Authors: Sara Craven
could pinpoint, that. Santino could meet her mother—visit her home
and see the kind of background she and Jan had come from. It
might not have the material wealth of his own family life, but surely
he couldn't be blind to all that was good in it. He would be forced to
admit that by denigrating Jan, he had been unjust to all the
Laurences.
Yet why was it important that Santino should make any kind of
admission? That was the question that began to hum at the back of
her mind and which she found herself increasingly reluctant to
answer. She'd already admitted to herself that he was out of her
league, so the kind of speculation that she had been indulging in
was unprofitable to say the very least.
She glanced again at the rose, glowing against her dress, and
shivered as she recalled the brush of his fingers against her breasts
as he had placed the flower there. Even that slight physical contact
with him had been like an electric < current, brushing through her
nerve-endings, so what would it be like to be held closely in his
arms—to be kissed by him? Her face flamed hotly as she realised
the exact tenor of her thoughts.
She gave a little shuddering sigh. It was utterly ridiculous to admit
even to herself that she could feel a measure of attraction for
someone like Santino. And such an acknowledgment, even uttered
privately in her heart, was in. some way disloyal to Jan. She could
not respect anyone who held her own sister in such total and cynical
disrespect.
She shook her head in disbelief. What in the world was happening
to her? All the most important considerations seemed suddenly to
have been eroded by these new and frankly overwhelming
sensations that she was experiencing. She knew—or rather she had
always told herself that she knew—what she wanted from a man.
Could it be possible that only a few short hours spent in the
company of someone totally alien to her experience could set all her
ideas, all her principles madly on their respective heads?
If so, it was an unhappy prospect. Would she find herself judging
each future relationship—she grimaced slightly at the word—in
comparison with a man whose eyes gleamed like a mountain lion's,
and whose icy tongue was quite capable of flaying the skin from
your body?
And was that really all it took—that fleeting physical contact and a
dinner at a candlelit restaurant—to begin this insidious bewitchment
of her senses, against all reason and all logic?
No, she told herself decisively, she was not going to allow this to
happen. She picked up her evening purse and rose, outwardly cool
and composed, but inwardly seething with conflicting and mainly
unwelcome emotions.
This mental admission of her attraction to Santino made her
departure to England even more imperative. She needed to escape
quickly while she was still comparatively heart-whole. She gave a
small bitter smile as she turned away. What strange and disturbing
byways her impulse to impersonate Jan had led her into! She had
wondered what it would be like to live her sister's life. Well, now
she knew, and it had not been a comfortable experience. She would
be glad to revert to being plain Juliet Laurence again, she told
herself firmly.
And if she hurried back to England, she might still be in time to join
that barge holiday she'd been offered. She would need something to
take her mind off the past couple of days. If she simply sat at home
brooding, Mim might guess that there was something wrong, and
start leaping to all kinds of conclusions. Juliet shuddered at the
thought of trying to evade her mother's gentle persistence once her
suspicions were aroused.
But for now, she had to get through the homeward journey. The
powder room door swung open at her approach and two women
entered, giving her an incurious look as they swept past on a cloud
of expensive scent. For a moment she lingered, wondering wildly
whether she could evade Santino altogether and get a lift back to
Rome from another patron of the restaurant—perhaps even these
very women.
But common sense soon disabused her of that notion. How was she
going to make herself understood with her limited knowledge of
Italian for one thing? She could hardly go round the terrace until she
found a driver who spoke sufficient English to comprehend her
requirements. And did she really think Santino would stand tamely
by while she stood him up—or appeared to, at least—in front of the
fascinated gaze of a section of Roman high society?
No, she would have to leave with him as she had arrived, and part
from him when they returned to the flat with a semblance of
insouciance.
She bit her lip as she walked across the terrace to the table where
he sat smoking. Why couldn't she be honest with herself, and admit
that she wanted to spend just a little more time in his company, in
spite of everything that he had said and the enormous gulf that
must, perforce, yawn between them? The truth was that when they
did part, she wanted him to think not quite as badly of her in the
role she was playing as he did now, and that when the truth finally
emerged, he might look back on the evening they had spent together
with even a little regret.
Romantic idiocy, she told herself caustically. When he does find out
what I've done, he'll probably want to break my neck.
He rose courteously at her approach, and held the chair for her to sit
down again. He looked incredibly tall as he stood over her, and
more formidable than ever, although he was smiling slightly.
'I have ordered fresh coffee,' he said. 'What little was left in the pot
was getting stale and bitter.'
Juliet glanced down at the cup in front of her. She didn't really want
any more coffee. If she drank too much of it in the evening then she
didn't sleep properly. But then she didn't actually expect to get
much sleep under the circumstances anyway, she thought wryly,
and lifted the cup to her lips.
The fresh, brew was hot, but it still had that faint bitterness Santino
had mentioned, and she put the cup down after a tentative sip with a
faint grimace.
