined. Age had been kind to her. I could detect no sign of make-up, yet she would have passed for a good fifteen years less than her years. She was a big, big woman, built like a stevedore. She had shoulders like a man, but her waist tapered nicely and her legs were long and slim. In spite of her size she was unmistakably feminine.
Robin was staring at her with undisguised admiration, and I didn't blame him. ‘Meet mother,' he said laconically, leaning back in his chair.
‘We've met, you fool,' said Maude, and then to me: ‘You're a brave woman to marry a Davey.'
She swiftly produced a bottle of champagne from a fridge in the corner and five crystal glasses from an old pine dresser. To me she said, with Robin's smile again: ‘Congratulations and welcome.' Then she turned to Robin. ‘Well done, lad,' she told him.
Robin grinned hugely. I didn't think I had ever seen him look quite so happy.
As if on cue Roger Croft-Maple arrived just in time to share the champagne. He turned out to be a benign charmer of a man a couple of years younger than his wife, who seemed to be just as unreservedly proud of Maude as was Robin. Minutes later James Davey arrived, and he so strongly resembled his elder brother that he could have been Robin's twin. But I realised quickly that the resemblance ended with their looks. James, who had never married, was an artist and a dreamer, with none of Robin's drive, and, I suspected, not a great deal of his energy. Like his brother, he was a charmer though.
Without ceremony dishes of vegetables, and ultimately a huge sirloin of beef on the bone were loaded onto the table, and as Roger carved the meat into thickly succulent pink slices I glanced appreciatively at Maude. ‘I'll bet you've never stopped eating beef on the bone, even when it's been banned,' I remarked.
BOOK: For Death Comes Softly
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