Authors: Sara Craven
her a courteous old-fashioned bow. 'You will forgive my wife,
signorina.
In her anxiety over her son she has neglected to tell you
that your sister who you will have heard is also in hospital is not
seriously injured. A couple of broken ribs, that is all.'
Juliet gave a long sigh. 'Thank God!' she murmured. 'Thank you,
signore.
I—I shall have to let my mother know.'
'But not tonight,' Santino said brusquely. 'You have heard my
stepfather say she is not badly injured.' He looked down at her and
his face was that of a forbidding stranger. The lover who had
caressed her to the brink of madness and surrender only a few short
minutes before had vanished as if he had never existed. Perhaps he
never had. He had spoken of fairy tales; maybe it had all been part
of it. She felt very weary suddenly and a little sick. She wanted
very badly to go to her room, away from these hostile eyes that
seemed to be boring into her, but her legs seemed to have turned to
jelly and would not support her properly so that she staggered a
little as she started to move.
'Attenzione,
Santino!' It was his stepfather speaking. 'I think the
signorina
is unwell.'
Without a word, and before she could utter a protest, Santino
swung her up into his arms and started towards the stairs, his face
paler than she had ever seen it and strangely set as if he found his
task distasteful.
But had she really expected anything else? she thought, a feeling of
desolation creeping over her. She'd known all along what would
happen once he knew the truth.
Santino did not speak until they were inside the room she had
moved her clothes into. He laid her on the bed and turned away.
'I'll send Annunziata to you,' he said abruptly.
'Santino.' She levered herself up on to one elbow and gazed at him
appealingly. 'How did it happen—the accident, I mean?'
'I don't know,' he said levelly. 'It is one of many questions for which
answers will have to be found. As soon as I have some definite
information, I will let you know. Goodnight -' he paused and his
mouth curved slightly into a mirthless smile. 'Goodnight, Giulietta.'
He walked to the door and went out, closing it behind him. Juliet
lay back against her pillows, her eyes closed, fighting the tears of
strain that threatened to overwhelm her. Poor Jan, she thought,
starting her honeymoon in hospital, but she Supposed she ought to
be glad that they had both apparently escaped serious injury. And
she should be glad too that the whole story was out in the open
now, and that her charade was over for good and all.
I should be glad, she told herself. I should be—but I'm not.
She turned over and buried her face in the pillow.
'If only they'd waited a few more hours,' she whispered achingly.
'Oh, why did they have to come just at that moment? Why couldn't
they have let me have tonight?'
Juliet awoke very early the next morning. She had not expected to
be able to sleep, but a rather worried-looking Annunziata had
appeared at her bedside the previous night carrying a tray with a
glass beaker in a silver holder which she told Juliet contained a
tisana.
It was hot and tasted of herbs, but it was oddly refreshing
and under Annunziata's watchful gaze Juliet felt impelled to drain it
down to the last drop. Almost in spite of herself, she felt soothed,
and it was soothing too to feel Annunziata's hands smoothing her
pillow and drawing the coverlet up around her shoulders with little
pats and soft mutterings.
Although none of her problems had actually retreated during the
night, Juliet could' not help but feel refreshed by her hours of deep,
dreamless sleep. She got out of bed and wandered across to the
window,. pushing back the heavy shutters. Below her the sea
moved gently, every tiny billow sparkling gold in the early sun. The
air smelt fresh and clean, and a solitary bird wheeled and dipped
high above in the cloudless sky.
Juliet sighed and pushed her hair back from her face. Somehow
today she had to get to the hospital to see Jan. Although she wasn't
seriously hurt, broken ribs were nevertheless uncomfortable, and
she would obviously be shaken after the crash.
At the same time Juliet had to face the fact that she was not looking
forward to this reunion with her sister. She felt that her discoveries
of the past few days had transformed her into a stranger—someone
in fact whom she would have preferred in other circumstances to
keep at arm's length.
Hypocrite, she told herself fiercely, as she turned away from the
window and picked up her robe and toilet bag. What point was
there in priding yourself on your virtue, if you had never been
tempted? And Juliet now knew only too well how fatally easy it
was to succumb to temptation once it was offered.
But for the arrival of his mother and stepfather, she would have
awoken this morning in Santino's arms to heaven knows what
regrets and recriminations.
Lost in her troublous thoughts, she wandered out on to the gallery
and almost collided with a figure leaving the bathroom.
'Oh,
scusi.'
She looked up startled, expecting to see the Signora, but
this was a woman she had never seen before, slightly younger than
the Signora but with the same cosseted well-groomed appearance,
and wearing an expensive negligee.
The woman did not reply to her hasty apology, but stood looking
Juliet over in silence, a half-smile curving her lips. But it wasn't a
friendly or a pleasant smile, the sort normally exchanged by house
guests in early morning encounters on the way to the bathroom. It
was all too knowing, and bore more than a trace of malice, and
Juliet felt defiant colour begin to rise in her cheeks as she suffered
this close scrutiny.
At last the woman moved away, taking a last searching look at
Juliet as she did so, her eyes lingering particularly on her hair. As
she passed with a whisper of silk, a cloud of exquisite perfume
hung on the air.
The same perfume gave the bathroom a more than usually exotic
atmosphere and Juliet did not linger over her bathing and dressing.