'Can we go now?' she asked. 'I'm a working girl, remember? I can't
take too many late nights.'
'Your looks do not seem to have suffered from them so far,' he
commented, blowing a reflective smoke-ring.
She flushed and drank some more coffee to mask her
embarrassment. He sat, watching her, his eyes hooded and
meditative.
'I ask you one last time, Janina,' he said, and she wished, with a
sudden pang to hear her own name on his lips and not her sister's.
'Will you accept the money I have offered, go back to your own
country and leave my brother in peace?'
He sounded almost tired, she thought in surprise, perhaps even a
little dispirited. Maybe he wasn't used to people rejecting any offers
he decided to make them, whether on a personal or a business level.
She swallowed some more of the coffee, then said quickly, 'I can't.
It—it's too late. Please take my word for that.'
Later, much later, she thought, he would know what she'd meant by
her hurried words.
'Your word!' he repeated, and to her dismay all the former cynicism
and contempt had returned to his voice to wound her. Then he
laughed shortly. 'Finish your coffee,
cara
, and we'll go. There's
clearly no more to be said.'
Juliet finished the coffee and replaced the cup in its saucer. So it
was all over. Waiters were bowing and smiling as they left, and she
guessed that he must have settled the bill in her absence and added
a generous tip.
Fate played some strange tricks, she decided as she sat beside him
in the car and heard the engine purr into life. For one evening she
had lived like a millionairess, only to be accused of being a
gold-digger. That was an element that had been missing from all the
best fairy tales, she told herself. Prince Charming had never
accused Cinderella of being out for what she could get, nor had any
of King Cophetua's relatives offered to buy off the beggar-maid.
It was much easier to be Juliet Laurence, schoolteacher, she
thought, or would she find, when it came to it, that nothing was
going to be easy for her again? That was depressive talk, she
criticised herself robustly. Her pathetic charade had to come to an
end sooner or later, and it was better that it was sooner rather than
later when she considered some of the self-revelations that had
come to her during the evening. And she wanted it to be over.
There was pain and danger waiting on the path she had embarked
on so recklessly. Her own life might be dull in comparison, but at
least it was safe and real.
It was very warm in the car even though the side windows were
open to admit the evening air. In spite of herself, she could feel an
almost irresistible urge to yawn taking hold of her, and stifled it
guiltily, brushing a concealing hand across her mouth. Santino
Vallone, she thought, would definitely not be accustomed to women
who yawned in his company.
Yet it certainly wasn't boredom she was assailed by—she felt too
keyed up for that—but a sudden and inexplicable drowsiness which
she found herself fighting with a strange urgency.
Santino leaned forward and flicked a switch on the dashboard and
music began to play softly, with a slow sensuous beat which had an
increasingly soporific effect. She forced her weighted eyelids to
remain open and pulled herself into a more upright position in the
seat. There was no way— no way at all in which she was going to
sleep.
Now if she had been with Barry she would simply have succumbed,
putting her head on his shoulder and letting her drowsiness have its
way with her, but such an action would be unthinkable with a man
like Santino. Even if they had merely spent a pleasant evening in
each other's company with no ulterior motives on either side, she
would still have been chary at putting herself so completely at his
mercy.
She found another yawn threatening, and turned her head away to
hide it, gazing rather desperately out of the window. Darkness
outside the car, darkness within it, and the soft insistent rhythm of
the music—all of it lapping her like a warm blanket, infinitely
comforting, infinitely appealing. And all she had to do was let go
and slide down into the darkness, closing her weary eyes and not
even thinking any more because thinking, reasoning was too hard
when you were so nearly falling asleep.
Through the mists that were drowning her, smothering her, he heard
him say softly but with an underlying note of faint amusement,
'Why fight it,
cara?
Just close your eyes and enjoy the ride.'
It was the amusement that told her, and she grasped at it with the
last remnants of reason. Her mouth felt stiff as if it didn't belong to
her, and her voice seemed to come from a long way away as she
heard herself say, 'The coffee —what did you put in the coffee?'
His laughter, mocking and enigmatic, was the last thing she heard
as she fell asleep.
She came awake slowly, her hand automatically reaching out to
grope for the alarm clock that she felt .must have triggered her
subconscious. But it wasn't the usual clutter of clock, lamp, the
novel she had been reading that her hand encountered. And as the
sun began to filter through her still-closed eyelids, she thought,
'How stupid. Of course, I'm still in Rome at Jan's flat. But I've been
dreaming about being at home.'
Then she opened her eyes and her first thought was that she was
dreaming still. For the room around her bore not the slightest
resemblance to the streamlined luxury at the flat. It was completely
and totally unfamiliar.
She sat up, accepting that there was a slight dull ache across her
forehead, her eyes questing round the room with increasing alarm.
It wasn't particularly large, but it had a formidable air which was
immediately apparent. Stone walls, their austerity unrelieved by any
kind of hangings or colour wash, massive furniture belonging to a
previous generation, small-paned windows set in deeply ledged