Authors: Sara Craven
'We won't today,' he said. 'I begged some carrots from your stepmother. I left
them in the tack room.'
As they walked back under the arch, Natalie was bitterly conscious of Eliot's
presence beside her, looming over her, a shadow in her personal sun. He
must have gone very hungry a lot of the time to keep his weight to a
reasonable level for his height, she thought vindictively.
She hated the way he looked around him as they walked along. It
was—proprietorial, as if he'd already taken charge.
Well, he could be in for a shock. He was only the junior partner, and he
would find, unless she missed her guess, that Grantham had every intention
of remaining firmly in the saddle.
Eliot said, as if he'd broken in somehow on her thoughts, 'Your father has
made quite a name for himself in schooling difficult horses.'
'Yes,' she agreed. 'He's fantastic with them.'
'I'm sure he is,' he said. 'What a pity one can't apply the same techniques to
difficult women.'
He opened the tack room door and motioned her ahead of him with a faintly
mocking gesture. He was smiling.
But not for long, she thought.
'Tell me, Mr Lang,' she said, poisonously sweet, -are those teeth your own?'
'Indeed they are, Mrs Drummond,' he said gravely. 'Would you like me to
prove it by biting you?'
She saw the bag of carrots on a shelf, and was glad of an excuse to move
away from him. 'No, I wouldn't.'
'What a pity,' he said. 'Because it's time someone made a mark on you,
sweetheart.' He'd followed her, and as she reached for the carrots, he took
her by the shoulders and turned her to face him, picking up her slim, ringless
left hand and studying it, brows raised. 'Because the unfortunate Tony
doesn't seem to have left much of an impression, in any way.'
Outraged, Natalie tried to pull away from his grasp. 'Let go of me!'
'Why?' he jeered. 'Because you'll die if I touch you?' He mimicked a falsetto,
and smiled cynically as her lips parted in a soundless gasp. 'Well, let's risk it
and see.' -
She tried to say 'No', but her protest was stifled as his mouth descended on
hers. He was thorough, and not particularly gentle. All the antagonism
between them was' there in the kiss, but charged, explosive with some other
element she could neither recognise nor analyse.
When at last Eliot released her, flushed and breathless, she took a step
backwards, leaning against a cupboard, aware that her legs were trembling
so much she was in real danger of collapsing on the floor.
Eliot's hand reached out, half cupping her breast, his fingers seeking the
place where her heart hammered unevenly against her ribs.
'You see?' he said drily. 'You survived, after all.'
Was this survival, Natalie thought dazedly, this crippling confusion of mind
and body? This strange quivering ache deep inside that she had never known
before? And all this for a kiss that hadn't been a kiss at all, but some kind of
punishment.
Mutely she stared up at him, seeing the mockery fade suddenly from the
hazel eyes, watching them grow curiously intent as his hand moved with
new purpose on the swell of her breast, his fingers seeking the tumescent
nipple through the thin dark blue cotton of her dress.
And was as suddenly removed. He said, 'I think we have company.'
In a disconnected part of her mind, Natalie heard the sound of voices, the
crunch of boots on gravel. Wes, she thought, and the others coming back for
evening stables.
Eliot reached past her and retrieved the bag of carrots. His arm brushed
against her, and her body wentrigid. He was aware of the reaction, and
smiled sardonically down into her white face.
'A piece of advice, Mrs Drummond,' he said lightly. 'In future when you
want to slag me off, keep your voice down—unless you want to suffer the
consequences.'
He walked away, leaving her still leaning against the cupboard as if she had
neither the strength nor the will to move.
As SOON as she had pulled herself together, Natalie went up to the house and
straight to her room, bypassing Beattie who could be heard humming
happily to herself in the kitchen.
And in her room she stayed, until a couple of hours later Andrew's Jaguar
pulled away, with his passenger safely on board.
When she ventured downstairs, Beattie was alone in the drawing-room,
sipping a sherry, and putting a few stitches in a piece of embroidery with an
air of satisfaction that was almost tangible.
'I've persuaded your father to have a rest before dinner,' she told Natalie
happily. 'I asked Andrew and Eliot to stay, but they had to get back.' Her
eyes twinkled, and she lowered her voice conspiratorially. 'Andrew told me
that Eliot didn't travel up here alone. Apparently he has a lady companion,
booked into the International Hotel.' She pursed her lips with mock
primness. 'Blonde hair, apparently, and a figure like a Page Three girl. I
think Andrew was quite envious, poor old thing!'
Natalie forced a smile, as she poured herself a drink. 'I suppose voluptuous
blondes are going to become part of the scenery from now on.' She tried to
speak lightly, but the words sounded stilted, but fortunately Beattie seemed
unaware.
'One thing's certain,' she said. 'Nothing will ever be the same round here.'
To Natalie, the words sounded like a prophecy of doom.
That night, as she was brushing her hair, she found she was studying herself
in the mirror, almost clinically. Her face, naturally pale under the cloud of
copper hair, was like a small cat's with its green eyes and high cheekbones.
Not the face of a woman at peace with herself, but there was little wonder
about that. For the rest of her— medium height with a figure on the thin side
of slender.
About as far removed from a Page Three girl as it was possible to get, she
told herself in bitter self-derision. And as that was where Eliot's tastes lay,
that would seem to guarantee her immunity in the future as long as she
behaved herself.
He had things to settle in Lambourn, so he wouldn't be returning to
Yorkshire immediately, which would give her a breathing space to come to
terms with the change at Wintersgarth.
He had commissioned Beattie to engage a local decorating firm to repaint
the flat, and would be sending up a list of the exact colours he wanted on the
walls. The quiet neutrals she had chosen were being banished for ever, it
seemed.