She felt uneasy, and knew that it was because of that encounter on
the gallery. She wondered who the glamorous stranger might be,
and when she had arrived on the scene.
She put on a pair of denim jeans and a sleeveless vest in a black
silky material and went downstairs. The
salotto
was deserted
except for Annunziata who was laying places for breakfast in the
dining alcove. She beamed expansively when she saw Juliet, and
seizing her arm led her to the great door with its massive iron studs
which stood open this morning to admit the faint breeze. Juliet
supposed with some amusement that she was being sent for an early
morning stroll to give an edge to her appetite, but she soon realised
her mistake. Annunziata was chattering away and gesturing towards
the shore. Looking down, Juliet saw a dark figure standing
motionless at the water's edge and realised with a painful thump of
her heart that it was Santino. Her impulse was to run back indoors
and take refuge in her room, but that would only be delaying the
inevitable. Sooner or later she would have to speak to him, to ask
him to help her get to Naples. She had no choice as her own money
and traveller's cheques were presumably still in Jan's apartment in
Rome.
Slowly she started down the steps, her hands instinctively balling
into fists at her sides as she moved, her nails digging painfully into
the palms as she struggled to maintain her composure.
She wished she could have emulated his own soundless approach of
the previous day, but of course, he heard her and half-turned
frowningly to see who was coming to disturb his reverie. His frown
did not lift when he saw her, and she felt absurdly hurt. It took an
immense effort of will to keep walking, slithering and sliding over
the stones until she reached his side.
'Buon giorno,'
he said quietly.
He was wearing faded jeans, and an old blue shirt open almost to
the waist. A strong line of stubble along his jaw indicated that he
had not bothered to shave that morning, but neither this nor his
faintly bloodshot eyes and heavy scowl could detract in the least
from his sheer virile appeal and Juliet felt her stomach contract
painfully as she looked at him. Afraid that those penetrating tawny
eyes would read her thoughts, she hurried into speech.
'Signore
, I—I need your help ...'
'And I need yours,' he interrupted flatly.
'Mine?' She stared at him, totally at a loss.
'You seem surprised.' He smiled without amusement. 'Did it never
occur to you when you embarked on this madness that there would
be repercussions?'
'Yes—no—oh, I don't know,' she said wretchedly. 'It didn't seem
important at the time. All that mattered was that Jan should marry
your brother if that was what she wanted.'
He looked at her broodingly. 'It is so important that this little sister
should have her own way in everything?'
'No.' Juliet swallowed. 'Although I suppose she is— rather spoiled.
She's so lovely, it's hard to say no to her,' she added defensively,
seeing his mouth curl cynically. 'She's always been so loved, so
admired all her life that perhaps she's—let everything get out of
proportion.' • 'Your loyalty far outweighs your common sense,
cara?
he commented with a derisive smile. 'What you are saying is
that to satisfy the whim of a spoiled, selfish little bitch, other lives
must be thrown in chaos.'
'But it wasn't just a whim,' she protested. 'Mario had to marry her,
don't you see ...' Her voice tailed away when she saw the way he
was looking at her.
'Santa Maria,'
he said very quietly. 'Is this something new?
Something that you have not told me, that even my mother has not
heard? Speak the truth!'
Juliet bowed her head miserably. 'Jan is going to have Mario's
baby,' she admitted in a low voice.
His face darkened furiously, and he turned away cursing under his
breath. There was a long silence.
'So there is to be a child,' he said at last, his back turned to her.
'When?'
'I don't know that,' she said. 'I wasn't meant to know.' Quickly she
explained her reasons for visiting Jan. 'When she told me about the
baby, I could quite understand why she wanted to get married as
quickly and quietly as possible,' she continued. 'That's why I
decided to help her. Mim—my mother—has always been so proud
of Jan—she's the success story of the family. It would break her
heart if Jan were to have an illegitimate child.'
He muttered something under his breath. 'I suppose there is a
certain irony in the situation,' he said after a moment or two. 'You
working to achieve this marriage to spare your mother's feelings,
and I working against it for the same reason. I was not of course
aware that you or your mother existed. According to the story your
sister told Mario, she was an orphan brought up in foster-homes
without a living relative.'
'Oh, no!' The appalled words broke from Juliet's throat. 'She—she
couldn't have said such a thing!'
He smiled a little. 'To achieve her desires, I think she could
probably say anything. You are sure, are you, that this baby exists
and is not yet another figment of her imagination?'
'I'm sure she's pregnant,' she admitted unhappily. 'She— she'd put
on weight, and she was very ill that first morning.'
'Hm.' He paused, then said coldly and brutally, 'So she decided to
foist the paternity of her bastard on to Mario.'
Juliet's eyes filled with tears. 'That's a despicable thing to say!'
'It may also be the truth,' he said. 'Not that I imagine she would ever
admit it, even if she knew what the truth was.'
'You shouldn't say these things,' she whispered, her lips trembling.
'You don't know her.'
'No, but I thought I did,' he answered abruptly. 'Instead, I knew you,
cara,
and last night that knowledge was almost complete.'
Juliet felt her throat tighten. The silence between them seemed to
stretch on forever, and become almost tangible. Oh God, she found
herself thinking, don't let him move, don't let him touch me. The