Over dinner, listening to Grantham and Beattie discussing their immediate
plans, Natalie had broken in abruptly.
'Did you know he might be bringing some extra staff with him?'
'He mentioned it, yes,' Grantham nodded.
'You didn't mention we were up to strength?'
He smiled broadly, 'At the moment, lass, maybe. But an extra pair of hands
won't hurt—and there'll be more horses to see to.'
'Oh, of course,' she said, heavily sarcastic. 'We're going to be deluged with
owners wanting us to take their horses now that the great Eliot Lang is
coming amongst us. No doubt he told you so himself.'
'He's had a couple of approaches from people he's ridden for,' Grantham said
mildly. 'What's odd about that?'
She bit her lip. 'Approaches are one thing, firm offers are another.' She
looked at him anxiously. 'Dad, don't go overboard, will you?'
He shook his head. 'I had a heart attack, my girl, not a brain seizure!'
Natalie wasn't particularly reassured. She said, 'If— and I mean if—these
extra horses come, where the hell are we going to put them?'
'In the new extension.'
'But that's only at the outline planning stage,' she protested.
'Not any more.' He poured himself some more coffee. 'I set the architect on
preparing detailed drawings last week. Permission'll be a formality.'
'And financing?' she asked huskily. 'We're still paying off the
accommodation block and...'
'And I've got a partner now. A partner with money.' He gave her a genial
wink. 'This is going to be his pigeon, not mine, so stop panicking.'
The conversation had only served to bring home to Natalie with increasing
emphasis how potent a force Eliot Lang was going to be at Wintersgarth.
Oh God, she thought savagely as she got into bed, why can't there be some
sort of time slip? Why can't we go back to the time before Grantham had his
heart attack, when everything was normal—and safe?She switched off her
light and settled herself for sleep, but it proved elusive. She found she was
being tormented by vivid mental images of Eliot Lang locked together with
his voluptuous blonde in some Harrogate hotel room.
When she did at last fall asleep, for the first time in many months she
dreamed of Tony, and woke in the morning to find tears on her face.
The internal phone in the office rang and Natalie answered it, her mind still
fixed on the farrier's bill in front of her. 'Yes, Beattie?'
'The removal van's arrived,' her stepmother announced triumphantly. 'Do
you want to join me in a good pry?'
Natalie stifled a sigh. 'I—I haven't really got time.'
'Well, never mind.' Beattie sounded disappointed but cheerful. 'He's going to
ask us to dinner when he's sorted himself out a bit, so we can see everything
then.'
Hurrah, Natalie thought bleakly, as she replaced her receiver. The date on
the calendar had been circled in red for quite some time now. There was no
way she could forget that today was the day Eliot finally moved into
Wintersgarth.
He'd been up several times in the intervening period, staying at the pub in the
village. He had attended the planning hearing when permission for the
stabling extension tfad been given, without problems as Grantham had
predicted. He had checked on the progress of the decorators, and the firm
he'd employed to install a new kitchen.
'I've seen the drawings,' Beattie had disclosed, awed. 'It looks more like the
deck of a space ship than a kitchen!' She'd given the Aga an affectionate pat.
'I'd be afraid of pressing the wrong button!'
Natalie wasn't the world's greatest cook, and the culinary arrangements at
the fiat had been basic to say the least, but it still galled her that he was
making such sweeping changes. But then everything he did seemed to find
some raw spot, she thought ruefully, particularly as so far he hadn't seemed
to put a foot wrong. She was ashamed to acknowledge that she'd harboured a
secret hope that Wes and the lads would resent him, had looked forward to
seeing him cut down to size in some subtle way. But it hadn't happened. He
seemed to have hit the right note with them, as with everyone. Except
herself.
She went back to the farrier's bill, but she couldn't concentrate. All she could
think of was that the flying visits were over. Eliot was moving in, for good.
And she would have to start thinking seriously about moving out.
She had dreaded having to face him again, after those few searing minutes in
the tack room. She'd expected some pointed reminder, a look, a drawled
remark. She'd been on edge waiting for it. But it hadn't happened—yet.
Perhaps Eliot had also had time to come to terms with a few things too. His
attitude to her was polite, but briskly businesslike. He still, to her father's
amusement, addressed her as Mrs Drummond.
'You're very formal, the pair of you,' he'd chided jovially. But it hadn't
changed a thing. Natalie was as much a thorn in his flesh as he was in hers.
But she wasn't driving him out of the only home he'd ever known, she
thought bitterly.
At half past twelve, she closed the office and started up towards the house
for lunch. The furniture van had gone, she saw, and Eliot's Porsche was
parked outside the fiat.
As she approached, a girl got out of the passenger seat and stood obviously
waiting to speak to her. A mass of curling blonde hair hung to her shoulders,
framing a full- lipped smiling face. She wore a ribbed wool dress, tightly
cinched at the waist with a leather belt, thus drawing attention to
well-shaped breasts and rounded hips. Her long legs were encased in
high-heeled patent leather boots.
'Hello,' she said. 'I'm Sharon Endicott. Do you think you could show me
where my things are to go? Eliot was going to, but he went up to the house to
speak to Mr Slater, and he hasn't come back.'
Natalie swallowed. She said feebly, 'How do you do. I'm Natalie
Drummond.'
The other girl nodded. 'I thought you would be.' She looked around. 'It's nice
here.'
'Thank you,' Natalie managed feebly. She still couldn't assimilate that Eliot
had actually brought his mistress with him. It seemed so—so blatant,
somehow. And it would go down like a lead balloon with the locals, who